Goucher College - Donnybrook Fair Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)
- Class of 1932
Page 1 of 284
Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 284 of the 1932 volume:
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. IDonny wooL i Fair - I932 -.A-.iA Wit, DonnybrooL Pair P 11655560, 6y tlze Class of 1932 Goucher College Baltimore, Maryland COPYRIGHT 1 9 3 1 RUTH SIEBEN-MORGEN Editor-in-Chief KATHARINE STIMSON Business Manager Engraved and Printed by THE READ-TAYLOR Co. Baltimore CONTENTS College Classes Activities Feature Dramatics Athletics Miscellany We, the Class of 193a Declicate this Donnybrook Fair to Davicl Allan Robertsory Hoping that it may express in some measure the honor in which we I'lOICl his recorcl as an eAucator and the conficlence with which we look towarcl the years to Be fulfilled under his Ieaclershl'p. FOREWORD This Book was macle to how Vivicl in memory the college We have known. FACULTY Daviol Allan Rohertson N a pre-Ware issue of Kalends, newspaper and literary magazine combined, appears the following account: HAt the formal opening of the college in November, 1888, the procession formed in Goucher Hall and marched to the First Church; the mayor of the city, the president of Johns Hopkins University and some of his associates, then our own facultyea little group of perhaps ten or twelve men and women., the trustees, students and friends of the college. No academic robes, just the simple christening of the infant Whose future was so uncertain. Twenty-flve years later the Hinfant had discarded its swaddling clothes and taken several quite manly strides toward maturityt A burdensome debt had been wiped out, an endowment assured and a new charter adjusted, to changed conditions, granted. There had been elected to the presidency of Goucher C01- Twenty lege a man who was Ha scholar, a man of culture, an organizer, a tried execu- tive, plain, practical, approachable, progressive in education and independent in action. William Wesley Guth was inaugurated in academic grandeur Which, in its contrast with that earlier, simpler service. indicated the growth of Goucher's prestige during the twenty-five active years which intervened. Yet not once did the administrators and trustees of the college consider their work in any way completed or even pause to indulge in justiliable self-congratulation. Their thoughts were directed always toward the future. Dr. Guth in his inaugural address expressed the constant attitude of those in whose lives the history of Goucher is written. ilThe college has twenty-five years of honorable history to its credit: let us not forget it. But what is more important it has many years of new life before it in which to make history let us look forward. Every phase of Goucher's development, every aspect of its being today is derived from the dynamic dreams, the far-sighted actions of earlier builders. The greatness of their work lay in its very incompleteness; its significance, not in What was accomplished but in what might be accomplished. Their plans wene not encompassed by the limitations of a single life time or the abilities of a single individual. For fullillment they looked to the distant future and sought the talents of many. Thus when they passed they left a work greater than themselves, a growing heritage. The man to whom such a heritage is entrusted rnust indeed be a great leader. We expect to lind in him a competent organizer with much more than a dash of business acumen. It is well that he possess valuable connections, both business and social; that he be blessed with poise and personal charm; that the Hgift of prophecy be his, to enthrall an audience; that he inspire loyalty in his associates. Scholarly interests and intellectuality are also greatly to be desired. Yet we look for something further in a great leader, something which may be a sum of all these things and yet is quite different from any one of them. It is a quality which unmistakably distinguishes a leader from men of commoner clay. This quality, the essence of leadership, is indefinable. It is a certain intangible force, a spiritual energy which communicates itself to other men, penetrates and pervades every held of activity in the community. Evidence of it is found in unexpressed but warmly felt enthusiasm for a great purpose generally agreed upon. Under real leadership life is efhcient, smooth, well ordered; more than that, it is meaningful and colorful through contact with a fine personality. Goucher College has found a great leader. At commencement in June of 1930 a letter was read whose concluding words were these: liWith conlidence in the experience, vision and energy of the trustees, the cooperation and wisdom of the members of the faculty, the loyalty of alumnae and students and the friendship of Baltimore, I accept the presidency of Goucher College, Almost a year later, in April, 1931, David Allan Robert- son was inaugurated as president of Goucher College. The inauguration of Goucherls hfth president will remain always one Of the most memorable events in the history of the college. Representatives from more than two hundred foreign and American universities, among them a num- ber of college presidents and deans, gathered to honor Goucher College and President Robertson. The academic procession was brilliant and impressive. Twenty-one The students, who like nine hundred black birds had been baked in a subterranean compartment of the Lyric Theater, were privileged to enter first. They remained standing while the members of Goucher's faculty and the oflicial delegates of othet colleges passed down the aisle in all the beauty and dignity of flowing robes and richly colorful hoods. Dr. Robertson en- tered at the end of the procession and with him walked Mrs. Herbert Hoover who was to receive an honorary degree. Two addresses preceded that of Presi- dent Robertson. Dr. Winifred Clara Cule lis, a charming British woman who was at that time President of the International Federation of University Women, spoke on University Women and International Rela- tions. Dr. Robert Andrews Millikan, probably the most eminent of living physicists, delivered an address on Educa- tion and Unemployment. Following the latter the President of the Board of Trustees presented the charter of Goucher College to Dr. Robertson. The loyalty of the students and the friendship of the guests present was evident in the splendid ovation following this action, the applause ending only when the entire assembly rose to express its joy. The president's inaugural address, The Teacher, expressed his ideals in regard to the almost sublime duty of the teacher and his very high standards for the character and abilities of the college professor. He emphasized the fact that, however important excellent physical equipment and a beautiful site may be, the primary concern of a college should be the gradual development of a splendid faculty. Following the inaugural address, honorary degrees were conferred, Miss Lizette Woodworth Reese. Baltimore poet, received the honorary degree of Doc- tor of Literature. Dr. Florence Rena Sabin, Dr. Winifred Clara Cullis and Mrs. Herbert Hoover received the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. In the evening following the ceremony, a banquet was held at the Lord Baltimore Hotel in honor of President and Mrs. Robertson. More than six hundred guests were invited. Dr. Harris E. Kirk was a most genial and amusing toast master. After a number of delightful speeches, two of them made by Goucher Seniors, the First Lady of Goucher gave a charming talk. Dr. Rob- ertson, whose informal remarks are always highly enjoyable, brought the pro- gram to a close. Immediately after the banquet, President and Mrs. Robertson left for Chicago, their native city, where they were further honored. Dr. Robertson was born in that city, attended the public schools there and the University of Chicago and afterward taught at the University for more than twenty years. It is interesting to know that as an undergraduate David Allan Robertson took part in numerous campus activities. Cartooning campus dignitaries for the publications of the University was a favorite occupation. Dramatics clalmed Twenty-two much of his time and interest. He was. moreover, a brilliant student and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in 1902. grad- uating the same year with high honors. In 1906, after completing his graduate ' study, Dr. Robertson married Anne Vic- toria Knobel, the lovely daughter of a Presbyterian minister. He continued his work at the University and became Assise tant Professor in English in 1914. In 1920 he was made Dean of the Colleges of Art, Literature and Sciences. The activie ties of Dr. Robertson during the years spent at the University are those of a man of broad interests and versatility. He was founder and at one time president of the Renaissance Society which encouraged line arts and brought exhibitions of paintings and prints to the campus. Dr. and Mrs. Robertson, both music devotees, were active in founding the Orchestral Associa- tion and through Dr. Robertsonls influence the Chicago Symphony Orchestra was brought to the University annually for fourteen years. In 1924 Dr. Robertson came to Washington as assistant director of the American Council on Education, a position which he held until coming to Goucher in 1930. It was during his six years of service in this capacity that be conceived and developed the HJunior Year Abroad plan. He was discouraged by other educators in his attempts to execute the idea but due to his efforts the plan is operating successfully in a number of colleges today. For the Association of American Universities, President Robertson investi- gated more than two hundred colleges and universities in the United States, In 1928 he published American Universities and Colleges which has been said to contain Hmore information concerning education than any other single Volume ever published in the United States. Dr. Robertson has also visited numerous European universities in connection with the international work of the American Council on Education. In 1926 Dr. Robertson represented the American Uni- Versities at the Third Congress of British Universities. In 1928 Dr. Robertson was awarded the degree of Doctor of Laws by George Washington University, and in 1929 that of Doctor of Literature by Bucknell. If this sketch had been written somewhat later in the century, there would be several additional paragraphs, for a new chapter is being written in the life of rresident Robertson as well as in the history of Goucher College. The two oLOI'leS will merge and become one. New threads Will enter into the narrative and old threads will be spun out to glorious completion. To those who come after us, Goucher and David Allan Robertson Will be two inseparable names. And yet, so completely have President and Mrs. Robertson entered into the immediate life of the college and won the loyalty and devotion of the students. that to us who have known them only a brief year there hardly seems to have been a time when they were not here. Twenty-three DEAN PANCOAST L311 Elinor Paneoast he cheerfully places his period and admits his ignorance of the subject, but the student of the college community could add much eloquence to this. She knows how various are the duties of the oflice, and how various and flexible must be the personality Who handles them. She sits on the oft- sung bench; object: awaiting the Dean. She trots merrily to chapel. There a gracious person turns the news of the week With a mot. Wherever she turns in the college community is a niche only one person can fill: the Dean. And so the student is prepared to add many paragraphs t0 Websterls defi- nition, and then to add, like the Baltimore weather man, Hit may be something yet againf' For any emergency returns to that radiating center: the Dean. All of Which is preface to selfvcongratulation. When Dr. Dorothy Stim- son boarded ship for England and a warning-less, cut-less world, Goucher bee camel plaintive. Where such another? Deans are born and not made. But Goucher is rich in its factulty personalities. Dr. Elinor Pancoast, turning from her many works and interests, added yet anotheraiideaning. In half a year, Goucher has come to know Dean Pancoast well. It has met her tact and gentleness in the little room With the brown and yellow boards. It has met her charm at chapel, at Sing Song, in many places. It is grateful for this chance to know a non-self-assertive person better; to sense the fine integrity of personality beneath the quiet manner. But the student Who initials the slip of paper marked l'Appointmentse the Dean, sees only a small side of Dr. Pancoast. There is the professor who elucidates the complexities of economic development and has furnished motiva- tion for many an Ec major. Above all, there is the Dr. Pancoast Who has made a name for herself in social work. Baltimore knows very well her lec- tures, her committee work, and her research in connection With social legislation and social reform. Dr. Pancoast is much interested in recent educational developments and hopes to see some of them carried into practice at Goucher soon. Especially does she favor a smaller number of subjects and the opportunity for greater concen- tration. The ureading periodll and Hhonorsli work also interest her and she hopes Goucher may increase its facilities for this type of work. Academically, iia college is its faculty. But very especially fortunate is the college whose dean is poised, sensitive and catholic. Goucher rolls happily along its way, complacent in the knowledge that at the slightest need, it linds a Dr. Pancoast waiting in ilOfliceethe Dean. D BAN: What says Webster? UAn executive officer of a collegefl There Twenty-five wt, variety of points. Miss Prohst iiSee Miss Probst, said the registrar's assistant to the tremulous freshman, and the freshman stood on one foot and pictured a stern official person Who would make her feel young, uncxtraordinary, and unessential tas no doubt she wasl. Presently she was speaking to a very quiet, pleasant person and felt the edge of her shyness melting entirely away. This and the discus thrower and the Goucher skyline were the freshmanis first impressions of Goucher, and she liked them all. As she waxed from freshman to senior, the stu- dent met Miss Probst in various connections and perceived the validity of nrst impressions. But much of Miss Probst's work she did not see, for it is not spectacular. Some of it is routine, some diflicult, but all requires care and conscience. In her long connection with Goucherelirst as student, then as officialeMiss Probst has seen the college pass through many crises. She has been one of its depend- able friends. iMlSS COHHQF anal MlSS Mason There is poetry anent the problems of the old woman in the shoe; ten or twelve children to be scrubbed and spanked and doled sugarplums in judi- cious proportions. Con- ceive, then, the complexi- ties of existence when a thousand young women must, figuratively, be scrubbed and spanked and doled said sugarplums in said judicious proportions. Miss Mason and Miss Conner have this task. Sometimes they must show tact in denial or reproval. Then again they can warm to enthusiasm at connded undergraduate plans. Miss Mason and Miss Conner make contact with the student body at a For all the miscellaneous forms of student perplexity they olfer advice and friendship. They leave a memory in the undergraduate mind of the many times that a smile and a helping word and a helping hand were To the Editors of Donnybrook Fair: A proper way to end my observance of VVashingtonis Birthday would seem to be in getting oil a response to your request for a letter! Without any prior thought of its coincidence with the twenty-second of February, I have had a beautiful visit today in the company of an English friend to the tiny hamlet of Jordans, some twenty-five miles out of London. Near here VJilliam Penn lies buried, and here Friends still hold their mmeeting in a beautifully propor- tioned brick house some three centuries old. Close by stands a huge barn made, so an ancient land shakyl tradition goes, out of the timbers of the good ship Mayflower. You see, your Dean is not wholly out of touch with things Ameri- can, nor is she exactly Anglicised, it must be admitted, despite these six months of London life. Only last Friday, as I paid a sixpense for some tea, I heard my- self remark, UHere is my dime ! XVhat are some of my impressions at this mid-point of my year abroad? That the London winter climate has to be experienced to be properly appreci- atedv-cspecially indoors. tYou may have heard that the English do not care for ucentrally heated housesJ That London is amazingly quiet for so great a city; and that it allows its inhabitants a notable degree of independence in action and costume. Mohammedans With bright colored turbans, women with strawe hats of the Victorian era, a horseback rider in blue on a beautiful white horse With forelegs bandaged in redaall these, and many more, have I seen in the crowded streetseyet people Will hardly give them a second glance. That time flies even faster here than in Baltimore tpartly because distances are so much greater that it takes much longer to get to one's destinationl. That the world of scholars and scholarly interests is remarkably Widespread With not only ex- cellent talk resulting even on casual occasions, but also With friendly and helpful interests in whatever bit of scholarship is under discussion. Furthermore, that one of the most satisfying occupations in the world is the using of ones mind, Whether in puzzling out a scrap of seventeenth century handwriting, in trans- lating a Latin phrase, or in digging through a pile of seventeenth century ser- mons in search for reference to contemporary scientific discoveries. At a tea many weeks ago a retired admiral, Who is also an authority on naval history, after asking about my work and my obvious enjoyment of it, remarked that he himself could not honestly say Whether he more enjoyed coming upon a set of facts that confirmed the work he had already done, or turning up some that com-v pletely overthrew his previous position and necessitated his making a new start. And I cannot decide either. iiThe moral of all this is -t0 be true to my Deanaish self and send you a miniature iichapel talky'edevelop your intellectual interests, adopt a hobby or two; but above all. iind out for yourselves, if you have not already done so, what fun it is and What satisfaction it gives you to use your minds as hard as ever you can. And may the good fairies give you plenty of opportunity not only to make this discovery worthwhile, but in the future to realize it all over again in the equivalent for you of my happy leave of absence spent chiefly in that true university, the Reading-Room of the British Museum! My best Wishes to one and all Faithfully yours. DOROTHY STIMSON. Twenty-seven FACULTY CLARA LATIMER BACON, A,B., A1M1, Pl-L D .. V..V...Professor of Mathematics 2316 N. Ca1vert Street WILFRED A. BEARDSLEY, A.B., PHD ..................................... Professor of Romance Languagps 105 Longwood Road, Roland Park ETHEL BOWMAN, A.B., A.M1, PH. D ..................................................... Professor of Psychology 704 Cathedral Street GERTRUDE CARMAN BUSSEY, A131, A.M., PH. D ................................. Professor of Philosophy 203 W. Lanvale Street JANE F. GOODLOE, A.B., A1M., PHD ....................................... Associate Professor of German 23 23 N. Charles Street EUGENE NEWTON CURTIS, A.B., B.D., A.M., PH. D ................................. Professor of History 31 York Court, Guilford HERMAN LOUIS EBELING, A.B., PHD ........................................................... Professor of Greek 329 Hawthorne Road, Roland Park MARY ASHMUN HODGE, A,B., M.D ................................... Professor of Physiology and Hygiene 319 Gittings Avenue ANNETTE B. HOPKINS, A.B., PHD ........................................................... Professor of English 203 W. Lanvale Street JESSIE L. KING, B.S., PHD ................................................................... Professor of Physiology Guilford Manor Apartments, 3 W. Bishop Road FLORENCE PARTHENIA LEWIS, A.B., A.M., PHD ............................ Professor of Mafhematics 2435 N. Charles St. HOWARD HUNTLEY LLOYD, A.B., PH.D ............................................... Professor of Chemistry 2821 Oak Street WILLIAM H. LONGLEY, A.B., A.M., PHD ................................................. Professor of Biology 511 E. 42nd Street STELLA MCCARTY, A113,, A.M., PHD ................................................... Professor of Education 3620 Fairview Avenue, Forest Park SELBY VERNON MCCASLAND, A1B., TH.B., AM, PHD ............. Professor of Biblical Literature 3621 Kimble Road SAMUEL N. TAYLOR, PHBH PHD ......................................................... Professor of Physics 2514- Maryland Avenue THADDEUS P. THOMAS, 1311.13,, PHD ............................... Professor of Economics and Sociology Cecil Apartments. 1117 N. Eutaw Street MARY WILHELMINE WILLIAMS, A.B., A.M., PHD ..................................... Professor of History 2435 N. Charles Street T wenty-nine HARRY TORSEY BAKER, A.B0. AM ........................................... Associate Professor of Engltsh 2210 N. Calvert Street VOLA PRICE BARTON, ABM A.M., PHD ..................................... Associale Professor of Physic- 2500 Ken Oak Road, Mt. Vv'ashington Heights JOSEPH M0 BEATTY, JRU ABM A.M., PHD .............................................. Professor of English 2817 Oak Street ALICE F. BRAUNLICH, A.B., A.M., PHD .................................... Associate Professor of Latin 2614 Guilford Avenue RALPH E. CLELAND, A0B0, M.SH PHD ................................................. Professor of Biology 694 Gladstone Avenue, Roland Park ESTHER CRANE, A.B., A.M., PHD ........................................... Associate Professor of Education 1734 St. Paul Street EUNICE R. GODDARD, A.B., A.M., PHD, ..................................... Associate Professor of French Calvert Court Apartments, Calvert and 3 lsl' Streets RAYMOND P. HAWES, A013,, A.M.. PHD .............................................. Professor of Philosophy 2903 Cresmont Avenue GRACE LOCKTON, A0130, BVD ....................................... Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature 2614 Forest Park Avenue LOUISE KELLEY, A.B., A.M0, PHD. .................................................... Professor of Chemistry Evergreen Apartments, 2647 N0 Charles Street CHARLES XV. LEMML A.M .......................................... Associate Professor of Italian and French 2310 N. Calvert Street IVAN EUGENE MCDOUGLE, A.B., A.M., PH0D...Associare Professor of Economics and Sociology 1900 E. 3lst Street ANNA IRENE MILLER, A.B., A.M., PHD ...... . ........................... Associate Professor of English 2426 EutaW Place ELIZABETH NITCHIE, A.B., PHD ........................................................... Professor of English Astor Court, Apartments, St. Paul Street , ELINOR PANCOAST, PH.B,, A.M0, PHD ....... Acting Dean and Associate Professor of Economics 2124 Mt. Royal Terrace ROBERTA FLORENCE BRINKLEY, A.B., A.M., PHD ..................... Associate Professor of English 203 W. 29th Street S. ELIZABETH VAN DUYNE, A.B., M.D ...................................................... Resident Physician 2121Ciui1ford Avenue OLA ELIZABETH WINSLOW, A.B., A.M., PHD ....................................... Professor of English 2402 N. Charles Street Thirty-one GRACE HADLEY BEARDSLEY, A.B., A.M., PH.D. ................ .Assistant Professor of Latin and 105 Longwood Road, Roland Park Instructor of History LOUISE CLERET SEIBERT, Brevet Supeirieur, ABM PHD ................. Assistant Professor of French 414' Notthway, Guilford JEANNE ROSSELET, A1B4, A,M., PHD ....................................... Assistant Professor of French 102 Ridgewood Road, Roland Park ELEANOR D. SMITH, A.B., AM. ............................................................ Instructor of History 2323 N. Charles Street PHILLIP F. GOTTLING, BYE.r A.M., PHD .............................................. Instructor of Physics 1614 Bolton Street ERNESTO MURILLO, A.B., Doctor en Derecho ....................... Instructor of French and Spanish 4704 Old York Road DOROTHY E. WALLACE, A1B., A.M ............................................ Instructor in Chemistry 1405 Eutaw Place ESTHER J. CROOKS, PH.B., A.M., PHD ................................... Associate Professor of Spanish 2215 N1 Calvert Street M. KATHERINE FREIIAFER. AB A.M. PILD ............................... Assistant Professor of Physics 300 E. 29th Street REBECCA RHOADS, A.B1. B.Litt .............................................................. Instructor in English 2708 N. Calvert Street FRITZ MARTI, PHD ............................................................. Assistant Professor of Philosophy 1123 N. Charles Street LADEMA MARY LANGDON, A.B.. M.S., PHD .............................. Assistant Professor of Biology Allston Apartments, Charles and 32nd Streets A. LAURA HINTZ, A.B.. A.M., PHD. ............... Assistant Professor of Physiology and Hygiene 103 E. 25th Street ELIZABETH J. RUTHERFORD, A.B., A.M ............................ Assistant Professor of Psychology ELIZABETH MERRITT, AB PHD ................................. Assistant Professor of Political Science 3402 W. North Avenue BELLE OTTO, A113, A1M .................................................................... Instructor in Chemistry 2705 N. Calvert Street CLARA QUINCER, B.S ....................................................................... Instructor in Education 2727 N. Calvert Street Thirty-three CROMWELL A1 RICHES, ABM AM ......................................... Instructor in Political Science 208 W. 29th Street MARION M, TORREY, A.B., A.MV, PILD .............................. Assistant Professor of Mathematics 2513 St. Paul Street MARY D.WEBER,A.B.,A1M ........ . . .1 V . V. . ...................... Instructor in Physics 4 McHenry Road, Pikesville MARION COLLINS, A.B1, A1M1 ...................................... Instructor in Physiology and Hygiene 2431 St. Paul Street CLEO CHRISOF, AB ............................................................................ Assistant in Phychology 3101 VJestfield Avenue. Hamilton JAMES WELLINGTON XVHALER. ABM A.M., PHD ..................... Assistant Professor of English 4-306 Maine Avenue CORA DURKEE GUZMAN BARRON, A.B., AM ........................................ Instructor in English 2330 N. Calvert Street JEAN INGRAM BROOKS. A.B., A.M., PHD ................................. Assistant Professor of History 2323 N. Charles Street HELEN WALTER DODSON, A.B ......................................................... Assistant in Astronomy 2305 N. Charles Street ANITA DE OYARZABAL .......................................................................... Instructor in Spanish 2019 N. Charles Street CESARINE BREUILLAUD, Brevet Supt'zrieur, A.B., A.M .............................. Instructor in French 2506 St. Paul Street RAE BLANCHARD, A1131, A.M.. PHD ........................................... Assistant Professor of English 2124 Mt. Royal Terrace ERICH SEEMANN, A.B1, A.M ................................................................... Instructor in German 2416 N. Calvert Street RUTH CARPENTER CHILD. ABM A.M ...................................................... Instructor in English 2513 St. Paul Street MARY CMHERINE RITTLER, AB. ........................................................... Asszsmnz in Physics 5004 Roland Avenue LOUISA FIETA XVHIIDIN, A.B., A.M. ...... 1 .............................................. I nstructor in Spanish 2514 Maryland Avenue WINNIFRED HOPKINS SHRINER, AB. V .............................................. Assistant in Chemistry 2408 Kentucky Avenue Thirty-five GERTRUDE ONNEN .............................................................................. Director of Dramalics 3413 University Place HENRIETTA EASTER PETERSON, A3131 ........................... Assistant in Physiology and Hygiene 1709 Bolton Street RUTH LUBELL, 13.8. V H. N Assistant in Physical Educalion 2834 Guilford Avenue MARY GRANT PARKHURST, B,S ............................................. Assistant in Physical Education 2834 Guilford Avenue ELLEN DUVALL ..................................................................... Assistant in Physical Education 2215 N1 Charles Street DOROTHY SHEPPARD, A.B .................................................................... Assistant in Chemistry 2705 N. Calvert Street JOHN W. EVERETT, AB ........................................................................ Instructor in Biology 2917 Guilfotd Avenue ELINE VON BORRIES, AB ....................................................... Director of Physical Education 2100 Eutaw Place ELEANOR W. FALLEY, B.S ........................................................................................ Librarian Calvert Court Apartments, Calvert and 3lst Sts. MARY T. MCCURLEY, A.B., A1M ............................................................. Vocational Secretary Calvert Court Apartments, Calvert and 3lst Sts1 DOROTHY TAPLEY, A.B .......................................................... Instructor in Physical Education 2306 N. Calvert St. MARGARET F. MACINTYRE. AB ....................................... Assistant in Physiology and Hygiene 2431 St. Paul Street JOSEPHINE FISKE, A.B .......................................................... Instructor in Physical Education 2306 N. Calvert Street PHYLLIS VIRGINIA PLYLER, A,B., AM ................................................. Assistant in Biology 2705 N. Calvert Street SARAH ELIZABETH WILSON, A.B ............................................................ Assistant in Biology 2433 St. Paul Street EDMUND SERENO ENDER ......................................................................................... Organist 4502 Carleview Road ETHEL BILY, AB ................................................................................ Assistant in Chemistry 604 N. Potomac Street MARY ELIZABETH BROWNE ., . .H .. .7 Resident Nurse Fensal Hall, Maryland and 23rd Streets ANNA MATHIESFN, A.B.. A.M., PHD ............................................ Instructor in Psychology 2905 N1 Charles Street MILDRED DAY DORCUS, A.B., A.M., PHD. , H Assistanr Professor of Psychology 3123 N. Calvert Street Thirty-seven MARM ELLEN ,, JEAN MCDOUCLE W CHAQLE? iDiKE H ; M?CASLAND EQOBERT WINSLOW QOBUQT AND VtDCANlA LLOYD LOQINC HAWES FACULTY JUNIORS 1 They claim no common kin: Some are of Aasir-kin. some are of Elfiind. Some are Dvalinn's daughters. f ----from The Prose Edda. SENIORS DR. EUGENE NEWTON CURTIS Senior Class Ogicers VIRGINIA POTTER ............................................................................. President DOROTHY GREIG ....................................................................... Vz'ce-Presz'dent MARY BOUIS ...................................................................................... Treasurer MARY HALL HAMILTON .................................................................... Secretary ALICE ONEN ................................................................... Recorder of Points NELLIE SMITHER .................................................................. Sergeant at Arms AMELIA GROSS ..................................................................... Sergeant at Arms Forty-three m a '9??? 3' KATHERINE ARMSTRONG Loch Haven, Pa. THERESA M. ALEXANDER MARGARET EDITH ARMSTRONG Linthicum Heights, Md. New York, N. Y. F o'rty-f 0 24 r 3.24M A i Mumaazivz? ,. warn; 4 mmwp R. RUTH BAIRD Towson, Md. HENRIETTA BURGESS BAKER RUTH VICTORIA BARKER Baltimore, Md. tID B K Moose Jaw, Canada Forty-five A. ELIZABETH BASSETT Coatesville, Pa. BEATRICE BERGER ELIZABETH BARKLEY Pa. , Philadelphia Baltimore, Md. -six Forty mg? 74:33Ei3'k BETTY BING Altoona, Pa. DOROTHY VIRGINIA BLELOCH MARTHA E. BORCORSELSKI Philadelphia, Pa. Washington, D. C. Forty-se'ven MARY ELIZABETH BOUIS Mount Washington, Md. MARY ELIZABETH BOYD DOROTHY BROOKS BRANSON Durham, N. C. Trinidad, Colo. Forty-eight MARIAN ELISE BRAUN Memphis, Tenn. ELEANOR BRATTON ELIZABETH BAKER BROWN Lewistown, Pa. Baltimore, Md. F orty-m'ne MARY ELIZABETH BUNN Philadelphia, Pa. EVELYN BELLE BROWN RUTH STEELE BUFFINGTON Q B K cb B K Baltimore, Md. Hinsdale, Ill. Fifty WILYEXEXZZZWK LYDIA MARY BURBANK Baltimore, Md. MARGARET LOUISE BURNET KATHRYN GERHART BUTTON Minneapolis, Minn. Philadelphia, Pa. Fifty-one 5383737525f 74$: . 1' 73:33 $$mrmmyug CAROLINE D. CAMPBELL Williamsport, Pa. MARY PRISCILLA CHINN MARY DORSEY CLARK q, B K Ellicott City, Md. Baltimore, Md. Fifty-two AIMEE LANNAY CLUNET Dayton, Ohio RUTH LOUISE CLARK SARA LEE COBAU Elizabeth, N. J. New Castle, Pa. Fifty-three MAY R. COHN cp B K Pittsburgh, Pa. FREDERICA KRANDA COHEN MILDRED CHILDRESS COLE Baltimore, Md. New Orleans, La. Fifty-four V .1 'Lx LUCY FRAZER COONS Orange, Va. MARY NEWMAN COOK DOROTHY WILLIAMSON COOK Baltimore, Md. tuK Washington D. C. v Fifty-five J, 333E W , HELEN MIRIAM COPLAN q: B K Baltimore, Md. EVELYN B. CORDISH CHRISTINE CORK Baltimore, Md. Clarkesburg, W. Va. Fifty-six EDITH ANN COULTER Baltimore, Md. EMILY DURHAM CRAMER KATHERINE DANIELS Fort Leavenworth, Kan. Nashville, Tenn. Fifty-set'en VIRGINIA ELIZABETH DILLON .12 B K Charleston, W. Va. CAROLINE ANNE DENTON ETHEL E. DEMUTH cb B K cp B K Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Fifty-eight 13:33; , ELIZABETH DUGAN Louisville, Ky. VIRGINIA LOUISE DRESCH MARY ELIZABETH EAST Mishawaka, Ind. Staunton, Va. m mm 2' :2! Fifty-nine WXW, m2? ' m HERBERTA P. FISH Yardville, N. J. HELEN VIRGINIA ELDERKIN ELIZABETH FISHER Baltimore, Md. Maywood, N. J. gmmamwgrx KATHERINE E. FLAGG Branford, Conn. DORIS PENNINGTON FLAVELLE RUTH GROVE FLUHRER West Caldwell, N. J. York, Pa. Sixty-one HAZEL FRANCES Fox c1: B K Baltimore, Md. MARGARET DAMBLEY FRANK GRACE CARVILL FRAZER Philadelphia, Pa. Mount Washington, Md. Sixty-two JULIA MCJUNKIN FURST New Castle, Pa. FRIEDA FRIEDLANDER LILLIAN G. FREBURGER q; B K Baltimore, Md. Baltimore. Md. Sixty-three GLORIA MARIA ANA GARCIA Baltimore, Md. MARGARET KATHRYN GEIS DOROTHY M. GAY Baltimore, Md. Westfleld, N. J. Sixty-four PRUDENCE GERSON Philadelphia, Pa. ANNA MAY GERSTMYER MARY MARGARET GORDON Baltimore, Md. Saint Marshall, Mo. Sixty-five NAOMI S. GOTWALS Norristown, Pa. MARIAN VIRGINIA GOTT ALICE RUTH GREENWALD Baltimore, Md. Chicago, Ill. S'ixty-six CLARA ERNESTINE GRETHER q: B K Defiance, Ohio DOROTHY N. GREIG KATHERINE GRIMMER Pittsburgh, Pa. Saint Pekin, Ill. Sixty-seven ,me myn Q X 1?: n, 'd MARY HALL HAMILTON ANIELIA ELIZABETH GROSS Cortland, N. Y. Memphis, Tenn. CHARLOTTE LOUISE HAMMELL Absccon, N. J. Sixty-eight MARGARET PATTISON HANN Baltimore, Md. FRANCES ESCOTT HARDISON DOROTHY HARGROVE Nashville, Tenn. Washington, D. C. Sixty-nine AMY BOND HAYWARD Ruxton, Md. HELEN ZAHN HASTINGS EMMA STREATOR HAWKINS Jersey Shore, Pa. Detroit, Mich. Sewenty MARJORIE A. HEITKAMP Ridgewood, N. J. E. RUTH HEDEMAN BETTYE REBECCA HERMAN Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Seventy-one ETTA HOFFBERGER Baltimore, Md. HARRIET HOFFBERGER SUSANNE ELIZABETH HIDEN Baltimore. Md. Newport News, Va. SeverLty-t'wo 2:? 331: Awe. LILLIAN VIRGINIA HOPE Fanwood, N. J. EDITH LEWIS HOLLANDER ELIZABETH HORN Baltimore, Md. Toledo, Ohio Seventy-three $326Z'535i2 24:32.7:237 WWW 5 ELEANOR HOUGHTON Montgomery, Ala. CAROLINE TRAVERS HYATT MARY O. HYNSON Baltimore, Md. Lebanon, Pa. Seventy-four QWW NA KATHERINE MAY BELLE ING Baltimore, Md. MARY VIRGINIA ILLICH DOROTHY JANDORF Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Seventy-five MARTHA BANFIELD JONES Edwardsville, Pa. LUCILLE MAY JOHNSON MARY WHITE JOHNSON Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Seventy-six NATALIE OSBORNE JONES Pittsburgh, Pa. MARY DE GROOT JUSTIS EDITH KELMENSON Jenkintown, Pa. Arlington, W. Va. Seventy-seven SARAH KATHERINE KING Towson, Md. J ULIA ELIZABETH KERSHNER KATHERINE E. KILMER Hagerstown, Md. Martinsburg, W. Va. Seventy-eighf ELSA KINGMAN Orange, N. J. LILLIAN ALICE KNORR MARGARET KNIGHT Garden City, N. Y. Throop, Pa. Seventy-m'ne MARION GWENDOLYN KRATZ Norristown, Pa. LOUISE ALICE KOHN RUTH MILDRED LAFFERTY Baltimore, Md. CD B K Wynnewood, Pa. Eighty V r Var r r A 1 , , vagm 1 . g ELIZABETH LILLY LAMB Roland Park, Md. MARGARET NORMA LANHAM ROBERTA D. LATHROP Baltimore, Md. Rockford, Ill. Eighty-one KATHERINE A. LATTIER Baltimore, Md, ELIZABETH LEARY SARAH ELIZABETH LEHMAN Rock Hall, Md. Williamsport, Pa. Eighty-fwo RUTH EVELYN LIBAUER q; B K Baltimore, Md. ERNESTINE M. LEITHEUSER MARGARET NAST LEWIS Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Eighty-three ; . ..V gang; Magi; MARTHA A. LINDSTEDT St. Louis. Mo. HELEN FRANCES LOWY RICKA LLOYD tuK Md Baltimore, N. J. , Newark Eighty-four SHIRLEY MAY MCLALLEN Teaneck, N. J. CATHERINE E. MCCARRON CLARA PATRICIA MCMAHON Pottsville, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Eighty-five am wage :5 .r ,Wib'? :5 ELLEN MICHELSON cp B K Baltimore, Md. MILDRED ROSE MEYER GWENDOLYN E. MATHANEY Meridian, Miss. Parkersburg, W. Va. Eighty-six GERTRUDE MILLARD Olympia, Wash. CATHERINE E. MILLER MARGARET MILLOY Butler, Pa. Erie, Pa. Eighty-seven NINA ELIZABETH MOORE Tower City, Pa. BFRTHA LYLIAN MITCHELL SARA WALKER MOORE New Bedford, Mass. Nashville, Tenn. Eighty-eight ELIZABETH Moss Birmingham, Ala. ANNA LOUISE MORRIS ELIZABETH C. MUELLER Baltimore, Md. Baltimore, Md. Eighty-m'ne SHIRLEY NEUBRAND Berea, Ohio ERMA G. MYERS ELIZABETH L. NAGLE Steelton, Pa. Northampton, Pa. N 127w t1; HAZEL ESTELLE OyNEAL Baltimore, Md. MARGARET HV NOECKER ALICE CRISPELL ONEN Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Battle Creek, Mich. Ninety-one BARBARA F. OVERHOLSER Reading, Pa. MARY ELIZABETH OSBORN DOROTHY G. PATTERSON Johnstown, Pa. Pittsburgh, Pa. Ninety-two LILLIAN CLAIRE PERRON Baltimore, Md. BARBARA PEARSON SOPHY MARIE PERRY Boston, Mass. Stirling, Ill. Ninety-th'ree DOROTHY G. PETERSON Jamestown, N Y. RUTH MARJORIE PORTER VIRGINIA POTTER Johnstown, Pa. Mount Washington, Md. Ninety-fom HANNAH M. W. POWELL Sharon, Pa. MIRIAM POTTs FRANCES ELLEN PRINGLE Baltimore. Md. Punxsutawney, Pa. Ninety-five MARY VALEDIA REED Steelton, Pa. MARGARET JANE PURDUM OLIVE S. RIKER Glyndon. Md. Tuxedo Park, N. Y. Ninety-sixz MARGARET J UNE ROBINSON $ B K Washington, D. C. EDNA B. RITTER MARGARET RODGERS Palmerton, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Ninety-seven Mer-ir ,, wry' gfoQQMJ-EQW e MARGARET DOROTHEA RUPLI Q B K Washington, D. C. THERESA S. ROSENTHAL MARTHA LINN RUTHERFORD Baltimore, Md. Paxtang. Pa. Ninety-eight MARY B. SCHADLER Elizabeth, N. J. LOUISE NAIRN SAMPSON LEAH ETHEL SCHILLER New Brunswick, N. J. Baltimore, Md. N inety-m'ne ELLEN DETWILER SCHOCK Marietta, Pa. SARA FRANCES SEAMAN MARY HUTCHINSON SEEM Scottdale, Pa. Greeley, Colo. One Hundred DOROTHY AXFORD SHIELDS qn B K Oil City, Pa. M. CATHERINE SHAW EMILY BREWSTER SHELDON Baltimore, Md. Philadelphia, Pa. One Hundred One MADELINE T. SKIRVEN Baltimore, Md MARY SLEMAN ELIZABETH L. SMITH Chevy Chase, MdA Wrightsville, Pa. One Hzmdred Two SERENA STEIN SMYSER York, Pa. NELLE K. SMITHERS EDITH FORD SOLLERS Memphis. Tenn. t? B K Baltimore, Md. One Hundred Three DOROTHY H. SPICKLER Chicago, Ill. ELEANOR G. SPEAR CLARA OWINGS SPILKER Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Baltimore, Md. One Hundred Four ALICE I. STANSBURY Wilson, Pa. GERTRUDE A. STAINTON HAZEL R. STEVENS Ocean City, N. J. Wilmington, Del. One Hundred Five GWENDOLYN D. SWINGLE Scranton, Pa. CATHERINE KENT STRATTON MARGARET CAMDEN T AYLOR Trenton, N J. Baltimore, Md. One Hundred Six EMILY VIRGINIA TIFFANY Warrenton, Va. MILDRED B. T IER ANNE T ROXELL Shamokin, Pa. Carmel, N. Y. One H mzdred S 91; en MARJORIE MEREDITH TRUITT Pelham, N. Y. MARY ALICE TRUITT ELIZABETH A. TUCKER Naperville, 111. New York, N. Y. One Hundred Eight KATHERINE WARDEN Mount Pleasant, Pa. ESTHER SUSANNE VARNER WAYNE WARDEN Johnstown, Pa. Louisville, Ky. Owe Hundred Nine CHARLOTTE H. WASKOWITZ Baltimore, Md. LOUISE WERTHEIMER EMALYN R. WEISS Baltimore, Md. Lebanon, Pa. One Hundred Ten ELIZABETH STEWART WISE Baltimore, Md. VIRGINIA OLIVE WILLIAMS ELLA KELROY WODE $ B K Baltimore. Md. Bradford, Pa. One Hundred Eleven ?;r WM; 6an 519?, f :5: ,4 BETSY WOOLLEN Chapel Hill, N. C. CELESTE LOUISE WOLFF RUTH WURZEL Ellicott City, Md. Philadelphia, Pa. One Hundred Twelve ROSALIE MARY YERKEs MIRIAM H. YOUNG Upper Darby, Pa. Baltimore, Md. One Hundred Thirteen Students Elected to P111 Beta Kappa RUTH VICTORIA BARKER EVELYN BELLE BROWN RUTH STEELE BUFFINGTON MARY PRISCILLA CHINN MAY REGINA COHN DOROTHY WILLIAMSON COOK HELEN MIRIAM COPLAN ETHEL ELIZABETH DEMUTH CAROLINE ANNE DENTON VIRGINIA ELIZABETH DILLON HAZEL FRANCES FOX FRIEDA FLORENCE FRIEDLANDER CLARA ERNESTINE CRETHER RUTH MILDRED LAFFERTY RUTH EVELYN LIBAUER HELEN FRANCES LOWY ELLEN MICHELSON MARGARET J UNE ROBINSON MARGARET DOROTHEA RUPLI DOROTHY AXFORD SHIELDS EDITH FORD SOLLERS VIRGINIA OLIVE WILLIAMS Senate PRESIDENT ROBERTSON DR. STIMSON DR. BACON MR. BALLINGER MR. BAKER MRS. BARRON DR. BARTON DR. BEARDSLEY DR. GRACE BEARDSLEY DR. BEATTY, JR. DR. BOWMAN DR. BRAUNLICH DR. BRINKLEY DR. BROOKES DR. BUSSEY MISS CHILD DR. CLELAND DR. EBELING MISS FALLEY DR. GALLAGHER DR. GODDARD DR. HAWES DR. HINTZE DRY HOPKINS DR. KELLEY DR. LEWIS DR. LLOYD DR. LONN DR. LONGLEY MISS MCGINNIS DR. MILLER DR. NITCHIE MISS OTTO MME. SEIBERT DR. TORREY DR. WHALER MISS WHILDIN One Hundred Fifteen THE REST OF US DIDN'T MAKE PHI BETE. JUNIORS . CLELAND RALPH E DR 1An XAPpreciatiOII HEN we were very young and our plastic minds were entertaining W those constantly-recalled first impressions of college, standing out in vividness above even our awe of seniors and our terror of examina- tions in vocal music was the story of a young professor who followed a flower all the way to Germany and became famous thereby. HA poet, said we to ourselves, for science was a closed book to us and Evening Primrose was only a lovely name. Then there was a lecture and we learned what a flower can mean in the study of life and, more amazing still, that the Hpoet was a promi- nent young biologist who raised that flower by acres on Goucher's country seat at Towson. Several months later the most important class meeting of the year was held, the momentous decision made and an emphatic injunction of secrecy laid upon us, For the next few weeks we succeeded in looking fairly mysterious and non- committal: February came and with it Sing Song and the triumph of presenting to the college Dr. and Mrs. Cleland as honorary members of 32. Dr. Cleland is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and, we say it with heads held high, a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Mrs. Cleland graduated from .Mt. Holyoke College and received her Masters degree there. She was mar- ried to Dr. Cleland in 1927. In January, 1930, the youngest member of the class of ,32 was recruited. William Wallace Cleland won his class numerals at the tender age of seven months when. like an infant Hercules, he stood upright and laughed gleefully to think of all the records he was breaking. DriCleland has been widely recognized in the held of biology for his work in regafd to the peculiar chromosome behavior found in the evening primrose. It seems tliat. the flower does not conform to the Mendelian laws of inheritance. and that-there is atjtpossr of finding this unusual type of inheritance in many other organisms. The ?Iefits of the applied laws of Mendel are well known. The great possibilities his somewhat similar field are obvious. Dr. Cleland has made significant distoveries regarding the physical basis of inheritance in the evening primrose. Our pride in Dr. Cleland's work is great, though it is still a reverenced mystery to many of us: our joy in his friendship is greater for it has been a splendid revelation to all of us. During these three years we have found in Dr. and Mrs. Cleland the wisest of counsellors and the most loyal of friends. They have rejoiced with us in our triumphs, occasionally athletic, and borne with us in our defeats, largely musical. The class of 32 wishes to express its appreciation for the unfailing interest and guidance of Ralph E. Cleland and Elizabeth Cleland and its joy in the knowledge that they are members of 32 TiThroughout all Etern-i-tee! One Hundred Twenty-one BILLY CLELAND THE CLASS OF 1932 One Hu mired Twenty-tw I Junior Class Ogicers RUTH NEAL .................................................................................... President NANCY CONKLYN ...................................................................... Vice-Presz'denz ELIZABETH WRIGHT ......................................................................... Secretary HARRIET MCKEE ............................................................................ Treasurer IONE SHAFFER ................................................................... Recorder of Points J EANNE GIDDING .............................................................. Sergeant at Arms MARION ROBINSON ............................................................... Sergeant at Arms One Hundred Twenty-three SOPHOMORES DR. CLINTON IVAN WINSLOW Honorary Member of 1933 THE CLASS OF 1933 One Hundred Twenty-siao Sophomore Class Ogicers ADELAIDE FORBUSl-I .......................................................................... President LOUISE HUTZLER ...................................................................... Vice-President MARGARET BRYAN ............................................................................ Secretary RUTH HENDERSON ............................................................................ T reasurer KATHERINE ABELL .............................................................. Recorder of Points MARGARET KUNKEL .......................................................... Sergeant at Arms ELIZABETH MILLER ............................................................. Sergeant at Arms One Hundred Twenty-seven FRESHMEN Honorary MQINkQFS SOUS Now that we're here We'll sing out a cheer To the Robertsons! Our red and white Welll pledge with their mz'ghte The Robertsonsl Thirty Four will raise a song to you, For you will be our friends so true Leading us on to higher ideals. oh Robertsons. In Gaucher none can equal you. Never shall we say die And all the college shall know why For loyal and true Wehll all be to youe Forever. THE CLASS OF 1934 One H undred T hirty FFQSINHQII Ciass OHiCQFS ELLEN B. ALPIGINI ......................................................................... President JANE PORTER , ................................................ Vice-President EDNA V. STOVER ................ : ............................................................ Secretary FRANCES IDE .................................................................................. Treasurer DORIS MUSSON ................................................................. Recorder of Points HARRIETT SALINGER ........................................................... Sergeant at Arms MARY ELINOR BATSON .............................. . .................... Sergeant at Arms One Hundred Thirty-mze Metamorphic Meloclrama SCENE I: A FRESHMAN ROOM AT THE BEGINNING OF THE YEAR. MAY. I'm so thrilled! College at last! tSighs estaticallyj JUNE. It's all so inspiring. I just know we are going to love every bit of it. IsnIt our room adorable? MAY. Darling. Especially now that we have the drapes and pillows and things - - - and those little rag rugs! I wouldn't want a large carpet, would you? JUNE. This is so artistic. tThey gaze enraptured into each others eyesj Ilm so glad you are my roommate, honey. MAY. So am I, dear. I IA Senior pokes her head in the doorJ JUNE tJumping upj Wonlt you come in? MAY. tHurriedly opening box of candyj Do have some candy. tShe smiles shyly and runs eagerly to the doorJ SENIOR tTaking biggest piecej No, I really cant come in. I must get dressed. JUNE. Oh, do you have a date? SENIOR. tManaging to look blasej Certainly. MAY. tObUiously awedj Oh! How divinel Aren't you excited? SENIOR. tYawningJ Not particularly. tWithdraws head and leaves the flustered freshz'esj JUNE. IsnIt she the sweetest thing? And so sophisticated! AIAY. And a date? Wouldn't it be nice to know some men? JUNE. But there will be just loads to do! Spirit parties all this week-- and later on basketball gameseande MAY. Of course! Basketball. I can hardly wait for them. And the plays and lectures! JUNE. Yes, and we go formal to some of them. I do so want to wear my new evening dress. Mother got it Ispecially for school. MAY. Goodness! It's eleven-thirty. How will we ever get up for classes? SCENE II: THE SAME ROOMeEVENINGeLATER IN FRESHMAN YEAR. May and June are Dressing. Maid Raps on Door. JUNE. Umpatt'enllyj Come in. MAID. Telephone for Miss June. JUNE. May, for heavenIs sake, take it for me will you? If its that Lee boy, tell him IIm in the Innrmaryegoneeanythingl MAY. Run your own errands, babe. Jack is downstairs now and I donlt want to keep him waiting more than fifteen minutes. JUNE. What an accommodation you turned out to be! Someone must have had a grudge against me when they put me with you! MAID. What shall I tell the gentleman? One Hundred Thirty-thxree JUNE. I'm not here! tMaz'd goes out and another rap is heard on the doorfi MAY. tExasperatedJ Comein. tGirl comes in with ticketsj Well, what do you want? GIRL. Would you like to buy a ticket for the play? It's next weeke Friday and Sature JUNE. Sorry, booked solid. AJAY. Not interested and broke tGirl leaves and Senior walks inJ SENIOR. If youid clear a few things off the chair I might be able to sit down. MAY. Whats the matter with the floor or the radiator? SENIOR. Ugnoring the questz'onj Going out again? The freshman- junior championship basketball game is tonight. JUNE. Really? MAY. Isnit it enough to put on gym bloomers three times a week with- out spending one's evening romping about like a barbarian? tSenl'or spies candy which June has been attempting to hide with a pillow, and after taking several pieces, leavesj JUNE. She's sharper than a cat! Three pieces left! One Hundred Thirty-four Skidbladnir is best of ships. It is so great that all the Aesir may man it, with their weapons and armaments, and it has a favoring wind as soon as the sail is hoisted, withersoever it is bound. -from The Prose Edda. ORGANIZATIONS Students Organization OHicers VIRGINIA DILLON .......................................................................... President BETSY WOOLLEN .................................................................... Vice-President MARY PHILLIPS WOOLVERTON ......................................................... Treasurer MARY HALL HAMILTON... ............................................ Recorder of Points JANE PORTER,.. ........................................... Freshman Member ELIZABETH WISE ,. , . , , . ....... College Spirit Chairman NANCY CONKLYN ..................................................... Chairman of Advisers HALL PRESIDENTS ALICE ONEN MARY E. BOYD MARY REED ESTHER VARNER MARY ALICE TRUITT MARGARET MILLOY KITTY KILMER GWEN MATHENY EMALYN WEISS LUCY COONS HANNAH POWELL FRANCES HARDISON ANN T ROXELL VIRGINIA WILLIAMS One Hundred Thirty-eight Goucher College Christian Association RUTH BUFFINGTON ........................................................................ President VIRGINIA WILLIAMS ............................................................... Vice-Presz'dent BETTY JOHNS ............................................................................... Treasurer FLORENCE ALEXANDER ................................................. Recording Secretary SARA PHILLIPS ...................................................... Corresponding Secretary MAY BALDWIN ................................................................. Social Chairman EDNA RITTER .......................................................... Social Service Chairman MARY HALL HAMILTON ...................................................... Fireside Chairman MARY SCHADLER ................................................................ Vesper Chairman ANNE WOODARD .............................................................. Publicity Chairman BETH ALDERMAN ........................................ United Campaign Fund Chairman IDA B. LYNCH .................................................................... Freshman Member CAROLYN JONES ................................................................ City Girl Member One H u ndred Thia'ty-m'ne Athletic Association ELIZABETH MUELLER ................................................................... President RUTH BAIRD .................................................................. .Fz'rst Vice-President ELIZABETH GATCHELL 1st Semester .......................... Second Vice-Presidem MADELINE SKIRVEN 2nd Semester .............................. Second Vice-Presidenr VIRGINIA UNDERHILL;lst Semester .. .......... . ..Secretary Treasurer CAROLYN JONES 2nd Semester ................................. . ..Secretary-Treasurer MARJORIE HEITKAMP ......................................................... Senior Member AMY HAYWARD . ....................................................... V Senior Member KATHARINE STIMSON, , ............................... , , Junior Member WINIFRED PRIOR, ..................................................... Junior Member MARGARET BRYAN ........................................................ Sophomore Member FRANCES IDE ..................................................................... Freshman Member ELSA KINGMAN ...................................................................... Member at Large BETTY KIRBY-SMITH ....................................................... Member at Large MARY COOK lst Semester ........ V V. ............... Member at Large MARY FREBURGER 2nd Semester . ............................ Member at Large ELIZABETH WISE 1st Semester . ........................ College Spirit Chairman NELLE SMITHER-an Semester ................................ College Spirit Chairman One Hundred Forty Dehating HIS year the Goucher College Debating Society has extended its program considerably and has shown a marked development both in its increased intercollegiate contacts and in the added interest shown by the student body at large. The society has completed its third season undefeated. This was largely accomplished through the untiring efforts of our coach, Miss Ruth Child. and we take this opportunity to express to her our appreciation. The initial encounter was held in Novembereour hrst international debate. Our opponents were Mr. Wilson of St. Andrew's, Edinburgh, and Mr. MacCor- mick of the University of Glasgow. Dorothy Cook and Betty Johns represented Goucher. The keen Wit of the Scotsmen, to say nothing of their appearance in native kilts, delighted the audience. They argued the question affirmatively. Early in December a team debated the New Jersey College for Women on the same subject. This time the ahirmative side of Resolved that the principles of Nationalism afford the best basis for the organization of world society was taken by Thelma Tharp and Betty Johns. They were most hospitably entertained at the college. March 12th marked our second annual encounter with Princeton Univer- sity. The subject on this occasion was Resolved that Chain Stores are detri- mental to the best interests of the American people. The Oregon or Jury sys- tem of debating was used, in which a cross-examination of each side takes place. Goucher was represented on the aflirmative by two freshmen, Laulette Irvin and Harriett Salinger. Their success is most encouraging and we hope for new talent and an enlarged field for the relatively youthful but successful extraecurri- cular activity at Goucher. One Hundred Forty-one Choir HE most convincing evidence that Christmas is in the omng is the lovely and impressive Carol Service which comes each year just before vacation. All the musical organizations of the College unite in presenting a song festi- val of sacred music, a glorious prelude to the Christmastide. This year Mrs. Low was unable to direct, and it was a glowing tribute to her training that in her absence Virginia Dillon directed the entire program, singing several num- bers of her own as well. After the solemn candIe-lit recessional the members of the Carol Choir were entertained at the home of President and Mrs. Robertson. The choir had the privilegeeone which we hope will be more widely bestowed in the futuree- of hearing President Robertson sing playing his own accompaniment. Supper followed with steaming mince pies and other Christmas goodies, and the choir felt amply rewarded for long hours spent in training. One Hundred Forty-twa Glee ClUlD OUCHER Glee Club has waxed, in its existence, from a few hopeful warblers to a compact group; and such pleasant performances as a Christmas Vespers and a Hansel and Gretel attest its success. Even the uninitiate can suggest one very important reason, for all associate Mrs. Henrietta Low with music, open mouths and ahys. Mrs. Low has devoted initiative and guidance to all things musical at Goucher, and especially to Glee Club. Mr. Ender is another person to whom Glee Club owes much, in his capacity as organist and musical adviser. As this goes to press, Glee Club is anticipating its spring concert, Which will be something of a variation in its usual performances. In accordance With increasing collegiate sophistication, it will substitute a recital for the usual oper- etta. Three sections are planned; choruses and songs from some of the old masters, a group of charming English madrigals, and a group of seventeenth and eighteenth century English songs. One Hundred F07'ty-th1'ee Siiver Bay Delegates FLORENCE ALEXANDER ................................. Christian Association RUTH BUFFINGTON .................................................... Christian Association HENRIETTA BAKER ....................................................... .Glee Club VIRGINIA DILLON ......................................................... Student Organization FRANCES NIXDORFF ....................................................... Athletic Association RUTH BAIRD ..................................................................... Athletic Association DOLLY GREIG .......................................................................... Class of 31 ADELAIDE FORBUSH ................................................................. Class of 33 VIRGINIA POTTER ....................................................... Delegate at Large BEATRICE BERGER ,. , .H , A. . ,Delegate at Large BETTYBING.,, ....................... ... ....... Delegate at Large One Hmzdred Forty-fom' PUBLICATIONS Donnybrook Fair EDITORIAL STAFF RUTH SIEBEN-MORGEN .......................................................... Editor-in-Chief MARY PHILLIPS WOOLVERTON ......................................... Literary Editor KATHERINE SCOTT ............................................... Assistant Literary Editor RHODA BLOSSOM ........................................................................... Art Editor RUTH BARNETTE .............................................................. Assistant Art Editor GLORIA THAMES ................................................................... Picture Editor EVELYN SELF ............................................................. Assistant Picture Editor MATILDA MCLESTER ............................................... Assistant Picture Editor DOROTHY KELLEY ........................................................ Assistant Picture Editor NANCY CONKLYN ..................................................................... Feature Editor MARGARET BOWERS ...................................................... Class and Club Editor MARY ELLEN HERMETET ................................ Assistant Class and Club Editor MILDRED ROME ....................................................................... Athletic Editor SARAH MAY CABLE .......................................................................... Typist BUSINESS STAFF KATHARINE STIMSON .......................................................... Business Manager ANNE WOODARD ................................. Subscription and Circulation Manager FRANCES ORT ................................................................. Advertising Manager ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS WINIFRED PRIOR EVELYN GIBSON MARGARET ULERY BETH ALDERMAN RUTH NEAL GRACE ROBERTS MIRIAM FLEXNER ' CATHERINE MCLAIN BETTY JOHNS FLORETTE VISANSKA HENRIETTA JACKSON MATHILDA MYLANDER DOROTHY KINCADE One H undred Forty-siac Kalengls Eclitorial Boarol JEANNE GIDDING .................................................................. Editor-z'n-Chz'ef RACHEL PARKER .. ...... , . .. ................................ . ............. Art Editor FRANCES HARDISON ............................................................. Exchange Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS KATHERINE SCOTT JANE COKER SARA MARGARET BOWERS SARAH USHER JEAN DODDS VICTORIA HERMAN LYDIA GOLDBLATT ISABEL KOCH One Hundred Forty-se'ven 46262 vap ' 2' 0 mm mm 0 p15, 2 222 H 2 KELIL p ' :12: 0f 25;: ADDQSH J0 WK 2 $1312? 5, 56541157,; x r 9441 6.3 8422.0 f. 0, W220. Me calla: .2 122222242, 12 42, 3222.22 :12 .22 Hus 42222 inn L -n 212 66$, 22:42'224 242 2342226 2222 b . 'Un unmet answer- 0 f. 1:; 2V2 ,5 49$ -. 22 41242222224225 12c VUFEL 0C6Erl lafllslgm 27-Day 301.363 g 9 wanna 2220 U 2222422 ' CU ED! '01; ,0 , Q 2?, '2224 22f 22 ' em 4223. them 22: man 352's lofpea ticizmk gyxcs 39$ QJ$ ,4 ks L' 22242 Arte .221 224, 22M 2:2 0f 1110 NM 222122412210... 18:1; Ce 232M. 2222 212L 22436 v w LQQ 20 223.12 0X3 onuwirlt'ar L ' 24.. 2222' imrmmzah ARMAME pmximi 2fi.2444mu'2 $$ ' 1295 . 2442i2c2'1523n;H06key Camp A! 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Editor-in-Chief BOARD OF EDITORS KATHARINE SCOTT MARY GIMBER MARION ROBINSON GERTRUDE SHERBY OLGA CALL REPORTERS MARY SCHADLER PHYLLIS SCHAAF LILLIAN HOPE CAROLINE DENTON PATRICIA BONSALL EDNA WIEST IRENE HOPKINS FANNY THOMS FREDA BRONNE MARY FREBURGER ELEANOR FRY KATHARYN ROGERS DOROTHY MCCANNE ART EDITORS ALICE PERRINE RACHEL PARKER One Hundred Forty-m'ne KaIQnJS:WeeHy Business Boarcl KATHERINE FLAGG ............................................................... Business Manager FRANCES PRINGLE ........................................................... Advertising Manager FRANCES HARDISON ................................................... Circulation Manager CIRCULATION AND ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS BEATRICE SPIRO BETTY EDMUNDSON VERA RIEFKIN DOROTHY KLOPP MARGARET BUTTON MARJORIE FRANKENSTEIN FLORENCE VISANSKA HARRIETT SALINGER MIRIAM FLEXNER ANNA PETHERSKY BEATRICE MAGILL LOIS ASENDORF JOE MARX One H undred Fifty PFQSS Boarcl MARGARET FRANK ............................................ President DOROTHY COOK .. ........................................ Vz'ce-Presz'denr JUNE ROBINSON ............................. . ...................... Secretary One Hundred Fifty-one -x pv-xm; Reaching from heaven Down to the earth-land Yet must be broken. When sons of MuSpeH Harrying farth there Cross the great circle, . Deeds will be dating, Moments of import. , Among the Famous ancl Fair ci 311 Virginia Potter erger ice B Beatr Virginia Dillon Elsa Kinsman AAary lMargaret C7OYC1C'II Emily Timmy Betsy Woollen LITERARY Follow Sottly Follow softly. Here is sleeping One who dares to dream relief. Follow softly He would waken At the stirring of a leaf. Follow softly. No we dare 7701. None should rouse him to his pain Save the hand whose touch might lift him To renewing joy again. So gently after. Lightly, slowly. Only he should dare the waking Who is solace for the grief. Lightly, tsoftly, He must sleep. MARGARET FRANK, '31. $77---- ...... - TFQQS Steel vet'ned Star cut branches, Mould the air around Your long-loopea' curves, Let the wind hammered by Your slow-mouthed words Bring the pain and joy Of men to you So that people touching you M ay see. KATHERINE SAPPINGTON. '33. One Htm dred Six ty-fou r Camiiola poised on the steps of Goucher Hallanowers blossomed at her shoulder, her dress glowed white, phosphorescent in the duskaand here, said the world stretching forth its hand, here, said the world composed at the moment tfor it was Step Singingl of dons, imported family, the curious of the neighborhood, here, said the world, is Youth combined with Intellect. Or so, Candida. taking an attitude in the archway, thought the comment might pos- sibly run. On this important occasion, a thousand conflicting moods seized her. At one moment it seemed that she was emerging from prison, that she was seeking high adventure, that roads stretched, hands beckoned, gates opened and banners waved-in fact, all the cliches Commencement orators are accustomed to enunci- ate. At other times she perceived, more clearly, that she was about to teach Eng- lish and History in the high school of Honkeytown, New York. At still others she called to mind one Christopher Annis and pondered the meaning of certain words, glances, abstractions, and a note slipped into an orchid corsage. But as she descended the steps, still pondering these matters, something else seemed to light in her mind. The future rolled up its stuEs, presented for inspec- tion; the past spread a trinket and a ribbon. For now she stood on the grass; the smell of wet dust arose: songs bummed in her head and the light, the air. All had happened before, had wound, in the most curious way, about scenes and moods and incidents. And so, in the moment that she set foot to the grass, a thousand memories burst upon her mind at once. Of which most flut- tered coat tails and departed, one or two remained for a glance. C ANDIDA had reached twenty-one and an A. B. at last. She stood THE NOVITIATE She saw herself walking along a certain street, on the day that college had been the adventure. And even the air was different at that time, was gold and clear and faintly chill like a drink. She moved onward remarking, USO this is college, college, and in fact, little else could be seen for some blocks. College lined the streets and spilled into the alleys. College spread a gray portal, halted traflic, pampered drug stores, sprinkled wenches in bright jackets on the Balti- more street. All was charming and amazing to Candida But as she paused on the threshold of life and Goucher Hall, the door swung open with a ponderous groan. Shoulders jostled; voices hummed: a wave bore her within. And the day, the day of days, HUp the steps, cried a voiceathe day of registration had begun. ASPECTS OF MATTER In the new part of the world in which Candida found herself, not all aspects of matter were lovely. Certain things might well trouble the critical One Hundred Sixty-jive eye, as Candida's bureau and Vingolfis weathervane, cigarette posters and Balti- more pavement and square, yellow, loaflike Baltimore trolley. But one thing cheered the heart of the aesthete-the skyline of Goucher as one moved along Twenty-fourth. An artist had massed it, the tall shape and the low; a sure hand had cut its edges. And Candida was forever creeping up on it and sur- prising it in new lights and unexpected aspects. At a certain hour of the dusk, the church lights were gold; 3 light snow had fallen; the spire and low roof appeared cut from metal foil and laid against the sky. Then again it was spring, and the property of the sunlight was to make all matter appear more translucent. The trees and shrubs of Bennett lawn became puffs and wisps of light: and from the edges of the tennis courts, tall green flames arose, as from the burning of some mineral. Then once, at two minutes to twelve on a foggy night, Candida went scuttling past. She happened to glance from a corner of her eye; she stopped. Here was a Poeelike atmosphere. Bennett court swam in mists: trees hung drenched dark hair; edges were refracted and strange gold globular fruitsestreet- lampseglowed at intervals through the fog. Candida composed a Poe-esque poem on the moment; subsequently was campused. THE TRIO They who have shared combs and dimes and mascara, Who have viewed each other sans lipstick, sans garb, who have brushed teeth in concert, imbibed cokes, denounced meat loaf, they know a strange intimacy. In Candida's wing chance scattered a handful, the grave and the gay, the me'chant and the gentle, and at night in a tangle of vivid pajamas, they lay on chair and on table and discussed men. . . .discussed matter. . . .The light played on the curve of a cheek and the crook of a limb, Candidays brassiere draped over a chair and the snapshot arcade of the lookingyglass. Three especially were always there. Candidals three musketeers, Porthos, Athos, and Aramis. They demonstrated the versatility of the chromosome. Porthos came from the west. She was long, sturdy, and tanned. Her strong fingers were made to handle a trowel, to lay a home, to spank ten children, like her grandmother before her. Aramis came from the south. She was small, delicately carved-lips, throat, hands, earseshe was made to delight the sense, within gossamer and silk, like her grandmother before her. And Athos? She came from New England. Her grandfather smoked a pipe in a room lined with old volumes; there he was accustomed to meditate. Or again, in the sunlight, forgetting his hat, he strolled the lanes of New Eng- land, still meditating. Of such contemplation Athos was born, the mature, the dreamy, the ironic. Candida had met many of Porthos and Aramis; they built the world and adorned it. Once or twice in a life she discovered an Athos, created to give it meaning. One H zmdred Sixty-sicc S'rkiim SCENES Memories of the library were lacking in glamour. but assuredly Candida had many. There was the Freshman History room and the talkative family that Hourished without its window. From wars in the abstract and Robinson's Readings one emerged to contention concrete: between Dicky and Tommy tif such were their namesy ; between Tommy and Mamma. Other rooms were connected with headaches and moans. Save the English. She sat always in one pIace. Her proboscis on one chair, her feet on another, she looked forth from the window down Calvert. Then Candida had occasion to observe how fresh, quaint, and delightful small bits of life become when viewed from the wrong side of a cage. A negro passed by at a Ioping gait: his advent and exit were fascinating, An old woman bore a mangy dog on a leash: her hair was discolored; her hat black and purple: nevertheless this too had its charms. But the most enviable manifestations of life were four little girls of the neighborhood. Sometimes they played high-andeseek. tapwoneback, with an air of great hustle and intrigue Sometimes. hair flying. skirts swinging. and shout ing, they skated back and forth in the dusk. The light drew away down a vista of small steps. the habitations of the weary. And Candida thought how these leaping things would become teachers and typists and maters and spinsters and old women With dogs on leashes Life, thought Candida. . . .so for an hour. A . .so for two hours, for three hours. Till some one at her elbow slammed a book, scraped a chair, in a series of small explosions Lights Hashed on and off; a bell rang distinctly: HTen minutes to tenf' said a voice. Then Candida departed with portions of library balanced between stomach and chin. bought a quart of black coffee, some midnight oil. and ignited the last with a Hourish. YOUTH AND AGE: PART I Candida had met the Chesapeake before, and decided it was greenish and smelt vilely. Boatride, however, revealed its purpose; boatride, climax of her freshman year, for she took Joyce, the deep-browed, the lovely. Long afterward a picture kept its shape for Candida that boatride had left in her mind. She saw, of course, the going in the sunlight: and the landing and the play and a merry-go-round andeshe seemed to remembera-a penny arcade. But the pleasantest part came at dusk. They sat in a corner of the prow of the boat, Candida's particular troop. They had taken informal and rakish attitudes, one perched on a railingt one sprawled on three chairs. Candida high on the roof of the stair, half-capsizing and reverting at intervals. Joyce lay at her feet and looked forth across the bay with a sad and meditative glance. 'And this is the part Candida remembEred. She saw them all, with their practical air, rouge. smudged. berets tilted, arms and legs at queer angles She saw the way the light drew over the bay, and the city was four smoke stacks One Hundred Sixtyaseven and a ruby. And all. to the Candida who sat on the bulwark, possessed intoxiu cation, humor and beauty. But the point of the picture was Joyce. She lay, dimly seen. in the dark below Candida; she did not move or laugh or exclaim. A light scarf drew the hair from the oval forehead; her eyes looked sadly over the bay. Candida was thrilled at her gentle mystery. She tried in vain to divine her thoughts. Was she thinking of her Man, far away in the west, with this air of gentle sorrow? Was she pondering Old Friendship, Philosophy, or Beauty? Candida could never decide. YOUTH AND AGE: PART 11 But years later, a Senior, escorted by an eager scrubby Freshman, Candida leaned back in her deck chair. She was tired, hot and dusty, she said to herself: home to bed-maheher freshmanethe energy of the child. . . .Candida gave a start in the dark. For as she yawned and subsided and counted lights on the shore, she had thought again of the sorrows of Joyce. Perhapsecould it be?-Candida stifled a yawne-could it be that she had been-bored? IiPILOGUIi But as Candida was about to disentangle another memory, voices cried her name jubilantly from the rear. She stood once more on the lawn of Goucher Hall, august, white-clad, Candida, A. B. She turned, discovering pater and mater and small segments of familiast And lolebehind them, a long, hand- some young man. They moved across the grass. discoursing in concert. an unstable planetary system. Presently the system dwindled strangely. 1n gray Baltimore dusk were seen strolling up the street-Candida and Another. KATHARINE SCOTT, t3 2. 4e-.-. , In the Literary Dusty plate. VVherein lie the doors of romance. Where kings are crowned To the hissing fanfare Of ever turning pages. I wonder If royalty isnhl more comfortable Under the heauy-liddea' eyes of sleepy students Than under the eyes of its subjects. PATRICIA BONSALL. 34. One Hundred Sixly-eight IAX whhy IlOlC 1's 300A to put away in All my life I have kept cubby holes, Little places to stow away in And then forget the things I put Ihere. My first one like a dogls Was underground But what I hid there I can't remember. The next one was on a pigpen roof Where half the tar paper had blown off Leaving space to hide small perfect things I had loved And wished to hide away. Later on I found another In a scooped out piece of marble Whose surface had been pebbled By hailballs and the rain. This was a warm hiding place Despite the coldness of Ihe stone For the sunlight flew in Circles over it Blurring the young secrets Stored away in its hardness My last one was a failure. It was in a garden. A surprising place at nighl, Muffled on all four sides By dark green hedges Against which tulips cupped their petals, Pale with the disembodied whiteness Of mistletoe berries. I should have known A hedge could be broken through. KA'I'JILZRINI'Z SAPPINGI'QN, '33. -7, as, 0 -. .., a Dissolution I wondered at a strip of land Slowly scraped by a blade of sea And thought will that thin lip of sand Dissolve eventually? KATHERINE SAPPINGTON, 33. One Hundred Sixty-nirw CIOUCiIQIJS NOFSC Nomenciature OR WHATS IN A NAME? abundantly supplied to the incoming student. but on one subject she is left deplorably unenlightened. The problem of the names of Goucher dormitories defies solution by conjecture and in vain she wonders if the balls were christened by an acrostic devotee or a Jabberwocker, or if there really existed, in some dim past, a certain Mr. Sessrymner or Mrs. Folkvang who con- tributed appreciably to the material welfare of the college. Even after she has become an initiate in the ways of Goucher College and knows rather vaguely that the strange names are HNorse, she continues to wonder mildly. Realizing the general ignorance on the matter, we have uncovered a few of the historical facts surrounding the naming of Goucher buildings. When the first residence halls for the VJomen's College of Baltimore were built, they were provided with blank name plates. On these tablets were to be inscribed the names of those benefactors who desired to contribute one hundred thousand dollars to the endowment fund for that privilege, In the meantime. the halls were designated A, B, C and D. Alfheim. which is now the library, was called House A. Glitner was House B, Fensal House C, and Vingolf House D. From past issues of Kalends we learn that HThe girls of House D gave a cotillion. Twenty couples went through the nguresf, and that HHouse D enter- tained House B and C at a two-act farce called Mr. Bobfi Donnybrook for 1899 contains the following verse: Ii: URING the summer preceding freshman year informative literature is UH is for large, lettered House With a place for a name on a stone, Where a dinner with herbs With contentment oft serves, And stalled ox's left severely alone. It seems that even in 1899 they believed in spinach for expanding intellects. But is became evident that the halls were deserving of real nameseand no benefactors had appeared. Dr. Joseph Shafloe, who was head of the romance languages department. suggested several plans, among them one based upon Norse mythology, which was subsequently adopted. One of the arguments in its favor was the fact that this system had never been used previously And so far as we are aware, it remains peculiar to Goucher. The names which were selected center about Freyja, the goddess of beauty and youthful love. Another name for her was Mardal; the hall which bears the name is flattered with initial honor. At the feasts of the gods, she poured the ale; and she received into her palace, which was called Folkvang, all faithful lovers who had come to live with the gods. Sessrymner, uthe many-seated was one of the halls in this palace. One Hundred Seventy Folkvang was built in Vanaheim, which was the iirst stratum of heaven, for Freyja 0r Mardal was the daughter of the king of the Vans or water godsi Midgard, che liat disc of the earth, lay just beneath. When the earth was fashioned by the gods, they slew the old giant Ymir and raised his brows as a citadelewhich they called Midgardwagainst the other giants. Above Vana- heim was Alfheirn, or fairyland, the home of the Light Elves which the gods gave as a gift to Odin. Beyond Alfheim was highest heaven where Valhal stood, Brave warriors were received into this hall, where they lived in bliss forever afterward, feasting. competing and drinking the ale that Freyja poured. Odin presided over Valhal, and his wife Frigg over Fensal. Of all the goddesses, she Wis the foremost: she has that estate which is called Fensalir, and it is most glorious. The other goddesses lived in Vingolf, a hall meaning Hblissful floor.' HThat was a shrine which the goddesses had, and it was a very fair house; men call it Vingolf. Snorri Sturluson gives this version of 2325 North Charles Street in the Prose Edda: HAt the southern end of heaven is that hall which is fairest of all, and brighter than the sun; it is called Gimle. It shall stand when both heaven and earth have departed; and good men and of righteous conversation shall dwell therein: so it is said in Voluspa: 7 A ball I know standing than the sun fairer, Thatched with gold in Gimle bright; There shall dwell the doers of righteousness And ever and ever enjoy delight. But roofs of precious metals were not limited to Gimle. Glitnir, whose very name means Hglitteringfl was not to be outdone. And as the gods explained to the inquisitive mortal, Gangleri: HForseti is the name of the son of Baldr: he has that ball in heaven which is called Glitnir. All that come to him With such quarrels as arise out of law-suits. all these return thence reconciled. That is the best seat of judgment among gods and men; thus it is said here: A hall is called Glitnir, With gold 'tis pillared, And with silver thatched the same; There Forseti hides the full day through, And puts to sleep all suitsfl Thrudheim was the abode of Thor. It is traced back to the ancient land of Thrace. near uTurkland or Troyl Here Thor was reared until at the age of twelve, he slew his benefactor and took the realm into his own hands. Unfortunately the last residence halls added to the campus have been called by more prosaic names. We wonder if this is not a high-handed oversight of the delicate compliment lVlr. Shafloe intended when he wove the hall names about the iigure of the most gentle born of the goddesses. VIRGINIA MONTGOMERY, 32. One H undred Se venty-one hx Qeottagc Oh little house with wrinkled stucco forehead And twinkling eyes, bright diamond-paned, Who owns you now? Do they still train the honey suckle vine Across your porch on trellised grocery string? Against your western wall in spring Are there still neat flower beds. Each tiny trench marked proudly by its banner Of empty seed packet inverted on a stick? iThus one knows quite what to expectJ And oh. the peach trees in the yard! Do those you shelter now Still foolishly break all lhc branches W'hen firs! fluffy pink envelopes the trees Like a sunset cloud which fell from heaven And tangled in their branches? Or do they wait and pickle the peaches. Or brew brandy perhapsfethat being A more adequate stimulant than blossoms, D0 little feet still track in mud on rainy days And dirty little hands still leave the dear impress On quaintly flowered walls? Lonely little house, Two of those small hands are large, Rough and restless, but often dirty too, Though with a grayer dirl; The other Iwo are waxen while And quiet forum: Only you and I remcmbcl: E 1'. Be, '34. Unr' Hundred Sci'tililllftzlir; Dark Xthsic It is not quite the same this year For someone let the twilight in: A blue light hlls one chapel arch Not curtained as it's always been. Iths up this slanting beam of dusk That gloom has gone, and lonely-heart-- They fled the organ shafts of sound. The arrow grave, staccato dart. No sudden dark, the peace descends Like all this blessed music here In rhythm as the blue Sifts in. As twilight, so the song this year. R. S. MA, '32. XXGittcn at Christmas Vespers Peace is not passive It comes struggling Triumphantly from depths Of tortured souls. I ts measures throb Approaching And receding Leave delicacy In fragmentary 51mins Seeming fragilem- Being strong. MARION ROBINSON, '3 2. One Hundred Seventy-threc I Was so AAucIl IquscH I was so much myself. alone. apart Inside this steady arsenal of mine. And there was never one who came beyond The cold barred gate and blazoned entry sign. I sat content to feel a tepid sun Which filtered through a jagged grey-stone wall, To hail in cheer the passing saunterers Hearing reply and caring not at all. Perhaps it was your firm approaching step -And yet you had the air of one not bold- That back the gates swung at your static touch And I ran full into your ruthless hold. But I. now lying broken in your train Care not but that the gates be closed again. MARION ROBINSON, '32t Luuahy Sleep, round and hollow like a cup Sleep, white and soft, that covers up Your head, and causes it to drop Deep, muddled t0 the top. In thick, cool slumber, Gold and amber. Sleep, nodding, drooping, lost it seems. Old witch, all-knowing, dreaming dreams That turn and drift in endless roll. Weak, melting, slow to toll The silken, quiet Sound of slumber, Gold and umber e Sleep. MARTHA LINDSTEDT. '3 1. One Hundred Seventy-four THE YEAR k, D: m :6 n, m, 0 V2, m w 6 p Garden Pariyf 44,132th , ' , 5m; Chapex War Once - 5amer Drerented the facuitq At fno' of Up a Trey Femman, Week Between the Halveyf, ' ' On the Eldekhes Chonnes For We Are? 522mm: Home Skew- i , , ,3 ; Fireside Madame De Bum? Dr Marjorie Mbolson Peception phi Beta: kppa Addrerr Abo- Pans , 2323 ' pPresidenf Robeffson presens honorary ,degkrees Horencey Pena Sabin, Uzeife Woodworm Reese 0n Wnifred C1316 Cullis.-r Cour??3'v m lmamwarml Newstwl Wanna lnaugural C srem om'es Robin Hood W : Maids of X No I'fl'ngbam Elizabem Bum? - '; ,0 Edifh Jeanm'sson Senior Chairman Junior Chairman DRAMATICS Brynhi1dr abode on Hinda-Fell, and about her hall there Was a fiaring fire: and she had made a solemn vow to take none but that man Who should dare to ride through the fiaring fire. --from The Prose Edda. OHiCQFS Cl Agora BEATRICE BERGER ........................................................................... Preszdent HAZEL FOX. ............................................................................ Vice-President BETTY BING ........................ . V, ....................... Secretary-Treasurer DOROTHY KELLEY ............................... . ...................... Business Manager GWENDOLYN SWINGLE .................. .. .. . Chairman of Scenery and Property RUTH WURZEL ........................................................ Chairman of Costumes MARGARET BLITHE ................................................. Chairman of Make-up VIRGINIA UNDERHILL ...................................................... Chairman of Lights One Hundred Eighty-m'ne The CIOucher College lvramatic Society HIS imposing title is now making its first appearance in any DONNYBROOK FAIR for in this year of revolutionary movements within the college com- munity HThe old order changeth was written as the epitaph for that long- standing tand long sufferingy organization, Agora. The new dramatic society combines the associated ideas of various dramatically inclined faculty members and students, ideas that have been formulating over a space of several years, and that found 1931 an opportune year for being put into practice. The reasons for reorganization are both logical and obvious. It is all too apparent that the social calendar is cluttered with events too numerous for com- fort, and the presence of many plays sponsored by various interests contributed t to the congestion. An organization combining under the one heading all that matic endeavor would thus do much to relieve the situation. At the same time, by centralizing the control and direction of all Goucher dramatics, it becomes possible to aim at a more professional standard with some hope of ultimate achievement. The quality of production has a good chance for improvement, since class distinctions no longer exclude a talented person from participation in any play. With the improved quality of production is bound to come an increased interest in and enthusiasm for the college's dramatic pursuits. The cen- tralization also does away with point-system trouble as far as dramatics are con- cerned. Furthermore, the organization is so planned as to further the playshop idea which, once in working order, means a smooth and profitable arrangement of all details of play production. All of this sounded so encouraging to the organization that it set for itself the further aim of contributing to the artistic life of Baltimoreeand no doubt it will eventually. The details of the organization are of interest to the entire colloge com- munity. Anyone is eligible to utry-out for active membership in the organizaa tion by reciting a selection of her own choice. The executive board then passes judgment upon the dramatic possibilities of the candidateekeeping in mind an imposing list of considerations. If this strikes terror in your soul, take heart! For with no effort whatsoever you may become an associate member, privileged to attend performances and social functions. But if you still crave the rights of the active member, you may supply in industry what you lack in courage, since consistent committee work is an adequate qualification for membership. Provision is made for a future date at which the Dramatic Society will supervise both May Day and Boat Ride plays. May Day will remain in the charge of the physical education department. but the committee work will be done by the Dramatic Society. Boat Ride plays will be in charge of Freshman and Sophomore members of the Dramatic Society; the right to try out, however, will not be limited to active members of the organization as in other plays, but One H u'ndred N inety Will be open to any member of the freshman or sophomore class. The officers of the organization remain essentially the same as under the Old regime; election, however, is in the hands of active members only The advice of the Honorary Member is to sought upon election of active members, selection of plays, and selection of casts for all plays. For the first few years, the new organization must depend heavily upon the cooperation and support of the entire college community. Only With this sup- port can the organization come to be the integral part of the college life that the dramatic organizations of other colleges have come to be. And only With this cooperation can the society attain to the financial independence necessitated before many of the aims can be realized. The Dramatic Society has presented one trial production, Marco Millions, apparently to the taste of the college in general. But Marco Millions is only a beginning, a promise of What may come in the future, a hint of the potentialities of this scheme. One Hundred Ninety-one lVlarco IMiiiions and here was the court of Persiaf' wrote Lamb of his nrst play. I had dabbled a little in The Travels of Marco Poloeand in Sinclair LeWiSe and here were Venice and Syria and Persia and India and Mongolia, here the palace of Kublai the great Khan in Cathay--and Marco Millions. For the Goucher College Dramatic Society was presenting Eugene O'Neill's play, and presenting it with more than a touch of the professional. The play itself is not O'Neill's best. As drama, it draws its thread of action too thin and obscures emotional crises by too long speeches. These faults. however. were mitigated by judicious omissions and curtailments of speeches. As satire it lacks the balance and the justice which characterize the best examples of satiric writing. Exclusive stress upon one aspect of a class or a culture temphasized in this performance by the use of the laundry-casesyl causes in many minds a defensive revulsion in favor of that which has been attacked and a search for flaws in that Which is held up for damaging contrast. Yet the sharp opposi- tion of two points of view, such as we find here, objectined in picturesque hgures like the young Marco and the aged Khan, With Kukachin pathetically trying to bridge the great gulf between them by proving the existence of Marco's soul, offers excellent opportunities for theatrical effect. In an essay the flaws in the thought would be painfully apparent; in a drama the emotional and humorous appeal of character and event tends to make the thought more nearly acceptable. This is no place, perhaps, to caVil at OlNeill's philosophy. But those of us who know Ser Marco Polo through his own narrative must protest a bit at the use of him to point the finger of scorn at Christendom. To the readers of his HBook he is no second-class Marco: HUpon his lKublailsJ observing Marco Polo, and inquiring who he was, Nicolo made answer, lThis is your servant. and my son;' upon which the great Khan replied, iHe is welcome, and it pleases me muchX and he caused him to be enrolled among his attendants of honor. . . . Marco was held in high estimation and respect by all belonging to the court, . . . He conducted himself with so much wisdom and prudence in the management of the affairs entrusted to him, that his services became highly acceptable? But however much we may protest against O'Neill's use of the great traveller, we cannot quarrel With his presentation of Marco Millions. Contrast is a valuable weapon in the hands of the satirist. The young Marco, ironically sent from the West to the East as the equivalent of a hundred Wise men, progresses from Venice to Cathay and grows from the eager boy who might write poetry to the pride of the house of P010 Brothers and Son. Sil- houetted against the antiquity and the wisdom of the Orient, he carries the but- den of the irony. The slender shoulders of Lillian Knorr, although, almost inevitably, she remained the boy instead of becoming the middle aged efhciency expert, bore that burden competently. The weight of the ironic wisdom of the East settled upon Margaret Blithe, who, in the role of Chu-Yin, gave the most consistently good interpretation of the entire play. Yet the great Khan too I HAD dabbled a little in the Universal Historye-the ancient part of ite One Hundred Ninety-three upheld that weight of wisdom. Jeanne Gidding played the part of Kublai with restraint and appreciation of its philosophy and its poetry, and rose, in the last act, to emotional heights unusual in amateur productions: the final scene was genuinely and deeply moving. The charm and the sorrow of the little flower princess, who fell in love With the man who represented the antithesis of all her heritage and environment, were beautifully interpreted in voice and manner by Beatrice Spiro. The large cast supporting these four principle characters was very good. Almost never was the spell broken. Praise is due especially to those who so ably met the demands of the diHicult Prologue, to the lisping Donata, who matured just as she should, to the dignified and impressive Tedaldo, and to the well contrasted Polo Brothers. The elders of the college community were a little aghast When they learned the identity of the play chosen by the Goucher College Dramatic Society for its initial performance. Many had seen the recent professional production of Marco Millions, staged with all the skill of one of the most notable of theatrical organi- zations. And they marveled at the temerity of Beatrice Berger and her asso- ciates, Whose resources were necessarily limited. But the event proved that fears were groundless. Even though they were fortunate in securing professional assistance, the committee wisely refrained from any attempt to Vie With the professional achievements of the Theater Guild. They set their stage by the use of different screens or drops which fllled in the comparatively small space between the curtains that draped the rear wall of the stage. Yet in that small spage was the sacred tree of Persia, or the Mohammedan mosque, or the prow of the royal junk, or the glittering dragon of Cathay. Thus With the aid of a few suitable properties, excellent lighting, and brilliant costumes, were the major effects secured. The skillful training of Mrs. Onnen showed in each phase of the produc- tion, in the acting, in the stage pictures, in the clear and careful articulation and the intelligent reading of the lines. Yet even that skillful direction could scarcely have produced such uniformly good results had the members of the cast been drawn from only one class. No one who saw the presentation of Marco Mil- lions could doubt the Wisdom of Goucherls new dramatic venture. ELIZABETH NITCHIE. One Hundred Ninety-fwe IT As YOU LIKE Junior P 1ay umphantly chant'plays may come and plays may go, but Junior Plays have gone forever. Although we cannot fail to be impressed by the finer and more brilliant productions of a Hdramatic society, there needs must be, even for the most assiduous tradition-breaker, a period of retrospection, when she realizes that Junior Play was a necessary preparation for a more mature effort. A little over three years ago the class of 1931 attended its first Junior P1335 Aucassin and Nicolette, a story of love and life in the twelfth century. That Whimsical tale, so delicately lyrical, was hardly suitable for presentation by an amateur cast, but Goucher juniorsealways hardy soulseundertook it with their customary Vigor, and did so well with it, that the hitherto uninitiated class of 1931 has been a staunch supporter of Junior Play ever since. In the fa1l of 1928, Junior Play was The Cradle Song of Sierra, a quiet and peaceful story unfolding slow1y behind the pale wa115 of a Spanish nunnery. Since most of the roles of The Cradle Song were Written for women, they were interpreted with a greater facility than those of Aucassin and Nicolette. That the play was a success is attested by the tine characterization of Dr. Hans Froe- licher that it was hcharming, dignified and impressive. With the arrival of Mrs. Gertrude Onnen in the following year, Goucher plays began to assume an almost professional air. Her direction of Twelfth Night was an example of that finesse so necessary in the presentation of Shakes- peare. 1931 surpassed other classes in re-creating the original atmosphere of the play, and they succeeded in producing an harmonious whole which was the result of excellent direction and stage management, and the exceptionally line acting of the individual members of the cast. They are to be congratulated. The repetition of Shakespearean comedy in December 1930 as the choice for Junior Play was perhaps a tactical error. Moreover, enthusiasm for the old tradition had waned under the popularity of the new idea of dramatics. There- fore the audience which witnessed As You Like It was hardly sympathetic. Unfortunately some of the antagonism of the house was transmitted to the actors, whose spontaneity and verve were lost as a result. Nevertheless it was a noteworthy attempt to do Shakespeare in the Elizabethan manner, and as such is deserving of the highest acclaim. ASSUMING more poetical license than is warranted, perhaps, we trie One Hundred N'inety-seven mmm. um m4 4. .Q, w I Arw. Into thev ash tnee Grown in that dwellin 8 Grown there by Volsung. Weapon of battle. 111- ft of great 0d' None could withdraw i . Gi None bad the pOWer Till there came Sigmund Son of King Volsung. x I k xx i M m M n h; V35 x .,a x ' ' 'w n. R! f I l X 9J O x, 1 3 x k WWWWMIInam. Q Baird, 1931 Baker, 1931 Bryan, 1933 Burtt. 1933 Cook, 1931 Crawford, 1930 Garcia, 1931 1931 Baird;'0k ms: Baker30k Bouis$ Buffmgton$1 Clark CookM: F1agg3f Garcizvk Haywardaw Heitcampwi HOlIander Lloyd3: Moore10k Muellerk 3 3k 3k 1k Naglei: Pearsonzk :13 30k Smitheri': Swingle Tuckefk Two Hundred One C7zNig11t AwarAs SWEATER ELIZABETH MUELLER, 1931 MAJOR 33G MARGARET STRAUSS, 193 0 MART! 1A CRAWFORD, 19 3 0 VARSITY UG Gatchell, 193 2 Hardy, 1933 Hoff, 19 3 0 Hofmayer, 193 0 Koch. 1933 Mathaney, 193 2 Mitchell, 193 O Mueller, i931 Mylander, 1932 Naglc, 1931 Pearson, 1931 Podolsky. 193 3 Rome, 1932 Seegar, G., 193 2 NUMERALS 1 9 3 2 1 9 3 3 Boyer Bryanw0k Gatchellyppluk Burtt Harmon Channel Kahner Daviyk Kirwamith Forbush Legumwt Freeburger$$$ McLainMug Harmum Jones Hardy k Mathaneyxg :1: :34 Hetzel IVIyIandery-g;10k Holberg Priorbk Koch RomeFk MacCarter Seegarai Podolskywk Sieben-Morgengmbk Sampsonw3 Stimsorfk Sappington Underhill Soul?k Voris Sterling VVaranch$ Stoddard Wright, E1 Sturtevant Vv'ilson WyIie Sieben-Morgen, 193 2 Smither, 1931 Stimson, 193 2 Strauss, 1930 Wagner, 1930 1934 Baxton Bosley Brant Calvin Clay 1de7'F Irwiin Kent Polan Randolph Robertson Tay1or3k Hockey Varsity ELIZABETH MUELLER, 31 .............................................................. Left Wing SOPHIE PODOLSKY, 33 ............................................................. Left Inner ELSA KINGMAN, 131 ............................................................... Center Forward MARGARET BRYAN, 33 ............................................................. Right Inner RUTH BAIRD, 31 ...................................................................... Right Wing CATHERINE MCLAIN, 32 ......... . ..................................................... Left Half RUTH SIEBEN-MORGEN, 32 .................................................... Center Half FRANCES IDE, 34 ......................................................................... Right Half BARBARA PEARSON, ,31 ............................................................ Left Forward EMMA ROBERTSON, 34 ............................................ . ,. ,.V..V.Rl'ghf Forward KATHARINE STIMSON, Z32 ...................................................................... Goal Two Hundred Two Sun for Team ..................................... . ...., AMY HAYWARD Manager Junior Team.. .. . . .,. . ,...ELIZABETH WRIGHT, Manager MARJORIE HEITKAMF, College Manager Sophomore Team .......................................... SOPHIE PODOLSKY. Manager Freshman Team .................................. MARY ARCHER RANDOLPH, Manager Hockey HEN the annual season opened the hockeyewise were seen to cock their heads speculatively. It was common knowledge that 32's and 33's teams had been considerably weakened. Nearly everyone looked to the seniors and freshmen to furnish the fastest action And they did just that. The freshmen made short work of their match with the incom- plete sophomore team while the 32 team, crippled by the loss of several former stars, went down to the first hockey defeat of their career by the score of 6e0. In the finals the brightly clad freshman eleven managed to get the ball from unexpected places for charges to the goal. Brilliant stick wielding like Robertson's and Coutch's enabled them to hold the seniors to a 3-all tie until the last few minutes of the second half. Then the freshmen joined forces. Someone passed the ball to M. Clay who without the slightest fiurry calmly sl ot the goal that gave her class the championship at 4e3. A bit later in the season, Goucher7s interpretation of Uncle Samls military forces was reacted to a waiting college world. The Army general atop the mule gave the command. Taking a toy cannon and the bass drum portion of a life and drum corps, the troop was off for Fensal Field twhere grow no poppies, only thorn bushesl. Navy promptly hailed the first battleship and steamed out of port with the goat in tow. The game itself was a slow one, especially in the first half. The Navy had a stronger attack than had been expected, but Army repeatedly stuck to their guns and drove them off. Sophie Podolsky, on sentry duty, took a well calculated pass from the center and slipped a shot past the sailor lookout for the first tally of the day. After that it was anybodyls game, both teams fumbling the ball badly. The teams came out from their orange-fiavored rest period with a more decided disposition to play hockey. After a hectic struggle within the striking circle, M. Clay drove a quick shot into goal to tie the score permanently. The game had now become a scrambly, snappy affair with two hosts of lusty rooters ranging on to every play. There were many crashes amidships. Army lost a valuable sharpshooter when Podolsky was forced out by a nasty cut on her knee. Kitten Stimsonls defense was splendid. A portly street-car conductor Visiting from a vantage point in the fence admitted to all who would listen, lil guess they have right much fun for girls! Two H undred Five Basketball Varsity NINA MOORE, '31 ....................................... . .......................... Forward WINIFRED PRIOR, 32 ................................................................... F orward RUTH BAIRD, 31 .................................................................................. Guard CATHERINE MCLAIN, 32 ................................................................. Guard HENRIETTA BAKER, 31 .............................................................. , Center ELIZABETH MUELLER, '31 ................................................................ Center Two Hundred Six Senior Team ........................ V. V V. V ..... ELIZABETH NAGLE, Manager Junior Team.. .. HMCATHERINE MCLAIN. Manager Sophomore Team ........................................... BETTY CHANNELL, Manager Freshman Team .. ..... BETTY ST. JOHNS, Manager Basketball MADELINE SKIRVEN, 31 .......................... College Manager er's students may be said to possess the next best substitute, Any aggregav tion as buoyant as the lassies on the senior basketball team deserves at least first option on a brand new pair of aerial implements Divers things may be said in connection with the past seasonaamong the foremost being that basketball, too, was badly hit by the business depression. Here, as elsewhere along college row, it was possible to procure excellent enter- tainment at the lowest premium imaginable; yet where to find buyers was a problem requiring nothing short of genius. There is no doubt that the sports market has been hurt by a crash; and it may happen unless a revival of interest comes soon, the bottom will drop out altogether. Rather than confine ourselves to such gloomy predictions, it seems far more 61 propos t0 imbibe the balmy airs of spring and resume our dissertation on ye olde game of basketball. This year's tournament was an interclass round-tobin. A victory gave two points: a tie, one point. Second team play was quite naturally characterized by less speedy and less cleanecut playing than first team. The sophomores came through the second team series to win the cup for the class. The first team trials pointed the way toward a contest between the juniors and seniors. Both had beaten their rivals with considerable ease, so that Serpen- tine night was really the most interesting of all. The junior team, somewhat depleted by the loss of its regulars, at various times during the lirst quarter showed surprising passwork and skill, However. these early signs completely faded toward the end of the game and it became a walkaway for the veteran senior group. Then came The Feed When some seventyefive healthy and husky young athletes attack a mere human-planned feast, the result is that the supply is inevi- tably unequal to the demand. And while we are indirectly discussing the prob- lem of international disarmament, we wish to issue the authoritative cumulative score for ice-cream: IN spite of the fact that all God's chillun don't got wings, several of Couch- Chocolate, 100 Walnut, 150 Vanilla, 23 tthe sissiesly It might be recorded too that the amazingly consumptive powers of the juniors and the new best sellereliThe Mystery of the Missing Ice-Cream, in Sixteen Platesl'eare inexorably connectedeQuod Erat Demonstrandum! Two Hundred Nine 1930 MANAGERS AND THE CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM Swimming HE 1930 form meet was won with supreme ease by 1931. They con- sistently took first places and came in regularly with seconds and thirds with the exception of the back stroke won by Fran Nixdorflr and the side stroke won by Ethel Soule. In the free style relay, 1931 was pushed from the spotlight by the fast time of the sophomores. The second meet proved the more interesting from the spectators, point of view. When we weren't draping ourselves in odd positions to get a primary source view of the spirited dashes, we were making for the nearest shelter with most unbecoming zeal. When aided by several of our human motorboats, Gouchr's crystal-clear waters proved to have unrealized powers for spontaneous circulation. Kay McLain, Gloria Garcia and F10 La Bau were a positive menace to the other entrants, romping down to victories whenever they swam, and hav- ing competitionhonly when they swam against one another. Mary Cook won the diving event with little trouble. Finney's strong pusheofT gave her first in the plunge. It is reported on eminent authority that certain individuals in the gallery gave way to a few unconditioned refiexes-they held their breath With the plunge entrants until physiological inadequacies forced them to retire. 1932 won the speed meet, but because of the lead of sixteen points over them in the form meet, the cumulative score showed 1931 Victorious. Two Hundred Eleven Jumbrr L , Sophomore: Tennis HOREAU once remarked that he wouldnyt walk around the corner to watch the world blow up. Unfortunately many Goucherites feel the same apathy When it comes to tennis. The splendid matches played on our courts twhose condition more than remotely resembled a turkey-gobblerls neckl were deserving of a far, far larger audience than they received. Such play ing as that shown by finalists like Elsa Kingman, Virginia Dillon, Nelle Smith- ers and Ruth Sieben-Morgen should not go unnoticed. Far be it from us to offer a treatise on the lost art of gathering for a tennis match; but it does behoove us to pause and meditate on the changes in our social order. Time was when tennis was the glorined pursuit of nearly every college gentlewoman tmirabile visul ; and now the old sport is most emphatically not what she used to be. Perhaps miniature golfeaccording to latest reports nego tiable on the holes in swiss cheese, and ping-pongeplayable on any oilicial col- lege bed, may be held in some cause and effect relationship. We decline, however, to commit ourselves. The doubles tournament was for the most part entered into by small num- bers of tennis enthusiasts of each class. Elsa Kingman and Nelle Smithers swept through their matches to a comparatively easy championship. The sophomores, Abell and Stoddard, beat the freshmen, Mules and Self. Then the junior final- ists, Ruth Sieben-Morgen and Mildred Rome, defaulted to the seniors who after this had no trouble at all in disposing with Abell and Stoddard and thus acquir- ing the doubles tennis cup. Two H zmdred Thirteen Basehau : OR the edification of those Goucherites whose definition of baseball is ia Pfaculty-varsity game, we venture to offer the news of other baseball con- tests. The sophomore, having beaten the freshmen with little difiiculty. V threatened to take another championship for 32. But the seniors objected. Consistent batting and Hildegarde Wagner's pitching prevailed, and 30 took the cup at 12a7. As for the faculty-Varsity game, there were Dr. Wilfred Beardsley's lengthy if dusty slides, Dr. Curtisi tremendous if foiled swats, and Dr. McCaslandis elaba orate if inaccurate catches. But there is something to be said on the academic side of the event. After all. to View our intellectual mentors in sundry athletic apparel is only a preface. To hold sprightly conversation with them on topics other than the rise and fall of the cabinet system is an education in itself. In the third inning Dr. Lloyd, veteran pitcher for the faculty, decided that the presiding umpire had mixed his formulas for balls and strikes. After a weighty conference on the side-lines, Herr Professor announced that he did not choose to pitch. We understand that Mr. Wyllis J. Ballinger valiantly coaxed him back into the game with the oHer of a strawberry lollypop. Dr. Lloyd was kind enough not to apply too much chemistry to his pitching. A few more cc. might have been embarrassingel8-8 is enough to produce a pinkish pre- cipitatef Two Hundred Fifteen FRATERNITIES Mary Cook Margaret Lewis Ricka Lloyd Edna Boyce Addaline Gillespie Alice Klingelhofer Marion Barbur Ann-Margaret Borjesson Virginia Bosley Georgie Bosley Dorothy Calhoun Marion Davenport Blair Alice Brown Neva Brown Alice E. Clarke Elsie COX Mildred Edmunds Dean Louise Dowell Marion Hoffman Draper Blanche Harman Eaton Nancy Fulton Margaret King Gertrude Knipp Tau Kappi Pi 1931 Elizabeth Mueller Dorothy Patterson Margaret Rodgers Martha Linn Rutherford 1 93 2 Virginia Lightfoot Harriet McKee Alice Perrine 1933 Mary Elizabeth Koch Florence Reich Betty Draper 1 9 3 4 Isabel Colvin Katherine Dunsmore Elizabeth Dellinger Lucy Nye SORORES 1N URBE Ruth Harlan Lenoine Harriet Ellis Levering Margaret Reed Lewis Stella McCary Gertrude Nickerson Mary Nelson Ruth Alice Roberts Elizabeth Sanders Emily Schilpp Grace Parker Saper Mabel Patten Stockbridge Ethel Hoffman Stone Eleanor Spear Betty Tucker Esther Varner Marion Robinson Virginia XVright Katherine Shaw Mary Phillips Cecile Hansen Jean Sanders Jean Summy Florence Edward Sumwalt Margaret Sumwalt Clarissa Townsend Frances Troxell Mary Ellis Turner Elizabeth Van Duyne Johnetta Van Meter Virginia Handy Voegli Angeline Grifflng XVolf Carol Wolf Agnes Chambers Wylie Two Hundred Eighteen Ruth Barker Helen Elderkin Hazel Fox Elizabeth Alderman Martha Harris Katherine Abe11 Margaret Blithe Louise Fleming Mary Page Haydon Betty Jenkins Dorothy Allers Anne Bagby Louise Tull Baker Sara Stone Bayliss Katherine Clazett Beck Dorothy VJelsh Blalock Mary G. W. Brauns Mabel Carter Mildred Coughlin Nan Hayden Cecil Mary I. Cleaveland Marjorie L. Dandridge Sadie M. Dandy Esther Ellinger Elizabeth Fleming Two Hundred Nineteen Delta Gamma Psi Chapter ESTABLISHED 1891 1931 Naomi Gotwals Amy Hayward Marion Kratz 1932 Carolyn Jones Ruth Nea1 193 3 Adelaide Forbush Margaret Gregg Ruth Henderson 1934 Jane Jones Dorothy Linthicum Marry Otte Helen Pastorius SORORES IN URBE Elizabeth Forbus Virginia Fox Virginia C. Fruston Jean Fulton Gladys Fulton Ursula Guard Melissa Hill Elizabeth Hiss Alida Hoen Violet Huff Rose C. Hulton Elizabeth Iddings Bess Stocking Koontz Mary Nelson Lee Elizabeth McCauley Anne Walters McNeaI Virginia Williams Roberta Lathrop Ruth Porter Katharine Stimson Virginia Jones Jean Robison Betty Townsend Mary Ellen Koonce Charlotte Bates Janet Goucher Miller Jessie Lefter Palmer Joanna Ross Pancoast Elizabeth Protzman Mabel Reese Margaret E. Runyon Mary Field Sadtler Isabel W1 Schmeiser Ruth French Shriver Doris Slothower Rebecca J. Timbress Louise XVest Emlie Wilkins Lucile M. Wilkins Mary Martin VJiIson Elizabeth Lamb Elizabeth Moss Theodora Fenron Brooks Maxine Allen May Baldwin Alice Bean Sarah Heintzelman Grace Mason Ruth Adams Baer Margaret Bryan Baer Rosa Baldwin Eleanor Crowthers Davis Hortense Dryden Anne Marguerite Dye Dorothy Ford Jeannie Louise Frames Rosalie Freeny Charlotte Arnold Genevieve Hendley LuIie P. Hooper Katherine V. Hooper 1A1p11a P111 Zeta Chapter ESTABLISHED 1891 1931 Alice Onen Emily Tiffany 1932 Mary Jane Buchanan Sarah Jane Evans 1933 Helen Benham Lucile Hurlock Martha Bob Lucas 1934 Harriet Perkins Jane Porter SORORES IN URBE Isabelle S. Hummer Genevieve M. Yeuili Aileen Kenney Margaretta Lindsay Marx H, G. Liipfen Edith Mills Jones Clarinda Mathews Alice Meredith Alice Nelson Helen Nicholson Noble Edna Norton Nellie Orcutt Alice Reuter VJayne Warden Betsy Woollen Edith Jeannisson Nancy Smith Mitchell Anne Peterson Sara Taylor Philips '1ary Archer Randolph Jeannette Sautcrs Anna E. Rutledge Jeannett Schumacher Evelyn EakIe Seeba Margaret P. Shryock Hattie C. Sneeringer Isabel Stone Taylor Marguerite Waters Grace W'ells Fauntleroy XVight Angeline F. Williams Eva Bandell Wilson Isabel Woods Two Hundred Twenty Henrietta Baker Ruth Baird Mary Bouis Janet Carnwath Nancy Conklyn Nancy Holcomb Martha Hagaman Mary Burner Margaret Carnwath Ann Corckran He1en Dawkins Mary Clay Eleanor Denmead Catherine Haywald Frances Ide Katherine Treide Baer Mary Sawyer Baker Mary Helen Baker Wilhelmina Benjamin Anna Boardman Mary E. S Colt Lucy Weaver Denhard Margaret Denmead Elsie Rabbins Dodds Ethel Shriner Dulancy Ruth Q Dunnington Ruth Fagundus Maria Fulton Marion Day de Groff Hazel Harper Hatchel Two Hundred Twenty-one C?amma P111 Beta Zeta Chapter ESTABLISHED 18 9 3 1931 Margaret Burner Margaret Harm Elsa Kingman 193 2 Lona Hanker Louise Hill Betty Johns Betty Kirby-Smith 1933 Louise de Journo Mary Belle Haggerty Edmonia Henley Jean Kneip 1934 Louise Leonaldson Lucy Ann Miller Ruth Murphy Frances Rudolph SORORES 1N URBE MabIe Hay May VVestcott Hayes Florence Ochm Hawkins Mrs. Henry M. Hall Elaine Herold Alvahn Holmes Penelope W1 Jameson Marion Jones Jarman Irene Rife Jex Cecelia Keilholtz Evelyn Considine Kirby Muriel Lee Dorothy S. Maltbie Catherine S. McCurIey Harriet C. McCurIey Mary T. McCurley Frances Pringle Virginia Potter Elizabeth Wise Evelyn Self Virginia Slease Gloria Thames Mary Philips VVoolverLon Jean Schilling Helen Temple Jean VVaddell Majorie Self Harriet Taylor Muriel Wollman Marine Ahle Mead Edith Melville Helen Quivey Bernice Ryan Dorothy Brown Smith Julia Sprenkel Amelia XVagner Sutton Frances Sweezey Agnes Thomas Belle Baker Treide Helen B1 Turnbull Hester Corner Vv'agner Jeanette W'ilmot Nellie Wilmot Dorothy Hall XVolfe Kappa A1p11a Theta AIpha Deha Chapter ESTABLISHED 1896 Mary Elizabeth Bunn Virginia Dresch Rhoda Blossom Jane Brown Helen Greene Florence Alexander Phyllis Andrews Tove Bach Patricia Bonsall Ada Christopher Mary 1X71 Ainslee Mary Buell Eleanor Watts Black Anna Brush Margaret Dixey Belle Taylor Doyle George Dove Davis Eleanor Dilworth Ethel Hendrickson Dorsey Emma Louise Dulaney Ethel Elmer Harriet Baker Ewalt Evelyn Ewalt Elizabeth Frisch Mary Carter Fusselbaugh Katherine Helfrich Fort Mary Bon VJ. Gontrum Ruth Granham 1931 Elizabeth Dugan Katherine Ing Mary B, Schadler 1932 Verner Kline Neville North Gertrude Rebert 1933 Florence Towns 1934 Mary Cooper Ruth Davis Elizabeth Foster Virginia Gazley Jane Kavanagh SORORES IN URBE Jean Merriken Harrison Carvilla Helfrich Helena Horton Ernestine D. Hutchins Helen E. Harper Ruth Haslup Dorothy 01 Kennedy Loubelle S1 Knipp Ruth Dyer Leonard Genevieve Le Compte Marion Hinds McCormick Mary Vv'ard Megraw Rita Winkleman McFee Nell M. Miller Louise Pennington Alice Bennet Pollard Helen Hayden Parker Gertrude T. Roberts Serena Smyser 1N11ary Alice Truitt Ione Shaffer EA EIizabeth Swing Elizabeth Tenet Eleanor Fry Mary Louise Kent Julia Richardson Virginia Stevens Betty Van Arnam Esther D. Smith Claire Vaon M. StieE Nlary Wilson Swindell Christie Dulaney Solter Ruth Taylor Adelaide P. Thompson Thelma Thomas Clara Davis Tucker Katherine Van Ness Stella Biddison Werner Flora W. Wilson Dorothy Wilson Mary Colt Wilcox Lillian S. Whitehead Leila S. Woolford Charlotte Williams Virginia P. Watson Hilda M. Wyckoff Two Hundred Twenty-two Sally Cobau Katherine Flagg Ann Eliason Barbara Grimths Mary Katherine Keith Betty Edmundson Anna North Nladeline Bowler Jane Caldwell Marian Courtwright Eugenia Edwards Eleanor Flautt Mrs. John Adams Helen Atwood Mrs. L. M Bacon, Jr. Mrs. XViIliam G. Ball Mrs. Brooks Boyle Leona Buchwald Mrs. Lewis Buckman Dorothy Cleveland Mrs. Henry E. Comer Helen Kunkel Cox Esther L. COX Ruth L. Cox Mrs. John K. Culver Caroline Ditts Mrs. Ralph Finkbinder Mrs. Allen Foster Mrs. Arthur Grainn Mrs. Virgil M. Hillyer Two Hundred Twenty-three Pi Beta Phi IMaryland Alpha Chapter ESTABLISHED 18 9 7 1931 Dorothy Graig Mary Margaret Gordon 1932 Mary Ellen Hermetet Dorothy Kelley Sally List 1933 Betty Brown Annette Webster Helen Townsley 1934 Elaine Hine Vera Keller Betty Laird Mary Frances Nichol Louise Oglesby Claire Phillips SORORES IN URBE Mrs. George Henbeck Katherine B. Hopper Mrs. T. B. Hull Mrs. Payne A. Kayser Elizabeth Kellum Margaret Hitchens Mrs. A. D. Kennedy Mrs. H. G. Kiefer Gertrude A. Kutzler Mary Elizabeth Lamb Margaretta Lamb Mrs. Gilbert H. Moore Mrs. Thomas E. Moore Louise Murphy Harriet Myers Mrs. John G. Murray Sylvania Nagle Eleanor Norris Martha Lindstedt Sophy Perry Frances Nixdorff Fanny Thorns Virginia Underhill Jane CoHin Ream Jane Delevett Charlotte Parker Adelaide Smith Sally Reed Marie Tolzman Jane Woodward Carolyn Enos Potts Mrs. Roland R. Read Blanche Reisinger Helene Schneidereith Isabel Schultz Mrs. William Sellards Mrs. Donald Sherwood Mrs. XVilIiam Sippel Florence Tottle Smith Mrs. E. N. Spurgin Mrs M. F. Teddlie Mrs. Richard Te Linde Mrs. R. Bruce Thompson Mrs. J. W. Tottle Helen Tottle Margaret Torsch Mrs. Charles Trussell Louise Van Sant m1 Katherine Daniel Amelia Gross Katherine Chapman Margaret Fox Ruth Hildebrandt Minetta Adair Mary Leslie Chapman Helen Christy Irma Foulkes Mary Weaver Harris Dorothy Atkinson Esther Bell Lydia Kirk Bond Ruth Coblenz Botzler Estelle Rachle Byrne Eleanor Coblenz Lillie Corwin Elizabeth Crawford Hilda Devries Davis Katherine Morse Deveraux Mary Dunlap Pauline Eggler Leila Fisher Mary Amest Fulton Mrs. C. F. Gee Mrs. A. T. Hall Mrs. B. L. Harburg DeIta De1ta Dc1ta Xi Chapter ESTABLISHED 189 8 1931 Eleanor Houghton Sara VJalker Moore 1932 Margaret Long Nancy Elizabeth Lybrook Virginia Kelly 1933 Dorothy McFetridge Elizabeth Miller Ann Morehouse 1934 Helen Hopkins Helen Johnson SORORES IN URBE Anna Harrison Mrs. Clarence Hewitt Dorothy Blass Hines, Jr. Barbara Bagle Hoben Anna Horoschak Mrs. Kreiger Mary Lentz Johnson Mildred Johnnsen Mildred Jackens Joyce Mildred Rife Judd Ruth Kramer Elizabeth L. Lentscher Ada XVadington Lentz Alice Mallieu Celeste KleimIe Maxwell Mildred McGimis Mary Mumford Michael Mary Sleman Matilda McLester Winifred Prior Ann XVoodard Margaret Nance Frances Pendleton Katherine Rogers Ida Baldwin Lynch Mary Louise Moffltt Florence S. O'Connel. Jr. Esther Love Palvagt Marian Mathews Parker Mrs Raymond Pearle Anne Bullivant PfeiEer Mrs. J. B. Raeder Frances Corwin Reeves Eleanor Rose Kathryn Swilling Letitia Stockett Edna Strouse Frances Thompson Janet Graham Tome Katherine W. Troellinger Sara Walker Warner Blanche Meyers Wilhelm Two Hundred T'wenty-four Alpha Gamma De1ta Nlary Elizabeth Boyd Kathryn Button Aimee Clunet Julia Furst Sara Margaret Bowers Thelma Bowman Eleanor Elias Elizabeth Hardy Ruth Kiehne Margaret Kunkel Carolyne Anewalt Eleanor Batson Mamie Lark Brown Helen Adams Evelyn XV. Andrews Dorothy H. Armstrong Helen Carter Barnes Margaret Brown Jean Burke Marion Tuttle Conner Jean Wilcox Curley Margaret Dennison Lillian Burroughs Davis Agnes Wild Denson Antoinette Egan Maude Gallen Ethel Haynes Thelma Hess Hall Jessie Healy Two Hundred Twenty-five Theta Chapter ESTABLISHED 19 08 1931 Mary Hall Hamilton Marjorie Heitkamp Elizabeth Horn Barbara Pearson 1932 Margaret Kreider Katherine McLain Katherine Phillips 1933 Louise Pearson Esther Riddle Louise Smith 1934 Ruth Harrison Margaret Hendrie Mary Ellen Hollaway Mary Elizabeth House SORORES IN URBE Dorothy Lloyd Helfrisch Beatrice Smith Hudson Emma Humphries Edith Joesting Alice Koller Hellen Knorr Rose Lampe Margaret Leib Ethel L. D, Lundvall Madge Macklin Dorothy McCord Margaret Waters Muse Dorothy Orenschall Margaret Owen Ruth Quig1ey Dorothy Russell Edna Richards Edna Ritter Nelle Smither Gendolyn Swingle Katharine Scott Ruth Sieben-Morgen Ethel Soule Lillian Stokes Virginia Matthews Shirley Kane Isabel Koch Katherine Sandi: Virginia ScheEenacker Ella Short Skinner Edna Singwald Ethel Staley Carolyn Stevens June Thomas Mildred Trueheart Margaret Vose Rosanna VJagnet Geraldine Walker Jean XVaIters Grace Watner Lillian Watner Katherine Wisner Florence Witherspoon Elizabeth Yardley Panhenenic Council. ELIZABETH MUELLER .................................... Chairman MARY COOK ........... . .. ,. . HTau Kappa Pi ALICE PERRINE ....................................... Tau Kappa Pi ROBERTA LATHROP ........................................ Delta Gamma ELIZABETH ALDERMAN ..................................... Delta Gamma WAYNE WARDEN ............................................... .Alpha Phi THEODORA BROOKS ............................................... Alpha Phi VIRGINIA POTTER .......................................... Gamma Phi Beta MARY PHILLIPS WOOLVERTON. .................. Gamma Phi Beta MARY ALICE TRUITT ................................ Kappa Alpha ,1 729m IONE SHAFFER ........................................ Kappa Alpha Theta MARY MARGARET GORDON .................................. Pi Beta Phi ANNE ELIASON ..................................................... Pz' Beta Phi SARAH W. MOORE ..................................... Delta Delta Delta WINIFRED PRIOR .......................................... Delta Delta Delta MARY HALL HAMILTON . .. ................ Alpha Gamma Delta KATHERINE PHILLIPS . Alpha Gamma Delta Two Hundred Twenty-six ROLL O111'cers o1 AJmim'stration anJ Instruction Supp1emented DAVID ALLAN ROBERTSON, A.B., Litt.D1, LLD ............................... President 2229 N. Charles Street LILIAN WELSH, M.D., LL.D.. , , ..Professor of Physiology and Hygiene 209 Paddington Road, Homeland DOROTHY STIMSON, A.B., A.M., PHD .......... Dean and Associate Professor of History The Cowdray Club, 20 Cavendish Square, London, England CARRIE MAE PROBST, A.B ................................................................ Registrar 698 Gladstone Avenue, Roland Park CHARLOTTE MCCARTHY, MD. ........................................ Associate Physician 1533 Balton Street KATHERINE JEANNE GALLAGHER, AB, A.M., PHD ....... Professor of History Hammond Apartments, 101 W. 39th Street HARRIS E. KIRK, D.D ....................................... Professor of Biblical Literature 503 Cathedral Street ELLA LONN, A.B., A.M., PHD. . .................................. Professor of History 23 20 N. Calvert Street ELEANOR PATTERSON SPENCER, A.B., A.M ............. Associate Professor of Art 2124 Mt. Royal Terrace WILLIAM LEE USTICK, A.B., A.M ..................... Associate Professor of English 409 Bretton Place, Guilford HONORA ENGLISH B S M. S.. Assistant Professor of Physiology The Greenway Apartm1e11ts Charles and 34th Streets BENNET L MEADE A B A. M .................... Asszstant Professor of Economics 1203 W. Fayette Street NAOMI RICHES, A.B., A.M ............................ Assistant Professor of History 208 W. 29th Street WILLIS J. BALLINGER, PH.B ................. Instructor in Economics and Sociology Green Hall Apartments, St. Paul and 33rd Streets ABBIE F. GAMMONS, BS ....................................................... Head Caraloguer College Club, 821 N. Charles Street MARY L015 CROUCH, A.B., A.M ..................... Head of Circulation Department Normandie Apartments 2624 St. Paul Street MAR FHA GILMORE HALL, A. B. B. S. . .. ...V...Asst'stant Cataloguer 2215 N Charles Street MARGUERITE GLOVER LENZ, A B ................................ Assxstanr z'n Lzbrary 25 W 27th Street NEVA KEMPTON BROWN A. B ......................................... Assistant in Lzbrary 924 Newington Avenue ANNA LOUISE GLXNTZ A B ......................................... Asszszant in Library 4801 Crowson Avenue Two Hundred Twenty-eight HENRIETTA BAKER Low ...................................................... Director of Music Prince George Hotel, New York City VELMA L. BRYAN, AB .................................................. Assistant to President Astor Court Apartments, 25th Street MARY C. WISONG ....................................... Secretary in the Presidenths Office 3611 Forest Park Avenue MARY Rt COLBURN ...................................................... Secretary to the Dean 1206 John Street ENA E. MANN ...................................................... Assistant in the Dearfs Office 3104 Chesley Avenue, Hamilton E. CARDLYN NICHOLSON ............................................ Secretary to the Registrar 4334 Roland Court FRANCES W. TROXELL, A.B .......................................... Registrafs Assistant Gilman Apartments, Calvert and 3lst Street MARJORIE ELIZABETH ALLEN, AB ............. Assistant in the Registrafs omce 138 W. 25th Street CONSTANCE J . ANDREW, AB ....................... Assistant in the Registrafs Office 1148 E North Avenue 1. RUTH MARSHALL, AB ............................. Assistant in the Registrarhs Office 3539 Falls Road GLADYs E. BURGOON .............................. Secretary to the Student Counselors . 4809 Keswick Road, Roland Park MARGARETTA SHANE JUDGE .. .. Secretary in the Vocational Offzce 104 E. 32nd Street ELIZABET G. AUSTIN ................................ Secretary. Department of Education 4418 Roland Avenue RUTH C. SYKES, AB ........................................ Secretary of the Medical Office 6210 Park Heights Avenue HENRIETTA HECHT STRAUS, AB. ....................... Secretary, Art Department 2421 Lakeview Avenue GLENN O. STAUFFER ........................................................... Chief Accountant 3808 Chatham Road FLORENCE E. CONNER ...................................................................... Cashier 2634 MaryIand Avenue ELSA G. HAYDEN . . . . ..,.,.Assistant in the Business Office 5720 Cross Country B1Vd., Mt. Washington MYRA L. CREUTZER ............................................................................... Clerk 4804 Haddon Avenue C. MILTON PAGEL ............................................ Manager of the Bookstore 1640 E. 20nd Street EMMA L. CHILDS, B.S ..................................................................... Dietitian Folkvang Hall, 3201 Maryland Avenue HAZEL HUTCHESON, A.B., R.N ................................. Assistant Resident Nurse Fensal Hall, N. W. Corner Maryland Ave. and 23rd St. LOUIS FORSTER ........................................................................ Chief Engineer 2 W. 23rd Street Two H undred Twenty-m'ne Han AAistresses MRS. MAMIE ADAMS ............................................. Mistress of Foster House Foster House, 2301 N. Charles Street MRS. A. HARMAN-ASHLEY .......................................... Miszress of Glimer Hall Glitner H311, N. W. Corner Charles and 23rd Streets MRS. ELLA W. BYRD ................................................ Mistress of Vingolf Hall Vingolf Hall, 8. W. Corner Maryland Ave. and 24th St. FRANCES R. CONNER, AB ......... Student Counselor in Charge of Hunner House Hunner House, 2305 St. Paul Street MRS. EMMA B. ELLIOTT ........................................... Mistress of Gimle Hall Gimle Hall, 2223 N. Char1es Street MRS. PRISCILLA K. HOBLITZELL .......................... Mistress of Dunnock House Dunnock House. 2307 Mary1and Avenue MRS. JOSEPHINE DAVIS LEARY, A.B.,.Mz'stress of Folkuang and Trudheim Hall Trudheim Hall, 2303 Maryland Avenue MRS. MARY R. MANNING, AB ........................... Mistress of Sessrymner Hall Sessrymner Hall, 2218 N. Charles Street ELIZABETH C. MASON, AB ........ Student Counselor in Charge of Midgard Hall Midgard Hall, 2233 St. Paul Street MRS. ELEANOR GITTINGS PRICE ................................ Mistress of Mardal Hall Mardal Hall, 2327 N. Charles Street MRS. ANNA EDMUNDs RUTLEDGE ................................ Mistress of Fensal Hall Fensa1 Hall, N. W. Corner Maryland Ave and 23rd St. MRS. MARGARET SHRIVE SCHORER ........................ Mistress of Goucher House Goucher House, 2313 St. Paul Street BERTHA SMITHERS ................................................... .Mistress of Ford House Ford House, 2317 MaryIand Avenue Two Hundred Thirty 1931 ALEXANDER THERESA MARGARET ...................................... L1nth1cum Heights Md ARMSTRONG KATHERINE ......................... BAIRD, REBECCA RUTH ........ BAKER, HENRIETTA BURGESS ........ BARKER, RUTH VICTORIA .............. BARKLEY, ELIZABETH ......... BERGER, BEATRICE ........ BING BE T 1 Y ................................. BLELOCH DOROTHY VIRGINIA . BORCORSELSKI MARTHA ELIZABETH ...... BOUIS MARY ELIZABETH ...................... . BOYD, MARY ELIZABETH .. BRAT TON ELEANOR ......... ..410 N Fairview St. Lock Haven Pa. ....................................... Towson, Md. E423 Guilford Terrace, Baltimore. Md. ......... 1146 Clifton Ave1, Moose Jaw, Can. 3808 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md. ....... 1901 Walnut St., Philadelphia. Pa. ................... 2506 Broad Ave., Altoona, Pa. 1417 Vv'. Allegheny Ava, Philadelphia, Pa. 1010 Otis Place, N. W., Washington. D. C. . .1814 Sulgmve Ava, Mt. Washington. Md. ....... Franklin Court Apts., Durham. N. C. ....... 123 E. Third St., Lewistown, Pa. BRAUN MARIAN ELISE. . 275 N. McNeil St, Memphis, Tenn. BROWN, ELIZABETH BAKER. ..,.4009 Keswick Road. Baltimore. Md. BROWN EVELYN BELLE .......................... .300 Garrison Blvd, Baltimore, Md. BUFFINGTON, RUTH STEELE... . .. .................... 169 Walnut 51., Hinsdale, 111. BUNN, MARY ELIZABETH .................. ..1418 N. Thirtieth St. Philadelphia, Pa. BURBANK, LYDIA MARY .................... 1906 Vv'arwick Ave., Baltimore, Md. BURNET MARGARET LOUISE ...... 2601 Euclid Place, Minneapolis, Minn. BUTTON KATHRYN GERHARTH ........... 4716 Leiper St., Philadelphia, Pa. CAMPBELL CAROLINE DANOW'SKY... . .838 Funston Ave. Williamsport, Pa CHINN MARY PRICILLA ................................ 510 E. 4151 St, Baltimore Md. CLARK MARY DORSEY ..... ..... Ellicott City Md. CLARK RUTH LOUISE. . . . End E117abeth, N. J. CLUNET AIMEE LANNAY .................. Briar H111 Road Dayton Ohio COBAU SARA LEE . 325 E. L1ncoln Ave, New Castle, Pa COHEN FREDERICA KRANDA ....Temple Garden Aptsq Balt1more. Md. COHN MAY REGINA ................... ....5812 Marlborough 51., P1ttsburgh, Pa. COLE, MILDRED CHILDRESS ....... ...2805 Carondelet St.. New Orleans, La. COOK, DOROTHY WILLIAMSON ............................. 2115 F St Washington, D C COOK. MARY NEXVMAN.... .. . 1, . . . 210 Longwood Road Baltimore Md COONS, LUCY FRAZER ............................................... The Poplars Orange, Va. COPLAN, HELEN MIRIAM .......... 1809 Ruxton Ave., Balt1more, Md. CORDISH, EVELYN BELLE.. .2206 Mondawmin Ava Baltimore, Md CORK. CHRISTINE ................................................. 239 Clay St,C1arksburg W. Va COULTER. EDITH ANN , ., , ., .4100 Ridgewood Ave. Baltimore Md. CRAMER, EMILY DURHAM ............. 3 20 Doniphan Ave, Fort Leavenworth, Kan DANIELS KATHERINE. .............................. West End Park Nashville Tenn. DEMUTH ETHEL E ..... .1318 Gwynns Falls Parkway, Balt1more, 1V1d. DENTON CAROLINE ANNE .................. 2017 St. Paul St., Baltimore Md. DILLON VIRGINIA ELIZABETH ..1106 Virginia St., Charleston, W. Va. DRESCH VIRGINIA LOUISE .................. 123 W. 4th 51., Mishawaka, Ind. DUGAN ELIZABETH ......... 3625 Lexington Road, Louisville, Ky. EAST MARY ELIZABETH ........... 316 E, Ma1n St, Staunton, Va. ELDERKIN HELEN VIRGINIA.., H.100 Beechdale Road, Baltimore, Md. FISH HERBERTA PEARL. .............................. Yardville, N. J. FISHER, ELIZABETH .............. .. 57 Second 81., Maywood, N. J. FLAGG, KATHERINE EMMA ...... Haycock Point, Branford, Conn. FLAVELLE, DORIS PENNINGTON ...Passa1c Ave., West Caldwell, N. J. FLUHRER RUTH GROVE ................................. 164 Lafayette SL, York, Pa. FOX HAZEL FRANCES . ..... 2706 Guilford St., Baltimore, Md. FRANK MARGARET DAMBI Y. .................. 408 S 42nd St Philadelphia, Pa. FRAZER FRACE CARVILL ................ 5607 Roxbury Place, Mt Washington Md EREBUGER. LILLIAN GLADYS, . .504 Orkney Road Baltimore, Md. FRIEDLANDER, FRIEDA ................................................ 1117 Bayard St.Ba1t1more Md. Two Hundred Thirty-one FURST, JULIA MCJUNKIN ............................................. 212 Winter Ave., New Castle, Pa. ...667 W. Franklin St., Baltimore, Md ..4-11 Beechwood Place, Westfield, N1 J. ...2621 N. Charles St, Baltimore, Md. ............. 210 High St., Philadelphia, Pa. ..1742 E. Lanvale St., Baltimore, Md. .. . ...342 E North St, Marshall, M0. ,201 VJickham Road, Baltimore, Md. ......... 738 Noble St., Norristown, Pa. ....... .Shoreland Hotel, Chicago, Ill. ......... 22 Clifton Blvd. Pittsburgh, Pa. .506 W'ashington Ave., Deliance, Ohio .............. 1015 S. 51h SL, Pekin, 111. .......... 95 N. Main St., Cortland. N. Y. 24' Morningside Park, Memphis, Tenn, .................................. Absecon, N. J. . 3115 Clifton Ave., Baltimore, Md .. 3.212 West End Ave Nashx 111e, Tenn. ............... 306 Maple St., Jersey Shore, Pa. .119 E. Magnolia Ave, San Antonio, Texas .............................................. Ruxton, Md. HEDEMAN. EMMA RUTH ............... ..3315 E1 Echodale Ave., Baltimore, Md. HEITKAMP, MARJORIE ATHERTO .. 224- Glenwood Road, Ridgewood, N. J. HERMAN, BETTYE REBECCA .................................... 2309 Wichita Ave., Baltimore. Md. HIDEN, SUSANNE ELIZABETH ....................... 5600 Huntington Ava, Newport News, Va. HOFFBERGER, HARRIET DORIS... ................. 3301 Springdale Ave., Baltimore, Md. HOLLANDER, EDITH LEWIS ......... 2513 Talbot Road, Windsor Hills, Baltimore, Md. HOPE, LILLIAN VIRGINIA1... ........................... Martina Ave, Fanwood, N1 J. HORN ELIZABEIH ............... . 2736 Robmwood Ave.,T01edo Ohio HOUGHTON ELEANOR 1. . Morningview, M0ntgomery,A1a HYATT, CAROLINE TRAVERS ..112 Longwood Road Baltimore, Md. HYNSON MARY ORILLA ..................... Hathaway Park Lebanon, Pa ILLICH MARY VIRGINIA .. 521 E. 4lst St, Baltimore, Md ING KATHERINE MAY BELLE. .....Cambridge Apts, Baltimore Md. JANDORF, DOROTHY 1. . 2331 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. JOHNSON IUCILLE MAY ..... .. 2735 Tivoly Ave., Baltimore Md. JOHNSON MARY WHITE ......... 1...2824 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. JONES, MARTHA BANFIELD 111111 34 Church St., Edwardsville, Pa. JONES, NATALIE OSBORNE... 1007 Sheridan Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. JUSTIS, MARY DE GROOT.... ...... 301 West Ave, Jenkintown, Pa. KELMENSON, EDITH ...................................... Arlington, WK Va. KERSHNER, JULIA ELIZABETH.... ........ Route No. 3, Hagerstown, Md. KILMER, KATHERINE ELIZABETH.. ...Dry Run Road, Martinsburg, W. Va. KING, SARAH KATHERINE. ...Aigbutth and York Roads. Towson, Md. KINGMAN, ELSA ............................. 385 Tremont Place, Orange, N. J. KNIGHT, MARGARET .. ........................................ 831 George St, Throop, Pa. KNORR, LILLIAN ALICE, ...St. James St. N. and Clinch Place, Garden City, N. Y. KOHN, LOUISE ALICE ........................................ 6902 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md. KRATZ. MARION GWENDOLYN. ........ 536 Hamilton SL, Norristown, Pa. LAFFERTY, RUTH MILDRED ............ 6 Hathaway Circle, Wynnewood, Pa. LAMB, ELIZABETH LILLY .......... 18 Merrymount Road, Roland Park, Md, LANHAM, MARGARET NORMA.. .114701 Fairhaven Ava, Curtis Bay, Md. LATHROP, ROBERTA .................................................... 1231 National Ave., Rockford, Ill. LATTIER, KATHERINE ANASTASIA .......................... 5 Millbmok Ave, Baltimore, Md. LEHMAN, SARAH ELIZABETH .......... ..2105 W. Fourth St, Williamsport, P31 LEITHEUSER, ERNESTINE MARIE ....116 Kenwood Ava, Baltimore, Md. LEWIS, MARGARET NAST ................. 1.202 Hawthorne Road, Baltimore, Md. LIBAUER, RUTH EVELYN.... ................ 2506 Keyworth Ave., Baltimore, Md LINDSTEDT, MARTHA ANN. 5 Market Place. Webster Groves, St. Louis, Mo. LLOYD, RICKA ANNA ............................ 2112 Mt. Holly St., Baltimore, Md. LOWY. NORMA RANCES ................... 21 Stratford Place, Newark, N. J. MATHENY, GWENDOLYN ELOISE. ...1720 19th St, Parkersburg, W. Va. MCCARRON, CATHERINE ............................................ 1819 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. GARCIA. GLORIA MARIA ANA. GAY, DOROTHY MYRTLE ......... GEIS, MARGARET KATHRYN... GERSON, PRUDENCE ............ GERSTMYER, ANNA MAY ...... GORDON. MARY MARGARET GOTT. MARION VIRGINIA ........ GOTWALS, NAOMI-SARA ........ GREENWAIJD, ALICE RUTH..1 GREIG, DOROTHY M .................. GRETHER, CLARA ERNESTINE.... GRIMMER, ANNA KATHERINEW. GROSS, AMELIA ELIZABETH ..... HAMILTON, MARY HALL ............. HAMMELL, CARLOTTE LOUISE HANN, MARGARET PATTISON.... HARDISON, FRANCES SCOTT... HASTINGS, HELEN ZAHN .......... HAWKINS, EMMA STREATOR ,. HAYWARD, AMY BOND ............. Two Hundred Thirty-two MCLALLEN, SHIRLEY MAY ...................................... 141 Van Delinda Ave., Teaneck, N. J. ..1537 N. Milton Ave., Baltimore, Md. ....... 1320 22nd Ave., Meredian. Miss. ....Georgian Court Apts., Ba1itmore, Md. ....415 Maple Ave, Olympia, Washington ........... 236 E. Fulton St., Butler, Pa. ............. 939 XV. 9th St. Eria, Pa. ,,,,, 10 Arch St., New Bedford, Mass. .541 E. Grand Ave., Tower City, Pa. ......... 1603 18th St. Nashville Tenn . . .2910 Allendalc Road Baltimore Md 3522 Salisbury Road Birmingham Ala. ..... 3402 Powhatan AVe., Balumore Md ...... 216 Chancery Road, Baltimore, Md. ........... 198 S. 2nd Ave., Steelton, Pa. .302 E. let St Northampton, Pa. ......... 143 Seminary St., Berea, Ohio . 10 E. Main St., Schuylkill Haven, Pa. .............. 4006 Femhill Ave., Baltimore, Md. .130 Frelinghuysen Ave., Battle Creek, Mich. .................... 116 Hay Ave.,. Johnstown, Pa. .............. 309 N. 9th St, Reading, Pa. 3929 Brighton Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. ................ 31 Sears Ave., Boston, Mass. .3425 Mondawmin Ava, Baltimore, Md. .................. 408 VJ. 3rd St., Stirling, 111. ...,Chestnut Hill, Mt. Washington, Md. ....3801 Egerton Road, Baltimore, Md. .............. 965 Linden Sn, Sharon, Pa. PRINGLE, FRANCES ELLEN ......... .Northill Farm. Punxsutawney, Pa. REED, MARY VALEDIA .................... 410 Pine St. Steelton Pa. RIKER, OLIVE S. .................... . Tuxedo Park N. Y RITTER, EDNA B ...................... H505 Co1umbia Ave,Pa1merton,Pa ROBINSON, MARGARET JUNE. ..1547 44th St. Washington, D. C. RODGERS. MARGARET ................. 523 Orkney Road, Baltimore, Md. ROSENTHAL, THERESA .................................................. Lake Drive Apts, Baltimore, Md. RUPLI, MARGARET .................................................. 223 N. Hall Place, Washington, D, C. RUTHERFORD, MARTHA LINN. .................... 3777 Derry St., Paxtang, Pa. SAMPSON, LOUISE NAIRN .......... ...3 25 Lincoln Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. SCHADLER, MARY BARLOW... ........... 734 Park Ave, Elizabeth, N. J. SCHOCK. ELLEN DETVJILER .. .580 E. Market St.. Marietta. Pa. SEAMAN, SARA FRANCES ....... ....109 Market St, Scottdale, Pa. SEEM, MARY HUTCHINSON... ...... 1220 9th Ave., Greeley, C010. SHAW, MARY KATHERINE ........ .1724 Braddish Ave., Baltimore, Md. SKIRVEN, MADELINE THERESA . ..... 2900 Ailsa Ave, Baltimore, Md. SLEMAN, MARY .............................. .. 26 W. Kirk St.. Chevy Chase, Md. SMITHER, NELLE KROGER ..... ...992 Lamar Ave., Memphis, Tenn. SMYSER. SERENA STEIN .............. 495 Linden Ave., York, Pa. SOLLERS, EDITH FORD ...................... 605 Lennox St, Baltimore, Md. SPEARE. ELEANOR GERTRUDE 875 8. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, P21. SPICKLER, DOROTHY HELEN..,. ..... 721 Irving Park Blvd., Chicago, 111. SPILKER, CAROL OWINGS ............ ,..321 1Vendover Road. Baltimore, Md. STAINTON, GERTRUDE AMELIA... ..... 1020 Ocean Ave., Ocean City, N. J, STANSBURY, ALICE ISABEL ........................ 502 5th Ave.. Wilson, Pa. STRATTON, CATHERINE KENT.. ..... 1819 Broad St Trenton N J SWINGLE, GWENDOLYN D ......... .1020 Quincy Ave, Scranton Pa TAYLOR, MARGARET CAMDEN.. .2405 W Lanvale St, Baltimore Md TIER. MILDRED BROWN .............. .144 E. Sunbury St Shamokin Pa TIFFANY, EMILY VIRGINIA, .............................. VJarrenton. Va. TROXELL, ANNA MARIE ......... ..Carmel, N. Y. TRUITT, MARY ALICE ................................................ Naperville, Ill. TRUITT, MARJORIE MEREDITH ................................. 204 Monterey Ave., Pelham, N. Y. MCMAHON, CLARA PATRICIA... MEYER MILDRED ROSE ............ MICHELSON, ELLENH MIL L ARD GERTRUDE EMMA MILLER,CATHER1NE ELIZABETH MILLOY, MARGARET .................... MITCHELL, BERTHA LILLIAN.. MOORE, NINA ELIZABETH ......... MOORE. SARA WALKER... MORRIS, ANNA LOUISE. MOSS, ELIZABETH ................................ MUELLER, ELIZABETH CHARLOTTE. MUINCH, GLADYS VASHTI .................. MYERS ERMA GRACE .................... NAGLE ELIZABETH LAUBACH NEWBRAND SHIRLEY . NOECKER MARGARET H ..... O'NEAL, HAZEL ESTELLE... ONEN, ALICE CRISPWELL ....... OSBORN, MARY ELIZABETH ........... OVERHOLSER, BARBARA FRANTZ... PATTERSON. DOROTHY GOODWIN. PEARSON, BARBARA ........................ PERRON, LILLIAN CLAIRE... PERRY, SOPHY MARIE .......... POTTER, VIRGINIA... .. . POTTS, MIRIAM .............................. POWELL, HANNAH MATILDA W.. Two H undred Thirty-three TUCKER ELIABETH A .................................... 607 Vx'.187th St. New York City. N. Y. .1109 Confer Ave Johnstown, Pa. .............. Church St, Mt. Pleasant, Pa. ..... 1715 Sulgrave Road. Louisville, Ky. . ...19 S. Linwood Ave., Baltimore, Md. ..................... 630 Chestnut St., Lebanon, Pa. .Belnord Apts., Brooks Lane. Baltimore, Md. WILLIAMS. VIRGINIA OLIVE... ..................... 67 Jackson Ava. Bradford. Pa. WISE. ELIZABETH STEWART. . ...... 113 Hawthorne Road, Baltimore, Md. WODE. ELLA KELROY. ........... 4019 Edmondson Ave, Baltimore, Md. WOLFF. CELESTE LOUISE... .................................... Ellicott City, Md. WOOLLEN, BETSY ............. .311 E. Franklin St, Chapel Hill, N, C. WURZEL, RUTH ........................... 430 S. 47th SL, West Philadelphia, Pa. YERKES. ROSALIE MARY.... ............... 6413 West Chester Road. Upper Darby, Pa. YOUNG, MIRIAM H ............................. . ................ 3304 Gwynns Falls Pkwy, Baltimore, Md. VARNER. ELIZABZETH SUZANNE W'ARDEN KATHERINE .................... WARDEN. WAYNE ................ WASKOVJITZ, CHARLOTTE... WEISS, EMALYN ROSANNA.... WERTHEIMER, LOUISE , . V. Two Hundred Thirty-fom' ALDERMAN. ELIABETH AUDRA., 626 Porter 81., VJarten. Ohio ALLISON, CATHERINE EVELYN .. 15 Morris Ave.. Schenectady, N, Y. ARMSTRONG, MARGARET EDITH. ................................... 190 Riverside Drive, N. Y. BACHTELL, CATHERINE RAHAUSER. , .133 Broadway. Hagerstowm Md. BALDW'IN. LEONORE JANE ......................................... 698 Gladstone Aven Dalton, Pa BARNETTE. RUTH LITTLEPAGE ...... . .716 Dryden Drive Baltimore, Md. BASSETT, ANNA ELIZABETH . . ., 586 E Lincoln Highway, Coatesvillc, Pa. BASSETT, MARY COXE ............................ . .586 E Lincoln H1ghway,Coatesville,Pa. BEADI E MARGARET MCILVAIN . .. ..... .. ..Brockway Pa. BECK, MARGARET BONITA JEANNETTE .. .. 1.58 N. VVyon1111g St Hazelton, Pa. BENNETT, MARY LOUISE ..................................... 2740 N. Calvert St,Ba1timore, Md. BENOIST, MARIE LOUISE ..... ., .. .,,3111 Macomb St, N.VV,. Washington, D. C. BENSER. ETI'IEL MARION ................. 5509 Gwynn Oak Ave. Baltimore, Md. BENSON SIGNE ................................................. .110 Forest Drive, Calonsville, Md. BLOSSOM RHODA . ., , .. . 38 Bayview Ava, Rosebank, Staten Island, N, Y1 BOAX RACHEL MILLIKAN ....................................... 1028 ancett Ave., McKeesport, Pa. BOWERS, SARA MARGARET . ...... 126 E. High St, Mannington, W. Va. BOWMAN. THEL MA EI IZABETH ....Cornwall Heights, Bucks Co., Pa. BOYCE, EDNA DEBORAH ........................... 561 VJ. Jackson St. York Pa. BOYER. HARRIET EDNA ...... , , ,, Monongahela Pa. BOYLE, EMMA HEDDEN ............................ . 4-303 Springdale Ave,Ba1t1more Md. BRANSON, DOROTHY BROOKS .................................... 609 Prospect 31. Trinidad, Colo. BRIGHAM, HELEN VIRGINIA ., .82 Edgemont Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. BRONNE, ERIEDA CAROLYN .......................... 234 Clea Ave., Glenns Ealls, N. Y. BROOKS, THEODORA EENTON ..... 611 Reservoir SL, Baltimore, Md. BROWN, JANE CALDWELL .. . .......... 68 E. Main St.. Chillocothe, Ohio BUCK, LOUELLA BAR'IILET'I ........ ...5735 Reisterstown Road. Baltimore, Md. BURKHOLDER. EMILY SMITH .. . ............. 238 N1 Fifth St, Reading. Pa. CABLE, SARAH MAY .................... . ................................... Chewsville, Md. CANNON, BETTY YARBROUGH... H543 Otis Blvd, Spartanburg. N. C. CARLL. MARY LOUISE ...................................................................... Elkridge, Md CARNXVATH JANEI .................................................... 8127 Cedar Road Elkins Park Pa CHAPMAN CATHERINE M. IOCKVJOOD .. .. , . .. 23 Elm St, Glens Falls, N. Y CHRISTY, HELEN ELIABETH .............................. 115 University Place, Murfreesboro, Tenn. COFEIN, JANE ALCESTA ............................. 68 Murray Ave., Uniontown Pa COHEN, JUDITH . ., . ., ...4109 Barrington Road. Baltimore, Md. COLEMAN, CATHERINE WAITE ............ 1326 De Kalb Sn, Norristown, Pa. CONKLYN NANCY ELIZABETH ,,.43 EdgecliHe Terrace. Yonkers. N. Y. CORBELL. NANCY.. , ...................... .400 Mt. Vernon Ave.. Portsmouth, Va. DODDS, JEAN HAZEN ....................................... 3541 New1and Road, Baltimore, Md. ELIAS, ELEANOR ELIZABETH.. .. ., .. .. ..,...727 S. Broad $1., Trenton, N. J. ELIASON, ANNA MARGARET.... ....................................................... Newcastle. Del. ESTERER, JOHANNA ................. Neububelsburg, near Berlin, Kaiserstrasse 35, Germany ENDER, ELIZABETH KNAPP,. ......................... 4-502 Carlev1ew Road. Baltimore. Md. EVANS, LYDIA WILLIAMS ...... .......... 612 W. 40th St., Baltimore, Md. EVANS, SARA JANE.,... ., H ,1 .. . ,Alden Park Manor. Germantown, Pa. EYLER, ANNA DORCAS .................................... 4018 N. Rogers Ava, Baltimore, Md. EEDDEMAN MARGARET CHAMBERI AINE. ..... 2742 N. Charles St., Baltimore. Md. EINNEY JOSEPHINE LOUISE .................................... 12 Shaw St Annapolis, Md ELEXNER, MIRIAM. . . Shoreland Hotel Chicago,111. EONAROEE, ANNE. ........ .2208 Bryant Ave,Ba1t1more,Md FOX, MARGARET BURTON.. .. .315 9th St Oakmont A11eghany Co, Pa. FOX NETTIE ROSALINE ......................... 422 N. Carey St.,Balt1more,Md. FRAY. ELLEN BROWNING . ............. . Culpeper Va. EUNKE, DOROTHY ELIZABE'IH ............................................. 88 BroWn St, Ashley, Pa. Two Hundred Thi'rty-jive GALLAGHER, MURIEL ELIZABETH ................................................. Eighth 81., Irwin, Pa. ...2600 N. Calvert St1v Baltimore, Md. ....2056 Kennedy Ave., Baltimore. Md. ........ Woodlawn Ava, Catonsville, Md. 445 S. Robinson St, Baltimore, Md. ....... 21 N. let Ave., Duluth, M111. ..1213 Center St., Wilkensburg. Pa. . .............. 601 15th St.,W1ndber, Pa. ..5023 St. George Ave., Baltimore, Md. ...362 S. Maple Ave., Glen Rock, N, J. ...................... Orchard Hill, York, Pa. ..... 812 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Minn, ...276 Walnut Ave., Fairmont, W. Va. ....... 3412 Falstaff Road Baltimore Md. HANKER, LONA EVELYN ...... 1159 Dorothy P1ace,Memphis, Tenn HARGROVE. DOROTHY ..................................... 1826 Biltmore St, Washington D C. HARMON. ARLINE ENGART ........ Care Washington Loan and Trust Co., Washington D. C. HEINEMAN, JANE ELIZABETH ................................ Temple Gardens Apts., Baltimore, Md. HERMETET, MARY ELLEN .............. 221 W. Carroll St., Macomb, 111. HILDEBRANDT, ANNA RUTH.. ....... 3820 Bonner Road, Culver, Ind. HILDEBRAND, FRIEDA B ......... , 344-9 Roland Ave, Baltimore, Md HILL. LOUISE .................... . 105 Gilmer Ave. , Montgomery, Ala. HOLTZMAN, ROSA ......................... ..2912 Springhill Ave Baltimore Md. HOPKINS, CATHERINE PHILLIPS. .......... 52 W Broad St. , Nanticoke, Pa. HOPKINS, GLADYS IRENE .............. 2006 N St., N.W,, Washington, D. C. HUEBNER, RUTH V ............................... 3725 Marmon Ave., Baltimore, Md. HUNICKE, MARION WESTERBERG.. ..96 N. Grandview Ava, Dubuque, Iowa JACKSON, HENRIETTA M ............................ 202 Maryland Ave., Cambridge, Md. JEANNISSON, EDITH E ...... ..1624 Harrison St., Frankford, PhiIadelphia, Pa. JOHNS, RUTH ELIZABETH ................................ 407 W. 9th St Wilmington, Del. JOHNSTONE, MARY WINIFRED. ........................................ Culver, Pa. JONES. CAROLYN LEIGH ............. ..501 Hawthorne Road, Baltimore, Md. JORDEN, GERTRUDE LOUISE... ............................. 17 S. 3rd St., Bangor, Pa. JORDING, RUTH M ................................... ....1700 E. 33rd St., Baltimore, Md. KEITH. MARY CATHERINE. ........ 126 Lawn Place, Rockford. Ill. KELLEY, DOROTHY .................. 9 S. Derby Ava, Ventnor, N. J. KELLY, VIRGINIA E .......... ...14-16 Quarrier St., Charleston, W. Va. KERN, MARY KATHERINE. .138 N. Washington St., Winchester, Va. KIRBY-SMITH, BETTY ............................................ Sewanee, Tenn. KLINE, VERNER ........................... 1407 S. 3rd St.. Louisville, Ky. KLINGLEHOFER, ALICE C.. ..... 530 E. Joppa Road, Towson, Md. KLINGER, MARY E .............. 5517 Haddon Ave., Baltimore. Md. KNORR, DOROTHY WITT.. ...... 236 Stanton, Wilkes- Barre Pa KREIDER, N. MARGARET... . 78 Prospect St, Hagerstown, Md. KRUGER. IRMA A .............. .. .Green Spring Manor Baltimore Md LANG, HELEN S ..... .. 214 Gareld St. Kennett Square, Pa. LEGUM, LILLIAN .................... 3100 Hilton St., Baltimore, Md. LEHMAN, CORNELIA G ...... ..2105 W. 4th St., Williamsport, Pa. LIGHTFOOT, VIRGINIA D.. ................ 115 Chestnut Ava, Takoma Park, Md1 LIST, SARAH JANE .............. ..Carmel Road, Pleasant Valley, Wheeling, W. Va. LOCKMAN, MARTHA C. .................................... Bellaire Apts., Carlisle, Pa. LONG. MARGARET A .................... 40.0 Lauderdale SL, Selma, Ala. LOWDENSLAGER. DORIS V... ...... 3711 Yosemite Ava. Baltimore. Md. LUCKE, CATHERINE C ........ 12 Hawthorne Ave., East Orange, N. J. LUTHY, HELEN G ............... 5011 Midwood Ave, Baltimore, Md, LUTZ, MARGARET A. ...719 N. Milton Ave., Baltimore, Md. LYON, RHEA C ........................... ....829 W. 36th St., Baltimore, Md. LYBROOK. NANCY ELIZABETH ............................................... Advance, N. C. MCCALLIE, KATHERINE CUNNINGHAM ............................. Jamesburg, N. J. MCLAIN. CATHERINE REYNOLDS ........... ...10 Beach Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. MCLESTER. MATILDA E ......................... 940 Prospect Place, Ashland. Ky. MACY, MARION W .... ...... .. . ..... 237 Ridge Road, Rutherford, N. J. GATCH, RACHEL ............................... GATCHELL, HETTIE ELIZABETH... GENGNAGEL, MARY KATHERINE... GIBSON, GRACE EVELYN .............. GIDDING, JEANNE NAN ................... GILLESPIE, ADDELINE WALLACE... GIMBER, MARY ALLEN ..................... GREEN. NANNETTE SARAH... GRIFFITHS, BARBARA ELLEN ................ GRUMBACHER, FRANCES MARGARET HAGAMAN, MARTHA JOSEPHINE ............ HAGGERTY, MARY BELLE ............ HAMBURGER, ROSE HELEN... Two Hundred Thirty-six MAGILL, BEATRICE R ...................................... ..512 Elkins Ava, Elkins Park. Pa. . .................................. Warsaw. Va. ..3300 E. Baltimore St., Baltimore, Md. ......... 225 S. Court St, Circleville, Ohio ...2513 Garrison B1vd., Baltimore, Md. ..1401 Forest Park Ave., Baltimore. Md. .............. 13 Alepot St., Lewiston, Penn, .. 340 Cumberland St., Waynesburg, Pa. .................................... Aberdeen, Md. ....... 1260 Logan Ave., Tyrone. Pa. ......... 1435 Charles St., Baltimore. Md. ..3517 Springdale Ave, Baltimore, Md. ................................... Cockeysville. Md. .218 E. Middle St., Hanover, Pa. ........... 204 Pine St, Steelton. Pa. .2013 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. ................................... Augusta, Ga. ....3340 N. 18th St., Philadelphia, Pa. .......... 1203 Bakerstown Road, Tarentum, Pa. .............. 66 Riverside Drive, Red Bank, N. J. VVVVV 1506 Bolton St, Baltimore, Md. ....... 3 65 2nd Ave., Phoznixville, Pa. ..36 Euclid Ave., Jamestown, N. Y. ........................ Port Deposit. Md. ...... 111 N. 13th St., Easton, P31 ............. 427 Park Ave., Johnstown, Pa. .173 Monte Vista Place, Ridgewood, N. J .............................................. Glyndon, Md. .................. Glyndon. Md. WW125 Carlisle Sn. Hanover, Pa. 11111 4634 Pimlico Road, Baltimore, Md. ........ 5200 Midwood Ave.. Baltimore, Md. ....1736 Columbia Road, Washington, D. C. .............. 1900 Boone St, Baltimore, Md. ..129 Linden Ave... Asheville, N. C. ............. 85 Fort St., Forty Fort, Pa. ....... 4 Dover Road, Glyndon, Md. ............................ 953 N. Gay Sn, Baltimore. Md. ........................... 22 E. 24th St, Baltimore, Md. 325 Hawthorne Road, Baltimore, Md. .325 Hawthorne Road, Baltimore. Md. .......................................... Marks, Miss. .. .. .. ...3641 Locust St.. Kansas City. Mo. ..1433 Decatur SL, N.W., Washington, D. C. .................... 405 W. 2nd St, Oil City, Pa. ........................ Reisterstown, Md. ........ 12 Academy St., XVestiieId, N. Y. .805 Mountain Aveu Westfield, N. J. .......... 3119 Kelvin SL, Pittsburg, Pa. ....306 Hallam, Wrightsville, Pa, ..... 121 Prospect St., Passaic, N. J. ................ 5. Church St, Mt. Pleasant, Pa. ..3 75 West End Ave., New York City, N. Y. ............. 5105 N. 13th St., Philadelphia. Pa. Murfreesboro Road. Nashville. Tenn, ...524 Woodlawn Road, Baltimore, Md. ..... 226 N. Monroe St., Baltimore, Md. ..... 200 Woodlawn Road, Baltimore, Md. ..... 4708 Keswick Road, Ba1tim0re. Md. SWING, EDITH ELIABETH... ................. 160 Penn Ave,, Bryn Mawr, Pa. TENER, ELIZABETH ............. 14032 Terrace Road, East Cleve1and. Ohio THAMES, GLORIA Q .......................................................... 1324 Clay St., Virksburg, Miss MALLORY, HENRIETTA. MATHANEY, RUTH A ...... MAY, ELIZABETH .......... MAYMAN, GRACE LEE... MAZUR, MARION IRENE ..... MONTGOMERY, HELEN M.. MONTGOMERY. VIRGINIA. MOORE, SARAH A ................................. MORGAN, JULIA PAULINE ................... MUEHLHOUSE, CAROLYN M. MUSKIN, DOROTHY ................ MYLANDER. MATHILDE M. NACE, FRANCES G. ............. NISSLEY, CHARLOTTE G. NIXDORFF, FRANCES F.,.. NORTH, NEVILLE .......... ORT, FRANCES L.... OTTE, MARY F... PAPA, TERESA A... PARKER, MARY T ..... PERRINE, ALICE T ............... . .......... PETERSON. DOROTHY GRETCHEN. PETHERSKY, ANNA .......................... PHILLIPS, KATHRYN L. PORTER, RUTH MARJORIE PRIOR, WINIFRED ............... PURDUM, MARGARET J PURDUM, VIRGINIA L... REBERT, E. GERTRUDE. REED, KATHERINE E.. RICHARDSON, JESSIE F.. REIFKEN, VERA A. ...... ROBERTS, GRACE C .......... ROBERTS, MARGARET R.... ROBINSON, MARION O ......... ROME, MILDRED L ...... SCHOFFER, LIILIAN... SCOTT, KATHERINE M. SEEGAR, ELIZABETH B ........ SEEGAR. GEORGEANNA S.. SELF, SARAH EVELYN ............ SHAFFER, MILDRED IONE SHERBY, SYLVIA R ................. SHIELDS, DOROTHY A SHIPLEY, TILLY C ................... SHORT, SARA SHERWOODE SIEBEN-MORGEN, RUTH .. SLEASE. EMMA VIRGINIA. SMITH, ELIZABETH L ................ SMITH, FLORENCE BLANCHE... SPENCE, JEAN ............................. SPIRO, BEATRICE S... STERN. NATALIE S.. STEVENS, EVA C ................ STIMSON, KATHERINE J.. STRAYER, WINIFRED M... STURTEVANT, HOPE ..... SUTHERLAND, EDITH M.. Two H undred Thirty-seven THARP, THELMA F. . ,. .......................... 49 E. Independent St.. Shamokin, Pa. THOMS. FANNY A ......................... TOMPKINS. ELIZABETH CHURCH TREXLER, MARION ........................... TROXELL, JOSEPHINE M ........... ULERY. MARGARET H . . UNDERHILL LOIS VIRGINIA VISANSKA, FLORETTE ................. 60 Fiske Sn, Waterbury, Conn. ........ 101 W. 85th St., New York City, N Y. .A. ......201 S. 2nd St, Lehighton, Pa. ....................................................... Carmel, N. Y. , V , , V H V. 4920 N. 11th St.,Philade1phia.Pa. V.,1440 N. Nevada Ave.. Colorado Springs, Colo. ............. 915 Virginia Ave., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. VLIET. KATHERINE . ..... 110 Johnston Ava, Trenton, N. J. VOORHEES, MARGARET C ............. . Lafayette Place. Kennett Square, Pa. VVACHTER, HELEN CHRISTINE . .. , , .. . , V, 2508 Hermosa Ave., Baltimore, Md. VVARANCH. DOROTHY S. .. ., ...,..,.736 Reservoir St.. Baltimore, Md. WARFIEIJD. ELSA G ............ . 3 Dutton Road, Catonsville, Md. VVEINBERG, FREDERICAH. .. .1215 N. Augusta SL, Staunton, Va. WILSON. HELENE Z ............................... ,Hl641 5th Ave, Huntington, XV. VZL WINCHESTER. CHARLOTTE M. . , ,. ,, St Timothy's Lane. Catonsville, Md, XVINSOR, NAOMI ..................................................................... Woodlawn Station, Md. VVOODARD, ANNE E ........................ .. ., H . ................... Spring Hill, Tenn. WOOLVERTON. MARY PHILLIPS 4461 Clairmont Ava, Birmingham, Ala. XVRIGHT, ELIZABETH A ................................. 501 Delaware Ave.. Buffalo, N Y. VJRIGHT, FRANCES . V V .. VVVVVVV 398 Upper Mountain Ave. Montclair, N. J, VJRIGHT, GRACE VIRGINIAH. ............... 5200 Reno Road. W'ashington. D. C. WRIGHT, HARRIET E .................................................. 501 Delaware Ave, BuEalo, N. Y. Two Hundred Thirty-eight ABELL, MARY KATHERINE ..................................................... 205 Richards SL, Joliet, 111. H 23 60 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. .................. 63 Cooper Lane, Larchmont, N. Y. 1.3131 Gwynns Falls Parkway, Baltimore, Md. V ................ 119 Calhoun SL, Battle Creek, Mich. 3925 Belview Ava, Baltimore, Md. ..12 Hubbard Park, Red Bank, N. J. .......... 805 Electric St., Scranton, Pa. 460 Felder Ava, Montgomery, Ala. ..... Curren Terrace, Norristown, P31 ............... 2000 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. 586 E. Lincoln Highway, Coatesville, Pa. V ............. 2001 W. Pratt St., Baltimore, Md. ....... 58 Coolidge Ave., Glens Falls, N. Y. BAUGH, ANNESLEY BOND .......... .207 XVoodlawn Road, Roland Park, Md. BEAN, ALICE GOODRIDGE.. .......... 1271 Cheroke Road, Louisville, Ky. BEGGS, RUTH MARIE ................................................ 3505 Springdale Ave., Baltimore, Md. BEHREND, AMY NORDLINGER .................. 3814 Military Road, N.W., Washington, D. C. BENHAM, HELEN .............................................. 117 Simpson Road, Ardmore, Pa. BLITHE, MARGARET DICKSON .,5 608 N. 13th St., Philadelphia, P21 BLOCK, PHYLLIS SELMA ......................... ...4023 Fairfax Road, Baltimore, Md. BORJESSON, ANN MARGARET SIGRIDH ........ 169 Mills SL, Morristown, N. J. BORNSTEIN, MOLLIE ............................... .2513 Quantico Road, Baltimore, Md BROWN, FLORA ELIZABETH. 1.3809 Chatham Road, Baltimore, Md. BRYAN, MARGARET ALICE... ...3 702 Duvall Ava, Baltimore, Md. BUCHANAN. MARY JANE .............................................. Granger, Iowa BURNET, MARY ELIZABETHM .2601 Euclid Place. Minneapolis, Minn. BUTTON, MARGARET ELOISE. ......... 449 N. Aurora SL, Ithaca, N. Y. CANN, MARY EMILY ................. ....28 E, 25th St., Baltimore, Md. CARMINE. ALICE CLAYTON, 88 Baltimore Ave.. Dundalk. Md. CARNWATH, MARGARET ............................ Cedar Road, Elkins Park, Pa. CHANNEL. ELIZABETH KATHERINE, 565 Hawes Ave., Norristown, Pa. CHAPMAN, MARY LESLIE .................................................... Reithbend, Va. CHESTER, EVELYN AGATHAH. V3404 Vv'albrook Ave, Baltimore, Md. CLEMENS, MARY FENDALL ...................... Evesham Ave., Govans, Md. COKER, MARGARET JANE ..... ..,13 Wade Avenue, Catonsville, Md. CORCKRAN, ANN CAROLINE. ................ 2211 Elsinor Ave, Baltimore, Md. CRIST, JOSEPHA LYLE ........... .725 Collings Ave., West Collingswood, N. J. CRONIE. EVELYN LILLIE. ............. 2334 W. Fayette St., Baltimore, Md. DANIELSON, ANNA ADA .................... ..3 907 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md. DAVENPORT, BEATRICE LAUREL... ..... 4512 Manilield Ava, Baltimore, Md. DAVIES, MARJORIE ELIZABETH ...... ,.,,1017 4th St., Santa Monica, Calif. DAVIS, ANNA VIRGINIA ................................................... Towson4 Md. DAWKINS, HELEN MARIE H . 129 Grand View Ave., Rye, N. Y. DELEVETT, JANE ...... 3 ................... H.12800 Garrison B1vd., Baltimore, Md. DOWNS, FLORENCE NIGHTINGALEHH ............... 2213 S. Road, Mt Washington, Md. DRAPER, MARY ELIZABETH.,. .. .. .................. 216 Laurens St., Baltimore, Md. DRY, MARY AMELIA ............................................. 409 S. Main St., Nazareth, Pa. EDMUNDSON. ELIZABETH BANCROFT , .V . ............. 5547 Raleigh St., Pittsburgh, Pa. EDWARDS. AROVVHENA MARY ....................... Care Dr. E. A. Park, Rogers Forge, Md. ELY, GRACE MARION .................... ....176 Stockton St., Hightstown, N. J. EPSTEIN. IDA .................. .............................. Centreville, Md. FAUCETT. ELIZABETH .......................... ....908 Walnut St. Gadsden, Ala. FAUSTMAN, CHRISTINE FREDERICA 1114 Laurens St, Baltimore, Md. FEIGENBAUM, ALMA ...................................... 819 Myrtle SL, Scranton, Pa. FLOYD, HARRIET LOUISE ...................................... 822 Willow St., Trinidad, Colo. ABRAMS, ELSIE IRENE .................... ALEXANDER, FLORENCE NEWTON... ALEXANDER, HILDA KRAFT ............ ALLEN, MAXINE LOUISE ............. ANDERSON, ANN ELIZABETHH. ASENDORF, LOIS CATHERINE... BALDWIN, AMBER ALICE... BALDXVIN, MAY FLOWERS... BARBER. MARION JENNIE ...... BARRETT, HELEN ATKINSON, BASSETT, JEANIE COXE .............. BASSLER, DORIS CATHERINE. .. BATES, CHARLOTTE HARRIET ..... Two Hundred Thirty-m'ne FLUHRER, ANNA MARY ....................................................... 164 Lafayette St., York. Pa. EORBUSH, HELEN ADELAIDE... Spring Valley, N Y. FOWLER. SUZANN ................. . .. , . . .. 65 Temple St Reading Mass FREBURGER, MARY JANE ...................................... 504 Orkney Road, Govans, Md. FRENCH, CAROLINE EUGENIA. . ..200 Homewood Terrace, Baltimore, Md. FREUND, EDITH CLAIRE .............................. 1137 E. 50th St., Chicago, 111. FRIES. ELIZABETH LEE ..... 5940 Forest Glen Ave., Chicago, Ill. FRY, ELEANOR KIRKLAND ............... 423 Hawthorne Road, Roland Park, Md. GAY, BEATRICE GERHARDIN ................................ 411 Beechwood Place, Westfleld, N. J. GESSEORD, LOIS MAE . .............. .1802 Dixon Road, Mt. VJashington. Md. GLASSMAN, LEONORE MIRIAM.. ................ 2687 VJilkins Ave., Baltimore, Md. GOLDBERG. BEATRICE RUTH.... .2611 Liberty Heights Ava, Baltimore, Md. GOLDBLATT, LYDIA RITA ...... .. ....... 9 Malvern H111 Apts., Portsmouth, Va. GOSSAGE LILA VIRGINIA ....................................... 949 Rosedale St, Baltimore, Md. GRAPE FRANCES BERNICE . , . . .. H H .. 2700 Madison Ave., Newport News, Va. GREENBERG LOIS GERTRUDE ......................... 328 Washington Ave., Charleroi, Pa. GREGG, BARGARET ELEANOR ................ 161 Main 51., Bradford, Pa. GREGORY. KATHRYN LOUISE .............................. 2774 Alameda Blvd, Baltimore, Md. GUTH, CHARLOTTE ............................................... 805 Brooks Lane, Baltimore, Md. HAHN, ALINE RUTH .. . . . . 1906 W. Venango St, Philadelphia, Pa. HAHN, HERMINE ........................................................... 67 S. Munn St., East Orange, N. J. HANNUM, MARGARET AMELIE JANE .. ...1105 Cambria Ava, Windber, Pa. HARBOLD, MARY LEAH ............................ 343 College Ave., Lancaster, Pa. HARDY, ELIZABETH SARA. ....................... 860 Park Ave., Rochester. N, Y HARRIS, MARTHA ANNE ..................... ...39 Franklin Park West, Columbus, Ohio HARVEY. KATHERINE MARY ....... .. 1 Huntington Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y1 HATTER, ELEANOR RAE .................................... ......5304 Wayne Ave, Baltimore, Md. HAWKINS, HELEN AUGUSTA .. .. .. .. 83 39th St..Ba1timore,Md. HEARN, MARIAN RAPHAEL ............................................. 630 Belvidere Ave., Laurel, Md. HEMRY. SARAH LOCKERMAN... ........................ Port Deposit. Md. HENDERSON, RUTH ELEANOR ........................... 27 Morse Ava, Bloomfleld, N. J. HENLEY, EDMONIA BERRY ..................... .1309 Warsaw SL, 8.. Birmingham, Ala. HETZEL MARTHA Vv'ARREN .. . ....... 106 Decatur St, Cumberland. Md. HEYMAN, ROSE .................. ...614 Heyman St., XVest Point, Ga. HUGHES MAUDE ELINOR ................ ,.29 Ralston Ave., Upper Darby, Pa, HURLOCK LUCII I E DAVIS ...... 4309 Charles St, Baltimore. Md HUTZLER JEANNEI IE LOUISE ................... 4704 Hermitage Road, Richmond, Va. HYDE GERTRUDE MARTINA .. . .4101 Penhurst Ave.. Baltimore, Md, INGRAM, GEORGETTE FRANCES .. . ......................... 481 Gerhard St., Roxboro, Pa, JOHNSON, MARY SUE ........................................................................... Churchland, Va. JOHNSON. SARAH JANE ........ . .. ., . 227 E. Main St., Elkton, Md. JONES MARION PHYLLIS. .......................................... 215 S. 4th St., Coshocton. Ohio JONES VIRGINIA . . ... . ., .. ,. . .. 711 Queens Road, Charlotte, N. C. DE JOURNO. IOUISE ANNE 1702 Walnut St, A11ent0wn, Pa, KAHN LILLIAN HORTENSE ..................................... 5709 16th St., Washington, D. C. KELLEY, MARION JEANNETTE .. .. .. ................................... Nickleville. Pa, KELLMAN, NAOMI RUTH ...................... 4120 Alto Road, Baltimore, Md KILHAM VIRGINIA IRENE. .. 423 E. Lafayette Ave, Baltimore, Md. KIEHNE RUTH SUE ....... 3618 Fairview Ava. Baltimore, Md. KINKADE DOROTHY DAI RYMPLE .. 6523 N. Park Ave.. Philadelphia, Pa, KI EIN, ALICE ELI EN ................................. .1503 let Why 8., Birmingham, Ala. KNEIP, JEAN DOROTHEA ............... 3402 Carlisle Ave., Baltimore, Md, KOCK, MARY ELIZABETH .......................................................... Ruxton, Md. KOPP. GRETCHEN ELIZABETH . .. , ., . ,. ..... 1102 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md, KUNKEL, MARGARET ELIZABETH ....................... 3915 Kate Ave.,BaIt1more Md LINTHICUM LOUISE LEVERING ............ .4809 Keswick Road Roland Park Md LLOYD MARY LOUISE ... .. 431 11th Ave., Munhall Pa LONGLEY ELIZABE I H FOWLER BAIRD ..................... 511 E 42nd St., Baltimore. Md. LUCAS MARTHA BOB .................. Broadmoor Apts Connecticut Ave., Washington. D. C. LUDLOW, HELEN MARIE ............................................ 531 N. Geneva St. Ithaca, N1 Y. LYSTER, MARION GERTRUDE ............................. 75 Ginon Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. MACCARTER, BEATRICE BOUCHIER ,. ,. .5310 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Two Hundred Forty MCCOLLY. AGNES MAY .............................................. 320 Euclid Ave, Greensburg, Pa1 MACDONALD JEANNETTE ISABELLA. . 49 East Ave Mt. Carmel, Pa. MACHOL NATALIE ........................................... 151 W1 86th St. New York City N Y. MCKAY, ALICE WOODW'ARD. , .637 St. John s Road,Ba1t1more, Md MCKEE. HARRIET WILSON...... . ...Buse1ton Ave and Boulevard, Ph1ladelphia Pa. MCMASTER. DOROTHY. .............................. 3220 Connecticut Ave, Vhshington, D. C. MALAVITA, LAURA EMILY . .. . . VVVVVV 120 VJ. 12111 St1, New York City, N. Y. MARING. ESTHER BELLE . .......................... . ..................... 319 Lopsley St1. Selma, Ala. MARSHALL, CATHERINE ARMSTRONG .......................... 260 Market St.. Leechburg, Pa. MATTHEWS, MARY VIRGINIA ................. 1 . 525 A11ison Ave., S.W., Roanoke, Va. MECHLER MILDRED VIRGINIA. .. ..1716 Appleton St. Baltimore Md MENGES, RUTH LASINE .. . ,. , , Berlin, Pa. MICHELSON RUTH BERNICE .................................. 2230 Eutaw Place Baltimore Md. MILLER, ELEANOR ELIZABETH . 206 S C1ifton Terrace Washington D C M11 LER,MAR1E 1 1L1 IAN. .1 . 1. . .1 .1 Morris Manor. Grand Rapids, Mich. MILLIKEN CHARLOT TE SUSAN .1 ,1 ...,..11 Ferris Lane. Poughkeepsie. N1 Y. MINOR. LESLIE WHEAT. ....... .... .. 713 Elmira SL, Vv'illiamsport, Pa. MITTCHELL NANCY SMITH. .. 1 . .1 2112 Maryland Ave.. Baltimore, Md. MOREHOUSE ANN ................................................. 62 Wairen St., Glens Falls, N. Y. MYERS JEANNETTE FRANCES. . 9044 691h Av.e Oak Lane Philadelphia, Pa. NANCE MARGAREI ................. . . . .2042 Park Ave Baltimore. Md. NESBITT. LAURA VVHITELY. W'yndccrest Road Catonsville, Md, NORTH, ANNA VIRGINIA... .1 .. 6307 Boxwood Road. Baltimore. Md. OGLESBY. LOUISE BURTON ....... ......f 1.. .......................................... Lewisville. Ark. PARKER. RACHEL WARNER 1 ,1.. ,, , , . .1506 Bolton St, Baltimore, Md, PAYMER, ESTELLE ZELDA ,. 1, .....3506 Powhatan AV'e,,Ba1timore,Md. PEARSON, LOUISE ELIZABETH .................. 4107 Springdale Ave., Baltimore, Md. PENDLETON MARY FRANCES. .1 1 . , 315 VJ. Main St.. Elizabeth City, N. C. PERARA ELSA ..................... 131 Fort George Ave., New York City, N. Y. PETERSON MARGARET ANNE . ........................... 1709 Bolton SL. Bahimore, Md. PHILL IPS CLARE ...................... . ................ 222 Pine St., New Port, Ark. PHILIPS, MARY CHESTER .. . ........................... 419 Bryn Mawr Ava, Cynw yd, Pa . PHILIPS SARA TAY1 OR .. .. ,. Kennett Square Pa. PODOLSKY, SOPHIA .. .4903 1.1berty Heights Ave, Ba1t1more. Md. POL 1 AK KA THRYN JANE ....... 1 ..2929 Belmont Ave.,Ba1timorc, Md. RANDOLPH, SYLVIA ..................................................................... W111iamson, W. Va. REAM, JANE MARGARET .1 .1252 Bonnie View Ave., Lakewood, Ohio REICH, FLORENCE LOUISE ., ,. ., . , .. .. . 7006 Elacins Road, Ben Avon, Pa. REIZENSTEIN, HELEN LOUISE ............. 2445 Callow Ave, Baltimore. Md. RICE BESSIE LILLIAN , 732 Leunox Ave., Baltimore, Md. RIDDLE MARY ESTHER DIVINE ...... . .. 63 Central Avne Wranasquan. N1 J. ROBERTSON, ANNA LYSLE ............ ., ., 1121 Main St.. Darby1Pa. ROBISON JEAN CONACHER 1. 1 730 Grant Ave.,P1a1nf1e1d, N1 J. ROGERS KATHRYN WEBSTERW .................................. 530 Mabrey SE1, Selma, Ala. ROSENBERG, SELMAH ,. . . 1. ., Z300 Edgemont Ave, Baltimore, Md. ROSS. HELEN MAY ........................... Riddlesburg, Pa1 SALGANIK,BERN1CE MILDRED ..... 1631 Ruxton Ave.. Baltimore Md. SAMPSON,AN1CE MARGARET. ,. 605 Harlem Lane, Catonsville. Md. SAEPINGTON KATHERINE CURTTS........ 1. .. 73 W'ater St, Perth Amboy, N, J. SCHH LING, JEAN FRANCES ...................................... 321 Owen Ave, Lansdowne, Pa. SHAXV, MARY MCELHENY ...... . . ,, 1. . 5.3 West Ave, Wellsboro Pa. SHERBY, GERTRUDE ........................ 1433 Decatur NVV.Wash1ngtcm,D.C. SHERRY IRENE .. .. 1 , ............................... 1104 Light St Baltimore, Md. SHIPLEY, JESSIE RAW 411 Main St, Reisterstown, Md. SHUGARS,AL1CE LOUISE ............................. 2005 Homewood Avenue,Balt1more, Md. SINCLAIR. DOROTHY MELVILLE , . . , . . .202 Homewood Terrace,Balt1mo1-e, Md. SMITH. ADA MAY ...................................... . 4000 White Ave, Baltimore, Md. SMITH. FRANCES LOUISE ............................. 1 1754 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. SMITH, MARION LOOKERMAN. .. , 1 1 H .. , ...2449 Maryland Ave., Baltimore, Md. SNYDER, LENA ...................... 7 N, Calhoun St., Baltimore, Md. SOULE. ETHEL IDA .. 4008 Norfolk Ave.. Baltimore. Md. STEIN, MOLLY JANE ........................... . .. 1. .. , . . 339 Berkley St.. Rochester, N. Y. Two H undred Forty-o'ne STEVENS. JANET RAE TURNER .............................. 125 Rosewood Aev., Catonsville, Md. ................ 230 Market St, Bangor, Pa. ..... 6844 Ogontz AVe., Philadelphia, Pa. ..... 501 N. London Ave.. Baltimore, Md. ........... 34-18 Bancroft Road, Baltimore Md. ,.5201 St. Charles Ave., Perth Amboy, N1 J. STURTEVANT, BARBARA ................. ....200 W'oodlawn Road. Roland Park, Md. TEMPLE, HELEN HAL CHRISTINE .. ................................. Nacogdoches, Texas TOMBAUGH MARTHA BANSMANH .................................. Hagerstown, Md. TOWNSLEY, HELEN ........... ., 1421 Washingmn, Great Bend, Kansas TRIPLETT,V1RGINIA ELIZABETH .810 Worthington Ave., Charlotte, N. C. TURNER ELIZABETH ........................................................................................ Ramey, Pav UNDERWOOD, MARJORIE ELIZABETH .......................... 66 Mellor Ave, Catonsville, Md. VERA, MARY EMILY ....................................... 413 E. Bean St, Washington, Pa. WADDELL JEAN SHAXV ............ 726 Colman Aveu Fairmont, W. Va. WASLEY DOROTHY MORGAN ..... 28 S. White St.. Shenandoah, Pa. WATSON, MARY GARDNER ...... 1600 Smith Ava, Bergenfield, N. J. WEAVER EMILY ADELINE ................. 214 Rugby Rd., University, Va. WEBSTER ANNETTE HARLEY. ....5315 Springlake Way, Homeland, Md, WEINBERG ROSALIE VIRGINIA... .,1403 Montague St., Washington, D. C. WHITE, MARGARET MARY .......... . ................. 612 W. 28 St., Norfolk, Va. WILSON, MARY ELEANOR .................................... 513 5 St. Wilson, Pa. WITTEKINDT, BEATRICE THELMA ........ .11830 N. Bond St., Baltimore, Md. WITTMAAK, DOROTHEA WILHELMINA .................. 425 Frontier Drive, Erie, Pa. ZURCHER, ESTHER EVELYN ................................ 1027 Dueber Ave., S. W., Canton, Ohio STODDARD, MADELINE LOUISE. STOKES, LILLIAN EMMAWH STONE, HANNAH BEULAH... STRAUS, MARIE BETTY ................ STURGIS, MARGARET DENTON.. Two Hundred Forty-two ADAIR ELIZABETH MINET TA . ........................ 201 E. North Ave1. Baltimore. Md. AL BERS DORIS HELEN .. .. .. .246 40 B1vd,.Doug1ast0n Park, L. 1., N. Y. ALPIGINI ELLEN BERRY ............................. 3124 Harford Road, Baltimore, Md. ANDREVJS, PHYLLIS BLAKE 1260 Henry St., New York City, N. Y. ANEVVAIT CAROLINE.. ....... 1451 Hamilton St., Allentown, Pa. BACH TOVA FRANK. ............. 93 Hillcrest Ava, Geneva, N. Y. BACKES EDITH CATPTERTNE ..... 238 S. Main St., Wallingford, Conn. BAKER WINIFRED NELSON. ............ 603 E. Joppa Road. Towson, Md. BALLARD VIRGINIA ELIZABETH 3 Greenwell Ave. Country Club H1115 Va. BAT SBAUGH, ERLA RAY ............................................................. Hershey, Pa. BANE MARJORIE ELISE ........... 2276 Park H111 Ave. Baltimore Md. BANK BERNICE RITA .3622 Reisterstown Road Baltimore, Md. BASSETT, MILDRED COXE ............ .596 Main St., Coatesville, Pa. BATSON MARY ELINOR... ..1430 N. 30th St., Birmingham, Ala. BEAR, MAXINE LEE ................................. 1022 Spring St., Pensacola, Fla. BECKER, CAROLYN EVA ............ .1 .1 .1Greenspr1ng Ava, Rogers Station, Md. BENEDICT, HELEN ELIZABETH .................................... 143 W. K1ng St. XV aynesboro Pa. BIRD, HELEN BRAYSHAW ...................... . ....................... Sandy Spring Md. BISER. ANN DIXON ............................ 6210 York Road, Ba1t1more, Md. BLATT DOROTHY SYLVIA. ...5400 Ventnor Ave, Atlantic City N. J. BONSALL. PATRICIA .......... 208 N. 38th St., Ph1ladelphia, Pa, BOSLEY GEORGIE PARKER ...................................... Towson, Md. BOWLER MADELINE TURNER. ......... 350 S. Aiken Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa. BOYER, ELSIE AUGUSTA ........... . 1. . 8309 Cadwalader Road, Elikins Park. P31 BRESSSLER, LENA ................................ 3508 Virginia Ave., Baltimore Md. BRIAN, DORIS ESTELLE... .. Mayfair House Germantown Philadelphia Pa. BROWN, MAMIE LARK ..... .1 . .1030 N. 28th St. Birmingham A13. BURKE, EVELYN ......................................... 3814 Chatam Road Baltimore, Md. CALDWELL, JANE MCCAMMON.... ..15 Rockledge Road, Wheeling. VJ. Va. CALHOUN, DOROTHY KATHRYN..1 ......... 2808 Union Ave, Altoona, Pa. CALL, OLGA ELIZABETH ............................. Groton School, Groton, Mass. CANN, ETHEL ELIZABETH .............. 28 E. 25th St., Ba1t1more, Md. CARRINGTON, MARY CAKES. 224 Prospect St., East Orange, N. J. CARSON. EMILY ELIZABETH... ................. 343 E. Main St., Moorestown, N. J. CATLING. DOROTHY GRACE .................... 1336 Randolph St., N. W., Washington, D. C. CAULK, MARY DOROTHY ..................... 5107 Roland Ava, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. CHESTER. CATHERINE MEREDITH. .................. 3404 Walbtook Ave., Baltimore, Md CHRISTOPHER, ADA ........................... ..1620 N. Holden St., Warrensburg, Mo. CLAY. MARY ELIZABETH ........................ 255 Wyncote Road, Jenkintown, Pa. CLAYBAUGH, MARGARET MCKEE ........ 1335 Chestnut St., Franklin, Pa. CLEGG, DOROTHY JEAN ............................................... Everett, Pa. COLLINS, ESTHER MARY... ..5850 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. COLVIN, ISABEL REBECCA ............. McKinley Place, Somerset, Pa. COOPER, DOROTHY ELOISE ......... 101 Burke Ave., Towson, Md. COOPER, MARY .......................... ..22 N. Cowley Road. Riverside, 111. COURTRIGHT, JANE MARION. .............. 87 Price St., Kingston. Pa. COUTCH. ELIZABETH RAY .................................. Alloway, N. J. CULE, DOROTHY ................................. ..1318 Division St., Scranton, Pa. DAVIDSON, VIRGINIA MARGARET... ............. 11 W. Chase St., Baltimore. Md. DAVIS, RUTH ADAMS ........................ .1902 Riverside Road, Old Hickory, Tenn. DELLINGER1 ELIZABETH ............................ Shumway Circle, Wakefield, Mass1 DEMUTH, ELEANOR CAROLYN .600 W'est End Ave1, New York City, N. Y. DENMEAD, ELEANOR TALBOTT... ................. 2830 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. DESSAUER, HELEN B ...................... ..924 W. VJayne St., Fort Wayne, Ind. DEVENEY, MARAVENE MAY ............................................... 36 Rockburn St., York, Pa. Two-Hzmdred Forty-three DOVJD, CECILIA BUTSCHER . 1 .......................... 1702 Avery SL, ParkersburgL W. Va. 1.1111 Philadelphia Ava, Barnesboro, Pa ........................................... Glasgow. Ky. .Riviera Apt. G-l, Baltimore, Md DUNSMORE, CATHERINE VINCENT. EDWARDS, EUGENIA PURSLEY. EISEMAN, LOUISE ......................... EISEN, FLORENCE ................. 3 200 Hilton St. ., Baltimore, Md. EPHRAIM, BETSY JANE ..... 2228 Linden Ave., Baltimore, Md. ETINGER, VERA LOUISE ., . 1, 1411 Ohio Ave., Youngstown Ohio FENKER. EMILOU ................... 1920 20th Ave.. S. Nashville, Tenn. FISCH, STEPHANIE... . 15 W1 18th St., New York City. N. Y. FLAUTT, ELEANOR ........................................... 300 Elliott Ave., Aurora, Mo. FLEMING, JOSEPHINE AZILDA.. 907 N. Sheridan Road, Lake Forest, 111. FLEMING, MARGARET ANNEW. ........... 1517 Locust St., Williamsport, Pa. FLEMING, MARY LOUISE ........... ..108 E. Whittier Ave., Altoona, Pa. FLORY, KATHERINE THOMASW ...... 61 Granville St., Newark, Ohio FOSTER, ELIZABETH ................. ,1712 N1 Lasalle St., Chicago, 111. FOWLKES, IRMA CARTER .......... 700 Dallas Ave., Selma, Ala. FOX. MARGARET LANSING . .2 Taney Ava, Annapolis, Md. FREED, HELEN EMMA ............................... New Freedom, Pa. FRY. MARY EDITH .............................................. Presser, Washington GAZLAY, VIRGINIA ELIZABETHH 111111 5416 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111. GOLDMAN, JESSIE .......................... .1816 W. North Ave., Baltimore, Md. GRANT, HELEN EILEEN ................ ,. 4'34 Kenneth Square, Baltimore, Md. GRAY, ELIZABETH KATHERINE. ,,,,,,,,, 601 W. 39th St., Baltimore, Md. GREEN, RUTH WADSWORTH ....... ..404 Church Lane, Pikesville, Md. GROFF, DOROTHY YOST ........................ 143 E. Clay St, Lancaster, Pa. HAHN, LA VERNA .............. H.4511 Windsor Mill Road, Baltimore, Md. HAMBURGER, DOROTHY.. .11.,4021 Barrington Road, Baltimore, Md. HANSEN, CECILE ETHEL ........................ Schenck Ave., Great Neck, N. Y1 HANZLIK, DOROTHY MARIE... ........... 2729 Mosher St., Baltimore, Md. HARE. FRANCES MAY ............. 13419 Guilford Terrace, Baltimore, Md. HARRIS, MARY WEAVER. .. Murfreesboro Road, Nashville, Tenn. HARRISON, RUTH LILLIAN.. .. ......... 1407 Chelton Ave., Catonsville, Md. HARTZELLE, RUTH LOIS ..................... 184-8 Coronado Ave., Youngstown, Ohio HAWN, DOROTHY HENRIETTA ..75 Parkway, Mountain Brook, Birmingham, A13. HAYDON, MARY PAGE ............................... 137 W. Lafayette Ave., Baltimore. Md. HAYLECK, MARY LODEMA ....... .3808 Barrington Road, Baltimore. Md. HAYWARD, CATHERINE COALE ........................................ 402 Lake Ave, Baltimore, Md. HEINTZELMAN SARAH HARPHAN .................................... 1119 Olive St , Coatesville Pa. HENDLER FLORENCE.. .. . ....... 1710 Eutaw Place Baltimore, Md. HENDRIE MARGARET STUART ,.WestMap1e SL, Greenlawn L 1. N. Y. HERMAN,VICTOR1A REGINA. ............. 2425 Lakeview Ave., Baltimore, Md. HINE, ELAINE MARY ............... H.283 Oakwood Ava, Cedarburst, L. L, N. Y. HOFFA. CAROLYN LEE... ........... 528 Westmoreland Ave., Kingston, Pa. HOFFBERGER, ESTHER ........................................ 5301 Springdale Ave., Baltimore, Md. HALLOWAY, GRACE SUSANNE., iGreen H.111 Apts., 33rd and St. Paul Stsii Baltimore. Md. HALLOWAY, MARY ELLEN .......................................... 7 Golf Road, Upper Darby, Pa. HOLT, MARIE ADELAIDE ..... .589 Harsell Road, Wynnewood, Pa. HOOD, DOROTHY MOYER.... ....107 Surrey Road, Melrose Park, Pa. HOOPES,ED1TH CAROLINE . ......... 29 N, Smallwood St., Baltimore. Md. HOPKINS HELEN. .. .. . V1012 Murdock Ava, Parkersburg. W. Va. HORNER ANITA LOUISE ................. 526 Tayman Ave., Somerset, P31 HOUSE MARY ELIZABETH ............. 2219 Sulgrave Ave., Mt. Washington, Md. HOWARD, MARTHA CRAMPTONi ............. Oak Court Aptsq Baltimore, Md. HOWELL. EVELYN BYRD .................. .310 E. 22nd St, Bayside, L. 1,, N. Y1 HUMPHRIES, THELMA LUCILE ................................ Route 1, Wilmington. D211 IDE, FRANCES AURELIA ,, .,. .m .. 2010 E. 31$t SL.,Ba1timore,Md. IRVIN LAULETTE LOUISE .................. 800 Oakwood Ava, Dayton, Ohio IRVJIN THYRA MAY. ............................ Cambridge N. Y 1ANUARY GI ADYS 1 OUISE , . 3406 Alto Road Baltimore. Md JENKINS BETIY ....... .. V13361ngrahm St. N W., Washington D C JOHNSTON HEL EN V1RC1N1AH .................................. 25 N Sprague Ave., Bellevue. Pa. JONES JANE MEREDITHH ., .7 ,. Corner 2nd and Laurel Sts., Philipsburg, Pa. Two Hundred Forty-four KANE, SHIRLEY RUSSELL ...................................... 3707 Yosemite Ave, Baltimore, Md. ....... 3804 Norfolk Ave.. Baltimore. Md. . ....... Owens H111 Apts., Louisville, Ky. ....... 110 East High St, Lebanon, Pa. ..1908 Eutaw Place. Baltimore, Md. .............. 16 S. 3rd St., Bangor, Pa. .518 Brunswick St., Baltimore. Md. .318 Lennox Ava, Syracuse, N. Y. ..405 Upland Road, Elkins Park, Pa. ..1525 N. 16th St., Philadelphia, Pa. .7069 N1 20th St., Philadelphia, Pa. .......................................... Jacobus, Pa. .19 Franklin Ave., Merchantville, N. J. ................................ Boonsboro, Md. ............................. Eveleth,M1nn. . 5.31 Chateau Ave., Baltimore, Md. 3317 XValbrook Ave Baltimore, Md. .. .111 West End Ave , Cambridge, Md. ...... 120 S. Second St., Clearfield, Pa. .............. Linthicum Heights, Md. ...................................... Linthicum Heights, Md. ..146 Kensington Road, Garden City, L. 1., N. Y. ................................................ Clarendon, Texas MCFETRIDGE, DOROTHY ANN ..................... .1 543 E. 10th St.. Tarentowm Pa. MCLAUGHLIN. LAURINE DICKINSON.. ....... 2322 Commonwealth Ave.. Chicago, 111. MCQUOWN. AILEEN JENNESS ........................ 400 S. Pennsylvania St., Punxsutawney, Pa. MANIOSKY, STEPHANIA .............................................. 2223 Gough St., Baltimore, Md. MANN, GLADYS ............... .. 806 W. 28th St., Wilmington, Del. MANN. JEAN ............................... 138 S. Green St., Henderson, Ky. MANNING, ENNA MARY ............. .3522 Gladstone Blvd., Kansas City, N10. MARX, JOSEPHINE HENRIETTA. ......... 102 S. 16th St., Allentown, Pa. MASON, MARTHA ELIZABETH.. 3 H5008 Midwood Ave., Baltimore, Md. MASON, VIRGINIA GRACE .......... ....1320 Mazuma Ave., Birmingham, Ala. MAYER, ADRIENNE CAMILLE .2230 California St., Washington, D. C. MEYER. CLAIRE BABETTE ..... ...6211 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore. Md. MILLER. LUCY ANN ................. ..835 McCoy Road, Huntington, W1 Va. MILLER. ROSEMARY EARLE.. ........ 118 Fifth Ave., Chambersburg, Pa. MINER, FLORENCE ZILPHIA... ........ 300 Park Ave., Swathmore, Pa. MOFFETT, MARY LOUISE... .................................... Lexington, N. C. MONASH, CAROL DAVIES. .......... 54 Broadview. New Rochelle, New York MULES, ALMA MARIE ..... .Hilton Ave. and Ridge Road, Catonsville, Md. MURPHY, RUTH COOKE..,. .................. 410 Bretton Place, Baltimore, Md. MUSSON, DORIS LEONE ...5706 Oakshire Road, Baltimore, Md. NICHOL, MARY FRANCES. ......... 145 Oliver Ava, Emsworth, Pa. NYE, LUCY MARGARET.... ., .166 N. Lincoln Blvd., Buffalo, N. Y. OLIVER, ANNE REBECCA .. ................ 37 N1 Center St., Cumberland, Md. OTTENBERG, REGINA ........... ..1613 Buchana St., N. W., Washington, D. C. OTTEY, GRACE DOROTHY ................................. 523 Yale Ave., Morton, Pa. PALMER, E. HOPE ......................................................................... Nichols. N. Y. PARKER. CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH... .3406 Garfield St., N. W'.. Washington, D. C. PASTORIUS, HELEN DAVIS ....................................... 230 E. Bertach St., Lansford, Pa. PATRICK, MARY REYNOLDS . . .1132 l7th St., N. W., Canton, Ohio pERKINS, HARRIET AUDREY.. ....205 S. Prospect St. Burlington, Vt. FINDER MARION JEAN ............................................. 434 Cyprus Ave Johnston, Pa. POLAN LILLIAN MIRIAM .. . . 2306 Tioga Place Baltimore 111d. PORTER JANE DEVEREUX ........................... 1132 Greenview Road. Birmingham, Ala. POWELL GERAI DINE KENNEDY . .................. 3212 St. Paul St. Baltimore, Md. PRICE, DONNA .................................. . ....519 Overdale Road, Ten Hills, Baltimore, Md. PRICE, MARY ELIZABETH ................................... 340 Marine Barracks. Quantico, V2. RAMIREZ DE ARFI 1 AND DORA . . ........................ Mayaguez Porto RICO RAMIREZ DE ARELLANO OLGA. .. .. Mayaguez Porto Rico RANDOLPH MARY ARCHER ............................................ 1504 Park Ave Richmond Va KATZ, MILDRED RUTH ...... KAVANAGH, JANE BRUCE... KELLER, VARA ELOISE ................ KEMLER, DOROTHY ELIZABETH... KENT, MARY LOUISE ........................... KIDWELL, BARRETT MARYLLUS ..... KNOWLAND, ELIZABETH WILCOX... KOCH, ISABEL LOUISE ........................ KOHN, JULIA ............ KOHN, MILDRED ..... KROUT, LAURA EDNA ............... LAIRD, ELIZABETH ALLISON... LAKIN, CATHERINE ................... LAMPE, IDA ALICE ...... LATCHAM, VIRGINIA ...... LEACH, FLORENCE ANNA... 4 LEONARD, LUCY ESTELLE ....... LEONARDSON. HELEN LOUISE ....... LINTHICUM. DOROTHY PERKINS. LINTHICUM, MARY DELMAH ......... LYNCH, IDA BALDWIN ............ MCCANNE. DOROTHY ............. Two Hundred Forty-five RANFT, CAROLYN REGINA .......................................................................... Pikesville, Md. REDHEAD, JANE LENORE.. ..................................... The Argonne, Washington, D. C, REED, SARAH JANE .................. Capt, T. W. Reed. Naval Station, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands RICHARDSON, JULIA HARRIS ........................................................................ Mercer, Pa, RICHMOND, JEANNETTE MARIE... ...191 Bellevue Ave, Upper Montclair, N. J. RITTENHOUSE, MIRIAM PAULINE. ........... 3129 N Calvert St, Baltimore, Md ROBERTSON. EMMA SADTLER .. .. . 4833 Keswick Road Baltimore Md ROBINSON. BURTON EDMUNDS.. .. 137 VJ. Washington Iane Philade1ph1a, 13:1. ROBINSON, MARY MARGARET ............................. 1017 23rd Ave., Altoona Pa. ROTHSTEIN. MIRIAM THELMA ..1432 Montague St., N. W., VJashingLon, D. C. RUDOLPH, FRANCES ALSTON .................. 1324 Mazuma Ave., Birmingham, Ala. RUSSELL, EVELYN ANNETTE... ..................................... Reisterstown, Md. ST. JOHN. BETTY BENNETT ............ 1033 Palisade Ava, Palisade, N. J. SALINGER, HARRIET SUSAN .................................. 530 S. St. Joseph St., South Bend, Ind. SANDERS. JEAN ELIZABETH ........................................... Greenlawn, Long Island, N. Y. SANDT, KATHERINE ........................... 225 Church St, Brookville, Pa. SANNER, MARGARET ELEANOR. ................ 1935 Mosher St., Baltimore, Md. SAUSE, HELEN ELIZABETH .......... ..2422 Liberty Heights Ave, Baltimore, Md. SAUTERS, JEANNETTE BEULAH.. .......... 64-04 Pinehurst Road, Baltimore, Md. SCHAAF, PHYLLIS ANNE ...................... 4633 Crestwood, Fort XVayne, Ind. SCHMIDT, LELA BELI .................... 4210 Springdale Ave., Baltimore, Md. SCHULZ, DOROTHY ELIZABETH.. ....... 867 Quinten Ava, Trenton, N. J. SCHVJARTZ, GERTRUDE LEVY.... 1225 Lindey Ava, Philadelphia. Pa. SELF, MARJORIE ADAIR ...... . ............. Marks, Mississippi SEWARD, ELIZABETH BELL . ............................ Allmondsville, Va. SHARP, ELSA FREDERICK, ......... 2733 N. Calvert St, Baltimore, Md. SMITH, ELECTA VIRGINIA.... ..,.319 Hampton Road, Southampton, N. Y. SMITH, FRANCES MABEL.. .. ................. 121 Prospect St., Passau, N. .1. SMITH, ADELAIDE SUSANNE... ............... 435 Chase SL, Kane, Pa. SPEERS, ELLEN TORRANCE .112 Main St, Belle Vernon, P21. STAINTON, HELEN JEANNETTE . 1020 Ocean Ava, Ocean City, N. J. STORY, CHARLOTTE ELOISE ..... 527 E Genesee St. Fayetteville, N. Y. STOVER. EDNA VORHEES.. ...... 4-33 S Julian 81:, Bedford, Pa. SUDOW, DENA ...................... ..1115 S. Jay SE1, Aberdeen. S. D. SUMMY, JANE AMER ............................. 838 E. Orange St, Lancaster, Pa. SUTTON, MARGARET VIRGINIA.. 2.3823 Woodley Road, Washington, D1 C. TAYLOR, HARRIET ELIZABETH... ....... 108 Longwood Road, Baltimore, Md. TAYLOR, LOIS KATHERINE .................... 3125 Abell Ave., Baltimore, Md. TOLZMAN, MARIE CAROLINE. .8 Overbrook Road, Catonsvi1lc, Md. TO'WNE, BARBARA ................................. 6000 Ready Ave., Baltimore, Md. TOWNSEND, BETTY CRITCHLOW... ..1612 Third Ave. New Brighton, Pa. TRACEY, CATHERINE GEORGE... ...... 107 Allegheny Ave Towson, Md. TURNER, HELEN MONTELL ....... ...710 XVaIker Ave Govans, Baltimore, Md. VAN ARNAM. BETTY LOUISE. .. .......... 1128 W Wayne St , Fort Wayne Ind. VAN NOSTRAND, GRACE ...................... ...Broad Hollow Road, Farmingdale L. I. N Y. VAUTHIER, ELIZABETH WOODVVARD. ................ 2102 N Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. WALKER, HELEN GRACE ........................ .3509 New Queen St, Philadelphia, Pa. WARGO, EMMA DOROTHEA.. ........ 603 Chestnut Ava, Trenton, N. J. WAYS, MARY KATHERINE.... .. .............. 40 Warrenton Road, Baltimore, Md. WHEAT, NATHALIE W ............... ...3218 Auchentoroly Terrace, Baltimore, Md. WHITE, ELIZABETH LENORE ....................................... 3800 St. Paul St, Ba1timore, Md. VJEST, EDNA SNYDER ................................ . 3010 Wylie Ave., Baltimore, Md WOLLMAN, MURIEL LEE. 2842 Guilford Ave , Baltimore Md. WOODWARD, JANE .................................. 224 Greeves St. Kane Pa WOODVVARD, PAULINE BARBER ............................................................ Millersviue, Md. Two Hundred Forty-sitr is i its blast heard throughout all words. and ' dallr has that trumpet wh Horn, Elm IJH :3 called G jallaz- . --from The Prose Edda. iIIAQX PAGE Alcock, John LiExporLer 1 xxiii Apex Gloriotone Radio .................. xxvii Archer Laundry .............................. xx Arundel Corporation ......................... Vi Baltimore Riding School .................... XXVi Belvedere Hotel ................................ xiv Bertram. Berneyelmporter .............. ix Campbell, Harrinontractor ............ x Campbell, Maryelmporter ................ v Celestial Restaurant ........................... ix Central Metal Supply ....................... xii Charles Street Association .................. xv Corinne Beauty Shop ........................ xxvii Daily Record .................................. xxiii Dietrich Brothers .............................. xxvii Eaton Burnett Business College ......... iii Elliott, Charles L. .......................... xxvii Eierman Motor Company ................ xxvi First National Bank .. . xxiii Fisthleaners ........ V xxvii Fiske-43terer .................. xvi French Hosiery Shoppe xii Gaxton Company ........ xxii1 Gill Secretarial School .. Goldsmith-Stern .......... XVi Hale, LeroyeReal Estate .......... Hawkins Ofiice Training Schoolw Harris 8 VViIIiams Hidden Garden Tea Room... 1. Hughes Catering Co. ................ .. ii Jones, A. T., 8 Sons77Costumers. Kirk, Samuel Y5 Son. Inc.-Jewelers.. viii Knipp, John C., 8 Sons ................... xxvi Lins, Dr. A. H ................................. XX I 0rd Baltimore Hotel ........................ ii Mail Steamship Line ......................... xxiv McDowell Co. .................................. xv PAGE McKee Secretarial School ................... XX Metropolitan Tourist Co. .................. xxvii Miller. I. ......................................... xv Morris, J ................. xv Mossi Isaac ....................................... xii Neild, Arthur ................................... xvi Nice. Mrs. Clay, Inc. ........................ xii Park Business College..,. ............... vii Pen-Mar Company ........................... xvii Peter Pan Gift Shop ......................... v Polly Ann Beauty Shoppe .................. ix Powell Nurseries ............................... xix Queen Quality Boot Shop .................. xii Quinby Inn ...................................... xiv Read Drug Store .............................. xvi ReadeTaylor Company, The ............. xxix Regal Laundry .............................. xxiii Remington-Rand Co. ............ viii Rettaliata. L C .............................. viii Ritter, I. A 8 Son ......................... xiv Roberts Pharmacy ............................ xiv Rossol 5 Restaurant ............................ xxvii Rubinsteins Beauty Salon .................. i Safe Deposit 8 Trust Co ................... xvii Schoen 8 Co. .................................. XXii Spalding '25 Brothers .......................... v Solmson Fly Screen Co ....................... iv Southern Hotel .................................. xvi St. Regis Restaurant .......................... xvi Thomas 8 Thompson ........................ vii Tickner i5 SonSeUndertaker ............ XX Towson Estates ................................ xviii Triangle Sport Shop .......................... viii Warren Road Garage ........................ V ix VJeIsh Construction Co. .................. XXV Western Mill 8 Lumber Co ............. xx White Studio ................................... xxvii Wolf Cohn-Gowns ......................... viii J 9.. . . .mnanMsKo v5 gamum 33;: J ,4 is. . mmmmmegufn. . $$$me nth. ,. .. ..v . . . Gwszmmgp .' ' lz .. 3a y Kb . Hggmgmamasgwa ....... , $1....mw $3 w, a 33 3 athxWJWVV E . w... . .1. n. . Na d 1h .hnl I xv... Ihl. . :- 21.. Qaedwcg.mmmm. aomm 4 x, ?Naawxwa H... man. 5:: ukmg$xE NW. . 1x$x$xxwis.x$.a ., ,9 wpmmEx 2Q $mo.gx. 603 .xxz 3 om e m Odommgy . .3 pp; www.wanmtd p1 1.qu 3...? $$qu . .3915 6:8 3,--Hy....'. Juil..:. .ailuuuwia? ,9 ham. zmnggiaig nngziszzww a 0 3w ,N. nggag mmaqm. .22.: ..., 70 .,, . . mme-oghwwcwwms .. . 3N3N . , . i... ll! . -x..$;3.va ,9 ,3; .333 U E E: :E E... E ; : E . SE: E o awv i X IVA? u WwOEm.umm5mAmv :- NELLE SMnmER IN H562 OFFICUAL CAPACITY I x 3 U w 'xM RF 2M? i GIRLS fhe mosf imporfan? years of your lives are righf now. Along wifh learning. learn +0 fake care of your skin and hair and your body God's greafesf giH. Frederick Permanenfs Rewaves. Finger Waves! MarceWs. Manicures Facials, Hair CuHing. Reducing Bafhs Mlle. Helene's HELENA RUBINSTEIN SALON 4ll N. Charles Sf. VErnon 2827 LEARN SHORTHAND IN 30 DAYS OldeswL ShorJr-Term School in BaHimore SHORTHAND, TYPING. BUSINESS INFORMATION. ENGLISH. FILING INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION Day and nghf Classe$ Open AH Year SECRETARIAL TRAINING GILL SCHOOL 5I9 N. CHARLES STREET TEL, VEr. b7l8 HAWKINS Tame SCHOOL 2324- NORTH CHARLES STREET SHORTHAND TAUGHT IN SIX WEEKS TYPEWRITING. BOOKKEEPING. FILING POSITIONS SECURED INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES Phone: BElmon+ 6592 M. E. HAWKINSI Direcfor JAMES W. HUGHES CATERING CO., INC. VErnon 0503 12 EAST CENTRE STREET BALTIMORE. MD. Only +he Besf and Pures+ Grades of Foods Used WM. T. CARTERl Manager PROMPT SERVICE The Lorcl Baltimore Hotel BALTIMORE'S FINEST HOTEL V An Ins+i+u+ion in Keeping wifh +he Tradii'ional Hospifalify of Maryland Our Four Res+auran+s are Under +he Direc+ion of One of America's Mosf Famous Chefs The Beaufiful Calverf Ballroom and Parlors Available for DINNERl DANCE OR BRIDGE UNEMPLOYMENT HTS GYM DEPARTMENT EATON 8: BURNETT COMPLIMENTS BUSINESS COLLEGE OF Secre+arial and A FRIEND Business Courses 7 and 9 EAST BALTIMORE STREET An Accredi+ed Commercial School ? 53D YEAR Send For Catalogue HAVE YOU FOUND IT? WFHE HIDDEN GARDEN 721 ST. PAUL STREET A favorHe rendezvous for Jrhose of discriminafing +as+e BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER Phone, VErnon 4483 Gllmor 0990 SOLMSON'S RUSTLESS FLY SCREENS AND METAL WEATHER STRIPS OF THE BETTER KIND CLASS PORCH ENCLOSURES DRAWINGS FURNISHED M. SOLMSON FLY SCREEN CO. Es+ablished 1890 Bayard and Nan+icoke 5+5. Vm'r OF TIME INEP-LCTION COMMITEE Girls' College and School OuffiHing m addHion fo Hwe implemenfs $or every afhlefic spark. A. G. Spayding 8y Bros. are also equipped f0 supply unHorms made In H1eir own $ac+ories. under +he mosf sanifary condifions for girls' colleges. schools and camps. IIO EAST BALTIMORE STREET w WASHINGTOqu e STREET, N. w. MARY CAMPBELL 419 NORTH CHARLES STREET m X; Gowns. Wra ps, Ensembles, Ha+s. Accessories GREETINGS!W9 wan+ you +0 feel +his Is YOUR shopya place you will deligl'rf +0 visit We specialize in HAND-WROUGHT JEWELRY, Florenfine. Semi-precious and An+ique Eninsh BuH-erfly Ficfures and Jewelry. IMPORTED GIFTS, including DANISH HAND- WROUGHT PEWTER, by JUST ANDERSON, and JAPANESE LACQUER WARE. which will no+ chip nor peeI usefuI as well as very lovely. Come in and Ief us prove our desire +0 welcome and serve you. Experf Jewelry and Wa+ch Repairing y 1 THE PETER PAN GIFT SHOP 422 N. CHARLES STREET y BALTIMORE. MD. w Summer Shop York Harbor, Maine y VErnon 8l24- y r 7 7 777 7 77 7 77 777 1 THE 1 1 ' 1 1 ARUNDEL CORPORATION 1 1 1 BALTIMORE MARYLAND 1 1 1 1 1 1 CONTRACTORS AND ENGINEERS 1 1 1 1 AND 1 DISTRIBUTORS OF SAND AND GRAVEL 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 CED 1 t9 1 1 1 Vl u- MY DEARv I NEVER. CRACK A 600K .' l Domr THOMAS 8 KNOW A TIHN W THOMPSON CO. PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS Pure Drugs. Toilef RequisHes, Efc. CHARLES AND 25TH STREETS CHARLES AND CENTRE STREETS BALTIMORE AND LIGHT STREETS Delicious Soda IT MAY BE SO BUT THERE'S ALWAYS'WW' BEImonf 9587 PARK BUSINESS COLLEGE i Progressive Secrefa rial Course Modern and Efficienf Pra c+ical Office Training Individualich French and English Day and Nigh+ Classes W 2735 MARYLAND AVENUE W Vll Magazines CHARLES AND TWENTY-SECOND STREETS Phone us your wan+s BElmon+ 6648 L. C. RETTALIATA PHARMACIST Sodas and Sa ndwiches COMPLIMENTS OF Kodak Supplies Whifman's Candies SAMUEL KIRK 8 SON. INC. Jewelers-Sfai'ioners SiIversmifhs 42! NORTH CHARLES STREET GOLD JEWELRY l8l5 TRIANGLE SPORTING GOODS D'AMONDS WRIST WATCHES CORP' FINE STATIONERY v F o u N D E D COMPLIMENTS VErnon mums F. J. PERRON. Regional Manager OF BALTIMORE Millinery Es+ablished I 895 WOLF COHN. INC. REMINGTON RAND BUSINESS Coa+s Furs SERVICE. INC. 130 WEST FAYETTE STREET BALTIMORE MD. Dresses IZZO CHARLES STREET. NORTH MARYLAND DRESSES FROM $l5.00 UP COMPLIMENTS OF THE CLASS OF 1933 VIII Thursday morning in the Rotunda - - STUDY IN PHYsmeNOMY 342-3 GIFTS FOR GRADUATION POLLY ANN Jewelry and NoveHies Beau+y Shop Moderafely Priced BEAUTY CULTURE BERTRAM S. BERNEY Specializing in Eyelash and Brow Dying IMPORT 729 WEST NORTH AVENUE 342 NORTH CHARLES STREET th' MAdiSO 5480 j W 7, ,i,,i 7, 7, , 1 NEW CELESTIAL RESTAURANT Phonev Cockevsvme I46 H7 NORTH HOWARD STREET 3 WARREN ROAD GARAGE Where Refinemenf Reigns B. C. ZINK. Propriefor Nash Cars Diamond T Trucks Dining Dancing YORK AND WARREN ROADS De Luxe En+er+ainmen+ COCKEYSVILLE. MD. NO COUVERT CHARGE ALBERT L. THOMAS -ZnWWPMm 1.6 nIxywz, mam 5?..Cm1 0:.. IOCmm mam OZNUmZ $387 :6 :mm 1 maozm IZdN 4.. Oyivwm: mOZm nO. aosmez ZZGEyZU 8302 80 3x80 NE: Fu+ure Hisfory of Goucher College 5000 A. DJ By DR. E. N CURTIS . As a Grouchy College, judging by :EF'Od of brganch +he iniernai evidence of papers Aicracan Guggk wriHen by s+uden+s or profes- sors and marvelously preserved +0 us undernea+h Hie lava-beds oi Hie Chesapeake. seems +0 have da+ed from +be laie Ren- aissance or Early ReformaHon. The evidence on Jrhis poini is. however. confliciing. There is M'WV' some reason io suppose ihaf Hie insfiiufion belonged +0 +he Aerec or Maya cuH'ure and was originally founded for prin- cesses or pries+esses of Jrbese races. If may have served as a fraining-school for Vesials in Hie Roman period. ther remains seem +0 daie from file American Civil War, while ibere are some references +0 Hie guiiioiine ancl +he Emperor Napoleon. We may infer iben Wi'i'i'l a fairly high degree of probabiii+y ihai fhis was a very ancieni and iong-persisfing foundaJrion. da+ing originally from abou+ 500 B. C. Though i+ may have been carried on a+ a Ia+er period by Hie Druids who are occasionally alluded +0 in Hie exhumed records. +he school was perhaps obiiierafed in some border-raid of +he Pawnees or Apaches ii+ is no+ clearly known whefher by fine Mexico or Paris branch of +his na+ioni. H was possibly revived as a Ter+iary branch of fine Franciscan order +hough iJr did noi again aHain iuii bloom unfii a cen+ury or +wo iafer. H was apparenHy affended in considerable numbers by Hie daugbiers of French emigres and was again burned on Sherman's march +0 Hie sea. Rising like Hie phoenix from ifs ashes a second iime, if seems +0 have been made a branch of Hie Unifeci Siafes Naval Academy. This was doubfless done +0 preserve if from iuri'i'ier clesfruciion. Li++le can be foici of Hie aciual life of +hese ancien+ sfudenJrs. H is i'houginL ihai Jrhey siudied mainly +he Jrrivium and quadrivium wiJrh some ArisfoHe. and ihaf Lafin was 'Jrhe medium oi insfrucfion. bui' even ibis is coniecfured. A Few ariifacis have been iound among Hie ruins; a greai' quanfiiy oi meJral hairpins badly corroded buiL perhaps made of Jrin from Cornwall: some oblong sfrips of a gummy subs+ance whose use cannmL now be deiermined. bui' possibly employed +0 fasien parchmenHeaves Jrogeiber Her as has been shown above, +bis insfifufion anfedafed +be knowledge o'F paperi: one or fwo specimens of a wri+ing-machine known as a +ypewri+er or prinfing- press. used wi+h0u+ doubf ai' a laier period +0 +ake noies in +he classroom: a number 01c ii++le boxes con+aining whife powder and a smail mirror. probably some drug for medicinal purposes: and a large club curved ai one end. clearly iniendeci for seli- defense under Hie Jrquelage of +he Naval Academy. As no gold coins have been found, if is coniedureol ihaf Jrhe sfudenfs were poor. From one or Jrwo charred frag- meni's of a small manual. i+ appears +ha+ a s+uden+ guild governed ihe college under +he name Siudeni's Organizaiion, and +ha+ +his body engaged and disciplined Hie fac- tu according +0 a greai variefy of rules. If appears even +ha+ one such s+uden+. a Miss Dean. served for a i'ime as Aciing Presidenf of +he college. She mus+ have been a very much harassed and +roubled woman as ibere are references +0 Miss Dean's cares in a si'udenf hymn oi: +he period. Anoiher siudenJr occupying an imporiani' posifion as Counsellor iwhich may be a corrupi'ion oi Chancellor or may mean Legal Defender in fine cons+an+ s+ruggles beiween Jrown and gowni was a member o1C Jrhe iConfinued on Page Xllli Civil Mr at XI wq 53 I 5 YORK ROAD THE HOSIERY SHOP. Inc. Hosiery SAY IT WITH FLOWERS Every+hing +ha+ is Ar+isfic and Beaufiful in CUT FLOWERS and PLANTS ISAAC H. MOSS, INC. Underwear BALTIMORE, MARYLAND LEROY HAILE REAL ESTATE 2I5 NORTH CHARLES STREET Opposife Ff EALTiMORE MRS. CLAY NICE. Inc. TOWSON delify Building 7 MARYLAND QUEEN QUALITY FOOTWEAR W Experf In All 1 For Evening For Affernoon H , W k Far The Campus alr Or W QUEEN QUALITY BOOT SHOP 2446 CHARLES STREET NINE WEST LEXINGTON STREET CENTRAL METAL AND SUPPLY CO. 609-Il EAST LOMBARD STREET PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLIES. PIPE, FITTINGS AND VALVES XII NORTH and MARYLAND AVENUES aha Fui'ure His+ory of Gaucher College i5000 A. DJ iConfinued from Page Xii Order of Masons, +hough +his is +he only con+ac+ wi+h +he building-guiids so far discovered. A +hird s+uden+ known as Regisirar or Regisi'er iihe exacf reading is here uncer- +aini musf have had charge of +he hypocausis wiih which +he buiidings were heafed, and +his may form a second poinJr of coniacf wiih Jrhe building guilds. The names of Jrhe halls in which Jrhe sfudenis lived show a sirong Viking influence and are regarded as furnishing posiiive promc +ha+ Jrhose wild marauders discovered BaHimore before Chrisfopher Colum- bus. H was doubfless +hey who firsi' sfamped a love of +he sea on Jrhese advenfurous maidens and +hus made possible +he Ia+er influence of +he Naval Academy. The cons+an+ly recurring proieers againsf +he food served in Jrhe halls of residence may be +aken as convincing evidence of +he as- ce+ic habii's 01C Jrhe s+uclen+s who of course learned +0 faer as Teriiaries oi Jrhe Franciscan order. This is all +ha+ is known of Grouchy College a favoriJre siuolium generaie of +he Pope. H is abundanily clear a+ leasf from iis emphasis on religion, navigafion and governmenf ihai Hie siudenis muer have been a very versa- Jrile and capable body of young women. Xlll x xl X AAAAQ Qumby g COMPLIMENTS OF 4W1? COMPLIMENTS OF ROBERTS DRUG STORE THE BELVEDERE BALTIMORE'S ULTRA AND ONE OF America's Oufsfanding Hofels a Resfauranf of Excellences a MANAGEMENT WILLIAM J. QUINN. JR. XIV THE JOS. E. MORRIS SHOP 304 Charles S+ree+ Norfh Frocks-Coafs-Hai's l. MILLER Beaquul Shoes 2I8 NORTH CHARLES STREET Since l835 RUCS CARPETS LINOLEUMS IT PAYS TO BE SURE WHEN YOU CHOOSE Quali+y and Price Guaranleed McDowell 8L Co. 2I7 NORTH CHARLES ST. THIS STREET-WITH SUCH A HOMEY ATMOSPHERE Like Regen+ Sfreel'. A bH' of +he Rue de la Paix. As charming as Corso Umberfo. We hear all Jrhese lhlngs of Charles Slreel and smile. For +here is +ru+h in all of +hem, ye+ knowing Charles Sfreel we could never find if loreign-like. For surely mosl' of HS Charm lies in H19 lad +ha+ while a big cify has grown up around if-Cliarles Sfreef. for all i+s newly acquired beau+y, is s+ill Charles Slreel of old Ballimore ToWn. Here +he shop keepers know +heir cuslomers. Here +he salespeople remem- ber your own name and offenHmes your mofher's. Here one day or ano+her you will see pracfically all your friendsa buying. window shopping or iusf walka ing Clown fown. S+ree+s wider, longer and more pre- +en+Iou5abu+ no sheet iusl like Charles Sheet l'he whole world over. CHARLES STREET of Bal'rimore Published by The Charles Slreel Associalion XV RUN RIGHT TO READ'S FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS! CONFECTIONER W AND CATERER 7OM703-705 W. NORTH AVE. BALTIMORE THE SOUTHERN HOTEL COMPLIMENTS OF BALTIMORE'S FOREMOST A Ho+el d A+mosphere and Environmenf W THE ST. RECIS FOLLOW 18I5-18I7 N. Charles 5+. IN THEIR reminding you of FOOTSTEPS- OUF SUPERB SERVICE TIMELY MENUS Edined Surroundings ExceHen+ Cooking Good and thesome Food Ided Desserfs Specm LOW Prices OPEN UNTIL 3 A. M. Your senior sisfers know fhey can feH you Hwaf fhe smarfer. more fasfidious girls shop af GoldsmiflmeernE GOLDSMITH-STERN'S I06 W. Lexingfon 5+. COMPLIMENTS OF THE CLASS OF1932 XVI COAL and BUILDING MATERIALS SPlC-AND-SPAN DELIVERIES ROOFING FURNISHED AND APPLIED PEN-MAR COMPANY INCORPORATED 323 MUNSEY BUILDING PLAZA 2750-9 SAFE DEPOSIT and TRUST COMPANY OF BALTIMORE I3 SOUTH STREET Surplus and Undivided Prowrifs Over ...................... $4.870.l98.00 CapH'aI .................................................................. $2.000.000.00 CHARTERED I864 Ads as Trusfee of Corporafion Morfgages. Fiscal Agen+ for Corporafions and lndi- viduals, Trans1cer Agen+ and Regisfrar. DeposHary under plans o1c reorganiza+ion. Ads as Execufor, Adminisjrrafor. Guardian. Trusfee. Receiven Afforney and Agent being especially organized for careful managemenf and seHlemenJr o? esfafes of every Characfer. One-s+ory Fireproof Building. th la+es+ and beer equipmenf for safefy of confenfs, used exclusively by H16 Company. Safes for renf in ifs large fire and burglar promc vauHs, wifh spacIous and weH-lighfed coupon rooms for use of pafrons. SecuriHes held on deposi+ 1Cor oqu-of-Jrown corporafions and persons. J. J. NELLIGAN, President XVII TOWSON ESTATES THE FINEST RESIDENTIAL SECTION OF TOWSON Locafed on Norfh Side of Joppa Road One Mile Eaer of York Road STANDARD THREE YEAR LEASES ENTRANCE TO TOWSON ESTATES IN A HIGHLY RESTRICTED NEIGHB ORHOOD THE FISH POOL AND RHODODENDRONS IN THE PARK AT TOWSON ESTATES TOWSON ESTATES ORGANIZATION 306 N. CHARLES ST. BALTIMORE, MD. OFFICE54I0-4I4 MORRIS BUILDING PHONE PLAZA 6254 XVIII Miss Von B, As you see. Takes her gym work seriouslee. Oh S-I-S-T-E-R-S. . . She's commanding. ln+roducing +he Basse++s She's demanding, Mildred, Jeannie. Elizabefh and Mary. Even for H16 $acul+ee. freshman. sophomore. senior and junior, respedively-all 01c Coafesville. Pa. POWELL'S NURSERIES OFFICE: H ALLEGHANY AVENUE, TOWSON MD. Phone TOwson 707 RHODODENDRONS . N ., , VIEW OF TOWSON ESTATES, EAST JOPPA ROAD, TOWSON, MD., SHOWING PART OF A PLANTING OF THREE-CAR LOADS OF RHODODENDRONS XIX Nighf CaH COckeysville 387F72I DR, A, H, LINS He who cures a disease. may be He skillfMest Specializing in lnfecHous and Confagious Diseases o1c H19 BM he WHO Premn+5 it 35 Dog Since I909. Lady Assisfanf. Counfry Boarding. Separafe Farms for Sick Animals. Office near Towson. +he smtesf Physician Tel. TOwson 907-W Funera! Service for 57 Years HARRIS 5 WILLIAMS Af Hwe Price You Wish +0 Pay WM. J. TICKNER 5 SONS Norfh and Pennsylvania Avenues Elec+rical Confracfors Elecfrical Appliances TOWSON. MARYLAND BALTIMORE, MD. We Have Hwe Lumber-vJud Call Our HYour Bosom Friend Number IS MOTHER'S FRIEND MADISON 5055 ON WA'SHDAY W E S T E R N ARCHER'S LAUNDRY MILL 5 LUMBER CORP' PROMPT SERVICE LUMBER5M'LLWORK MCKEE SECRETARlAL SCHOOL THE ST. JAMES Charles and Cenfer S+ree+s Builders' Supplies Pain+s 5 Hardware Secrefarial Subiecfs. Special Summer 2600 BLOCK W. NORTH AVE. Ugd Waibrook SfaroM Course for Goucher Graduafes. Taephone VErncn 3I26 Miss Gardner, Princhal FAR OVER THE MISTY HILLS Far over ilie misly hills Upon a fair horizon Sunsef gleams. Beyond a slormy sea There rises a caslle fair The spires o'F Goucher rise on Tower of dreams, lnl'o elernily. Flaming brighl in +he golden lighl Though s+ormy walers llauni us Of +he selling sun, And hinder all our way. E'er +riumphan+ i+s dreams come frue A vision s+ill will haun+ us And i+s baHle's won. Of happiness some day Lo. Goucherewe see you lhere When we. oh Gaucher College. From alar. May reach your happy shore As a beacon +0 ligh+ our way tln love and adorafion One lone slar. To live forever more. Tunee-Where My Caravan Has Rested Twiligh+ folds 50H wings around us As you reach your goal. on Goucher, Closing memories in our hearl' Where your vision splendid gleams, Slarry memories iliai will keep us May ifs radiance, ever shining Build new dreams +nougl1 we musl' par+. Lign+ Hie way +0 fair new dreams. Tune --The Prisoner's Song Oh. if I had someone lo love me Oh. for years I pursued educalion A Masler Oi Arfs I would be. And for knowledge I manlully slrove As if is I am only a Bachelor. Bui l'd much ralher seek for my culfure Nof a chance for ano+her degree! Wll'l'l a broom or a nice kilchen slove. Oh, if I lnacl a ring on my finger And a queer +hrobbing pain in my Oh. l WlSl'i I had someone lo love me l'iearl. Before my illusions have flown l'd forsake my career like a marlyr For l'd ralher wash dishes Wllll someone Bu? alas! I'm engaged lo my arl. Than +0 be very famous alone. Buf l'here's no use bemoaning my lulure For l'm doomed +0 a long life of fame Bu+ a+ leasf fliere is one consolalion There are lwo lelTers aller my name. ...... AB XXI FRIEND WOUNG FASHIONS-WITH SCHOEN DISTINCTION Among our moer discerning pa+rons are SmamL Young Persons whose fashion insigh+ leads Hwem +0 Schoen as surely as does +heir oleJrermined desire for qualify. Take occasion +0 inspecf our collecfions of unusual dresses for sporfs. sfreef and affemoon-af $16.75 and up. SCHOEN 8 C0,, INC. Exclusive apparel 224-226 N. CHARLES ST. XXII ,gufvxhhg A h Total Resources $85,000,000 Compliments A Bank large enough for every hOf- financial service. No'r foo large for personal aHenfion f0 +he THE N w . DAILY FIRST NATIONAL RECORD BANK LIGHT AND REDWOOD STS. your garmen+s are re+urned absolufely ODORLESS. colors refain Jrheir ORlGlNAL beau+y and STAY CLEAN longer. wifh our IMPROVED METHODS of DRY CLEANING Regal prfosil'vcem Dry Cleaners DIVISION OF The 50H Regal Wm Laundry Planf Gilmor and Mosher S+ree+s PHONE: MADISON 2751-2752-2753-2754-2755. Always +he Fashion ou find af Gaxfon wiH be JOhn L. AICOCk and CO. +he finer sorf. Alway: in Gaxfon apparelh you wiH discover +ha+ farfher +ouch of disflndion which is ?he delighf of +he fashion-keenthhouf penalfy of price, BALTIMORE. MD. EXPORTERS Pacific Coas+ Spruce and , -. I'm: Douglas hr 214- N CHARLES Walnut Poplan Quarfered and Plain Whife Oak Walnut Poprar and Hickory Logs XXIII ANOTHER year of school nearly finished! And now to plan the vacation. Something different, of course. Something to remember and talk about next fall. Sail direct from Baliimm'e 0:1 one of the new Baltimore Mail Liners to Havre, channel port for Paris, or to Hamburg, the gateway to Central Europe. Eight in- vigorating days at sea and then the picturesque charm and beauty of the Old World. For information see any authorized agent 0! h travelbureau or apply at 340 N. Charles Street BALTIMORE MAIL LINE MAIL . PASSENGERS . FAST FREIGHT t'mr BALTIMORE - - - MARYLAND SUMMER VACATION! an Ocean Voyage to Le Havre and Hamburg $IOO UP ROUND TRIP $I8o UP New. fasr, beautifully appoint- cd liners sailing, from Ealzir more and Hampton Roads. One-dass onlyilurge. outside :tuterooms. sixty percent with private bath. famed Southern cuisint THE JUNIOR HOCKEY TEAM aFmr weeks 0? careFuL ?rammq 2nd Consoenttous coachmq ,the iho feam at hst was ready---. crack: n WP XXIV A WELSH HOME IN EVERY SECTION Beautiful Architecture Substantial Masonry Construction BURLEITH English Type Brick Homes BurleHh Avenue. 5+ 2700 blk. Liberfy Heighfs FERNWOOD New Type CoHages Garrison 0 Fernhill Avenues SYMINGTON ArHch CoHages Frederick Rd. 2Q Symingfon Ave. WALBROOK New Daylighf Homes Rosedale 5+. 0 Normounf Ave. Ellamonf 3+. 0 Belmonf Ave. DOLFIELD New Type Dayligh+ Homes Garrison 0 Dolfield Avenues PELHAM AVENUE 6+ Belair Road Brick DaylighiL Homes HARFORD ROAD Individually sfyled Brick Homes 4600 block Arabia Ave. FACING HERRING RUN PARK 2600 block Chesferfleld Ave. Beaufiful Brlck Homes NOTTINGHAM 1English Semi-Defached Brick Home: Edmondson Avenue, facing Ten Hills WESTGATE CoHages of DisflncHon Edmondson Avenue, adjoining Ten Hills on fhe Wesf ASHBURTON English Semi-Defached Brick Homes 3500 block Lynnchesfer Road STAMFORD ROAD af Ten HIHs Magnmconi'ly Locafed English Homes WELSH CONSTRUCTION CO. 0 CITY OFFICES 0 I I-I3 E. FAYETTE STREET l QUALITY FURNITURE DECORATlONS JWQ INTERIOR WOODWORK WI m P BALTIMORE. MD. Cabinef Shops 630 S. PULASKI ST. Showrooms 343 N. CHARLES ST. Since 1868 The Groa+es+ American Value Cars CcHed For ' ' H T Repairing on a and Delivered Rafe Basis By EIERMAN MOTOR CO. Phone CockeysviHe H7-62 COCKEYSVILLE. MD. COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND BALTIMORE RIUING SCHOOL Woodbourne 8 Purdue Aves. GOVANS. MD. Saddle Horses for Hire Correcf Riding and Jumping Taughf by EXPERT NNSTRUCTOR Wc specidee in schooling Hunfers and Saddb Box SfaHs for Boarding Horses. PhoneiTUxedo 2089 Horses LIEUT. H. A. DENTRY. Owner 8 Gen. Mgr. XXVI WHY WORRY- abouf your furs, and winfer ciofhing Wis summer? Clean and s+ore Hmm in our cold worage vauHs Then In The $alL when you refurn f0 Gouchor. Jrheyfe ready f0 wear safe and fresh Branch 2428 N. Charles Sf. Phone LAWC. 2200 Fl$h APEX GLORITONE RADIO COMPUMENTS op ON SALE AT ROSSOL'S RESTAURANT 2903 CrosmomL Avenue Baleora Md I200 N. CHARLES ST. Day Phone LAfayeHe 242I Nighf Phona MAdison 95I07W COMPLIMENTS OF CHARLES L. ELLIOTT . BQOFB'ND'NG. CORINNE BEAUTY SHOP Fme Bmdlng a Specnalfy l90l ROSEDALE ST. BALTIMORE. MD. COMPLIMENTS OF A. T. JONES 8 SONS ETHEL C. EINSTEIN 823 N. HOWARD STREET METROPOLITAN TOURIST co. For Hire 4I4 N. CHARLES Cosfumes for Plays. Operas Masquerades eh; COMPLIMENTS OF DIETRICH BROTHERS Esfablished l888 A QUARTER CENTURY OF COLLEGE PHOTOGRAPHY 220 WEST 42nd STREET, NEW YORK COMPLETELY EQUIPPED TO RENDER HIGHEST QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP AND AN EXPEDITED SERVICE ON BOTH PERSONAL PORTRAITURE AND PHOTOGRAPHY FOR COLLEGE ANNUAL. Official phofographer +0 THE DONNYBROOK FAIR XXVII N Compliments of A FRIEND N DEAN 'S DESK RWP XXVlll medals; 100! Our entire organization ioins in extending thanks to the Schools and Colleges whom we are serving and have served in the past. Their number has increased From year to year, making this, l93l, our banner year, with almost IOO stast having placed their contracts and confidence with us. V DESIGNING plus ENGRAVING plus PRINTING equals gntlivitletl ResponsiLilily zfeaal-faybrv Baltimore V Our proposal and Ibu page book Engraving Suggestions will be sent you upon receipt of speciFications.
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