Goucher College - Donnybrook Fair Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)

 - Class of 1934

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Goucher College - Donnybrook Fair Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1934 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 190 of the 1934 volume:

THE NINETEED THIRTY-THREE OHHYDROOK PUBLISHED BY THE J U H lOR CLASS COUCHULCQHECL BALTIMORE, MAILYLAND DR. DAVID ALLAN ROBERTSON Honorary Member and Friend Class Nineteen ThirlyrFour x 1:: t, -. g; g ; Dedication To Dr. David Allan Robertson, honorary member and friend of the Class of 1934, this book is gratei fully dedicated. We feel peculiarly akin to Dr. Robertson in that 1934 entered with him as Fresh; men in Gaucher College. We, therefore, dedicate the spirit of progress in this annual to Dr. Robert! son, who has caused the college to progress since his inauguration as President. June. aa H133 078.04- Dedication To Mrs. David Allan Robertson, honorary member and friend of the Class of 1934, we grate fully dedie cate this book in acknowledgment of her gracious, ness and willingness to befriend each one of her daughters. We sincerely hope that the spirit of Mrs. Robertson, representing to us as she does the charm and refinement of conservatism, may be embodied in this annual with the spirit of progress. MRS. DAVID ALLAN ROBERTSON Humorary Member and Friend Class Ninclcen ThirlyzFaur F oreword Goucher College is nearing the half century mark. We, who have spent but four years as an integral part of Goucher, have learned to recognize and revere the ideals which produced from small beginnings the College as it stands today. In the fortyreight years that lie between 1885 and 1933, there has been constructed a monument of tradir tion which has been the heritage of each class entering these halls. Scholarship, honesty, good fellowship; these form the inviolable trinity which is the essential base for Goucher's existence. Goucher is yet young as the ages are reckoned. We have no doubt that Goucher College in the future shall expand in actual size to the proportions already established in her ideals and traditions. .s $5.: President of Gaucher College Dr. Robertson During the months previous to his inauguration in April, 1931, and since that memorable date, Dr. Robertson has more than lived up to our high hopes in him. He has, indeed, become the man of the hour in Goucher circles, not only because of his excellent handling of college problems, but also because of the splendid comradeship he has established with both faculty and students. Dr. Robertson's achievements and personality were known to us before we were fortunate enough to convince him that Goucher was the place in which both Faculty and students would be most benefited by his presence than any other office that he might have chosen. As time has passed, that conviction has become only the more solidly fixed in the minds of all Goucherites. DR. DAVID ALLAN ROBERTSON Dean Stimson Many a Goucherite has warmed the mourner's bench out, side of the Deanhs oHice and wondered what deed or misdeed had resulted in a summons to the Dean's Office. Whatever the cause of the summons, no Goucherite thinks of the Dean save as her personal Friend. The Dean has been a member of the college community since 1920, nor has she been away from us save For a year spent in England. We welcomed her return in 1931 with broad smiles. Dean Stimson has so endeared herself to all within the college that all had cause to be glad that once again we could peer into her omce and see her conversing with a Goucherz ite. Indeed, the longer we know the Dean, the more assured we are that the Dean cares. DR. DOROTHY STIMSON Dean of Gaucher College TOP ROW CLARA LATIMER BACON, AB A M., PhD. Prafcssar of Mathematics VOLA PRICE BARTON, A.B.. A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Physics WILFRED A. BEARDSLEY, A3,, Ph.D. Prafessur of Romano: Languages JOSEPH M. BEATTY, JR., A.B . A.M., Ph.D. Professor of English BOTTOM ROW ETHEL BOWMAN, A.B., A.M,, PhD. Professur 0f Psycholugy CERTRUDE CARMAN BUSSEY, A B . A.M., PhD. Prafesm of Philosophy RALPH E. CLELANDx AIL MSH Ph.D. mecssor af Biology EUGENE NEWTON CURTIS, AB. A.M., Ph.D. Professor of History HERMAN LOUIS EBELINC. A.B.. Ph.D Professor of Greek Faculty TOP ROW KATHARINE JEANNE GALLAGHER, A.B., AMn PhD. Professor of Hislory RAYMOND P. HAWES, A.B., AM Ph.D. Profasoy of Philosophy MARY ASHMUN HODGE. A.B., M.D. Professor of Physiology and Hygicnc ANNETTE B. HOPKINS. ABn PhD. Professor of English BOTTOM ROW LOUISE KELLEY, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Profane! of Chemistry JESSE L. KING. B.S., Ph.D. Profuse: of Physiology HARRIS E. KIRK, D.D.. LL.D. Professor of Religion FLORENCE P. LEWIS, A.B., A.M., PhD. Profusar of Mathematics HOWARD HUNTLEY LLOYD. AB, Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry TOP ROW WILLIAM H. LONGLEY A.B.. A.M.. Ph.D.. Sc.D. Professor of Biology ELLA LONN, A B , A.M., Ph.D. Pralessor of History STELLA McCARTHY, AB. A M., Ph.D. Professor of Education SELBY VERNON McCASLAND. A.B., Th.B., A.M., PhD. Professor of Religion BOTTOM ROW IVAN EUGENE MCDOUCLE, A.B., AVM Ph.D. Profcssor of Economics and Sacialagy KATHRYN McHALE, B.S., A.M., PhD. ' Professor of Educalt'on ANNA IRENE MILLER, A,B,, A,M., PhD. owcssar of English ELIZABETH NITCHIE, A.B.. Ph.D. Professor vf English ELINOR PANCOAST. Ph.B . A M . PhD. Profusor of Economics TOP ROW SAMUEL N. TAYLOFL Pth PhD. Professor uf Physics THADDEUS R THOMAS, Ph.B., A M.. PhD. Professor of Ecanamics and Sociology MARY WILHELMINE WILLIAMS, A.B., A.M.. Ph.D Professor of History OLA ELIZEBETH WINSLOW. A.B , AMU PhD. Professor of English BOTTOM ROW HARRY TORSEY BAKER. A.B., A.M Assuciale Professor of English RAE. BLANCHARD, A.B., A.M.. PhD. Associate Professor of English ALICE F. BRAUNLICH. A.B.. A.M., PhD. Associate Professor of Latin ROBERTA FLORENCE BRINKLEY. A.B.. A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of English ESTHER CRANE, AB A.M.. PhD. Anacialc Professor of Education TOP ROW ESTHER J. CROOKES, Ph.B.. A.M.. Ph.D. Associate Profcssor of Spanish EUNICE R. GODDARD, A11. A.M.. PhD, Associulc Professor of French JANE F. GOODLOE, A.B., A.M., PhD. Associate Professar of German CHARLES W. LEMMI. A.M. Assnu'ale Professor 0f Italian and French BOTTOM ROW ELEANOR PATTERSON SPENCER. A.B.. A.M.. Ph.D. Associate Professor of Fine Arts MARIAN M. TORREY, AVE A.M.. Ph.D. Associulc mecssor af Mathematics CLINTON IVAN WINSLOW. A.B., AM PhD. Associale Professor of Political Scicnce JAMES WHALER, A.B., A.M., PhD. Associate mecssor of English MARY E. ANDREWS, A.B.. A.M.. B.D., PhD. Assistant Professor of Religion 20 TOP ROW GRACE HADLEY BEARDSLEY, A.B., A.M.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Latin and History ELINE VON BORRIES. A.B.. A.M. Director of Physical Educaiion JEAN INGRAM BROOKES, A.B., AM Ph.D. Assislanl Professor of History MILDRED DAY DORCUS, A.B., A M., PhD. Assisianl Professor Psychology M. KATHERINE FREHAFER, A.B., A.M.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics BOTTOM ROW A. LAURA HINTZE, A.B., A.MV, Ph.D. Asxx'sianl meessar af Physialngy and Hygicnt LaDEMA MARY LANGDON, A3,, M.S., Ph.D. Assislanl Professor of Biology ANNA MATHIESEN, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assislanl Professor of Psychology ELIZABETH MERRIT, A.B., PhD, Assistant Professor of Political Science NAOMI RICHIE, A.B.. A.M.. PhD. Assislunl Prnfcssar of History TOP ROW JEANNE RUSSELET. A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of French ELIZABETH J. RUTHERFORD, A.B., A.MA Assistant Professor of Psychology LOUISE CLERET SEIBERT, Brevet Superieur. A.B.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Freud: EUDOFILIA ARBOLEDA. A.B. Inslyuclar in Spanish KARL JOHN RICHARD ARNDT, A.M. Inslructar in Cayman BOTTOM ROW RUTH CARPENTER CHILD, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English ELIZABETH SHOYER CLELAND. AB., A.M. Instructor in Chemislry ELLEN DUVALL, B.S. lnstruclor in Physical Education JOSEPHINE FISKE, A.B. , Instructor in Physical Education PHILIP F. COTTLINC, B.E.. A.M , Ph.D. Instructor in Physic: 22 TOP ROW EISA LESER, AB A.M. Insiruclor in Ccrman RUTH LUBELL. BS. lnslmciar in Physical Educalian ELIZABETH STOFFREGEN MAY, AB Ph.D. lnslrutlor in Economics GAIRDNER BOSTWICK MOMENT. A.B.. Ph D lnslmclur in Biology BELLE OTTO, ABM AlM. Insimclor in Chemistry BOTTOM ROW CLARA QUINCER, B5,, A.M. Instructor in Edmalian ELIZABETH A. REDDEN A.B.. M.S. Instructor in Etonamics and Sociology CROMWELL A, RICHES, A.B., A.M lnsh'uclor in Polilical Science MARY CATHERINE RITTLER, AB. Insimclar in Physics DOROTHY TAPLEY. AB. Instructor in Physical Education TOP ROW DOROTHY E. WALLACE, A B., AM, Instructor in Chemistry MARY D. WEBER, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Physics CESARINE EREUILLAUD WHITE, Brevel Superieur. A.B., A.M. Instructor in French JOHN QUINCY WOLF, A.B.. A.M, Instructor In English HELEN MIRIAM COPLAN, A.B. Assistani in Biology BOTTOM ROW CAROLINE ANNE DENTON. A.B. Assistant in Biology ELIZABETH MUELLER. AB. Assistant in Physiology and Hygienc MARY FRANCES OTTE, A.B. Assisiunl in Physiology and Hygiene WINNIFRED HOPKINS SHRINER, A.B Assistant in Chemistry EDITH FORD SOLLERS, A.B. Assistant in Chemixlry 24 TOP ROW ASSUNTA VASTI. A.B.. ScD. lnstrudoy in Pllysiulagy and Hygiene MARYLAND KRAFT YOUNG, AB. Assislanl in Astronomy FRANCES R. CONNOR, A B Student Cuunsclar EDMUND SERENO ENDER Organist ELEANOR W. FALLEY. BS. Librarian BOTTOM ROW ELSA G. HAYDEN Assistant in the Busindss 017m CHARLOTTE McCARTHY, Ph.D., M.D. Physician MARY T. McCURLEY, A.B., A.M. Vocational Secrclury CARRIE MAE PROBST, A.B Registrar S. ELIZABETH VAN DUYNE, AB.. M,D. Physician Bennett Hall: at some time in its career, each Class has occasion to meet in Bennett Hall. CLASSES IJWWIIAW n f. imwm . iQiKWMHEMp K v. ViccePrcsidcnl Jean Schilling Secrelary Annette Webster Trcas urcr Let's see, murmured the old lady to her nine dozen or more grandechildren as they asked her to tell about her College Days, uthe best way for me to get rid of you is to tell you, so listen carefully, this is a recital of great names. We had a different class president for each year. Janice James, who left at the end of our Freshman year, was the first president of 1933. After her came Adelaide Forbush, Peg Camwath, and Virginia Matthews, in not too rapid succession. The class was very proud of its leaders, children, for they worked hard and well. You may take this as a moral while you are about it. Our class meetings seemed to dwindle in size as the yearSeall four of themgwent by, but the energetic spirit of the class remained. None of that was lost. HOur honorary member was Dr. Clinton Ivan Winslow, and what a good friend he was to us! And I shall never forget Jane Coker's fight to keep Kalends in college. There was much criticism when the quarterly didn't appear early in the school year, but Jane was courageous enough to stand by her principles and wait for good enough material. She wrote beautifully, too. Dr. Clinton Ivan Winslow Ruth Henderson SCI 30 iStOl'y Anne Peterson Katherine Harvey 31 Scrgeanlaaerrms Frances Pendleton SergeanttaltArms Recorder of Points Her pen was versatile, you may be sure. And speaking of versatile authors, Gertrude Sherby deserves credit for her forceful writing and directing as W eekly's editor. She injected vigor into the paper and made it seem more alive than it had been For some time. Dear me! I was just thinking of the day in our third year when the annual was handed over to the Seniors. We all went to Chapel that day and the Editor of Danny brook gave it to the president of the Class of 32. Ml t seems to me, my little lambs, that my beloved class didn't show itself to the best of its ability in athletics. As I look back, I remember that in our Freshman year we won a consolation hockey match from the Sophs, and in our Senior year, we were hockey champions. But in other sports, like swimming and basketball, our victories were scattered and vague. Margaret Bryan, Elizabeth Channell, and Mary Freburger were most prominent in athletics. Tsk, tsk, how I've rambled! Come out from under the desk, child, and run along with the rest. llll tell you about the day we all went rolling skating, but that will have to wait until another time. Virginia Matthews. President MARY KATHERINE ABELL ELSIE IRENE ABRAMS 111 B K 113 B K International Relations English ELIZABETH MINETTA ADAIR FLORENCE NEWTON ALEXANDER Romance Languages Economics 32 HILDA KRAFT ALEXANDER ANN ELIZABETH ANDERSON Mathematics English LOIS CATHERINE ASENDORF AMBER ALICE BALDWIN International Relations Biology 33 MAY FLOWERS BALDWIN MARION JENNIE BARBUR English Romance Languages JEANIE COXE BASSETT DORIS CATHERINE BASSLER Romance Languages German CHARLOTTE HARRIET BATES Economics ALICE GOODRIDGE BEAN English ANNESLEY BOND BAUGH Chemistry AMY NORDLINGER BEHREND Combined Languages HELEN BENHAM 1? B K History JACQUELINE BILLARD English AMELIA DODSON Bl ELASKI Biology MARGARET DICKSON BLITHE $ B K Physics HELEN VIRGINIA BOOTON English German MOLLIE BORNSTEIN FLORA ELIZABETH BROWN M athematz'cs Economics 37 MARGARET ALICE BRYAN Romance Languages 5M haw W30? ALICE CLAYTON CARMINE History MARY EMILY CANN K? B K Romance Languages :mw -'wa3' ,?,'59 TWWMTMMI' P QR N01, :2. mm rift ,. , ' . mwAfMW FthgkaH 'tvinw MARGARET CARNWATH Economics m ELIZABETH KATHERINE CHANNEL Economics MARY FENDALL CLEMENS Economics EVELYN AGATHA CHESTER Psychology MARGARET JANE COKER English 39 ANN CAROLINE CORCKRAN Education EVELYN LILLIE CRONIE Romance Languages JOSEPHA LYLE CRIST Chemistry BEATRICE LAUREL DAVENPORT Romance Languages MARJORIE ELIZABETH DAVIES Q B K Psychology , WW M m. mu, WWW: HELEN MARIE DAWKINS History ANNA VIRGINIA DAVIS International Relations JANE DELEVETT Economics ZEVAH DOMI ITZ Economics FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE DOWNS Romance Languages FRANCES HOWE DOUG LASS English W ' ' :5?in 2vw x1. iiNSf Jag hg SM ihx'ifdk'n Limmn MARY ELIZABETH DRAPER History ELIZABETH BANCROFT EDMUNDSON Romance Languages GRACE MARION ELY History 43 AROWHENA MARY EDWARDS Biology y 12;, ' 613'? RN IDA EPSTEIN Romance Languages ALMA FEIGENBAUM Romance Languages J DEE'V WWW ?,MV'IWV v L AEXWM, ANNA MARY FLUHRER Romance Languages HARRI ET LOUISE FLOYD English tifigiiizQ Latin MARY JANE FREBURGER CAROL EUGENIA FRENCH German Chemistry EDITH CLAIRE FREUND ELEANOR KIRKLAND FRY Romance Languages English 45 BEATRICE GERHARDIN GAY LOIS MAE GESSFORD Physics QD B K Political Science LEONORE MIRIAM GLASSMAN BEATRICE GOLDBERG Romance Languages Economics 46 LYDIA GOLDBLATT LILA VIRGINIA GOSSAGE English Economics FRANCES BERNICE GRAFF q; B K LOIS GERTRUDE GREENBERG Economics Economics 47 MARGARET ELEANOR GREGG Romance Languages CHAROLTTE GUTH Biology KATHERINE LOU 1 SE GREGORY Latin ALINE RUTH HAHN Romance Languages 19 HERMINE HAHN Econom ics MARY LEAH HARBOLD Q B K History ELIZABETH SARA HARDY Romance Languages DOROTHY HARRIS KATHERINE MARY HARVEY Economics Economics HELEN AUGUSTA HAWKINS MARION RAPHAEL HEARN Chemistry Economics SARAH LOCKEMAN HEMRY RUTH ELEANOR HENDERSON English $ B K Biology 4' 1335350 ?391 'q?3MExErZETTW ' VIOLET LOUISE HENNINGER MARTHA WARREN HETZEL Mathematics Political Science 51 JEANNETTE LOUISE HUTZLER GERTRUDE MARTINA HYDE CD R K Chemistry Chemistry SARAH JANE JOHNSON LILLIAN HORTENSE KAHN Romance Languages Economics NAOMI RUTH KELLMAN English VIRGINIA IRENE KILHAM Q B K Physics 53 RUTH SUE KIEHNE Romance Languages 2H 11.: I mrd: ALICE ELLEN KLEIN $ B K Romance Languages DOROTHY TREXLER KLOPP JEAN DOROTHEA KNEIP Physiology and Hygiene Mathematics MARY ELIZABETH KOCH MARGARET ELIZABETH KUNKEL Education Education VIRGINIA HOLMES LATCHAM ELIZABETH FOWLER BAIRD LONGLEY Romance Languages Biology MARTHA BOB LUCAS KATHERINE COOPER LOWE . $ 13 K Economics English 55 HELEN MARIE LUDLOW BEATRICE BOUCHIER MacCARTER English English MARY BRUCE MACKALL LAURA EMILY MALAVITA H islory ' Romance Languages ESTHER BELLE MARING CATHERINE ARMSTRONG MARSHALL Education English RUTH LASINE MENGES MARY VIRGINIA MATTHEWS lb B K History Political Science 57 RUTH BERNICE MICHELSON ELEANOR ELIZABETH MILLER Economics Romance Languages MARIE LILLIAN MILLER CHARLOTTE SUZANNE MILLIKEN English Economics LESLIE WHEAT MINOR NANCY SMITH MITCHELL Mathematics English WARGARET SHABERG MOHLENRICH ANN MOREHOUSE Economics and Sociology Political Science 59 MARGARET NANCE Education MARGARET VIRGINIA PALMER English LAURA WHITELY NESBITT Education RACHEL WARNER PARKER Biology ESTELLE ZELDA PAYMER Mathematics MARY FRANCES PENDLETON English LOU 1 SE ELIZABETH PEARSON Education Xij L. n; quwM ELSA PERARA 11? B K Romance Languages MARGARET ANNE PETERSON History Ir: Wit ?IM mu SARA TAYLOR PHI LI PS English MARY CHESTER PHILIPS Economics SOPHIA PODOLSKY B iology KATHERYN JANE POLLAK SYLVIA RANDOLPH English English JANE MARGARET REAM FLORENCE MARIE REICH Psychology Education 63 HELEN LOUISE REIZENSTEIN Psychology LILLIAN RICE Hislory FRANCES ELIZABETH ROSE Political Science WM? MARY ESTHER DIVINE RIDDLE English ANNA LYSLE ROBERTSON AMY RUTH ROCKLE Education History M V kw J4 KATHRYN WEBSTER RODGERS HELEN MAY ROSS Economics English 65 BERNICE MILDRED SALGANIK ANICE MARGARET SAMPSON History Economics JEAN FRANCES SCHILLING HELEN MARIE SHANNON Economics Economics 66 KATHERINE SHAW English v M4 GERTRUDE SHERBY Economics MARY McELHENY SHAW Psychology MSW .1 0w, , 3km .y LFi IRENE SHERRY Physiology and Hygiene 67 JESSIE RAE SHIPLEY Chemistry v KW WWWV av N9 ,, mm: mu DOROTHY MELVILLE SINCLAIR English ALICE LOUISE SHUGARS $ B K History ADA MAY SMITH Chemistry FRANCES LOUISE SMITH MARION LOOCKERMAN SMITH Economics English ETHEL IDA SOULE LENA SNYDER q; B K History Physiology and Hygiene 69 JANET RAE TURNER STEVENS LlLLIAN EMMA STOKES History Economics MARIE BETTY STRAUS KATHERINE SNEED STRITEHOFF Education Political Science 7O MARGARET DENTON STURGIS MARTHA BANSMAN TOMBAUGH Romance Languages English ELIZABETH TURNER MARGERY ELIZABETH UNDERWOOD Political Science Latin 71 JEAN SHAW WADDELL MARY ANN WADDELL Romance Languages Romance Languages MARY GARDNER WATSON DOROTHY MORGAN WASLEY cp B K Physics English 72 ANNETTE HARLEY WEBSTER ROSALIE VIRGINIA WEINBERG Romance Languages Romance Languages ANNA ELIZABETH WHAREN MARGARET MARY WHITE Physiology and Hygiene History 73 MARY ELEANOR WILSON BEATRICE THELMA WITTEKINDT H istory H istory ; . ESTHER EVELYN ZURCHER DOROTHEA WILHELMINA WITTMAAK 1? B K Economics Romance Languages 74 Betty Carson Jur VicarPrcsidcnl Muriel Wollman Secretary Nineteen Hundred and ThirtyrFour entered Goucher as the first unhazed Freshmen in the college history. Strange; Iy enough, the general opinion among us was that we would have enjoyed being hazed. Somehow the name tags around our necks and the selcalled college spirit parties which were monopolized by the sororities in search of pledges, did not convey as we had hoped, the feeling that at last we were Freshmen in college. We did not get to know our fellow classmates. Not until hockey and other field athletics appeared with the attendant blue, yellow, and . . . . most important of all, the RED gym outfits Hashing hither and yon, did we really feel any unity. From then on, we more or less cooperated. Before the year was completed, we had captured the hockey, swimming, and volley ball championships. A great sure prise to everyone tourselves includeds was the showing we made in SingaSong when we broke another record by being the first Freshman Class ever to win a place in Emma Robertson Trcas urcr Dr. and Mrs. David Allen Robertson 76 listory Helen Grant Mary House Recorder of Points 77 ScrgcanlratrArms Barbara Towne ScrgeanlaaI'Arms SingrSong. Dr. and Mrs. Robertson were announced as our honorary meme bers. And well do we remember our Lantern Chain and a song to a certain Teddy Bear whose picture now hangs in Goucher Hall. The year ofhcially closed with the inauguration of our honorary member, Dr. Robertson, as President of Goucher. Our return to college the next Fall marked the beginnings of the usual sophcy moric difficulties with required subjects which gave us the jitters right and left, including Sundays. During the year, we again captured the swimming and volley ball laurels, but lost our hold on the hockey championship. Our president was Jane Porter who had succeeded Ellen Alpigini, Freshman president. At the end of the year, several of us endured involuntary mud baths For the sake of Daisy Chain. Harrietis donar tion of paper towels did little for our protection when we carried the Chain, except get soggy. However, better soggy than muddy whichever way you take it. Grace VanNostrand, our Junior President, led us this year in the supervision of the usual Junior activir ties. We started the year with an exhilarating sense of having attained upper classmanship. Quizzes in Grace van Nostrand, President Junior Class D. Price, Olicnbcrg. Wargo. Bresslar, Ritlmhausc. Meyer. Green. Hunin'le, Flory, Jacoby. Caulk. Tracey. Claybaugll, St. John. Fox W fest. W asley, I ywi'n, Taylor, Leonard, Robimn, Davidson, Dcmutlr, Redhead, W alkcr. Lang Fowlkcs. Slover. Crifis. Haapes, Leach, Sammy. Musson. Howard. Paslarius, Mnnash, Lakin, Irvin. Oliver. Murphy. Patrick Kalz, January, Balsan. Hendrie. Cooper. Bosley, Hansen. Hood. Chester, Sammy, Sanders. Bielaski. Townsend. Finder. Mann, Sausc, Olstead Haylccla, McQuown. Andrews. Lynch. Seward, Baycr. Robertson. Van anlrand. Tawnc, Grant, Howell. S. Halbway, Alpigi'm'. incll, McCannc, Becker Religion and Philosophy convinced a few of us that we were going to retain upper classmanship for a deplorably long time. Life was terribly brief for all there was to be done. Those of us who worked on Donnybrook were too busy to think about the passage of time; we received a distinct shock when told that we were nearly Seniors. We did not feel that we had had time to be Juniors yet. During the year we lost our hold on athletic prominence in several instances, although our volley ball team remained practically as invincible as ever. Boat ride is still in the offing. It will feel strange to be taken by an underclassman, but no less enjoyable. It will not be long now before we switch the tassels on our caps and catch our breath for the home stretch. What next year will bring is something only the gods can tell . . . . and they won't. 78 Freshmen are all alikeiconfused, eager, covertly impressed: the two hundred and sixty girls who poured into Goucher in the Fall of Nineteen Thirtye One were no exception. We blundered about, timidly asking for Trudheim or the elusive Alfheim, we stared hard at Goucher Hall in the sunset, and thrilled to Hfirst Chapel with its impressive file of Vera Coster Pres idcnt Margarat Harvey Vicc-Presidenl Adele Bauer ViccAPrcsidenl faculty and bewildering array of regalia. Collegeaspirit'parties whirled us into the midst of school life, and then, over all too soon, Dr. Wilfred Beardsley were Receptionuall long lavender dressed, palins, striped ice cream, and seraphic Sophomores; Dr. and Mrs. Robert, sonls welcome; Thanksgiving Dinnereapples and pumpkin pie andaseat on the balcony; and our play Sleeping Beauty. After Christmas we came back as regular members of the school. We were no longer newlcomers, we knew our way about and we had completed almost a halfzyear of Freshman Historyisomething indeed to make us a very part of Goucherl But we had before us the horror of exams which Sophomc Charlote Cas Secretary 80 Alice Apte SergeaniraltArms 'Iistory Nancy Reed SergeanlrateArms Cloyd Stifler Recordci of Points Jean Bennett Tre as urcr faded quickly into the happiness of SingrSong. Sing, Song night was a redeletter one for us er. and Mrs. Beardsley were so good as to take us i'for better or for worse! They have meant to us more than we can say, as comrades and beloved friends. After the tonweeks hiatus of Spring Vacation, we came back to work, May Day, and the Boat Ride We took much pride in escorting the Juniors, entertaining them with our play, and feeding them delectable picnic lunches. The Merryzgoiround was perfecteif the swimming was a bit chill! Between teas and club meetings we followed Peter the Great and corrected comma splices until final exams. And Finally we were in June Week, and the Seniors were bidding many last farewells. We marched in Fensal court with lanterns held highVetribute to our welliloved sisters. First Commencement was a jumble of impressionsiblack solemi nity and a vicarious thrill; it was pretty hard to look four years ahead and see ourselves with small rectangles of sheep, skin! Drt Grace Beardsley 81 Sophomore C lass Kamlncr. Donclmo. Thcarh, Klzy. Hunnum. Riilcr. Orgel, Dail, Daub, Morris, Mueller. Duuiy. Pfacndlcr Chambers. Dixon. Dingmun, Lindsay. Pluggameyer, Philson, McNuil, Suydam. Caudell, Thomas. Brown, Caulbaum, Strung Cibsun, Forsyihc, McCauleg. Foslur. Waxley, Armstrong, Bowen, Hosielter, Williams, Young, Mcads, Elbcrfald Weinstein. Himclfarb. RDSCVIHOUI, Morris. Cassnll. Caster. Bennett. Stewart. Duprcy. Cramfield, Oltenbcrg, Palz Nineteen Hundred and Thirterwo, and October, and we could even be supercilious at the SpiritaParties! No one notices Sophomores anyhow. But we had great joy in welcoming the Freshmen and making them feel more at home. If our answers to such questions as Elsewhere is the Book Store? were a little superior, they were at least willing. It was we, this year, who whisked about the Rotunda and struggled with the palms to get plates and plates of ice cream to the Helegants. We plunged into activities-wdebating and clubs, hockey, tryeouts for the play. We ate even more apples at Thanksgiving Dinner, and came in new Christmas clothes to face exams with a pleasant indulgence. The old thrill came with SingrSongiwhen we wore our green ties to win the FacultyrSing competion with our tribute to our Beardsley Team. E In April we marveled at the New Recreation room-we couldn't believe that the lovely draped windows in this gracious hall had ever been menaced by rude volley balls! The Hrst dance was a big succeSSewe all came. Boat ride we all enjoyed again for the play, the food, the fun; and Physiology wasn't so bad until a hazy warm afternoon in May when the spell of Spring invaded even the Laboratory-I And then suddenly it was June Week again, and we sat in the greenish dusk to hear Step; Singing. We filed finally into the long aisles of the Lyric . . . . black quiet again . . . . and it wasn't so hard to dream ahead three years . . . . Fleckcnsli'ne, Cagan Cherry, Draper, Hoskins, M. Wheeler Freshman History Freshman Week just about brought to a close the careers of the eee Freshmen who had come from states and one foreign country to enter and to attempt to remain in this institution of work and learning. Each one of us, clinging frantically to the few friends, or potential friends we had met, entered the chapel of Katy to let our Hrst tests take us. After we had been registered and had struggled over the remaining tests, we turned anxious and fearful faces toward the class; room and our Hrst chapel. The size of the faculty tas a whole, not individuallyi and the dignity of the ceremony were most impressive. Meantime, of course, Spirit Parties had done their bit to get us started on the right Foot, and to help eliminate that inevitable strangeness of the entire situation. At the close of this week the Freshman Class breathed a sigh and settled itself into the three divisions of every college class: greasy grinds, play girls, and that wonderful middle class who seem to find plenty of time for both work and play. Having settled, the class raised its head for a brief moment at short intervals to take in enthusiastically or in boredom the high spots of the year The Reception gave us our first oppore tunity to see the faculty dressed up and gracious, as human as though they had never seen the inside of a classroom. Caught immediately in the bewildering tide of rushing, this Class of '36 laughed, hoped, and cried its way through, at the 84 end dropping in exhaustion to take up the tasks awaiting them. In the busy weeks that followed hurts were healed, prejudices forgotten to a certain extent, and comparatively new friend ships improved with age. Afternoon dresses which were nearing disintegration From lack of use were brought forth, surveyed critically, and finally donned for Mrs. Robertson's tea, an ecstatic moment for all Freshmen and For one Freshman in particular. Catching our breath only for a second at Thanksgiving we raced on, pausing a brief instant For the lovely Carrol Service before going home for a much needed Christmas RestzCure. On our return, after the embracing of and exchanging of Christmas lies with our various and assorted chums, we made Dr' Keney halfrheartecl attempts at Hreviewing early for exams. Then came last minute cramming, exams, and for some . . . . dlse qualification. Our New Semester Resolutions lasted Fully three weeks. Before we knew it or could in any way account for it March Fourth, Inauguration, and the Gym Department's ingenious Inaugural Depression Bawl were upon us . . . . and gone. And we need only mention SingeSong. After a glorious two weeks of Spring Vacation we greeted our friends here as enthusiastically as though it had been two years The feeling, that the social element which had been sadly lacking was very important, was verified by the opening of the new ReCrHall in Bennett Annex. Now we continue to dash along, looking eagerly forward to Lantern Chain and to BoatrRide . . . . to say practically nothing of exams, vacation, and Sophomores! Freshman Class chow, Gaddl'ng. Hobbs, Chambers, Brenner. Chase HaiIc. HaiIc. Kane. Bodinc. Matthews, Clarke. Heard, MacBn'ar Holstein, Long. Irwin. King. Hollingsworlh, Pratt, Clickmun, Lough. Butler, Foster, Roger Brown. Hill, Hcmry, Draper, M. Wheeler. FIeclfenslinc. Cherry. Suusc. Cordon, Roscnllml, Freeman 85 Catherine Hooper Hall: used by all the or; ganizations at some time during the college year. ATIOHC W'frW ?' $-5'1?55 3$311$$$?$1 $; f :m' ' SSMMM maaszaszrz NW1 wmsmrrvrew M ??$ , V bfoNrN w, 2 mm . stM 1 .z A, ., W? Abrams, Schilling, Harvey, Weddell Wasley, Ascmlorf. Lucas, Barbur, Hclzel, Alexander Patrick, Abcll, Carnwath, Balsan, For5usl1 Students' Organization President ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Margaret Carnwath VicerPresiJcnl ,,,,,,,,,,, Katherine Abell Recording Secretary ...... ,,Elinor Batson Corresponding Secretarym 777777 Mary Patrick Treasurer .................... Josephine Fleming Recorder of Points,,,, ............. Anna Davis College Spirit Chairman. ,,,,,,.Adelaide Forbush Chairman of Advisors , Mary Archer Randolph Junior Mamba... 7777777777777777 Jane Porter Sophomore Member, ,,Virginia Woolverton Freshman Member ........ Jane Ireland Fire Cbicf...,..,m ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Katherine Shaw As a result of agitation in 1901, for student government, a meeting was held to elect the first president of Student's Organization, Mary Porter Ross. In 1902, Freshmen were Erst admitted to the organization. In 1927328 important changes in the constitution were made. The VicezPresident was made Chairman of Judicial Board, and the duties of that board differentiated from the Executive Board. At present the three departments of the board Executive and Judicial Boards, and the StudentCounCiD meet three times a year en masse. In the intervals between the large meetings, Executive Board represents the entire or! 90 91 ganization. It hears reports From halls, considers current student problems, and sanctions the organization of new groups. Meetings are held once a week. Meanwhile, Judicial Board tries cases involving breaches in the honor system. The third department tStudent CounciD consists of the presidents of the various organizations in the college, Chairmen of Judicial Board and of College Spirit, the editors of the publications, and various temporary members. The purpose of the Council is to bring about closer contact and cooperation among the or; ganizations. College Council, not provided for in the constitution of Student's Organization, is important because through it students and faculty consider cooperatively problems of in; terest to both. The College Council is called by the President of the College and is attended by the leaders of the various organizations, hall presidents, and certain members of the faculty. Student's Organization is a growing part of the college. May we not fail in our trust to keep it growing toward the goal of pure selfagovernment through selfacontrol as it was dreamed by the students of 1902. Laws in Embryo Miss Taplcy, Ritler, Helzel, Chambers Grant, St John, Ida, Bryan, Channel, Frelmrger, Draper Athletic Association President ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, VicetPrcsidcnl,,, Second Vicc'Presidcnl, Secretary; Trcas urcr,. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Margaret Bryan , ,,,Betty Channell ,,,,, Betty St. John , , Frances Ide jMartha Hetzel 'lMary Freburger IKMuriel Wollman iLHelen Grant Senior Memberswqum. junior Memberswqmm Sophomore Memberw.... .i ,. ,. ,,.V,..,,,Nancy Reed fSue Chambers Members at Large ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , iEIinor Batson LMargaret Harvey Freshman Member ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Helen Draper Have you ever stopped and wondered who prepares the hot dogs for the ArmyiNavy hockey game, who makes the plans for basketball and tennis tournaments, and for the swimming meets? The hardrworking A. A. Board struggles with the events in which so many participate. The Board is a group of elected representatives which acts as a nucleus of the A. A. Association to which every student belongs. 93 If in one of your laps around Bennet Court you find a loose brick, just let the Board know. You may even see Margie Bryan, the emcient little president of At A., out there with cement and trowel plastering it back in place. When more than one ladyrpower is needed, other Board members are ready and willing. Betty Channell, the ViceePresident, has done splendid work. Martha Hetzel, Senior member, was college basketball manager this year. Mary Freburger was basketball manager. Next year the Association will have experienced leaders who have served on the Board this year. A. A. ranks high among the leading Eastern Universities and Colleges for women. It is a member of the National American Athletic Federation; of the Athletic Conference of American College Women, and of the United States Field Hockey Association, and sends delegates to Hockey Camp, Silver Bay, and A. C. A. C. W. meetings. The Physical Ed. Department has done a great deal more than anything for Goucher's athletics. This year Miss Tapley was the department's member attending the Board meetings. Major or Minor Sporls? C Cline, Staford, Warga, Rice, Rittcr, Hood, Hill, Nukes, Missimer, Connor Kacslncr, Sanders, Ollenlzerg, E. Cline, Parkin, Bcrgdof, Parker, Armstrong, Minor Hannum, Frcburgcr, Philips, Blithe, Coleer Choir President ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Mary Philips Secretary ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Jane Coker Librarian ............................................................ Margaret Kaestner To those who belong to the Goucher College Choir, it means more than singing; it means friendships and associations we shall always cherish. A hurried practice and a feeling of insecurity are our memories of the first chapel of the year, but it is also a memory of reunion with friends and a welcome to those who will soon join us. Next in our memories are the vesper services which, although not so numerous, are very lovely. At Christmas 94 95 Vespers we sang the Carol of the Russian Children, a carol added to our repertoire this year. This and other songs, both old and new, were sung when Choir and Glee Club joined in the Carol Service. Part of this service was broadcast later over WBAL. According to our plans For the remainder of the year, three more radio broadcasts will be presented. If the Choir has been successful this year, the majority of credit should go to Mrs. Low whose unfailing patience and friendship gives us the courage to continue our work. Her faith in us and her high standards inspired each one of us to do our best to achieve that perfection which would make her proud of our music. Mr. Ender, also, deserves thanks from each one of us for his aid. Under these two advisors, the Choir hopes to improve and grow as amazingly in the future as it has since Mrs. Low first undertook its direction several years ago. Enroulc Chapel Glee Club Cline. Connor, Wilb. Rillur. Van Noslrand, Parkiw. Hendric, Noises, Clickman Armslrong, Ollcnbcrg. Cline, Lindsay, Wargo. Hannum, H0011, Rieger, Walers. Cnulboume, Cale Rice. Bcrgdotf, jahnson. Bryan. Coleman. Farbush. Balm Blithe, Philips, Dingman, Adair, Sanders. Reich. Minot, Caudcll Glee Club President , , , ,,,Mary Freburger Secretary ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Grace van Nostrand Treasurer ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,Margaret Kaestner Librarian, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Jean Sanders During 193233, the Glee Club has had an interesting year. Its first presentation was the Carol Service, the ofhcial farewell to college for the holiday season. The chapel, decorated with fragrant pine bows and lighted by tall, impressive candles, gave t the occassion a festive air This year the Peabody String Quartet and Mr. Ender again accompanied us. The soloists were numerous and worked very hard to make the Service a success. The radio broadcast was a thrill enjoyed by several members of the Glee Club who were invited to join the Choir. For many 97 of the members, it was their first experience in sending their voices through a microphone. The opera Martha, by Von Flotow, was the Spring Producy tion. We were very fortunate in having Mr. Eugene Martinet of the Baltimore Civic Opera Company twhich, by the way, presented Martha this seasoni, was kind enough to lend us his scores, scenery, costumes . . . . and his men! The Opera Company gave its performance before we began our rehearsals, so that the Glee Club attended the third per, formance in order to obtain a better idea of what was expected of it. The Glee Club Opera was presented before an appreciaa tive audience. Not so many years ago, Goucher College was fortunate enough to obtain Mrs. Low as Director of Music. It is mainly through her efforts that Glee Club has attained its present success. M artha Patricia, Philips, House, Stiflcr, Stakes, Ida, Woolvcrlon Eclmundson, Bennett, Morehousc, Boyer, Clark. Carson Gaucher CollegeChristian Association President .................................................................. Ann Morehouse Vicchresidenl ............................................................. Helen Benham Recording Secretary ....................................................... Jean Bennett Corresponding Secrclary.., ,,,,,,, Betty Carson Treasurer ., . t. , ,,Margaret Boyer Society Chairmans....... .................... Betty Edmundson Vespers and Fireside .. ,,Lillian Stokes Publicity ....................................................................... Cloyd Stifler Social Service ................................................................... Mary House Uniled Campaign. ..Mary Philips Membership ................................................................... Mary Patrick Freshman Member ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Phebe Ann Clarke The G. C. C. A., a nonsectarian organization, is unique in that it Fullfills a spiritual and social need in the college comr munity. We feel that the spiritual life of the individual is enriched by the Vesper Services which are held at Matricula; tion, Christmas, and Easter. The informal Sunday evening Firesides bring the student into contact with interesting perv sonalities. During one week of the year a discussion group lead by Dr. Speers is held in Alumna Lodge. An opportunity is 98 99 offered to express and exchange viewpoints and problems which confront thoughtful college women. The Association promotes friendly relations within the college by helping the Freshmen become acquainted, by visiting those who are ill, and by holding informal teas where students may relax after a strenous day. Members take an interest in social service work in the city of Baltimore. The International House, The Home for Incurables, The Childrens Hospital School, and Chinese Sunday School offer an inexhaustible field in which work may be done. The United Campaign enlarges the scope of the Associar tionTs work to include financial support of our sister college, Isabelle Thobum in India and to contribute to the Inter; national Student Service. Delegates are sent to a conference held at Silver Bay to dis; cuss questions of interest with representatives of prominent eastern colleges. This is profitable to Goucher as well as to the individual. Throughout these activities the Goucher College Christian Association strives to further the ideals of service illustrated in the life of Christ. A Moment's Relaxation GOUCHER COLLEGE LIBRARY Price, Dr. Naomi Riches, Irwin Morris. 5am, Davies, McQuown, Hawn Debating Society President ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Marjorie Davies Secretary, Treasurer ,,,,,,,, ,Jane Margaret Ream Chairman of Bibliography! . . ,,,,,,,,,Aileen McQuown Chairman of Publicity ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Dorothy Hawn The first debate held at Goucher on December lst, was with the Men's Debating Team from Swarthmore College. The question was: Resolved; that the United States should recog nize Soviet Russia within one year. Laulette Irwin and Leona Morris, representing Goucher, won by unanimous decision. The second debate, with Princeton, resulted in a still unbroken series of victories over this opponent. Donna Price and Laulette Irwin formed the Goucher team. On March 13th, Goucher debated with the Woman's Team from William and Mary College. Goucher's team, consisting of Leona Morris and Olive Levell, was defeated. Other debates, scheduled for this year, have not yet taken place. The Bibliography Committee, which unearths material For the debaters, deserves special praise for its work during the year. The Publicity Committee was responsible for the very excellent posters appearing on the campus. 100 l01 City Girls President ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Elsie Abrams For years the City Girls' Centre has hung out its shingle at 23rd and Maryland Avenue This year it was felt that if the Centre were closer to the centre of activity, it would prove of more use to city students. Thanks are due to Dr. Robertson, Miss Connor, and Mrs. Hayden for the conversion of Foster Basement into an attractive new Centre. The college authorie ties have been kind enough to present the Centre with sub! scriptions to leading contemporary magazines. These are read avidly by the appreciative students. Besides the advantages that the City Girls' centre ofFers the city student, the day students are organized under the leader; ship of a president, who acts as an intermediary between the city students and the college authorities. She also represents the City Students on Student Organization and Judicial Board. Any suggestions brought forward by C. S. are brought to her. It is her aim to coordinate the city students more closely with college life. City Girls Away From Home Bates, Cley, Blithe, Forbusll, Balson, Hannum, Abe Channel, Rillcy, Alexander, Philips Silver Bay Every year Goucher sends several delegates to Silver Bay on Lake George, where about three hundred representatives from Eastern Women's Colleges meet each year. There they discuss problems of worldwide interest and listen to inspiring talks by noted speakers. A genuine interest in religion and religious topics is evinced by all attending the Silver Bay Conference. Goucherhs representatives have never failed to distinguish themselves in various ways at these conferences. Their ability to harmonize in the community singing is fast becoming a saga among the members from the attending colleges. Goucher delegates distinguish themselves in the sporting contests as well as the singing contests. The blue bandannas of Goucher stand for the spirit of Goucher carried to the conferences each year by the Goucher students wearing the bandannas. 102 Ottcnbcrg, Sause, Sammy, Wallman, Robinson, McCann Claybaugh, Finder, Bang, Davidson, Hoopcs, Brown, Demulh Ida, Roberlson. Lynch, Howell, Becker, Grunt, Howard, Hayleclz Donnybrook ,,,,,,,,,, Evelyn Byrd Howell ,lda Baldwin Lynch ........ Emma Robertson EdibrimChicf ................. Business Manager, ,, Circulation Managen,..,,,, , Circulation Assistants,, mmum, . ., Ari Editor ,,,,,,,,,,,,, Art Assistant,,,,, Snapshot Editor, Photography EdtlaL, Photography Assistant Class and Club Editar,,,,, Class and Club Assistants... V Literary Editor,,,,,. . . Literary Assistants,.,,,,.. ... ,, Sports Editor,,,,,,,,,, Sports Assistanlsm Advertising Manager.. , Advertising Assistants ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 Mane Summy Eleanor Demuth Betty Carson V Mary Caulk lJean Sanders Helen Sause .................. Lois Taylor ,,,,, Rebecca Oliver , .Mary Hayleck IMarian Finder IBurton Robinson ,,.,,,Martha Howard Dorothy McCanne 4 Edith Hoopes LBernice Bank ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Helen Grant IKatherine Chester ' ' XBetty St. John MMFrances Ide V HREgina Ottenburg Helen Sause Eleanor Demuth Mamie Lark Brown Katherine Chester Burton Robinson The Editor sat down before her battered war time model typewriter and pondered a mighty ponder. It did not seem 104 105 possible that the production of the annual was nosing into port. Why, only a few months ago she and l. B. Lynch, the Business Manager, had been elected to navigate the good ship Donnybrook into port by the following May. A crew of able and notesoeble young mariners swung aboard and the trip was on. The going was stormy. The Editor idly pounded a key loose while she recalled how Donnybrook struck a reef and nearly sank when the company with which the landing contract had been signed whammed into Bankruptcy Sands with a dull, sickening thudi However, new contracts were signed and Donnybrook progressed, accompanied by the pitiful cries of Seniors having their pictures taken, and the low moans of Carolyn Becker the distraught Photography Editor. Meanwhile, the Business Manager and her assistants, tsuch as had not been thrown overboard as so much useless ballastJ pulled the ropes and fished for ads under the direction of Frances Ide. The literary staff managed to hook some excellent material for the literary section. Lois Taylor, Art Editor, was observed muttering to herself and cocking her eyebrows at Goucher Hall entrance. On the whole, the staff did splendid navigating feats. So Donnybrook was almost to port! Rather a changed vessel from her sister ships. Well, too late to do anything about it now. The Editor pounded three more keys loose and sighed. Asca Dusauer, Hawn Missimmcr. McCannc, B. Price, Demulb, Fox, Usher Weekly EdilopinvCIiief ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, bCertrucIl; Sgrby orothy c nne Elizabeth Shirk Editorial Board Representatives... Managing Editor ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Alice Klien Assistant Managing Edilo7.. ..Eleanor Demuth A71 Edilor .......... Patricia Bonsall fK. Shaw lMary Louise Kent Reporters ................................................................ Estelle Krasne ,Dorothy Hawn Elinor Adler Louise Eiseman ' Copy Editor ......................................................................... Sarah Usher Technical Board..................... ., ,, . IHelen 0 Ne! IHelen Dessauer ...Miriam Ottenberg Dorothea Wittmaak Assistant Copy Editor Assignment Editor......... Briefly, the paper is assembled as follows: The Assign, ment Editor haunts the Student Counseloris omce the first few days of the week. Wednesday morning the bad news is posted on W eekly board. Each reading of the assignment sheet provokes groans. Reporters swap assignments, and the panic is on. The Copy Editor is awakened Sunday morning when a guilty reporter tiptoes heavily into her room to dispose of a late assignment and knocks down a few books. Sunday is best skipped over. Reading, editing, rewriting, cutting . . . . and even worse . . . . looking for copy! It is then one wonders where the reporters spend their time. Assignments are not in 106 107 and the reporters can't be found. No head! Oh, this is horrible . . . . the girl ought to stick to singing! On Monday night a gloomy group gathers around the pale green table in the Weekly Room. Strips of paper, paste, scissors, rulers . . . . the technical stafF is reading proof and the Managing Editor is pasting up the dummy. The Managing Editer snips copy, stretches articles, and we cofess, often explodes. Tuesday evening, page proof arrives for the Managing Editor to see what happened to those tardy inserts and the galley corrections. Wednesday evening, the paper arrives for distribution by the Circulation Board. The odds vary from week to week as to how many copies will go astray. And so it goes, a fairly typical week, sparing the most gruesome details, the saddest mishaps. There is a lot more to the story-meetings, fights, complaints, and here and there a laurel leaf . . . . never a wreath! Never let it be said that we tan't take it and come back for more, for we enjoy our work and aim to please. This year has been a critical one for Weekly, but it is being happily climaxed by the presentation of the first written con, stitution the organization has ever had, and which should be invaluable to running and improving the paper. Thank you kindly for your indulgence, your patience, and we hope, your sense of humor. Page Proof Arrives Apia, Kuhn, Stein, Berlin, Marx WeekIy-Kalends Business Board Business Manager ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Molly Stein Circulation Managers.....,.r,,.,thhwhu,A.......................Josephine Marx Advertising Manager,m...,,.,..... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Naomi Berlin Business Slaf ........................................................................... Alice Apte Business Slaf .......................................................................... Doris Stern This board is composed of Business Manager, Advertising and Circulation Managers and their assistants. Weekly pays for itself through the efforts of this board to get ads. W eekly also pays for the publication of Kalends which, in the good old days, used to be boss over Weekly in its importance. The Circulation Board distributes the paper and also gets suba scriptions. 108 Kalends Edilareianbicfhm ,,, , ,, ,, ,, , , ,, , ,Jane Coker Assistant Edi!or,,,, m....l - Managing EJilor,,, ,,,fLyd'a Goldblatt Art Ealilor ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ...Rachel Parker Miscellaneous Editorw. .. .. ,,,Sarah Usher Exchange,,,, , , ,,,,,,, Jane Meads Mane Meads lLenore Chertcoff Assistant Editors ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, lVivian Davis lClarissa Howe lMarion Smith The Hrst Kalends appeared in May, 1890, as the paper of the Womanls College of Baltimore. Though the form was that of a magazine, the content was essentially that of a newspaper. Although it has long been customary for Kalcnds to appear at intervals of about two months, the present staff has changed the policy in order to publish Kalends only when enough excellent material has been obtained to justify its publication. Inferior padding will no longer be used in order to allow the magazine to appear at set intervals. The many constructive criticisms offered by the students are significant of the changing attitude with regard to college magazines: essays are becoming more popular; many persons have advocated the occassional introduction of humorous verse into Kalends. We are not longer infants; neither are we sages. But surely we can achieve some balance between these poles, and create a magazine which is youthful without immaturity, and serious, yet not boring. Meads, Chcrlclzof Lenzen, Clark, Michelson, Howe, Barton, Franks Usher, Coldblall, Coker, Mayer, Parker 109 Biser, Fry, Hendrie, Davidson Press Board President ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr Virginia Davidson Press Board is responsible for keeping Goucher in the limee light. There are four members on the board, which meets once a week with Dr. Robertson to discuss events of interest to the general public. Each member of the board supplies a Baltimore newspaper with such items. When a story i'breaks, the amateur reporters must drop everything, rush around to dorms and labs and drag willing and unwilling damsels to pose before a photographer's camera. For such work the papers express their gratitude in the form of a highly useful commodity. Some papers give space rates while others pay a definite salary. Members of Press Board have a twofold interest. They are interested in Goucher and the position the college holds in the community. Secondly, they are loyal to their papers. In their competition with each other they are friendly, but their chief concern is to get a story before the other does. It is an interesting experience to participate, even as an amateur, in the machinery which goes to produce a newspaper. It is not always a simple task, For there are times when the interests of Goucher and those of the newspaper are at swordSe points, but all things considered, Press Board members still think their work thoroughly enjoyable. HO Bennett, Bates, Philips Coldblall, Abrams, Alpigl'ni, French, Bowler Presidcnle,,,, , ViceePresidenL. Business Manager Lighting,,,,.,, Costumes Scenery,,, Makeaupw Properties. Publicity ,,,,,, Masks and Faces ,,,,,,,Ellen Alpigini ,,,,Elsie Abrams WJean Bennett ,,,,Carol French Emma Stimson ,,,,,,, Betty Carson .,.Madeleine Bowler Bernice Salganik ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, :Lydia Goldblatt Under the able directorship of Mrs. Gertrude Onnen, dramatics at Goucher have steadily increased in excellence and importance. In l929 the organization was named Agora, but this was changed in 1932 to the Goucher Guild. The change to the present name came about because of the Guilds plans to produce Androcles and the Lion. Mrst Gertrude Onnen, Dircclor The New York Guild, however, had a clause in their contract stipulating that Androcles could not be pro; duced by any other guild. Goucher's determination to present Androclcs resulted in the adoption of the name Masks and Faces for the dramatic organization. This year has seen four plays produced with con; siderable success. An additional production for May Day at the campus was also under the direction of Masks and Faces. The organization has For several years employed the workshop idea, producing all of its own scenery and COSI tumes as well as directing its own lighting effects. The excellence and effectiveness of the results is attested by its reception in a critical college community which recognized and praised the worth of the work. 112 H3 Thanksgiving Dinner and Play According to the old custom, the Thanksgiving season was celebrated by a dinner for students and faculty and a play presented by the Freshmen. The dinner was held on Saturday, November 19, in the gymnasium of Catherine Hooper Hall. On the table in the center of the floor lay a handsome roast pig surrounded by apples. At one end of the gymnasium, two brown kegs Furnished cider in an oldrfashioned way. Smaller tables were scattered over the gymnasium and the balcony. When all had assembled in the chapel after dinner, the winners of the then allzimportant uhobby contest were announced. The climax in entertainment was the Freshman play, The Thrice Promised Bride. The audience was whisked off to China and found itself in a magistrates court in HOINan Province. The solemnity and reverential attitude of the actors put the listeners themselves in awe of the grand magistrate. And None Were Thrown lo the Lions Fall Productions Anna Irene Miller Androclcs and the Lion is characteristically Shavian: CllSr playing a farcial quarrel between a little Greek tailor and the buxom wife who objects to his membership in what she cone siders a disreputable sect of Christianity and also to his fondz ness For animals, and ending with the genial partnership of tailor and lion. The comedy contains some of Shaw's most profound remarks about religion. Among the exquisite vignettes of the different types who assemble under the banner of Christianity are Androcles, Francisan in the love of the beasts, his brothers; Ferrovius, at heart ever militant and ever struggling toward the gospel of peace; Spintho, believing that martyrdom will atone for all sins; Lavinia, who must have something greater than dreams and stories. The audience were tempted to call out, uWell roared, Lion, to approve the richness and variety of emotion with which Miss Goldblatt endowed Shawls irresistible beast. This interpretaa tion was only one of the fine pieces of acting which made this evening perhaps the most distinguished in the history of the dramatic association. Spintho tMiss Salganikl, Ferrovius tMiss Howelll, the Centurion tMiss Alexanderl, Caesar tMiss Bank, and the menagerie keeper gave consistently fine inter; pretations. Lavinia UVliss Forbushl got the serious beauty of her lines, though she scarcely did justice to her lighter moments. While one can imagine an Androcles with more of wistfulness 114 and less buffoonery than that of Miss Blythe, her study of the little tailor was a real creation. The interestingly stylized setting of the forest near Rome was excellent. Even the cat with whom Androcles consoles himself while he awaits martyra dom was so magnetized by the performance that she did not make a break For liberty. In The Last of the Lowries, written in imitation of Riders lo the Sea, Paul Green is more fortunate than some imitators of Synge in knowing well a section in which the possibility of tragedy is as omnipresent as in the Aran Islands: the land of the mountain feuds. The cry of the old mother Cumba, though not of as inevitable a beauty as Maurya's is as sincerei Thans all that's left o'them I loved . . . . a bundle o'clothes to show for my man an Four grown sons . . . . But theyire all gone, and what call hev I got to be living more . . . . Like many of the Irish plays this American drama is an example of folkamaterial, an interest in which has been a fructifying power in modem European drama since the days of Peer Cynt and is increasingly important in our own. On the whole the Goucher players caught the mood of this difficult play in the realistic setting of the North Carolina cabin and in their acting. Miss Abrams, as always, played with distinction. An enumeration of the parts which she has taken, including Marie in Liliom, Cassandra in Trojan Women, and of Miss Blythe's successful Sparrow and the Chinese sage in Marco Millions is an indication of the ambition and achieve! ment of Goucher's theatre guild. The Last of lhe Lowrz'es Depart 115 The Coming of Macbeth GI'UBCI'I The two plays selected by Mask and Faces for their second presentation of the year were skilfully chosen because of the vivid contrast which they provided. Women Have Their Way was a flippant piece, centering in the indolent, uneventr ful, atmosphere of an Andalusian town, where men were only efFete ornaments appropriated by the town gossip and giggling adolescents as soon as they registered at the one and only hotel. Being a biologist, we cannot reconcile the discrepancy between the negligible arithmetical ratio of the male species with the geometrical ratio of the female population. Our only logical explanation is the theory of Natural Selection. At any rate, we can assure you that the women are a sturdy lot! Bernice Salganik performs the role of the matchrmaking gossip to perfection: How you can keep this up, I don't know, she explodes. llSix women all panting to be talking about one single thing and all sitting talking about nothing at all. Well, if you can, I CAN'T. So there . . . i Has he written to you yet? All of this very much to the discomfort of the lovely Juanita, played by Bernice Bank, who is being married oft to the very eligible, gallant Adolfo, despite her protest that she has never even spoken to him. H6 117 However, we must not condemn the ladies; there is only the knitting and the weekly paper to occupy their thoughts; and the balconies are manyftthe men rare . . . . Gruach is sombre, black and stem in contrast to the light piquant comedy of Women Have Their Way. The cast was admirably selected. Elizabeth Longley portrayed the stern, harsh queen with restrained dignity, composure and ease. She was a pale, haughty figure, expressing sterness in her very fingerrtips. Elsie Abrams, we recall in retrospect as a lovely apparition gliding through the sombre castleka bunch of wet flowersethe crumpled wedding gownea sputtering candle. However, the lengthy, overrdramatised soliloquy near the end detracted from an otherwise individual interpretation of a difficult, emotional role. Nor must we neglect to mention Denison Laws and Marjorie Faust-both worthy of praise for their smooth performance. AVA Plays are usually painestakingly rehearsed, presented with animation, enjoyed, and straightway forgotten. But I don't think that these two will easily elude the memory. The reason? Simply this: D. K. did not damn them with faint praise. And that is a signal for wild hosannahoe Having Their Way The Faculty Plays Faculty Plays Florence Brinkley Whether it was curiosity or keen appreciation which enticed a hilarious audience to Catherine Hooper Hall on the evening of February 10th, a large gathering of students and faculty was present to see the professorial presentation of broad burlesque. The rollicking spirit in which the faculty enterprise was under; taken had first revealed itself in the titles of the plays chosen, Passion, Poison, ana' Petrifaction, and The Pot Boiler, and now dominated each moment of the action. The laughter was given welcome relief during the interr mission by three dances presented by Miss Lubell. The transie tion was most skillfully gained by the gay interpretation of the ColaMsh Bowl. Shiite, danced to a Brahms Rhapsody, is unfora gettable. The severely serious mood of Strike was soon lost in watch, ing the strenuous efforts of Mr. Thomas Pinikles Sud to com! plete his play while conducting a rehearsal of it. Though there was a sigh of regret when the curtains finally concealed the four desperate Characters with brandished revolvers, one person was heard to say, uI am glad it has ended; I just couldn't laugh any more 1 There was no pretense of finished work in these productions, but if the plaudits of the multitudes be the criterion of success, the members of the casts share equal honors. Of greater signiHcance to the faculty players was the successful carrying through of a project to raise money for the Faculty Scholarship and Loan Fund. 118 ?, F whiny. The Award G Night Awards NEW 1931,1932 VARSITY Hockeyercrothy Lawton Florence Dixon Mary Louise Kent Martina Hyde Laulette Irwin Volley BaII--Rachel Boax Doris Musson Lois Taylor Dorothy Hanzlik Alma Hendrickson Helen Hale Martha Hetzel Swimming-Grace Almond Florence Downs Harriet Taylor Eleanor Wilson BLAZER Ruth SeibenlMorgen NUMERALS Haclzcy l932v--None l933- Sally Johnson Ada Smith Alice Bean Anna Robertson 193477Dorothy Lawton Betty St. John Dorothy Hawn I9357Mary van Benschoten Emma Stimson Florence Dixon Jane Stanley Nancy Reid I935 Frances Freedman Mary Alice Chambers Janet Davies Rebecca Ritter Margaret Gerstling Tennis I93L7Cecile Hansen Jane Summy Basketball 193377Ann M. Borjesson Betty Turner 1935777 Margaret Harvey Alice Apte Helen Hale Ellorita Auch Valley 3011193277 Rachel Boax Edna Boyer Harriet McKee Frances Wright I933FvElizabeth Miller Lillian Miller Helen Hawkins l934vStephania Maniosky Martha Howard Lois Taylor I935-N-Alma Hendrickson Margaret McCauIey Marjorie Moore Margaret Stewart Winifred Urban Hulda Magalhais Swimming I9337Florence Downs I9347Regina Ottenberg I93fiGrace Almond Claire Stimer Vera Zimmerman Jane Moore I20 121 Hockey College Manager, Freburger 33, Ada Smith ,35, Sue Chambers '34, Emma Robertson '36, Ruth Mueller To those who really enjoy hockey, practice on our minature field means working for higher goals. It means, First: the FreshmaneJunior game, ceded to the Freshmen this year. Then comes the SophomoreISenior contest. The Seniors won their first game in history, and no less than the championship before they were through. Hockey feed saw the announcement of outstanding players to play in the Armeravy duel, as well as the announcement of hockey delegates to represent Goucher at Hockey Camp. To complete a thrilling season, Goucher went uraherah on the day of the annual Armeravy Fracas on the hockey field. Ye olde army mule left his ashecart pulling to head the uni military array of Army rooters to the field. The Navy goat did its best to delay proceedings by causing the Navy meters to drag him, by fair means or Foul, to the scene of battle. Despite the excellent manoeuvering of bot hunits, the score was a tie when the final whistle blew. The closing bell of the yearts activities in hockey was the selection of varsity. FreLurgcr, McCaulcy, Frazier, Chambers Lawton, Grant, Bryan, Robertson, Ida Davis. Ida, Auclz D. Wheeler, Draper, McCauIey Basketball Coaches, Miss von Borries, Miss Tapley, Miss Fiske College Manager, Martha Hetzel '33, Freburger '35 Harvey 34, Sause '36 Hill The details of GoucherTs basketball changed this year in several ways. Two new balls were added to the equipment, a big group of enthusiastic Freshmen appeared, serpentine did not appear, and most drastic of all, the three division court was replaced by the two division court. The abolition of centers and side centers was a good move considering that the Katy court is slightly degenerate in size. The players who formerly occupied the center section had to turn into guards or forwards. As to the games themselvesethe usual epidemic of dis; qualifications and injuries and the superabundance of inertia led to an absence of second teams. For this reason the games were scheduled for three consecutive Tuesday nights, the team of each class playing those of the other three classes. Two other games, from which varsity members could not be chosen, were the Alumnae vs. Freshmen Championship team, and Alumnae vs. Disqualified team. Both games were won by the Alumnae. The end of the season came with the traditional feed at Alt Heidelbergs. Ice cream was eaten, the games hashed over, and the basketball record closed for another year. 122 123 Volley Ball College Manager, Betty St. John Coach, Miss Duval '33, Ada Smith '34, Dorothy Hanzlik '35, Margaret McCauley One day in early Spring a Freshman walked into Bennett Annex, stopped, and giggled. Oh, my goodness, she said, that certainly was a high minded individual who put up that tennis net! If she had come back at 4 dclock she would have discovered that it was a volley ball net. The Seniors have seen the before and after of Volley ball at Goucher. It was in 1931 that the sport was organized into one with interzclass matches, and honorary varsity. Now the Seniors declare that it's great fun to bombard the walls and windows of Bennett Annex and to wear OFF the grass behind Harriett's combination office, cafeteria, and human aquarium. One does not have to be a cross country runner or an expert dodger but she must be able to serve, spike, and lift from the net. She must be nimble on her feet, quick, clever, powerful, and able to control her body, and to be part of a team. This year the rules permitted two serves but no assistance, and each player was allowed to touch the ball twice in sue; cession. The latter rule enabled the individual to try accurate placing across the net or to a teamrmate. Hit It! Harden, Sammy, Balson, Hill, Grant, Reid Tennis College Manager, Eleanor Batson 33, Ada Smith '35, Nancy Reid '34, Jane Summy '36, Muriel Rawle The Fall singles tournament ended with the same old story wJupiter Pluvius reigned and rained. This meant that the matches were not finished so the college champion remained undiscovered in the ranks composed of Jane Summy, Helen Grant, Nancy Reid, Marjory Harden, and Grace Hill, who were still running when tennis migrated to the Katy gym for the winter. After hibernation all the players emerged again for the Spring tournament. This was a well managed one in which first the Class champion was determined and then the college champion. Definite times were assigned to the players and their matches had to be played off by that time. The times were set by the class managers. Who were under the dime! tion of the college manager. The advanced tennis classes taught by Miss von Borries were new this year and no doubt account for the improved playing appearing in the matches. Tennis seems to be the most popular Spring sport and it's a shame that there are not more hours of daylight so all of those wanting to play can get a chance to do it. Another solution might be Found in more numerous courts. 124 Swimming College Manager, Muriel Wollman Coach, Miss Fiske '33, Eleanor Wilson '35, Grace Almond '34, Margaret Fox '36, Mary Brown Swimming was managed this year by Muriel Woolman, '34, and coached by Miss Fiske. The class managers have by this time become quite skillfull in hogtying girls and leading them to swimming practice. All those with high ambitions turned out to watch the meets for it is quite the fullfillment of their ambitions to climb way up on top of the lockers where they can see everything and yet be safe from splashesetnot that any Goucher girl ever splashes when she swims or divesy. Even faculty members have been seen perched up on the lockers. The events witnessed in the two meets were: Six length free style Free style realy Two length free style Divingisurface and board Four length breast stroke Form eventsifront crawl Three length back stroke Form eventSeback crawl Medley relay Form eventsibreast stroke As in the other sports an honorary Varsity is chosen after the meet and announced at G Night. This Varsity does not compete in intercollegiate matches, and due to the small size of our pool does not engage in teler graphic meets. Swimming is a great sport. At Goucher it is characterized by several traditional thingSepeculiar looking gray bathing suits, a long bamboo fishing pole to retrive clumsy Freshmen, Harriett's eagle eye, and icy cold showers. Above all it cures insomnia and gives you a good appetie. Just take a swim and then try and complain about the food in the dore mitorieSeit's impossible! Fax, Brown, Wilson, Wollman, Allmomi The Key Carriers Also Rans llAlso Ran, that good old college custom which still with; stands the onslaughts of tradition breakers, was celebrated this year by the election of prominent Seniors to the society. This organization has no connection with Phi Beta Kappa. The girls who are elected are elected on the basis of their participae tion in college affairs and their general popularity. Presidents and officers of organizations are automatically made members of the society. This year, those elected were awarded huge paper chryz santhemums with long, vivid green stems and a startling lack of leaves. A large cardboard key, bearing the motto HALSO RANS was suspended about the neck of each girl. The group was surprisingly large. The individual members proudly or sheepishly displayed their keys for the duration of the day on which they were awarded. On the followingday, both Chrysanthemums and keys had disappeared, presumably to bedeck the walls of various dorm rooms. 126 1933 Katherine Abell Margaret Blithe Helen Booton Harriet Floyd Adelaide Forbush Margaret Gregg Ruth Henderson 1934 Louise Fleming Mary Page Haydon Betty Jenkins J ne Jones Helen Pastorious Jean Robison Betty Townsend I935 Susanne Chambers Edna Dingman Florence Dixon Josephine Lindsay Frances McNutt Margaret Philson Mary E. Plaggemeyer Emma Stimson 1936 Charlotte Bailey Janet Cocherill Eleanor Hobson Martha Koch Eleanor Kratz Eleanor Tanner Josephin Worthington Marion Worthington 129 Delta Gamma Psi Chapter, Established I891 In the 18903 a group of six Goucher undergraduates con ceived the idea of founding a National Woman,s Sorority at Goucher College, then the Women's College of Baltimore. At that time one other group existed on the campus, Tau Kappa Pi, but it was local, not national, in character. Knowing that one of the faculty members, Miss Lovell of the Greek department, was a member ofa national sorority, the six undergraduates went to her for information and assistance in gaining a national charter. Miss Lovell was a Delta Gamma from one of the earliest groups, founded at Ann Arbor, Michir gan. Through her cooperation, a charter was granted on May 22, 1891, and Psi Chapter of Delta Gamma, the first national Sorority on the campus, was established. Since that time Psi Chapter has grown From those six charter members to a group which averages thirty in number. We Meet Between Classes I933 May Baldwin Alice Bean Helen Benham Martha Bob Lucas Lucille Hurlock Nancy Mitchell Anne Peterson Sara Taylor Philips Mary Fendall Clemens I934 1935 1936 Grace Mason Mary Louise Holloway Jane Berries Bernette Reynolds Jane Porter Louise Keyser Phebe Ann Clark Alice Lee Ryland Mary Archer Randolph Marguerite Nicrosi Marion Chase Margamt Schreiber Margaret Peck Jane Ireland Cecelia Stewart Jane Stanley Ethel Lipscomb Charlotte TifFany Cloyd Stifler Betty Paddock Polly TiHEany Nancy Parrott Marion Vaughan 130 I31 Alpha Phi Zeta Chapter, Established 1891 In 1891 a Charter to establish Zeta Chapter of Alpha Phi was granted to eleven girls. The first meeting was held on the fifth day of the chapter's life. For the years when Zeta was the only southern chapter of Alpha Phi, it was a part of the New England group, but now it has joined with its younger Southern sister chapters. While maintaining its scholastic and altruistic purposes, Alpha Phi solidifies its social unity in its apartment at dinner once a week. This custom is started annually by a week end Fall house party and is ended by a week's relaxation on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. We live, study, participate as Zeta of Alpha Phi has done For Fortyztwo years, trying to progress both with and in Goucher College. A Quiet Chat I933 Marion Barbur Amelia Bielaski AnnrM. Borjesson Mary Elizabeth Draper Addaline Gillespie Martha Hetzel Mary Koch Mary Philips Florence Reich Katherine Shaw 1934 Jane Bielaski Isabel Colvin Katherine Flory Cecile Hansen Lucy Nye Marion Pinder Jane Redhead Betty St. John Jean Sanders Elsa Sharp Jane Summy Catherine Tracey 1935 Barbara Elberfeld Catherine Grauel Clarissa Howe Margaret Kaestner Mary Settle Janice Young 1936 Margaret Basil Mary Brown Helen Draper Ruth Mueller Alice Nye Anne Wright 132 133 Tau Kappa Pi Alpha Chapler, Established I891 Tau Kappa Pi was established at Goucher in 1891. It was Founded as a literary society of which all five girls in Goucher's first graduating class, were members. When national sororities began to Found chapters at Goucher, Tau Kappa Pi, in deciding to maintain its own identity, acquired a national charter with the provision that new chapters may only be established in nonacoeducational colleges having a standing as high as that of the Woman's College of Baltimore. Our first rooms were in Goucher Hall in what used to be music rooms. The active members at present maintain an apartment at 2222 North Charles Street. The active chapter and alumnae give two banquets each year, one For the newly pledged members and another for the initiates. Recently members of the faculty have been asked to act as sponsors. Many have honored the sorority by accepting this invitation. Tetc A Tete 1933 Margaret Cornwath Ann Corckran Helen Dawkins Katherine Harvey Jean Kneip Jean Schilling 1934 1935 Eleanor Denmead Marjorie Harden Frances Ide Dorothy Lang Margaret Harvey Catherine Hayward Dorothy Lawton Dorothy C Roberts Ruth Murphy Mary Patrick Harriet Taylor Muriel WoIIman Virginia Woolverton Annie Linn Henley Mary Strong 1936 Doris Cherry Phyllis Heard Jean Fraser Helen MacBriar Doris Rever Nellie Smith Margaret Southworth Sarah Stauffer 135 Gamma Phi Beta Zela Chapter, Established I893 On November ll, 1874, a new sorority, Gamma Phi Beta, was organized at Syracuse University. On November 4, 1893, Zeta Chapter, a subsidy of Gamma Phi Beta, received its charter. There were only seven charter members, and Zeta was the only southern chapter. However, it now has a larger list of members and many southern sister chapters. When Zeta initiates a girl, its purpose is to impart to her the highest ideals; to grant to her the truest of friendships; to bestow upon her the benehts of the entire Greek world; to interpret For her the beauty of knowledge. e To the college we want to give united and enthusiastic support to all its enterl prises, institutions, and ideals. The entire aims and ideals of Goucher sororities may be found in the following brief quotation from the PanrHellenic creed, llTo us, sorority life is not the enjoyment of special priviz leges, but an opportunity for wide and wise human service. The Bela Sanctuary I933 Florence Alexander Frances Douglas Florence Downs Eleanor Fry Mary Bruce Mackall 1934 Phyllis Andrews Patricia Bonsall Ruth Davis Marjorie Faust Mary Louise Kent 1935 Jean Bennett Barbara Herman Virginia Keller I936 Rebecca Bennett Harriet Dodd Dorothy Gillespie Nancy B. Mustard Eleanor Newham Helen Price Mary L Stambough Anne Phelen Wright 136 137 Kappa Alpha Theta Alpha Delia, Established 1896 Kappa Alpha Theta was founded at Asbury University tnow DePauw Universityl in 1870. It was the first society of women organized as a sorority and bearing a Greek letter name. Alpha Delta Chapter was founded at Goucher College on May 15, 1896. A distinct honor has been awarded Theta as the first sorority by the Sigma Alpha Epsilon which has built a war memorial temple at Evanston, Illinois. The PanrHellenic room, on the lower floor, has a large vaulted ceiling supported by rows of columns. In the vaults between the columns, are placed the shields of fraternities and sororities in the order of their found; ing. The shield of Kappa Alpha Theta is placed hrst before all the other sororities. Theta has the distinction of having in its ranks the first women to be elected to Phi Beta Kappa. They were Lida Mason and Elaine Hamilton of the University of Vermont. Other famous members of Theta include Helen Jacobs, Willa Cather, Bertha van Hoosen, and Mary Yost. At Ease 1933 F Brown B. Edmundson J, Delevett J. Ream 1934 M. Bowler B. Carson J. Fleming T Speers J. Woodward 1935 M. Storr V. Thomas B. Tottle 1936 M Carson M. Caugill M Doubleday K. King R. Margrett AA Parkin K, Ranck M. Stewart B. Tottle B Williams 138 I39 Pi Beta Phi Alpha Chapter, Established I 897 Every organization owes its being to the inspiration and purposeful planning of some one individual, and in the case of Maryland Alpha, that individual was Elizabeth Kennicott Culver. Her family came here from Boulder, Colorado, in the early days of the Womants College of Baltimore. Having experienced the advantages of sorority life at the University of Colorado, and in her association with Pi Phi's during several year's study abroad, she was eager to establish a chapter of her sorority in Baltimore. She joined forces with Loe Ware who had been initiated into Pi Phi at the University of Michigan, and with three resident alumnae From Swarthmore College. Their meetings culminated in a conference with Mrs. Hans Froelicher, whose advice they sought in making up a list of charter members. A group of seven was organized, a charter obtained from the Grand Council of Pi Beta Phi, and Maryland Alpha was duly installed. Maryland Alpha is one of seventyzeight chapters of Pi Beta Phi, all of which are located in the United States or Canada. We Study the Fashions 1933 Minetta Adair Elizabeth Miller Anne Morehouse Margaret Nance Frances Pendleton Katharyn Rogers 1934 Alta Denison Irma Fowlkes Ida Baldwin Lynch Mary Louise Moffett I935 Hoyland Livermore Genevieve Miller Jane Moore 1936 Martha Cox Alice Erwin Nellie Hoskins Cola Barr Jackson Virginia Kane Virginia Long Dorothy Nance Dorothy Webster 140 I41 Delta Delta Delta Xi Chapter, Established I898 Delta Delta Delta was founded at Boston University in 1888. At present there are eightyrfive chapters located in thirty eight states, with three in Canada. Tri De1ta is one of the few international sororities. National conventions have been he1d trianually since the first national convention at Knox College in 1893. In 1931, the first international convention was held at the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec, Canada. Xi Chapter was installed at the Woman's College of Baltir more on November 25, 1898. There were nine charter meme bers. For many years Xi maintained two rooms donated by the college, in one of the dormitories. At present, the rooms are located at 2123 North Charles Street. Xi Chapter edited the Trident, the publication of Delta Delta Delta, from 19021906. This publication was first begun on the third anniversary of the founding of the order in 1888. It has been issued as a quarterly ever since that time. We Form A Delta 1933 Margaret Hannum Ruth Kiehne Margaret Kunkel Virginia Matthews Louise Pearson Esther Riddle Louise Smith Ethel Soule Lillian Stokes 1934 Elinor Batson Margaret Boyer Mamie Lark Brown Margaret Hendrie Mary House Dorothy McCanne Katherine Sand: 1935 Charlotte Cassell Vera Coster Margaret Dail Vivian Davis Katherine Donehoo Suzanne Hannum Julia Kley Virginia Mueller Rebecca Ritter Alice Wylie Katherine Zimmerman 1936 Jean Fleckenstine Grace Hill Dennison Laws Margaret Matthews Mary Louise Shaw Dorothy Wheeler Marjorie Wheeler 142 143 Alpha Gamma Delta Theta Chapter, Established I908 In the history book of Alpha Gamma Delta, there is written opposite October 10, 1908, Theta Chapter installed at the Woman's College of Baltimore. On the records of Baltimore City there is placed after the same date, A grand parade was tendered Cardinal Gibbons in honor of his homecoming after a visit to the Vatican. How great an effect the one had on the other can be appreciated only by the members themselves and by the hack drivers who were delayed several hours in their attempts to reach the Stafford Hotel twhere the installation of Theta took placel Since 1919, Theta has held yearly benefits for the manage ment and support of a summer camp for children at Crispell Lake. For several years the headquarters of Alpha Gamma Delta have been the rooms on the corner of Maryland Avenue and 23rd Street. One of the things of which the present chapter is most proud is its scholastic record. For the past two years Alpha .Gamma Delta has been the second highest chapter on the campus and we are duly proud of our several Phi Beta Kappa members in this yearis class. Nobody Home Pan Hellenic Association P' Beta PM Gamma Phi Bela Annette Webster Anne Corchran Madeline Bowler Katherine Harvey Muriel Wollman Kappa Alpha Theta Florence Downs Patricia Bonsal Tn' Della Katherine Rogers Irene Fowlkes Iplm Phi Alplm Gamma Della Helen Benham L '56 S 'th Mary Archer Randolph KeatikerinHeUSandt 61111 Gamma Tau Kappa Pi Adelaide Forbush Marian Barbur Ann Corkran, Pres Margaret Gregg Jean Saunders 148 149 Dismal Swamp Marjorie E. Bang Yes, sirl When I was studyin' my geography lesson back in school days, and larned about all them bears and snakes in th' great Dismal, I swore that was one place I'd never come to! And yetehyar I am. The grizzled guide was voicing my own thoughts. Would I really walk-w Where willeoietheewisps and glowiworms shine In bulrush and in brake; Where waving mosses shroud the pine, And the cedar grows, and the poisonous vine Is spotted like the snake; Where hardly a human foot could pass Or a human heart would dare, On the quaking turf of the green marass. As we puffed along in a tired old motorboat, it seemed as if we were a really the first to see this swampkcoulcl anything really have changed much? Of course all the Hrstegrowth timber had been chopped down, but the matted undergrowth of bamboo, and of grape vines had grown up on both sides of Feeder Ditcheand everything to our eyes seemed primeval. But our surroudnings did not seem very eerie or mysterious in that blazing September sunlight. The guide, who was a perpetual talking machine, entertained us with a dramatic monologue all the while. Apparently he liked to have his say about the swamp, himself, and his surroundings, and all one had to do was to stick a new needle on his record, and out would come another flood of information. He had been a lumberjack in these forests for ten years, and before that had cut virgin timber in the Virginia Dare forests in North Carolina; theiibfore he was well qualified to tell us of them. But he had no longer the strength; so now he took parties of sight seers up to Lake Drummond, in the heart of the swamp. The big tragedy in his life was that his neighbor has kindly, and nice a man as you ever want to see-iuntil someone else comes around, had started competing with him by taking parties out. And I ask you, is it fair for a man who has a dandy little gas station to snatch the bread From a laWIabidini honest manis mouth, who hasn't got no other means of livin'? Here I go along makin' my Few pennieSoand that man has to come along. This distrubance loomed large in his life-no wonder when his livelihood was threatened. I shall always remember him in connection with the Dismal Swamp. At intervals along the Ditch there were trails broken down to the waters edge. A queer little shiver wriggled up and down my spine when I heard that bears had beaten down that track. In their clumsy search for food they had trampled all the poke berry vines, eager to devour the bluishe recl berries which they loved. And I always thought a poke berry diet was poisonous! But perhaps they made a delicious menu for Mr. Bruin when 154 l55 washed down with some of this teazcolored water. Against the sun, and stretching into the distance, the swamp water lay smooth and oily like a stream of melted Hershey chocolate. But when one scooped some water up, it appeared as if all the housewives had shipped all their excess cold tea to the Dismal Swamp. This is, however, The scecallecl 'juniper wateri which is in reality a blend of the leachings of water from gum, cypress, maple, and juniper peateland, which covers several hundred square miles. Gum water is not palatable, cypress just a trifle better, but it is the juniper which makes the other swamp waters palatable and healthful. This reassuring statement did not entirely persuade me, and I gingerly sampled the drop at the end of my finger. We piled out of the boat at the only permanent habitation in the swamp -that of the governmentzemployed lock tender in the Waste Weir clearing. l t seemed very odd to find a welletended garden and lawns with gravelled walks in such a desolate area. Leaving the motorboat, we settled ourselves carefully in a little rowboat-so weighed clown with human freight that it scarcely came two inches above the waters edge. Any incautious move might mean that we should have the doubtful privilege of more close come panionship with the water snakes. Nearing Lake Drummoncl itself, the trees arched lowerias if seeking to keep us from trespassing. The lake itself stretched out its weird beauty before us, with its embroidery of cypress snags and roots near the shore, and here and there a lone tree marooned out in the open water, stretching itself on its toes, loath to be in such a watery home. The blackened stumps recalled Arthur Rackham and his weird illustrations of gnomes and witches stretching out their encircling limbs. This must have been the place where all the malignant hamadryacls had their home! Northwest of Lake Drummond soared the virgin timber, in such an isolated position that it would not pay to cut it; but around us, on the south side the first timber had all been logged, and much of the second growth had been destroyed by fire. I could not exactly agree with Washington when he termed Dismal Swamp a glorious paradise. l n accounts of Washing; ton's connection with Dismal Swamp, it is often said he dug the ditch 'to draw Great Dismal,' but the fact is he dug it to drain into Lake Drummond the scattered swamp and wet lands lying to the westward, and also to use the ditch for transportation. Blackberry bushes grow rank in Dismal, attaining a height of twenty feet or more. Other things grow to an uni believable size. Cotton stalks grow ten feet tall, and produce worthless iblue' and 'yellow' cotton. We left the black, springy, oozing shores of Lake Drummond in the setting sun. Would the dead sweetheart in Mooreis ballad All night long, by a firefly lamp, paddle her white canoe when we were gone? Since we had come in September, we luckily escaped the pest of the yellow flies, the red bugs, and most of the mosquitoes. My brother was very anxious to obtain his object in coming to Dismal Swampwthat of catching as many snakes and animals as he could carry. 50 it was with much trepidation that I was persuaded to follow the trail behind them with bare arms, and socklets the sole protection for my legs. With dreadful bloodzcurdling nightmares of rattlesnakes, copperheads, and cotton; mouthed mocasins on the ground; and monstrous poisonous spiders which lurked above one, took a nice bite, and then climbed their ladder again, leaving one much the worse for wear, I didnt know which way to look up or down or aroundeand ended by closing my eyes. As a result I stumbled over all the roots there were to stumble over, and each time was sure I had wrecked the happy home of some peaceeloving rattlesnake. If I died, it would be all their Faultwand I pondered over the place where I would like to be buried. The king snake is the boss of the reptiles, non, poisonous and immune to venom; in a half secondis time he can tie a rattle snake, a copperhead, or a cottonemouthed mocasin into three knots, break its back and begin swallowing. How I prayed to be turned into a king snake-or even into his wife! Perhaps the snakes had pity on meeat any rate they did not come to greet us then. The trail on which we wandered was a fairly wellebeaten one. What a superhuman feat it would be to hack oneis way through the underbrush, impeded by tangled vines, and scarcely daring to put one's foot down, For fear of the large fire holes. These fire holes, sometimes eight or ten Feet deep down to the sand and clay bottom, are left when the peat has burned. The peat is very inflammable, and if one drops a lighted match, the area will burn for a long timeein a circle underneath the surface. Fires have caused tremendous damage in the swamp. After the destructive fire in 1923, which destroyed one hundred and fifty square miles in the swamp, peat land near the Feeder mouth burned until March, 1926. Overhead birds chirped cheerfully, while little of sunlight Filtered into the damp forest around us. The guide showed us places where deer had been, and where coons and mink had left tracks. He stopped before a gum treeia virgin treew-left because it was diseasedeand pointed out to us where a recent adventurous bear had scrambled up to get some sweet gum berries for dessert. While heaving a sigh of relief that we were going back, I held my head too high; a gossamer snare enfolded me, and a unice little spider sat down beside her and frightened Miss MufFett away. With this ferocious spider examining my hair and neck, I wanted to writhe on the groundibut oh, there were worse things on the groundl Everyone whacked at the little lfraicl cat, and Mr. Spider sought safety territory! l56 l5? Feet trailing in the rusty colored water of Feeder Ditch, my smaller brother obligingly wiped the cobwebs away with his head from overhanging branches. We chugged back to civilization, with our cargo of sweet gum berries, two chameleons, a swamp cypress, mosquito bites and tics. The end of our glorious adventure. NotceSome of the scientific facts are taken from the National Cece graphic Magazine, July, 1932, Dismal Swamp in Legend and History. To Judas lscariot O Judas, friend, my heart cries out to you. One gesture that I understand, One look of sympathy, one hand To show you the compassion that I feel, To help you bear the eternal harsh ordeal Of daily slander, daily taunts, and pain lnflicted daily on the same sore stain,w I wonder would it help to know The kindliness I long to show. Each little child is taught to hate your name. And people blindly call each deed of shame A deed like yours: A Judas! they proclaim Upon the doer. Even he the blame Calls down in curses on your burdened name. And men of science coldly seek to find The type of complex of your furied mind. I f holy Jesus hears men pray, Do not you, Judas, feel them flay? O Judas, friend, my heart cries out to you. For I am so like you in things I do! Edith C. Hoopes Nocturne The cool, green moonlight clings To slim birch trees. Once more sweet winds and soft night wings Wake sad slow ghosts Of all the joy we knew, and brings A dream of you. Gone? Gone? The house yet rings With your clear voice. Still, still, my heart sings With love for you . . . . But pale, cold moonlight to Bare branches clings. Evelyn Byrd Howell Dream Bubbles A multircolored bubble floats through realms of space To me from dreamland. Within its shining crystal I see a dream come truew To me, in years to come. Oh God! let not that bubble burst into the darkness Where others long before it have departed. Let me draw near enough to touch without its bursting Into a rainbow mist of tears, Leaving but a vanished vision and a broken sigh For things that never were. Change Indian, Indian, Bronze against the sky, There comes in eagle's sight Wagons white And men to vie With Indian, lndian, Bronze against the sky. You to show him how to sow; He to show you how to kill With axe and knife and tomahawk. Did you ask to know? Indian, Indian, Bronze against the sky, White will come and Red must go. You will die. He will sow. White man, White man, Tell me why! Evelyn Byrd Howell Dorothy McCanne Uaned When l die, if there should be Nothing, nothing left of me, If in both my heart and head l shall be so truly dead That nowhere in me there is stirred A memory of what occurred, Or any spirit left in me To seek a bright eternity, Then in oblivion profound I am willing to be drowned. I knew it long before I came To inspirate a mortal frame, And often in the sway of sleep I have roamed its caverns deep. Life is such a frantic race, Rest is good from such a pace. And after all the loves and hates The mortal me disintegrates, The atoms still remain to race Eternally through endless space, So some shall meet and fuse and pass Into a flower, a blade of grass And thrill again to know delight ln living in the air and light, To know the sweet ecstatic pain Of coming into life again. So, though I die, some part of me Shall know great immortality. M ary H aylcck 158 159 About 11:30 I sit among my books and think While through my pane I see stars wink As if they know, my clear, that I Cant work, no matter how I try. For if you're always in my brain How can less potent facts remain Concerning physiology Or functional psychology? On every page of every book You sit amused, and as you look At me, my studies fade away, For you're more interesting than they. But Ie-my dear, you must confesse Also impair your studiousness. Bernice Bank To R. M. The torch fell dead. The castle, in the glare Of noonday, melted. And the sacred shrine OF stillness, once so intimately mine, Was sacked, and echoed strife and trumpets' blare. My universe, that reached the angelsI hair And knew no limit, like the celandine Shrank into littleness. Stars ceased to shine. Just doubt and cold reality were there. And then I saw your soul, all clear and bright. Not through your words was it revealed to me; Each hour of your life laid bare the grace And radiance of your spirit. By its light I saw the Eternal in reality. Your life of love restored to me God's face. Edith C. Hoopes Snow-lacly Bernice Bank Her name is Cora. Conventionally enough, she is a hat check girl in a local night club. She will never be pretty because of her ears. They are offensive protusions through the Fringes of her hair. Her nose stops short with an air of surprise when it has completed only threerquarters of the average length of a nose. Her mouth is attractive until she smiles; then one notices the spaces between her even teeth-teeth which make me think of the walls I used to build with blocks when I was a child. Because of my sense of the ornate, I used to arrange the top layer so that there was a space between each two. Then the wall became an irregular pattern like Cora's teeth. I can't remember whether her eyes were blue or brown. They are the kind of eyes one doesn't notice. She is small, too small for her surroundings. Her delicacy is out of place against the background of jazz. Sometimes, when she isnlt smiling, when her eyes are halfzshut, her hands folded, I forget her ears. Her lashes lean down to meet her cheeks like the lace of a bedelamp over a pillow. Her hands are gracefully slim, with fingers that trace patterns on the counter before her. When she sits with her eyes halfeclosed, her hands quiet in her lap, she belongs to a canoe on summer waters, not to this atmosphere of halfzdrunken dancers. She is a snOerady, untouched by the warmth that surrounds her. The last time I saw her, I spoke to her She was pathetic, sitting alone in her cubbyzhole She shyly accepted the cigarette I offered, and lit it with an expertness that surprised me I realized that I had expected her to refuse saying, I don t know how to smoke. I cannot picture a snowJady handling a cigarette with dexterity. Youlve been working here sometime, I said. Do you like it? UWell, I needed the money. But I won't be here long. I'm going away Monday? Strange time For a vacation. I wondered if she had been dismissed. She looked as though she had seen days of hunger. Surely no man could turn out so pathetic a creature. My brain leaped to a more romantic cone clusion. Perhaps she had a sweetheart who wanted to take her out of this, a lover who would bring her the warmth and sympathy she needed. ul have to go, she said. live saved enough money to go to the mountains. The doctor told me a year ago that if I didn't, I'd get TB. uTuberculosis! And it took you a year to get the money? She didn't answer. Do you live with your parents? uThey died before I knew them. uAren't you too young to be living alone? She laughed scornfully. Her laugh was out of keeping with the gentility of her hands. She said, I'm not so young. I've been married five years, but my husband left me. Ilve got two kids to support. 160 l6l Butewhere will they go when YOUmN UWhen I go to the mountains? Her uncertain eyes blurred. Their father is a rich man's son. Hels been trying to get 'em for a long time. I wouldn't take a cent From him. Well, I guess he wins now. Just then one of my friends called me. I turned to Cora before I left. If thereis anything I cane l'Aano, thanks. It'll be 0. K. Later I met the proprietor of the night Club. I told him of the cone versation. Can't you do anything For her? I asked. l'So she's told you that story, he said. She tells it to anyone who will listen. She isn't starved, and she hasnjt tuberculosis. If she does have children, she doesnt support them. She's leaving, all right, but not for the mountains. She got a job dancing in a burlesque show. I was amazed at the ease with which I had been duped. My wonder became anger, and I started to walk towards Cora. I stopped. She was sitting, hands folded, eyes down; her hair tell more gracefully about her head, covering her ears. I thought, She can't be lying. He just didnit want me to know that he hasn't tried to help her. I stood looking at Cora. I hated to see my snowilady melt. Directions When I die: Don't send me Howers- I cannot rise and touch their velvet softness-I would startle you! Don't leave my body to lie in statei I might grow tired of the expression I'm supposed to weareof solemn dignity. Donit let people file by mee People who ignored me in lifewstay away! I'm no show. Friends, why want a last look now? You'll have had one anyway. Don't have tears and sadneSSe For maybe I am gladeif I'm not, it's not your misfortune. Donlt eulogize my good pointsh For I have them yet, as always, nor have my sins departed. Don't have soft music-- I always loved gay tunes, and, after all, it's my funeral- Dorothy McCanne Monotone Evelyn Byrd Howell Life, said the Colonel, uis not kind to all of us. We were seated before Mrs. Livingstone's hospitable fireplace sipping afterzdinner coffee. I, knowing the Colonel's knack for telling a story, had endeavord to swing the conversation his way. Now I figuratively pricked up my ears and literally urged him on, remarking that I did not see how life could be unkind and yet allow For happiness. The Colonel humphed and settled his vast bulk more comfortably in his chair. Young woman, he said, the two neither hinder nor help each other. There was the case of Max Kleisner . . i . The Colonel thoughtfully weighed the warm bowl of his pipe in his hand as he gazed at the hre. Then be began to talk. As I listened, the name Max Kleisner gained meaning. One of those wild, fiery German emigrants of the year 48. A sensitive type, studious, musical, slight of build, filled with unyielding ardor for the cause of Young Germany. Slowly the raw edges of his personality rounded and were polished by the Colonel's descrip tion. 11 . . . . so Max was exiled from the thing his heart loved above all elseH The Fatherland! One thing he managed to save from the wreck of his young life, his violin. And how he had scraped and saved and labored in those early years to buy that violin. Now, on his way to a strange land, it was all that remained of his dreams. His hopes for Germany were shattered. That was the first tragedy of his life. It nearly broke him, as it broke so many of his comrades. One day, early in January of '49, he landed in New York. Bleak, raw, windy. Sleet driving against the huddled ngres of cab drivers on their boxes. Horses slipping on the iceecovered cobble paving. Max looked out of coldrblearecl eyes on the grimness of the scene. The cabbies glanced indifferently at the slight, blond German with his violin case tucked under his arm. In all the world there was none to care if he froze or roasted. It is certain that he must have done one or the other, for when he arrived in Wisconsin a year later, he limped. The villagers will tell you that his toes froze 'way back east somewheresf The only thing that was evident was that he limped and he no longer had his violin. Someone told Max to stake a farm claim. He made his selection from a Claim Oflice map. The land looked good on the map. It was wooded, had a stream running through it, and was marked lfertilef Fertile? For two years Max did not know whether it was or not. He was too busy clearing the woods and building himself a snug cabin. During those years the villagers saw him twice. That was when he came to town carrying a load of pelts which he wished to exchange for supplies. God knows what privar I62 I63 tions he endured. The first time he struggled into the village, his hair was gray. The next time it was totally white, and a long purple scar drew his face down on one side. Well, sir, no one knows when or where Max met the woman he married, but the fact remains that five years after he came to Wisconsin, he limped into Diepner loaded down with pelts and followed by the ugliest woman born since the witch of Salem met her death by fire. Max sought the village priest, and the marriage ceremony was performed. The German made the priest promise to come see him within the month. Nothing could induce him to explain why. He exchanged his pelts for money this time, bought a buckboard, loaded it with supplies, and started For his cabin. His wife never uttered a word while in town, but the light of happiness in her eyes was beautiful to see. She adored Max. The next month the priest and I set out to make the promised call. Neither of us knew why we were going. The priest went because Max asked him. I went because I liked Max and, weII, because of my damned curiosity, I guess. Late that afternoon we arrived at the edge of the farm. What a dreary, desolate place it was. There were rocks, rocks everywhere. Not even God Almighty gave that land a second thought. He just plain chose to forget it, But Max! He staked it; he was proud of it. It was his. The priest and I drove on. Had there not been a trail chopped through the trees, we would not have known where to go. Suddenly, I saw the gray clad figure of a woman in a field to our left. It was Max's wife. She waved her hand awkwardly and pointed to the east where the cabin stood. We were still fifty yards away when I noticed a small boy playing around the clearing. I had not had time to raise an eyebrow before Max appeared in the doorway. uWhen we had eaten our supper, Max shyly asked the priest if he could baptize a baby born out of wedlock. He blushed and stammered while he explained that he had wanted to bring Maria to the village and marry her three years ago on his second visit to Diepner, but she had been heavy with child and the journey was too long. The adoring, hideous Maria said never a word. She smiled and nodded and jiggled her three year old son iupsadaisyf HWhiIe Max and the priest talked, I played with the child. He had his fathers long musical fingers. I wondered idly if he would ever Ieran to play a stringed instrument. I asked the mother if the boy had any chance to learn music. Maria looked at me and vaguely moved her hands about. I asked her one or two other questions, but she remained unresponsive. Max must have noticed my perturbed look, for he said, 'Mariaeshe does not speak. She does not hearf So that was it. That poor Max! Year in and out he had no living soul to talk with. The three of them lived in a dead silence, muffled by the snow in winter and relieved by the wind in the trees in summer. The silence of the stars for company and the devil's own back yard to yield a few acres of crops from ceaseless hours of labor, labor, labor. If the early New England settlers had landed in Maxls patch of Wisconsin, the sight of all those rocks would have made what rocky Helds they had look like a beach with maybe sixty lone pebbles on it. Fertile? One look at that place was enough to make anyone sympathize with God for forgetting it. But not Max. That man had a Titan's soul in a Druidls body. Each year he was more bent. Each year brought another Kleisner. One more mouth to feed. Max adored his children; There were nine of them until little Maria and two of her brothers sickened and died. Then Carl tried log rolling in the stream one day. He slipped and fell off the log. It hit his head. He went down like one of the endless procession of stones he had helped his father throw into the water. Elisabeth jumped in to save her brother, and was whirled like a leaf downstream. One minute her little head shone golden in the sunlight. The next it disappeared forever in the swirling stream. The deaf and dumb mother saw the tragedy from her window. She ran from the cabin waving her arms futilely above her head. Terrible animal sounds issued from her throat. Had she been able to attract Maxls attention, Elisabeth might have been saved. Maria was then heavy with her tenth child. It was stillrborn. Maxls scar was white as he told me the story. Four children were left. One was deaf and dumb like his mother. Of the other three, two were boys. Through the years Max saved as he could. He was determined to give his children the best he could afford. They went every day in the ancient buckboard to the district school. Year by year as the oldest outgrew his clothes, they were handed to the next in line. As her brothers' clothes wore thinner, Joanna, the baby, saw the devils playground take on the seme blance of a real farm. Rocks disappeared, trees came down, more rooms were added to the cabin. Mother Maria mended and patched the shabby suits, or worked silently in the fields beside her husband. From time to time I went to the farm to see old Kleisner about wheat contracts or new farm machinery. One day he spoke to me about sending Max Junior to medical college. HAlI the time, that boy fix cow's leg or he fix his Mutter's arm she has broke. A day fifteen years previous flashed into my mind. What was it I had said about the baby Max's hands? Those long HngerSesplendid For surgery. HThe next year Young Max left For medical college. He did exceptionally brilliant work. He succeeded and he failed. He succeeded in that he is 164 165 today ranked with the world's greatest surgeons, but he failed in that he forget completely the bent form of his father toiling in the fields. He failed in that he never remembered the dumb grief in the eyes of his mother the day he left the farm. He never returned. Eventually the daughter left home. She and her younger brother watched and discovered where their father put his money when he returned from signing new acreage contracts One night Joanna and Hans took that money. They followed the path blazed by Max the younger on his way out. Joanna was never heard from again. Hans is now captain of one of the leading prison football squads. His father, mercifully, does not know. uBaCk there on that Farm there are now three peopleiMax, Maria, and the speechless son. The Colonel paused. He weighed the cold bowl of his pipe thoughtfully in his hand. A A'You and I would say lPoor old Maxl' He is dying of cancer. Of all his children, only one stays by him His savings are gone. No, life has not been kind to Max. Has he been happy? I do not know. But the other day when I went to see him, he was radiant. He held something in his hand which he shoved at me exultantly as he exclaimed, ' It is gut, gut! Life iss so gut. Hans, he find thiss und bring it to me!' Maria stood behind her husband. It struck me suddenly that in this hideous warty old woman there was something so good and clean and splendid that she was lovlier than beauty itself. HIn idle curiosity I looked at the thing Max handed me. It was a violin. I turned it over. There, on the back, was carved deep into the wood, this inscription: mMax Kleisner, I846'. Poem I wonder if, with all my striving, deanw Do not I Fall quite short of what you grasp With so much ease? I seek for beauty near And far. I search, and ever seek to clasp It always to my breast. It slips away. But you,wyou come to me and simply say In whispers sweet, I love you more each hour. And then it seems that you have in your power Beauty infinite and rare. Your soul By its simplicity has reached my goal. Edith C. Hoopes Youth Perhaps when I am old and fear to die; When I have proved each theory a lie,- Perhaps, I, too, shall read The Book each day, And once again believe, and really pray. Perhaps. Edith C. Hoopcs Condemned Who? Me? I jest went oI'F I aint clone nothin, My rocker like. You wouldn't do. I killed him, sure. We was buddies, see? HANG HIM! And then he Who? Me? He stole I aint done nothin' The one thing I had You wouldn't do. An' kicked him dead. An' we was buddies . . . . Such a little tad . . . . Gee! He had no chance I aint done nothinI To yell for me. You wouldn't do. An'e'hellel guess Evelyn Byrd Howell Death ITis not because I hope to see the face Of a savior, hear his Come or sad Depart, Nor do I hope to feast my hungry heart On heavenly beauty in a holy place. 'Tis not because I think I shall behold The sunrclad woman or the crystal sea, Hear incenseeladen thunder or the three Perpetual sancti,enot for hopes so bold It is that I love death. When I am dead, My aching soul shall find a quiet peace In sweet, moist earth, and rains and dew and snow Shall seep down cold upon my cooling head. And I shall hear low murmurs, feel the trees That rock in wind. And I shall love it so! Edith C. Hoopes 166 1933 ABELL, MARY KATHERINE... ,, ,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 205 Richards St, Juliet, 111, ABRAMS ELSIE IRENE , , 2360 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. ADA1R,EL1ZABETH MINETTA ,, 201 E NorthAve.Ba1t1more Md1 ALEXANDER, FLORENCE NEWTON ,, , 11704 Sycamore St. Bethlehem Pa1 ALEXANDER HILDA KRAFT, ,,,,,,,, 3131 Gwynn 3 Falls Parkway Baltimore Md ANDERSON, ANN ELIZABETH,,,, ,,, ,,3925 Belview Ave Baltimore Md. ASENDORF, LOIS CATHERINE ,12 Hubbard Park, Red Bank, N. J BALDW1N, AMBER ALICE..1.,, ,805 Electric St Scranton, Pa. BALDWIN, MAY FLOWERS, 406 Felder Ave. Montgomery A13. BARBUR, MARION JENNIE,,, ,Curren Terrace Norristown, Pa. BARRETT, HELEN ATKINSO , ,2000 Eutaw Place Baltimore Md BASSETT, JEANNIE COXE ,,,,,,,,, 586 E. Lincoln Highway, Coatesv1lle,Pa BASSLER, DORIS CATHERINE,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2001 W Pratt St.Ba1timore,Md BATES, CHARLOTTE HARRIET, , , ,58 Coolidge Ave., Glens Falls, N1 Y. BAUGH, ANNESLEY BOND ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .,207 Woodlawn Road, Baltimore, Md. BEAN ALICE GOODRIDGE , ,,,,,, 1000 W, Locust, Johnson City, La. BEHREND, AMY NORDLINGER , ,,3814 Military Road, Washington, D. C. BENHAM HELEN,, ,. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1 12 Linwood Ave., Ardmore, Pa. BIELASKL AMELIA DODSON ,120 Gilchnst Road Great Neck L 1. N. Y. BILLARD, JACQUELINE,,. 1607 Park Ave Baltimore, Md BLITHE MARGARET DICKSON. 5608 North 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. BOOTON HELEN VIRGINIA , 1,,516 Reservation Hill, Williamson W Va BORJESSON, ANN MARGARET SIGRID ,,,,,,,,,, 114 Miller Ave., Sayreville, N. J. BORNSTEIN MOLLIE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,2513 Quantico Ave., Baltimore, Md. BROWN, FLORA ELIZABETH .,13809 Chatham Road, Baltimore, Md. BRYAN, MARGARET ALICE ,,,,,,,,,,, 3702 Duvall Ave., Baltimore, Md. CANN, MARY EMILY ............... ,,,,,1,28 East 25th St., Baltimore, Md. 88 Baltimore Ave,, Dundalk, Md. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 8127 Cedar Road, Elkins Park, Pa, ,, , 312 E. Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 3404 Walbrook Ave, Baltimore, Md. .,Evesham Ave., Govans, Baltimore, Md. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 13 Wade Ave., Catonsville, Md ,, ,, 2211 E1sinor Ave Baltimore Md 725 C20111ngs Ave., W Co1lingswood N. J ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2334 W Fayette St., Baltimore, Md. ,4401 White Oak Ave., Baltimore, Md. .,,,9932 Robbins Drive, Beverly Hills, Calif. ,,,,,,,,,,,,, Eudawood Farm, Towson, Md. ,,,,,, 129 Grand View Ave1, Rye, N. J. 2800 Garrison Blvd, Baltimore, Md. ,2008 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. W516 Parkway, High Point, N1 C. ,2213 South Road, Baltimore, Md. .216 Laurens St., Balt1more, Md , , 5547 Raleigh St Pittsburgh, Pa ,,,17 Wood1ands Road,13arnes, London England ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 176 Stockton St Hightstown N J ,Centerville, Md. .819 Myrtle? St.. Scranton Pa ,,822 Willow St Trinidad, Colo ,,,,,,, 164 Lafayette St, York, Pa. ,Sprmg Valley N Y. ,504 Orkney Road Baltimore, Md ,200 Homewood Terrace Baltimore Md. CARMINE ALICE CLAYTON CARNWARTH MARGARET, CHANNELL ELIZABETH KATHERINE, CHESTER EVELYN AGATHA1, CLEMENS, MARY FENDALL. COKER, MARGARET JANE,,,, CORKRAN, ANN CAROLINE, CRIST, JOSEPHA LYLE, CRONIE, EVELYN L1LL1E ,,,,,,,,,,,,, DAVENPORT, BEATRICE LAUREL DAVIES MARJORIE ELIZABETH, DAVIS ANNA VIRGINIA. DAWKINS HELEN MARIE DELEVETT, MATILDA JANE ETTZHUCH, DOMNITZ, ZEVAH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, DOUGLAS, FRANCES HOWE ,,,,,,,,,,,, DOWNS, FLORENCE NIGHTINGAL DRAPER, MARY ELIZABETH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, EDMUNDSON, ELIZABETH BANCROF , EDWARDS, AROWHENA MARY .............. ELY, GRACE MARION ,,,,,,,,,, EPSTEIN, IDA,, FEIGENBAUM ALMA FLOYD HARRIET LOUISE, FLUHRER, ANNA MARY, FORBUSH HELEN ADELA1DE, FREBURGER, MARY JANE. FRENCH, CAROL EUGENIA, FREUND, EDITH CLAIRE....,,. ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1137 East 50111 51., Chicago, 111 FRY, ELEANOR KIRKLAND. ,,,423 Hawthorn Road, Baltimore, Md. GAY, BEATRICE GERHARDIN. ,,,,, ,411 Beechwood Place. Westfield, N. J. GESSFORD, LOIS MAE , . , .,.W, Chesapeake Ave,, Towson, Md, G1LLESP1E, ADDALINEW ,,,,, 1213 Center St, Wilkensburg, Pa. GLASSMAN, LEONORE M1R1 , ,,,,,,,,,,, 2687 Wilkins Ave., Baltimore, Md, 1 1 Liberty Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md. GOLDBLATT,LYD1A RITA1, ....... 5 B. Buckingham Apts. Norfolk Va GOSSAGE L1LA VIRGINIA ..... , ,949 Rosedale St., Baltimore Md GRAFF FRANCES BERNICEH, .1 700 Madison Ave Newport News Va GREENBERG LOIS GERTRUD , ,.328 Washington Ave Charleroi, Pa. 168 - ECONOMY CABBIES THE DAY 0 The rates are new. But everything else is uas usualh, at the St. Regis . . . haven of quiet in the shadow of Radio City . . . host to discrim- inating out-of-towners who value service that goes beyond smiles and cap-touching. New rates: Single rooms, $4, $5, $6. Double rooms, $7, $8. Parlor, bedroom and bath, $10 to $20. Menu prices revised. HGTEL ST. REGIS FIFTH AVE. NEW YOIIK GREGG, MARGARET ELEANOR... .. . .161 Main St , Bradford, Pa. GREGORY, KATHRYN LOUISE..... ..11 2774 The Alameda, Baltimore Md. GUTH, CHARLOTTE... .. .. . .. . ..805 Brooks Lane,Ba1t1more, Md. HAHN. ALINE RUTH... 1906 W Venango St,PhiIade1phia.Pa. HAHN, HERMINE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ...569 Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark, N. J. HANNUM MARGARET AMELIE JANE. ,,,,,, 1105 Cambria Ave., Windber, Pa. HARBOLD. MARY LEAH 777777777777777777777777777777 343 College Ave. Lancaster, Pa. HARDY, ELIZABETH SARA ,,,,,, . .860 Park Ave., Rochester, N. Y. HARRIS, DOROTHY TRESSA ........... .914 Chauncey Ave,Ba1t1more, Md. HARVEY, KATHERINE MARY HAWKINS, HELEN AUGUSTA. HEARN, MARIAN RAPHAEL........ HEMRY, SARAH LOOCKERMAN... HENDERSON, RUTH ELEANOR... HENNINGER, VIOLET ELIZABETH . HETZEL, MARTHA WARREN 77777777777777777777777777777777777777 HUTZLER, JEANNETTE LOUISE .. .. HYDE GERTRUDE MARTINA. JOHNSON SARAH JANE KAHN.L1LL1AN HORTENSE KELLMAN NAOMI RUTH... KIEHNE RUTH SUE K1LHAM,V1RGIN1A1RENE KLEIN ALICE ELLEN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, KLOPP, DOROTHY TREXLER. KNEIP, JEAN DOROTHEA. KOCH, MARY ELIZABETH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, KUNKEL MARGARET ELIZABET . LATCHAM VIRGINIA HOLMES LONGLEY, ELIZABETH FOWLER BAl LOWE KATHERINE COOPER LUCAS MARTHA BOB. .. LUDLOW HELEN MAR1E ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, MCCALLIE KATHERINE CUNNINGHAM.. MacCARTER BEATRICE BOUCH1ER ..75 W. Washington Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. MACKALL, MARY BRUCE........ ...3401 Woodley Road, Washington, D. C. MALAVITA, LAURA EMILY ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 120 West 12th St New York, N Y. MARING ESTHER BELLE..... . . . .319 Lopsley St.Se1ma,Ala. MARSHALL CATHERINE ARMSTRONG ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ...260 Market St. Leechburg, Pa1 MATTHEWS MARY VIRGINIA. . . ..220 Avenham Ave Roanoke. Va. MERGES RUTH LASINE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Ber11n Pa. M1CHELSON,RUTH BERNICE 7777777 2230 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. , ...206 S. Clifton Terrace Washington, D. C. MILLER MARIE L1LL1AN.. ,,,,,,,,,,, Morris Manor, Grand Rapids, Mich. MILLIKEN CHARLOTTE SUZAN .125 Brewster Ave. Scarsdale N1Y. .. ..8 East 39th St.,Ba1t1more,Md. .. 1,Laurel Md. .Tome Sc11001, Port Deposit, Md. 27 Morse Ave., Bloomfield N. J. ....... 624 N. Second St., Lyk1ns, Pa. ,,,,, 106 Decatur SL, Cumberland, Md. ...4104 Hermitage Road, Richmond, Va. ..4101 Penhurst Ave., Baltimore, Md. . .................................... EIkton, Md. .5709-16th St. Washington, D C. .4120 Alto Road,Balt1more, Md. 3618 Fa1rview Ave., Baltimore, Md. ..... 423 E Lafayette Ave Baltimore, Md. 1503-21 Way South, Birmingham, Ala. ........1360 Perkiomen Ave., Reading, Pa. . ..... 3402 Carlisle Ave., Baltimore, Md. ............................................ Ruxton, Md. 3915 Cold Spring Lane, BaItimore, Md. ..... 3719 Rexmere Road Baltimore, Md. 1 511 East 42nd St.Balt1more,Md. 523 Nottmgham Road Ten H1115 Baltimore, Md. ...3601 Connecticut Ave.Wash1ngton D C. .................. 331 N.GenevaSt,1thaca,N Y. .......................................... Jamesburg, N. J. ............. 11 Ferris Lane, Poughkeepsie N. Y. MINOR LESL1E WHEAT... . ...................... 713 Elmira Sth1111amsport, Pa. MITCHELL NANCY SMITH ..212 Maryland Ave.Ba1t1more Md. MOHLENRICH, MARGARET SHABERG .......................................... Summit Ave,Catonsv111e, Md. MOREHOUSE ANN , . . . ...62 Warren St. Glens Falls N. Y. NANCE MARGARET ................................................. 4002 St. Paul St.Ba1t1more,Md. NESBITT LAURA WHITELEY.. ...15 Wyndcrest Road, Catonsville, Md. PALMER MARGARET V1RGIN1A.. ................................... Easton Md. PARKER RACHEL WARNER ......... .1919 Park Ave1Ba1t1more Md. PAYMER, ESTELLE ZELDA ......... ....3506 Powhatan Ave.Ba1t1more Md. PEARSON, LOUISE EL1ZABETH...... ......4107 Spr111gdale Ave1 Forest Park Baltimore Md. PENDLETON, MARY FRANCES .. .375 N.Ma1n St., E11zabeth City N C. PERARA, ELSA ........................................... PETERSON. MARGARET ANNE PHILIPS, MARY CHESTER ................ PHILIPS SARA TAYLOR ....49 East 80t11 St., New York, N. Y. . ...1709 Bolton St., Baltimore, Md. ........... 419 Bryn Mawr Ave., 13313 Cynwith Pa. Fourwinds, Kenneth Square Pa. PODOLSKY SOPHIA. 4903 Liberty Heights Ave.Ba1t1more,Md. POLLAK, KATHRYN JANE .......... 2929 Belmont Ave, Baltimore Md, RANDOLPH,SYLV1A.. ........... 106 Fourth Ave., W11liamson, W. Va. REAM JANE MARGARE . ...................................... 23 Maple Ave., Madison, N. J. REICH FLORENCE LOUIS . .. 06 Flaccus Road, Ben Avon, Pa., Bellevue P. O. REIZENSTEIN HELEN LOUISE ......................................... 905 Lake Drive Baltimcre, Md. RHODES FRANCES ELIZABETH . .723 Electric St., Scranton, Pa. R1CE, B. L1LL1AN .................................. . . ................... 732 Lennox St.Ba1timore, Md1 RIDDLE MARY ESTHER DIVINE... .. 63 Central Ave., Manasquan. N. J. eARVEL HALL 1 ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND, Opposite Naval Academy 1 Now Operated by the Owners 1 AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN Fully Reconditioned 1 1 DINING ROOM . . . . GRILL GARAGE PARKING 1 ,1 Your garments are returned absolutely ODORLESS, colors retain their ORIGINAL beauty and STAY CLEAN longer, with our IMPROVED METHODS of DRY CLEANING 1 ZORIC 1 Regal 113W solveno Dry Cleaners 1 DIVISION OF 1 The Soft 1 Regal Water Laundry Plant, Gilmor and Mosher Streets Phone: MAdison 2751,2755 Inclusive ; 1111 W1 1 1 1 1i The Arundel Corporation 1 BALTIMORE, MD. 1 CONSTRUCTORS and ENGI N EERS AND DISTRIBUTORS of SAND and GRAVEL The First National Bank 1 OF BALTIMORE 1 CAPITAL, SURPLUS, UNDIVIDED PROFITS 1 Over $10,000,000 COMPLETE BANKING FACILITIES ROBERTSON ANNA LYSLE, .. ,, ,, ..1 ,1121 Main St, Darby Pa ROCKLE, AMY RUTH ,, ,,,,, 2507 Cedar Drive,13aitimore, Md ROGERS KATHARYYN WEBSTER 77777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 530 Mabrey St.,Se1ma, Ala1 ROSS HELEN MA 777777777777777777777777777 , , , 777777777777777777777777777777 Riddlesburg, Pa. SALGANIK. BERNICE M1LDRED, ........ 2308 Lantle Roac1, Baltimore, Md SAMPSON, MARGARET ANICE ,, 605 Harlem Lane, Catonsville, Md. SCH1LL1NG, JEAN FRANCES, ,,,,,, 321 Owen Ave1, Lansdowne, Pa. SHANNON, HELEN MARlE .1818 S..,W Ninth St, Miami, Fla SHAW KATHERINE, 5,605 14th St1 N1W1, Washington D C. SHAW, MARY McELHENY,,, 77777777777777777777777 53 West Ave..We115boro,Pa SHERBY GERTRUDE ,,,,, 1433 Decatur St1, N.W,, Washington, D. C. SHERRY IRENE 777777777777777777777 1104 Light St. ., Baltimore, Md. SHYSLEY, JESSIE RAE,., . 4,11 Main St., Reisterstown, Md SHUGARS,AL1CE LOUISE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2005 Homewood Ave., Baltimore Md S1NCLA1R DOROTHY MELVILLE, ,,,,202 Homewood Terrace Baltimore, Md. SMITH, ADA MAY ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , , , 4000 White Ave.,Ba1timore, Md SMITH, FRANCES LOUISE 77777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 1754 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. SMITH, MARION LOOCKERMAN, , , , , 2449 Maryland Ave., Baltimore, Md. SNYDER, LENA ............................................ 7 N. Calhoun St., Baltimore, Md. SOULE ETHEL 1DA ,,,,,,,, ,4008 Norfolk Ave, Baltimore, Md. STEVENS JANET RAE T NE ,. Rosewood Ave. Catonsville, Md STOKES,L1LL1AN EMMA. , ,2432 78th Ave.Ph11adelphia, Pa. STRAUS MARIE BETTY ,3418 Bancroft Road,Ba1timore,Md STRITEHOFF, MRS KATHERINE SNEED ,,,,,, 3320 Rueckert Ave., Baltimore, Md STURGIS MARGARET DENTON .............. ,188 Water St., Perth Amboy, N J TOMBAUGH, MARTHA BAUSMAN... ,60 Broadway Hagerstown, Md. TOWNSLEY HELEN LAURA, 1421 Washington, Great Bend, Kan TURNER EL1ZABETH,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Ramey, Pa UNDERWOOD, MARJORIE? ELIZABETH ,66 Mellor Ave., Catonsville, Md. WADDELL JEAN SHAW ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,726 Coleman Ave., Fairmont, Va. WADDELL MARY ANN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,..726 Coleman Ave., Fairmont, Va1 WASLEY, DOROTHY MORGAN.,.. 28 S. White St., Shenandoah, Pa. WATSON, MARY GARDNERWW, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 60 Smith Ave.. Bergenfield, N. J. WEBSTER, ANNETTE HARLEY. .5316 Springlake Way, Homeland, Baltimore, Md. WE1NBERG, ROSALIE VIRGINIA, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1403 Montague St., Washington, D. C WHAREN, ANNA ELIZABETH,,., ,,,,, 94 Academy St., Wilkes'Barre. Pa. WH1TE, MARGARET MARY ,,,,, ,6,,12 West 28th St., Norfolk, Va. WILSON, MARY ELEANOR ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .513 Fifth St., Wilson, Pa. WITTEKINDT, BEATRICE THELMA, , 830 N Bond St.Ba1timore, Md. W1TTMAAK, DOROTHEA W1LHELMINA,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,425 Frontier Drive Erie Pa. ZURCHER, ESTHER EVELYN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1027 DueberAve, sw Canton Ohio ALPIGIN1,ELLEN BERRY. 3,124 Harford Road Baltimore, Md- ANDREWS, PHYLL1S,,, 1:11:70 Mrs R. J. Southworth Park Central Hotel New York, N Y. BAKER W1N1FRED NELSON ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 603 E. Joppa Road, Towson, Md. BALLARD VIRGINIA EL12ABETH,,,13 Greenwell Ave., Country Club H1115,C1arendon P 01, Va BALSBAUGH, ERLA RAY.,. . Hershey, Pa. BANG MARJORIE ELISE. ,,,,, 2276 Park Hill Ave., Baltimore, Md. BANK, BERNICE RITA.1..,.,, .3622 Reisterstown Road, Baltimore, Md. BANK, MIGNON MOZELLE.. ,,,,,,,,,,,, 2405 Linden Ave., Baltimore, Md. BASSETT, M1LDRED COXE,. .586 E Lincoln Highway, Coatesville, Pa. BATSON, MARY EL1NOR.., ,1430 North 30th St, Birmingham, Ala. BECKER, CAROLIN EVA..,, ,1 1750 Baltimore Trust Blc1g., Baltimore, Md. REEHLER, FARIS MARlAN ...... ,Ruxton, Md. BENEDICT, HELEN EL1ZABET 143 W Ki1'1g St Waynesboro, Pa B1ELASK1,JANE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . 20 Gilchrist Road, Great Neck, N. Y. BISER, ANN D1XON,, .,6210 York Road,Ba1t1more,Md. BONSALL, PATRICIA ,,,,,,,,,, 208 North 35th St., Philadelphia, Pa. ,,,,,12 Aigburth Road, Towson, Md. BOWLER MADELEINE TURNER,, ..,.102 Ashland Ave., Buffalo, N, Y. BOYER MARGARET JEANNETTE... 170 King St., Northumberland, Pa. BRESSLER, LENA- .2926 Grantley Road, Baltimore, Md. BROWN MAMIE LARK 1030 North 28th St, Birmingham, Ala. BURKE, EVELYN,, 3814 Chatham Road, Baltimore, Md. CALL, OLGA ELIZABETH 1 ,,,Groton School, Croton, Mass. 172 1 7777,777,7 ,ign ,,-,. unwir, 0... i ! Iclea7 Laundry CHARLES STREET Just below 25th i i offers services especially designed to take care of studentsi laundry needs. i Here you will find prices in keeping with moderate allowances from Dad. i i John L. Alcock and Co. BALTIMORE, MD. EXPORTERS Pacific Coast Spruce and Douglas Fir Walnut, Poplar, Quartered and Plain White Oak, Walnut, Poplar and Hickory Logs L 7 , V , n.7,, .- , ,-, , MW. OF BALTIMORE 13 SOUTH STREET Surplus and Undivided Profits Over ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, $2,900,000 Capital .......................................................................... 2,000,000 CHARTERED 1864 Acts as Trustee of Corporation Mortgages, Fiscal Agent for Corporal tions and Individuals, Transfer Agent and Registrar, Depository under plans of reorganization. Acts as Executor, Administrator, Guardian, Trustee, Receiver, Attorney and Agent, being especially organized for careful manage; ment and settlement of estates of every Characteri Onevstory Fire; i proof Building, with latest and best equipment for safety of contents, :i used exclusively by the Company. Safes for rent in its large fire and burglar proof vaults, with spacious and wellalighted coupon rooms for use of patrons. SAFE DEPOSIT a TRUST COMPANY Securities held on deposit for out'of1town corporations and persons. I J. J. NELLIGAN, Chairman JOSEPH B. KIRBY, President i L , Ii, CANN, ETHEL ELIZABETH ............................................................. 28 East 25th St., Baltimore, Md, CARSON EMILY ELIZABETH. ..343 E. Main St., Moorestown, N. J. CAULK MARY DOROTHY .....5107 Roland Ave., Baltimore. Md. CHESTER KATHERINE MEREDITH.. 3404 Walbrook Ave., Baltimore, Md. CLAYBOUGH MARGARET MCKEEU ................. 1335 Chestnut St., Franklin, Pa COHEN, FLORENCE 1RENE........ .3415 Gwynns Falls Parkway Baltimore Md COLVIN, ISABEL REBECCA...... . . . .. ..McKinley Place, Somerset Pa COOPER DOROTHY ELDRSE .. 101 Burke Ave Towson, Md CULE DOROTHY... ..1318 Division St, Scranton Pa DAVIDSON VIRGINIA MARGARET . .3210 Abell Ave., Baltimore, Md DAVIS RUTH ADAMS. 1 102 Riverside Road Old Hickory, Tenn. DEMUTH ELANOR CARDLY ..... 600 West End Ave, New York. N. Y. DENISON WILMA ALTA ............. ...137 Bowens Ave., Waterstown, N. Y. DENMEAD ELEANOR TALBOTT.. .......... 2830 St. Paul 51., Baltimore, Md. DESSAUER HELEN BEATRICE 924 W. Wayne St. Fort Wayne 1nd. DEVENEY, MARAVENE MAY ...... .36 Rockburn St. York, Pa. DOSTER HARRIET ELIZABETH... ...2707 Hanover Circle B1rm1ngham,AIa DUNSMORE,CATHER1NE VINCENT. .1111 Philadelphia Ave.13arnesboro Pa. EISMAN LOUISE ............................. Riviera Apt. G 1, Baltimore, Md. EISEN FLORENCE. .3200 Hilton Road, Baltimore, Md. EPHRAIM, BETSY JANE. . ........................ 2228 Linden Ave Baltimore Md FAUST MARJORIE LOUISE....Br1ghtwater,L 1, N Y FISCH STEPHANlE W15E.. .15 West 8lst St., New York N. Y FLEMING JOSEPHINE AZILDA 907 Sheridan Road, Lake Forest 111 FLEMING MARGARET ANNE ......... 1517 Locust St.. Williamsport, Pa. FLEMING, MARY LOUISE......... 108 E. Whittier Ave., Altoona, Pa. FLORY, KATHERINE THOMAS... .......67 Granville St., Newark, Ohio FOWLKES, IRMA CARTER ...... . FOX MARGARET LANSING... FREED, HELEN EMMA ....... FREY, MARY ED1TH.... GOLDMAN JESSIE ........ GRANT HELEN EILEE GRAY ELIZABETH KATHERINE GREEN RUTH WADSWORTH GRIFFIS, JANEAL BENSON .. GROFF, DOROTHY YOST.... HAHN, LA VERNA ............. HAMBURGER, DOROTHY... HANSEN CECIL ETHEL. HANZLIK DOROTHY MARIE. HARE, FRANCES MAY. HART, GRACE LOUISE ................... HARON, DOROTHY HENRIETTA. . HAYLECK MARY LODEMA... HENDRIE, MARGARET STUART HOFFBERGER, ESTHER ................ HOLLOWAY, GRACE SUZANNE... HOOD, DOROTHY MOYER. HOOPES, EDITH CAROLINE. HORNER ANITA LOUISE. HOUSE MARY ELIZABETH HOWARD, MARTHA CRAMPTD HOWELL EVELYN BYRD..- IDE FRANCES AUREL1A IRVIN THYRA MAY 1RWIN,LAULETTE LDUISE. JACOBY,SYLV1A LILLIAN. JAFFE, BEULAH JUDITH.... JANUARY, GLADYS LOU1SE.. JENKINS, BETTY ................... JONES, JANE MEREDl-1TH... KATZ MILDRED RU .............. KEMLER DOROTHYT ELIZABETH. KENT MARY LOUISE ......................... KIDWELL, BARRETT MARYLLUS. . KING, MARY EMILY ............................. 2..16 Longwood Road,Ba1timore, Md KNOWLAND, ELIZABETH W1LCOX.. 3.18 Lennox Ave., Syracuse N. Y KOHN, MILDRED ......................................................................... .329 Park Ava, East Orange, N. J. .. ..700 Dallas Ava, Selma, Ala, .2 Taney Ave., Annapolis, Md. .............. New Freedom Pa . ..Prosser, Wash 16 W. orth Ava, Baltimore, Md. 94 East 1 15th St, Apt. 1 1, Cleveland, Ohio ............ 601 West 39th $11., Baltimore, Md. .. ...404 Church Lane, Pikesville, Md. .Altamont Apts., B1rm1ngham, Ala. .................. 143 E. Clay St., Lancaster, Pa. . 451 1 Windsor Mill Road, Woodlawn, Md. ....4021 Barrington Road, Baltimore, Md. ..Sussex Road, Great Neck, N. Y, ....... 2729 Mosher St., Baltimore, Md. 3419 Guilford Terrace. Baltimore, Md. .................... 2156 FSt, N..,W Washington D. C. ...75 Parkway Drive Mt Brooke,131rmingham,Ala. . .3808 Barrington Road Baltimore, Md. ............................... Greenlawn, L. 1., N Y. ..3301 Springdale Ave., BaItimore, Md .Green Hall Apts.Balt1more, Md. 07 Surrey Road, Melrose Park Pa. ...29 N. Smallwood St.,13a1t1more, Md. ....... 526 Tayman Ave., Somerset, Pa . ..2219 Sulgrave Ave., Baltimore, Md. ........... 3212 Walbrook Ave,, Baltimore, Md. 4 Berkshire Road, Great Neck. L. 1., N1 Y. ........... 2010 East 315t St., Baltimore, Md. ........................... Cambridge, N. Y. ..800 Dakwood Ave., Dayton, Ohio .509 Sixth Ave., New York, N Y. ....... 228 W. Penn St., Butler Pa. .3406 Alto Road Baltimore, Md. 1336 1ngraham St N W.Wash1ngton, D. C. ...Corner Second and Laurel Sts., Philipsburg, Pa. . ..........3804 Norfolk Ave., Baltimore, Md. 1908 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. ........... 16 S.Th1rd St. Bangor, Pa. 5.18 Brunswick St Baltimore, Md. 174 The Clayton Shops 10 WEST NORTH AVENUE North Avenue Market Building DRESSES MILLINERY COATS UNDERWEAR HOSIERY NOVELTIES OFFICIAL EQUIPMENT AND WEARING APPAREL For All Sports that WOMEN and GIRLS play Basketball Soccer Swimming Volley Ball Tennis Field Hockey ngwim 1338 G St, N.W., Washington, D, C VErnon 0503 JAMES W. HUGHES CATERING CO., INC. 12 E. Centre Street BALTIMORE, MD. Only the best and purest grades of foods used WM; T. CARTER, Manager Prompt Service 303 N. Charles St., Baltimore OFFICE Hawkins TRAINING School 2324 NORTH CHARLES STREET sNext Door to Gouchetj Short Term Business Courses Shorthand Typewriting Boyd System Book Keeping Taught in Six Weeks Filing Individual Instruction Day and Night Classes Phone BElmont 6592 M. E. Hawkins, Director Steam Engine Generator Sets High and Low Pressure Piping Steam Supplies-Machine Work WALLACE STEBBINS E-r SONS, INC. IOO S. CHARLES STs PLaza 7260 Arundel Ice Cream Shoppe Our Own ICE CREAM FANCY CAKES SANDWICHES and SOUP 2436 NORTH CHARLES STREET Call CHesapeake 94952We Deliver Run Right to READS For All Your DRUG STORE NEEDS Southern Hotel Baltimords Foremost A Hotel of Atmosphere and Environment LAKIN CATHERINE, Boonsboro, Md. LANG, DOROTHY ELIZABETH ,. 4502 Wentworth Road Baltimore.Mc11 LAWTON DOROTHY ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . , 1,19 W. Lafayette Ave Baltimore, Md LEACH, FLORENCE AN NA ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 3317 Walbrook Ave., Baltimore, Md. LE FEBVRE, V1V1AN CONSTANCE , , ,, ,,,, ,, 4513 Dover St.,Chicago1111. LEONARD, LUCY ESTELLE .......... ,. 125 Mills St., Cambridge, Md. LYNCH,1DA BALDWIN... , ,146 Kensmgton Road Garden C1ty,L 1., N Y McCANNE,DOROTHY, ,.C1arendon Texas MCGING, ELIZABETH CATHERINE MCLAUGHLIN,LAUR1NE DICKINSON MCQUOWN A1LEEN JENNESS MANIOSKY,STEPHAN1A... MANN, JEAN MARX JOSEPHINE HENRIETTA, MASON, MARTHA E. G., MASON VIRGINIA GRACE MAYER ADRIENNE CAMILLE MERCER, MARY LOUISE. ,, MEYER CLAIRE, BABBETTE MISSIMER LOUISE GURNEY, MOFFITT, MARY LOUISE ,,,,,,,,,, MONASH, CAROL DAVIES, MURPHY, RUTH COOKE..,. MUSSON, DORIS LEONE, ,, MYERS, RUTH M1R1AM1,,,, NYE LUCY MARGARET,, OLIVER, ANNE REBECCA OLMSTEAD, MARGARET ELIZABETH OSTERGREN MRS. ELIZABETH WARD, OTTENBERG REGINA, PALMER ELSIE HOPE PASTOR1U3,HELEN DAV1S ....... PATRICK, MARY REYNOLDS, P1NDER,MARION JEAN,,, ,, PORTER JANE DEVEREUX POWELL, GERALDINE KENNEDY ,,,,,,,,,, PRATT, MARGARET WYNNIFRED, , Pratt s Junction Lancaster, Mass1 PR1CE, DONNA ,,519 Overdale Road Ten Hills,Balt1more,Md. PRICE MARY ELIZABETH , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Qtrs. 340, Marine Bksu Quantico, Va RANDOLPH MARY ARCHER .11504 Park Ave.R1chmond Va RANFT CAROLYN REG1NA11 . ,, .Sudbrook Park, Pikesville Md. REDHEAD JANE LENORE, , ,The Argonne, Washington D1C. RICHMOND JEANNETTE MARIE, 1,92 Be11evue Ave. Upper Montc1air, N J1 RITTENHOUSE MIRIAM PAULINEW , , , 3129 N. Calvert St.Balt1more Md. ROBERTSON, EMMA SADTLER, ,,,,4833 Keswick Road, Baltimore, Md. ROBINSON, BURTON EDMUNDS.,. 1 Washington Lane, Philadelphia, Pa1. ROBINSON, MARY MARGARET. ,,,,,,,,, 1017-23rd Ave., Altoona, Pa. ROBISON, JEAN CONACHER..., ,,,,730 Grant Ave., Plainfield, N. J. ROWLAND, ALMA GERTRUDE 6 Ridgewood Ave.Ba1t1more, Md. ST. JOHN, BETTY BENNETT,,,, .,.1033 Palisade Ave Palisade, N1J1 SANDERS, JEAN ELIZABETH , ,, , ,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Greenlawn L. 11 SANDT, KATHERINE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,225 Church St,Brookv111eN,PYa. SANNER, MARGARET ELEANOR ,, H1935 Masher St. ., Baltimore, Md. SAUSE, HELEN ELIZABETH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2422 Liberty Heights Ave. Baltimore, Md. SCHLOSS, ELIZABETH DEITER, . , ,, ,Greensp11ng Manor,Ba1timore1 Md. SCHMIDT, LELA BELL ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , ,,,,,, ,,4210 Springdale Ave1, Baltimore, Md SCHULZ, DOROTHY ELIZABETH ,,,,,, 867 Tuinton Ave... Trenton, N1 J. SEWARD, ELIZABETH BELLE, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Allmondsville, Va. SHARP, ELSA FREDERICK ,,,,, ,2733 N1 Calvert St., Baltimore, Md SMITH, FRANCES MABEL, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 121 Prospect St., Passaic. N J. SMITH, HANNAH .................. ,, , ,27 Laurel St., Hagerstown, Md. SPEERS. ELLEN TORRANCE ,,,,, , , ,,,,,,,,,,,,, 112 Main St., Belle Vernon. Pa1 STAINTON, HELEN JEANNETTE,,, 1, ,,,1020 Ocean Ave., Ocean City, N. J. STEIN, MOLLY JANE,,, ,,,339 Berkeley St., Rochester, N. Y. STOVER, EDNA VORHE ,,,,,, 433 S. Juliana St., Bedfort, Pa. SUMMY1JANE AMER ,,,,, 838 E Orange St., Lancaster, Pa. TAYLOR,HARR1ET EleABETH 1,,,08 Longwood Road,Ba1timore,Md1 TAYLOR LOIS LARRIMORE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 3125 AbellAve.Ba1t1more,Md. TOWNE, BARBARA,,,,,, , ,, ,,,623 Tunbridge Road,Ba1timore, Md1 ,,.429 E North Ave1Ba1timore, Md. ,,,,,,,,,, 1643 Touhy Ave, Chicago, 111. ...... 400 5. Penn St, Punxeutawney, Pa. 524 S. WoIfe St, Ba1timore, Md. ,,,,,, 138 S. Green St., Henderson. Ky. ,, ,102 South 16th St., Allentown Pa . 5008 Midwood Ave1Balt1more,Md. ,,,,, 1320 Niazuma Ave1Birmingham,Ala . ,2230Ca11forniaSt1, Washington D. C. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 36 Wyomissing Blvd, Wyomissing, Pa. , 6216 Wallis Ave., Ba1timore, Md1 , , , 436 Flamingo St., Roxborough Philadelphia Pa. , Lexington N. C. 54 Broadview, New Rochelle, N1 Y , , ,410 Bretton Place Baltimore, Md. , ,,5706 Oakshire Road, Baltimore. Md. , , ,,,1641 Chilton St., Baltimore, Md. ,366 Lincoln Parkway. Buffalo N. Y ,37 N. Center St.Cumber1and, Md. ,,745 Burnside Ave1, E Hartford Conn , , ..... 132 Williams Ave. Winsted Conn ,,,1613 Buchanan St., N..W Washington, D C ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Nichols, N. Y. ,.,,,,230 E. Bertoch St., Lansford, Pa. ,,,1132 17th St.N.1W Canton. Ohio , 434 Cypress Ave. Johnstown, Pa. ,,1132 Greenview Road Birmingham Ala. 3,212 St. Pau1 St., Baltimore, Md. 176 DRY CLEANING CO. 2428 N1 CHARLES, Near 25th LAfayette 2200 Baltimore. Md. Shoulders Decorations RITTER'S FLOWER SHOPPE 2438 N. Charles St. DISCOUNTS TO STUDENTS OPEN AN ACCOUNT Telephone CHesapeake 9421 Corsages Compliments of HYNSON, WESTCOTT G DUNNING 0 Charles and Chase Streets Baltimore, Md. ZELL MOTOR CAR CO. 11,19 E. MT. ROYAL AVE1 PACKARD HUDSON 1Essex1 TERRAPLANE Prlces Range from $552 Delivered and up The Metropolitan Tourist Co. Inc. 414 North Charles Street Baltimore, Md. Telephone: VErnon 4360 Compliments of THE ALCAZAR Cathedral and Madison Streets Baltimore, Md. VErnon 8124 The Peter Pan GIFT SHOP 422 North Charles Street Baltimore, Md. Phone VErnon 5436 Established 1901 JOSEPH B. DREISCH ELECTRICAL WIRING AND CONSTRUCTION EXCLUSIVE LIGHTING FIXTURES 116 W. Mulberry St. Baltimore, Md. Compliments of ILD Open Daily and Sundays Phonz VErnon 4886 THE MAISON MARCONI Exclusively FRENCH and ITALIAN CUISINE 106 W. Saratoga St, Baltimore, Md. Private Dining Rooms Prompt Service CLARENCE W. R1TTER Flowers 1908 NORTH CHARLES STREET BALTIMORE, MARYLAND No Branch Stores OSMAR P. STEINWALD 2509 Harlem Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Telephone, Cilmcr, 6651 TOWNSEND, BETTY CR1CHLOW......... .. . .. .. . 1612 Third Ave.1 New Brighton, Pa. TRACEY, CATHERINE GEORGE. ,,,,,, 107 Allegheny Ave Towson Md. TURNER, HELEN MONTELL........ .. .. ... 7.10 Walker Ave, Baltimor21Md1 TWITTY, CHARLOTTE ..3519 N. Meridian St.1lndianap31is, 1nd. USHER, SARAH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 201 Lehigh St1, Tamequa, Pa. VAN NOSTRAND, GRACE. . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Broad Hollow Road1Farmingdale1 L. 1.1 N Y1 WALKER, HELEN GRACE... . 09 New Queen St. F21611052 of Schuy1k1111PhiIadelphia1P31 WARGO1EMMA DOROTHEA. 2Chestnut Ave1, Trenton, N. J WAYS1MARY KATHERINE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 406 Harrenton Road1Ba1timore Md. WHITE1ELIZABETH LEONORE 1.2800 St. Paul St11 Baltimore1 Md. W1EST1 EDNA SNYDER 777777777777777777 ....5010 Wy1ie Ave., Baltimore, Md. WILLIAMS, ROSA DULANEY CHEW.. ..3023 N. Calvert St.1 Ba1timore1 Md. WOLLMAN, MURIEL LEE ,,,,,,,,,,,, ...2842 Guilford Ave., Baltimore, Md WOODWARD1 JANE 77777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 224 Greenes SL1 Kane, Pa. WORTHINGTON, JOSEPHINE KENT ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4302 Wendover Road, Baltimore, Md ABBISS1RACHEL . .. . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1022 Kirkpartick St, North Braddock, Pa: ADLER1EL1NOR RITA ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Hewlett Manor, Hewlett1 L. 11, N Y ALMOND1GRACE ELIZABETH .. Round Bay1Md APTE1 ALICE DORDY ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. . ... 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 601 N E 58th St.1Miami, Fla ARMSTRONG, RUTH M1R1AM.. . .2304 RosedaIe SL1 Baltimore1Md AUCH, ELLA MARGARITA. ,,,,,,,,,,,, ..1908 Fairview Ave., Easton, Pa BALLARD, ELIZABETH VON KETTLER.. 1111111111111111111111111111 Ruxton1Md BARTON1CAROL1NE WHITMAN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 227 Pine StuM111vi11e1 N J BARNETT, MRS KATHRYN DALLETW ..Latrobe Apts. 1 Charles and Reed Sts., Baltimore1Md BAUER, CLAR ADELE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .415 Hallen Road1BaItimore1Md BELITZ, BLANCHE YOUNG... . . . . .. .. .3913 Dalrymple Ave113a1timore1 Md BENNETT, BETTY MILDRED... ....1001 Sewell Ave11 Cape May, N. J: BERLIN, NAOM1 LEIGH ,,,,,,,,,,, .. .1042 Redgate Ave1Norfolk1Va BLOCK1BETTY JOSEPHINE... . .154 Rugby Road1Brook1ine1 N. Y BOWEN CAREY BEL L ...426 Wastena Terrace, Ridgewood, N J BRACK1M1LDRED GERALDINE .. .1 1.4020 Fairfax Road Baltimore1Mdv BRONNE1RUTH W1LMA.. .. .. . . . . . Bronne Shirt C011 Hudson Falls, N. Y. BROWN1BARBARA KLOCK ..307 Edgevale Road, Baltimore, Md- BURGDORF1ESTHER JOHANNA ......................... 4601 Balair Road, Baltimore, Md. CANNON1M1LDRED ROXANA ....................................................... 1321 Gilpin Ave.1 Wilmington Del. CAPLAN, FRANCIS GERTRUDE . . . ............. 553 Allen St.1 Allentown, Pa. CASSELL CHARLOTTE R1EHL...... ....... . 219 Brightwood Ave., Baltimore1Md CAUDILL1MAX1NE... .......................................... Morehead1Ky. CHAMBERS SUSANNE LoUisE ,,,,,,,, WW7430 BoyerSt1V1t.Airy,Philadelphia,Pa. CHERTCOFF LENORE ANNETTA ...................................................... 739 College Ave.1 Lancaster, Pa CHESLEY, HENRIETTA ELIZABETH 2100 N1 Calvert SL1 Baltimore, Md. CLINE1 ELIZABETH CRISWELL .................................................. 495 S Potomac SL1 Waynesboro1 Pa. COHEN1 ELSA LOUISE ........ . ........... Naylor Lane1Pikesville, Md. COHEN EVA CARLYN ....... 2.6 First Ave., New Brunswick N1J. COSTER VERA GERTRUDE .. . .. 5717 Gwynn Oak Ave.1 Baltimore, Md COULBOURN1SARAH ELIZABETH. . , . .............. Marion, Md. CROUSE1HELEN V1RG1N1A .................................................................... ..Owings Mills, Md. CUTCH1N, VIRGINIA RANDOLF. 15 2 More an Ave.,1331timore1 Md. DAIL, MARGARET BREDELLE. ............................................. 3721 Gwynn Oak Ave.,Ba1timore, Md. DANZIG, SARAH........ .. . ............... 630rientalSt.1Newark1N. J. DAVID, ANNA RUTH ........................................................... . DAVIES, JANET BROWNELL.. . . . DAVIS, PEGGY ............................................... DAV1S1 V1V1AN ADELE. . . ......... 1018 N. Highland Ave.1 Pittsburgh1Pa. DEGEN1MAR1E LOUISE... . . ...1100 East 14th Ave., Denver, Colo. DINGMAN1EDNA MAE... .................................... ...56 Adams St.1 Mt. Vernon N. Y. DIXON FLORENCE MABEL . . ..246 Roseville Ave11 Newark, N. J DONEHOO1KATHRYN BENSON ....................................... . . .5 Peachtree WaV1At1anta Ga. DOUTY MARY AL1CE... .. . .. ...4202 Maine Ave.1Ba1timore1Md DUPREY1ROSEMARY ........................................... . . .............. 154 Arch St1Sunbury1Pa. ELBERFELD1BARBARA... ..................... 155 Mulberry Ave1, Pomeroy, Ohio EMERMAN DOROTHY BAER.. ...469 Grandview B1vd., Erie, Pa1 ENFELD DOROTHEA HOLLAND ............................ Forest Hi111 Md. EVANS VIRGINIA JOHN... ............ 612 West 40th St, Baltimore1 Md. .16507 Wallis Ave Baltimore Md. .241 EastlandAve11Pe1ham1N.Y 56 Cobane Terrace1West Orange1N.J. 178 It is but Feminine to wish to be exclusive 1. MILLER Beautiful Shoes 218 N. Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Show Dad you've learned to budget Tell him you know where to get quality fursiwith styleiat prices to suit today1s pocketbooks. That you'll buy your furs at Auman E-r Werkmeister The Leading Furriers 311 North Charles Street 1872 1933 FOOTER'S America's Quality Cleaners and Dyers 316 N. Howard St. 1914 N. Charles St, 218 W. Saratoga St. 820 Frederick Road 0Catonsville1 3204 Greenmount Ava 3310 Garrison Ave. 187 Main St. 1Annapolis1 A SPECIAL DEPARTMENT FOR COLLEGE PUBLICATIONS J. E. GERDING CO. Designing . Engraving , Printing 1600 EASTERN AVENUEwBALTIMORE BRoadway 0800 Printers of The Gaucher Weekly Baltimore Riding School Woodbourne and Purdue Avenues GOVANS, MD SADDLE HORSES FOR HIRE Correct Riding and Jumping Taught by EXPERT INSTRUCTOR We specialize in schooling Hunters and Saddle Horses Box Stalls for Boarding Horses. PhoneATUxedo 2089 L1 EUT1 H. A. DENTRY, Owner and Gen. Mgr. Costumes Shipped Everywhere Phone VErnon 3473 A. T. JONES f-r SONS Costumes to Order Since 1868 COSTUMES Mask Balls Tableaux Theatrical: Operas Baltimore, Md. 823 N. Howard Street Phone us your wantsiBElmont 6648 L. C. RETTALIATA PHARMACIST Charles and TwentyISecond Streets Luncheon 25c to 50C Dinnzr 60: Sunday Dinner 65: Weekly Rate, $3.00. including Sunday Dinnzr THE COLLEGE INN 100 E. TwentygThird St, 1East of St. Paul SL1 Mrs1 N0 A Anderson Baltimore, Md. CHesapeake 9165 Member of the F. T. D. A. Delivers Anywhere TUDOR FLOWER SHOP 1700 E. MONUMENT ST. Across the street from Johns Hopkins Hospital Wolfe 9200 Dorothy E, Guttmacher, Gaucher I916 Phone, CHesapeake 9056 Mrs. Alice Sonnehill KAYyS SHOPPE Nove1tiesiGifts22Cvreeting Cards Speciallinhincsc I mporls 211 N Charles St. Baltimore, Md. Vernon 4294 Private Rooms M A 1 S O N A P O L L 0 Italian am! French Restaurant 1008 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, Md. EDD1E GHISLETTA Former Partner of Marccni's Restaurant FARRELL, ALICE CLARA............ FERTIG, BERNICE JOAN..,. F1ELDS. MARTHA ISABEL......... FLEGENHEIMER, ROSA HABLE. FORSYTHE MARY MERCER.-. ... ..107 Greene St., Cumberland, Md. ....605 W. Eighth St., Plainfield, N. J. ..1102 East 20th St, Baltimore. Md. H4222 Penhurst Ave., Baltimore, Md FOSTER MARGUERITE W1LSON . . . ,,,,,,,, Sparks, Md. FRANK,BERN1CE CHARLOTTE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2 E E Esplanade Apts Baltimore, Md FRANK, RUTH CAROLINE .. . 6225 Homer St th, Philadelphia Pa. FRANKENBERGER JANE FRANCES FRIEDMAN, FRANCES LOUISE ,,,,,,,, GIBSON, FRANCES 1RENE. GLUCK, RUTH MAR1ON...... GOLY, ELEANOR...... . , GORDON ROSALEE ,,,,,,,,,,, GRAT ELEANOR ANNE- GRAUEL,CATHER1NE HENRIETTA GREENFIELD, JESSE ROBERTA GRUMBACHER,CATHER1NE LOU1SE Orchard Hill, York, Pa. HAHN MARY ELIZABETH . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Main St., Bath Pa HALE, HELEN ESTELLE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Woodbine Ave, Towson, Md HANNUM CAROLINE CATHERINE SUZANNE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1105 Cambria Ave. Windber Pa. HARDEN, MARJORY .. 551 Prospect St. Maplewood N. J. HARVEY, MARGARET LEE . 125 Brewster Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. HAYDEN, DOROTHY ELIZABETH ...1808 East 3lst St., Baltimore, Md. HAYWARD,CATHER1NE COALE ,,,,,,,,,,, 402 E. Lake Ave., Baltimore, Md. HELD, KATHARINE HERBERT... 309 WT Pennsylvania Ave., Towson, Md. HENDRICKSON, ALMA REED.. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Rolling Road, Relay, Md. HENLEY ANNIE L1NN rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr .1309 Warsaw St., Birmingham, Ala. HERMAN BARBARA HERTHA . ...4409 Be1view Ave.Ba1timore,Md. HERMAN PAULINE LONGFELLO 121 E Fort Monroe, Va. H1LLYER KATHRYN STUARTW ..328 Central Ave Leonxa, N. J. HIMELFARB, ROSA ................... .114 E. Centre St.Ba1timore, Md. HINTON, CLARA ISABEL... . .................. 5220 Florence Ava, Baltimore, Md. HOLLOWAY, MARY LOUISE. . . . 1201 S. McDonough St,, Montgomery, Ala. HOSTETTER, RUTH SENER... 7777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 709 N. Lime St., Lancaster, Pa. HOWE, CLARISSA RINAKER. , 2823-29th St., N.W., Washington, D. C. HYDE MARGARET IRENE 777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 4101 Penhurst Ave., Baltimore, Md. JACOBS FANNIE GEORGE. . ..951 W. Walnut St, Lancaster, Pa. KOESTNER, MARGARET GRAHAM.. KAHN RITA ANNE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ...1590 Virginia St., Charleston, W, Va. ...6347 Pershing Ave., St. Louis, Mo. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 181 Overlook Ave., Bel1eville, N. J. e Navarro, 1 12 Central Park, South New York, N. Y. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 841 Parker St., Newark, N. J. ...1614 Virginia St., Charleston, W. Va. ,,,,,,,,,, 324 S. Ann St., Baltimore, Md. 5205 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. W424 Ha1comb Ava, Clairton, Pa. 67204 Sycamore Road, Baltimore, Md. ..50 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. KAHN, RUTH SAMUELS ..................... 532 Cattell St., Easton, Pa. KASHMAN, DORIS HENRIETTE. 777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 104 Kenyon St., Hartford, Conn. KAUFMAN, BABETTE STERN. ,. . 2202 Brookfield Ava, Baltimore, Md. KELLER, V1RG1N1A BOWEN 77777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 6340 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111. KEYSER, LOUISE D1LWORTH.. . . . .. . 611 W. 40th St., Baltimore, Md. KLEY, JULIA MAIRS .......................... 5323 Bellville Ave., Baltimore, Md. KOCH, ISABEL LOUISE. ...405 Orland Road, Elkins Park, Pa. KOCH, MARTHA LOUIS . ........ 1 19 Congress St,, Bradford, Pa, KRASNE, ESTELLE........ 220 West 93rd St., New York, N. Y. LAWSON, DOROTHY ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ...7211 Shore Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. LINDSAY, JOSEPHINE STAUFFER, 777777777 Grp Lancater County Pa. LIVERMORE MARY HOYLAND . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Ninth St Lumberton, N. C LONDON RIVA ESTHER... 40127 Forest Park Ave.Ba1timore Md. LYDDANE, JUNE HANCOCK: .......... 3308 Oakfield Ave.Ba1timo1-e, Md. McCAULEY MARGARET BELLE .5023 Gwynn Oak Ave., Baltimore, Md. MACEK, CAMILLE PAULINE... ...117 Everett St., Easthampton, Mass. McNUTT, FRANCES ATHENA.,. .......... Crozer Campus, Chester, Pa. MAGALHAES HULDA ............................................... Hopewell, N. J. MARGOLIS, HELEN. ...321 Second Ave., Montgomery, W. Va. MATEJKA SLAVA ELIZABETH .,Eastern Ave. Road, Stemmefs Run, Md. MEADS JANE RUSSELL .................................. 5837 York Road, Baltimore, Md. MEED, V1RG1N1A KELLEY..,. ...1507 Covert St,, Parkersburg. W. Va, MEYER, RUTH ................................. 251 Va1entine Lane, Yonkers, NT Y, M1LLER ELEANOR SYLVIA. .Fort Wood Apts., Chattanooga, Tenn, MILLER GENEVIEVE. ................. 141 Mercer St., Butler, Pa. MILLER HARRIETTE GERTRUDE .. 19th and Walnut Sts.. Chester, Pa. MOORE HANE EVALY .917 Birchard Ave., Fremont, Ohio MOORE MARJORIE BARRIERE ............................... Fullerton, Md. MORR1S JESSIE MAY ........................................................... . H .. ....Aberdeen, Md, ........... P. O. Box 227 Winchester, -Va. 180 520 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK Completely equipped to render the highest quality craftsmanship and an expedited service on both perz sonal portraiture and photography for College Annuals OJ?5c1'al Photographer to the 1933 DONNYBROOK ........... . ... .. ,. ...... Buena Vista, Va. ....2011 N. Fu1tsn Ave., Baltimore, Md. ..253 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. . ...419 Felder Ave Montgomery, A1a . . . . ,,,,, .176 S. Garfield Ave Hinsdale 111 ORGEL, GERTRUDE LEAH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1435 Lexington Ave New York N Y. OTTERBERG MIRIAM. . 1613 Buchanan St., N. W. Washington, D. C OTTEY GRACE DOROTHY ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 523 Yale Ave., Morton, Pa. PATERSON MARY MINIFIE... ..622 East 33rd St, Baltimore, Md. PATZ ETHEL. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Eileenton, Ga. PECK, MARGARET BUCHANA ..12 Parkmont Apts,, Lynchburg, Va. PEEK,EL1ZABETH VIRGINIA ,,,,, 806 Ochlawaha Ave., Ocala, Fla. PFAENDLER, MADELINE SOPHTA ,,,,, 186v80th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. PHILSON, MARGARET JANNEY ,,,,,,, .. 22 Meyers Ave1, Meyersdale, Pa. PLAGGEMEYER, MARY ELIZABETH.. ...Sudbrook Park, Pikesville, Md. REED, NANCY EL1ZABETH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 410 Pine St, Steelton, Pa. RITTER, REBECCA POTTER... ...305 W. Highland Ave., Chestnut H111, Pa. ROBERTS DOROTHY CARLTON.... . .3404 Carlisle Ave Baltimore, Md ROSEN, LOUISE ,,,,,,,, 205 Moore St. Hackettstown N. J. MORRIS, LEONA SARA ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, MUELLER, MARY VIRGINIA... NEWMAN HELENE- NICROSI MARGARET RANDOLF........ .. O',NE1LL HELEN IRENE ROSENBLOTH SYLVIA MoLLY...--.-.-..--.-.,....,.,fjff.fff ,,,,,,,, 49 West M3111 st' Penns Grove, N J RUPPERSBERGER MAUD DAWSON . . 3611 Calloway Ave Baltimore Md. RUSSELL ELLEN FURR , , Middleburg Va. . 1138 Longwood St., Baltimore, Md. 6000 Park Heights Ave.Ba1t1more,Md ,,,,,,, 3955 Bonner Road, Baltimore, Md. .120 Rosewood Ave.Catcnsv111e Md. ..... 164 Washington St., Perth Amboy, N J 1046 E. Philadelphia SL, York, Pa. .. .700 Reservoir SL, Balt1more Md . A11mondsv111e Va. ................................ 1501 Oak St., Lebanon Pa 9 Fourth Ave Launch Beach Milford, Conn. ........................ 110 Crescent Ave., Leonia, N. J. ..2607 E. Wood Place, Milwaukee, Wis. 184 Park Ave., East Orange, N. J. ........................................... De1ta Pa. ...5648 Dorchester Ave. Chicago, 111. 524 Woodlawn Road,Ba1timore Md. STORR, MARY M1LL15... .. .329 Aycrigg Ave Passaic, N. J. STRANG, MARGERY DUNLAP ..1348 Harrison St. Philadelphia, Pa STRONG, MARY MILLER ...... ...417 West 120th St New York N Y. STURTEVANT, BARBARA...... ....200 Woodlawn Road, Baltimore, Md. SUYDAM, CATHARYN RISLER... .....241 Charles St., Westfield, N J. THEARLE, ELAINE MILLS . , .3333 Alto Road, Baltimore, Md. THOMAS, VIRGINIA MAE..... ........... 219 Rebecca Place, Peoria, 111. TOTTLE, ELIZABETH BROO 1012 Belvedere Ave., Baltimore, Md. TURRELL, MARY LOUTSE...... ...42 N. Franklin St., WilkesrBarre, P31 URBAN, ETHEL WINIFRED, ...... 614 Winans Way, Baltimore, Md. VERNON, HARRIET DOROT .. .100 West 25th St., Baltimore, Md. WALL, CECILE EDITH .............................................................. ...445 N. E. 25th St., Miami, Fla. WARD, HELEN HOBBY... . . ...... Clover St., Larchmont, N. Y. WASLEY, RUTH ELLEN....... 28 S. White St., Shenandoah, Pa. WATERS, ELIZABETH .. . .5812 Chevy Chase Parkway, Washington, D. C. WHEELAN, JANE FRANCES ............................................................ 701 N. Sixth Ave., Sandpoint, Idaho WILLIAMS, MARY ELIZABETH... ........................................ Laurel,De1 WINESTTNE. EDITH ANNETTE. .39 Plaza Ave., Waterbury Conn WOOLVERTON, VIRGINIA ............... 4461 C1airmont Ave., Birmingham A131 WORTHINGTON, MARIAN L1NDSAY.. 4302 Wendover Road Baltimore, Md SCHACH ANNA LENORE ....... SCHENTHAL.AMAL1E GRACE SCHOFER, ANNA... SCHULTHEIS, GRACE MYRTLE SEAMAN MARY HELEN... SENFT, FRANCES NITAFER . SETTLE. MARY HAMPSON ....... SEWARD, HELEN PARROTT SHIRK, ELIZABETH RUTH........ SMITH, MARIAN ELIZABETH. SNIDER, HESTER BERNICE..... STANLEY, JANE ELIZABETH... STERN DORIS ELSBET ..................... . STEWART, MARGARET lTIELIZABETH... STIFLER CLOYD .................. STIMSON EMMA COLE WYLIE ALICE BONSAL ............................................................. 11.3119 N. Calvert St, Baltimore, Md. YOUNG,JAN1CE LAURA Poquessing Ave., Somerton, Philadelphia, Pa. ZIMMERMAN,KATHER1NE ROSE... ...........Evergreen and Edna Aves., Hamilton, Ba1timore, Md. ALLBEE, RUTH EL1NOR .. . ................................. '59 Wall St., Springfield, Vt. ..1001 N. Elm St., Greensboro, N. C. 1030 Bailey Place, Zanesville, Ohio ..................... 210 E1 Bertsale St. Lansford, Pa. BAACH, LEAH LOUISE ................................ . BAILEY, CHARLOTTE ALLAN. BALSBAUGH, DOROTHY ............................................. 182 W w xx X WW OUND managerial policies and long. successful experience have provided us with sufficient equipmem, adequate personnel, and ample resources to render dependable service as artists and makers of fine printing plates. That you Will be secure from chance, is our first promise. JAHN 8u OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. 817 West Washington Blvd., - Chicago, Illinois In the foreground ; FL Dearborn rererected in Gram Park on Chicago's lake front. Illustration by Jahn G Ollier Art Studios. BASIL, MARGARET LORRAINE..... ... .. 3711 Liberty Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md, BENNETT, BETTY MILDRED... ....1001 5ewe11 Ave., Cape May, N1 J1 BENNETT, SELMA LEIGH.... ,,,,,,, 69 West 38th St., Bayonne, N. J. BERGER, LILLIAN 5URA.... . Ridgeway Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. BERNSTEIN, GERTRUDE.. ....1730 East 27th St., Brooklyn, N'. Y. BESSE, MARY ELSIE . ,,,,,, 298 W. Fourth 5t., Spencer, Iowa BLEND, RUTH ABBEY ,,,,,,,, ..2223 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. BLOCH JEANETTE. .559 Center St, South Orange, N. J. BLOCK ISABEL DAVHIDOW... ..602 N. Irving Ave., Scranton, Pa. BODINE CLARA JEANETTE 77777777777777777777777777777 Gladstone, N. J. BOND, JEAN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .524 Orkney Road Govans, Md BORRIES JANE 777777777777777777777777777 Indian H1115, Louisville, Ky BRAND GERALDINE MAY ,,,,,,,,,,, 28 Woodmere Blvd. Woodmere, L. 1., NY BRANDENBURG, ALICE STAYERT. .. 2501W NorthAve1Baltimore,Md BRENNER, MERLA ESTHER....... .. 3410 Forest Park Ave. Baltimore, Md BRESLER, SARA HOPE........ .154 Pennsylvania Ave, Mt. Vernon N Y BROWN, BETTY NANCY... 7777777777777777777777777777 105 E. Delaware P1ace Chicago, Ill. BROWN, ELEANOR LOUISE. ..Lehman, Pa. BROWN, MARY REBECCA 7777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 Elkton, Md. BUTLER, EVELYN RAE. . . 3210 Brightwood Ave., BaItimore, Md. CARSON, CHARLOTTE MARTHA 777777777777777777777777777 343 E. Main St, Moorestown, N. J. CHAMBERS, RUTH IRVING ,,,,, 600 W. Chesapeake Ave., Towson, Md. CHASE, MARION ANN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Frederick Road, Catonsville, Md. CHECKET, FRIEDA LENORA... ..2220 Mondawmon Ave., Baltimore, Md. CHERRY, DORIS MARILYNN.. .29 Hotel Drive, White Plains, N. Y. CLARKE, PHEBE ANN .................... ...44 School Road, West AshviIle, N. C. CLINE, CATHERINE FRANCES . . ,,,,,,,,,,, Fort Banks, Winthrop, Mass. COCKERILL, JANET COFFMAN.. ...148 Lonsdale Ave1, Dayton, Ohio COGAN, DOROTHY MARIE ,,,,,,, ....527 Clark St, Westfield, N. J. COHEN SYLVIA ZELDA .817 Lake Drive, Baltimore, Md. CONNOLLY MARY PATRICIA. ..149 Grove St, Woodbridge, N. J. CONNER, MARY LILLIAN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Woodstock, Ohio CORBY, ELIZABETH ADAMS ..75 W1 Catawisse St.Nesguehon1ng,Pa1 COX, MARTHA ANNE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 110 Edgar St1, Kane, Pa CRIGLER, ELEANOR FIELDING. 418 N. Tryon St., CharIotte, N. C. DAVIDSON, MARY LAURA........... .3210 Abe Ave., BaItImore, Md. DELEVIE. HANNAH JEANNE .. ..Marlborough Apts., Baltimore. Md. DODD, HARRIETT BURTON......... ....1425 Blue Ave., ZanesviIIe, Ohio DOUBLEDAY, MARGARET MAR . ...3 Elm St... Cooperstown N. Y. DRAPER, HELEN MARGARETM ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 216 Laurens St, Baltimore Md. EINSTEIN, HELEN FRANCES... 2925 E. Overlook Road,C1eveIand Heights, Ohlo ENGEL, PAULINE CLAIRE..... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2346 Eutaw Place, Balt1more.Md ERWIN ALICE CORNELIA 201 Madison Ave., Hasbrouch Heights, N. Y. FELDMAN, ELEANOR ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 320 Central Park, W., New York, N. Y. FEUSTMAN ROSE MARY .6701 Park Heights Ave., Baltimore, Md. FIENBERG LORETTA ........................... 915 Wooster Ave., Dover. Ohio FLECKENSTINE REBECCA JEAN. ....647 E. Third St., Bloomsburg, Pa. FLINN JEAN DOUGLA5.. ..438 West 116th 5t., New York, N. Y. FOSTER NELL MARTIN ............................. 5502 Groulland Ave1Ba1timore Md FRANK, HELENE EVELYN 2011 Ruxton Ave, Baltimore, Md. FRASER JEAN ELIZABETH..:....:....:...: ............................................... 332 Gerard Ave, Elkins Park Pa FREEMAN SHIRLIE BERNICE . , 292 West 92nd St New York N Y FREUDENBERGER, CARLYN HELENE ....................... 85 Fairview Ave., Jersey City, N. J. ..... 602 Lauderdale 5L, Selma, Ala. ...1721 Chiltan 5t., Baltimore, Md. ..309 Brawn 5t., Union City, N. J. ................. Baugsue, Bangkok Siam .1213 Center St. W1lk1nsburg, Pa. . 419 N1Pu1aski St Baltimore, Md. ................... 14 Suttan Ave., Relay, Md. 2720 Reisterstown Road, Baltimore, Md. .633 S. Kenwood Ave., Baltimore, Md. ...... Reckord Bldg, Towson, Md. ...... Reckord Bldg, Towson, Md. ...606 Marshall Ave., 5.W., Roanoke, Va. .1457 Milner Crescent, Birmingham, Ala. .1620 E. Lafayette Ave., Baltimore, Md. .......... 20 Stanley Place, Yonkers, N. Y. ...47Vz Watkins Ave., Middletown, N. Y. FURNISS, CAROLINE McKEE.... GARDNER, ELIZABETH CAMP GEHRINGER, EDNA MARGARET... GENGRADOM, SAIYUDE ............ GILLESPIE, DOROTHY ........ GLICKMAN, EVELYN MIN .. . GOLDING, MARIE SMITH ............................... GORDON, FORTUNA LUCILLE. . GURNY, HELEN .......................... HAILE, EVELYN... HAILE, GENEVIEVE .............. HALPERN, ZELDA JEANETTE. HANOVER, FLORENCE INEZ HAZARD, HILDA ........................ HEARD, GRACE PHYLLIS ......... . HEIDENTHAL ELEANOR FRANCE5 ............................ 184 A prideful Record OR exactly 27 Years, the identical executive and production staffs have been maintained in our College Annual Department, building books of the better sort. Twentyzseven years of accumulated experience is at your disposal to assist in building just the sort of a book of which you have dreamed and--- within your own budget. Our Best References: Business Managers and Editors with whom we haved worked. PI'OOF Of Performance: The Hnished books of approximately hfty of the leading colleges and universities within a radius of 200 miles of Baltimore. A THE HORN-SHAFER COMPANY Oncorporated 1905i College Annuai 515ec7'a71'sts 3-5 East Redwood Street - Baltimore, Maryland Builders and Printers of the DONNYBROOK HENNING, JEAN GARDNER..... . .. . 85 W1 Tioga St., Tunkhannock, Pa. HERMES, JEAN ELIZABETH ...... . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ..Nanuet, N. Y. HERSTEIN, ROSLYN CYNTHIA. .1 West 39th St., New York, N Y. HEYWOOD, L1LL1AN LEEDOM,.. 326 Summit Ave.1Jenk1ntown,Pa. HILL, GRACE DOROTHY ....... 3412 Marshall Road Drexel H111, Pa HOBBS,PAUL1NE TUSTIN 2904 Monltgbewllo Terrace,Balt1more,Md HOBSON, ELEANOR LEWIS . . .. ... WK11ne Ave, Lansford1Pa HOCHSTEIN, ISABELLA BAYLA . 211311 Jefferson St, W11mington Del HOLLINGSWORTH ALEN KEENE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1218 N. Calvert St., Reisterstown, Md1 HOLMES,ADEL1NE LONGSTREET... . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Holmdel, N J HOSKINS1 NELLIE GRACE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . .905 Walnut Ave. 0Raymee Heights,Balt1more,Md HUNT, MARY LOUISE HOLMES. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 440 9N Charles St.,Baltimore1Md. IRELAND JANE ELIZABETH... ...3624 Victoria Place 6Hyde Parkl Cincinnati, Ohio JACKSON1COLA BARR1....................................,.1 5 Union St., Selma, Ala, JAFFE NAOMI GERALDYNE ..901 N. Fulton Ave., Baltimore, Md. KANE VIRGINIA BELLE 777777777777777777777777777777777777777 Edgar St., Kane1 Pa. KARMANN, 1RENE EMILY 3214 Juneau P13ce, Baltimore, Md KELL1 ANNE LAMPTON . .3818 Sequoia Ave., Baltimore, Md. KEMP, EMILY JANE 777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777 Relay, Md, KIEFFNER, MARY JANE.1.. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2028 East 3lst St., Balt1mcre, Md1 KING, KATHARINE BOWl 16 Longwood Road,R01and Park, Baltimore1Md KNIPP, ELIZABETH SIBLEY.... . 625 Woodington Road Baltimore, Md. KNOX, LUCY LEE FORNEY.. ,,,,, 3125 Cathedral Ave,Wash1ngton1 D C KRATZ1 MARY ELEANOR, .. . . . ,,,,,,, 536 Ham11ton St., Norristown, Pa. LAWS, DENISON ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1207 West 4lst St., Richmond Va. LEADBEATER, MARY MORRILL ...114 Harvard St., Alexandria, Va LEBOW, HARRIET JOYCE......... ...42 Atlantic St., Canteret, N. J. LE CLAIR, MARIE HERSCHE... .3413 Glen Ave., Baltimore, Md. LEGUM, RUTH DIXON... ,,,,,,,, 3100 Hilton St , Baltimore Md LENZEN MARY EL1ZABETH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1113 Argonne Drive, Baltimore, Md. LE VAN1EL1ZABETH SNYDER . . 107 N. Front St., M1nersv111e, P31 LEVELL, OLIVE DORA ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, . . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 3173 Keswick Road,Balt1more, Md. LEVY, FRANCES JOSEPHINE... . 4013 Carlis1e Ave., BaltimorE, Md. LEVY, ROSALIND SYLVIA...... 7777777777777777 4434 Cherry St., Erie, Pa. LIPSCOMB ETHEL CARR ............. Duke St, Durham, N. C. LONG1V1RGIN1A... .231 S. Randolph St., Rockingham, N. C. LONGWELL,ED1TH EL1ZABET . . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Custer City, 13;. LOUGH DOROTHEA MASON .. Harbor Lane1 New Rochelle1N1Y LOWE, BERTHA ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2043 N1 Fulton Ave., Baltimore, Md. LUDERS, INGEBORG MARIE... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 65 Park Lane, Essex Falls, N J LYNCH, ISOBEL PHELPS ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. 46 Kensington Road, Garden C1ty, N. Y. MacBRIAR, HELEN JOSEPHINE. 2907 E. Linnwood Ave., Milwaukee, W15. MCCAULEY BARBARA JANE ,,,,,,,,,,,, 4310 Hayward Ave., Baltimore, Md. MACHT,R1TA SALOME... ...3420 Auchentoroly Terrace, Baltimore, Md. MARGRETT RUTH CAROLINE ,,,,,,, 40 1nvale Ave., Upper Montclair, N1 J. MATTHEWS, MARGARET ELIZA 220 Avenham Ave.1 Roanoke,Va1 MEYER JEAN ALICE . . ... .46 Walnut Ave1Whee11ng W. Va MICHELSON1ELA1NE HELEN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4110 Forest Park Ave,Balt1more,Md. MUELLER, RUTH MARGUERITE... ...3402 Powhatan Ave1Baltimore, Md. MUSTARD MARY BOYKIN .. 218 WoodIawn Road, Baltimore, Md. NANCE1DOROTHY.. ............. 4002 St. Paul St, Baltimore1 Md. NEWNHAM ELEANOR ANNE. ...518 E1 Mt Pleasant Ave., Philadelphia, P311 NOKES, EDNA MAE ...................... . . ............................... Southhampton, N. Y. NYE1AL1CE HESTER ..... . .. 366 Lincoln Parkway, Buffalo1N.Y. OTTENHEIMER,FANN1E BENESCH ............................. . Esplanade Apts , Ba1t1more1 M1111 OTTINGER1BARBARA 1 ..... 1308 Wilson St, McKeesport, Pa. OW1NGS.EVA McCURLEY RAMSEY ...................... 00 Lynchester Road,Ba1timore Md. PADDOCK1KATHER1NE ELIZABETH. ..4136 N. Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wis. PARKIN, ALICE DRAVO ........................... . ...31 Homer St., Newton Centre, Mass. PARROTT, NANCY ELIZABETH,1 ....................................... Newnan1Cva. PETERFREUND, SELMA RUTH... 78 Beekman Ave., Mt1Vernon1 N1Y. PRATT, MARY VIRGINIA ............................. W1 Joppa Road1 Towson, Md. PRICE, HELEN EVELYN. 1 .1912 Fifth Ave.1 Bay C1ty1 Mich. PRISMAN, THELMA .......................................................... 3804 GIen Ave1113a1t1more Md PURKINS, MARY ADELAIDE. 1519 Lakes1de Ave1Ba1t1more, Md. RANCK, KATHRYN ERNST.......... - - ' 212 St Mark s Square,Ph11adelph1a,Pa. RANSOM, AMY LOU1SE ........... 53 Stratford Road1Rockv111e Center, N Y. RAUSCH, ELIZABETH OHM.. ........ 2020 W1 Fayette St., Baltimore, Md. RAWLE, MURIEL AL1CE ...................................... . ................... 845 West End Ave., New York, N. Y. 186 187 REGAR, SARAH HARRIET, , ,, ,, ,,,,,1354 Kennedy St1, N.W., Washington, D. C. REVER, DORIS ADEL.,,. ,,, , ,., ,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2323 W.Lanva1e St., Baltimore, Md. REYNOLDS, BERNETTE1, 7777777777777 , , ,4 Popular St1Milford,Mass1 RICE MARY ELEANOR ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , Beechwood Ave., Catonsville, Md. RlEBLING MARIAN ELIZABETH , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,2441 Edmondson Ave., Baltimore, Md. ROBINSON RUTH ANNE ,, ,,,,,,,,, 2Char1es St. Wellsboro Pa. RODGERS, ADELAIDE, , , 4214 Connecticut Ave., Baltimore, Md. ROSE, HELEN ELIZABETH,, 7777777777777777 117 W. Third St1,Oi1City, Pa. ROSENMEYER PAULINE HARRIET ,,34 De Bary Place, Summit, N. J. ROSENTHAL ELIZABETH RACHEL POLLACK ,,,.2400 Elsinor Ave., Baltimore, Md RYLAND ALICE LEE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,12 Cavalier Apts1 Lynchburg Va SAMLER,RUTH,,1. , , , 2,475Ca110wAvm Baltimore,Md1 SAUSE, ANNA ELSBETH, ,,,,, ,2925 Montebello Terrace, Baltimore, Mi SHAPIRO HILDA MERIAM, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2305 Tioga Parkway Baltimore M ' SCHIFFENHAUS, DORIS MARCvERYW1 . ,, ,, ,1,,,,40 Van Ness Place, Newark N J. SCHIFFMAN, NANCY, , , , , ,, , 104 William St. Pittston, P31 SCHOLL, LOUISE MARY ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 839 Wyrinewood Road, Phi1adelphia, P1. SCHREIBER, MARGARET DEARBO 1716 Rhode IsIand Ave., N. W. Washington D1C. SHAW, MARY LOUISE,, , ,,Warwick, N Y. SIBLEY,V1RGIN1A LOUISE ,,,,, ,, 3,115 Co1c1 Spring Ave1,Ba1timore Mi SINGLETON EDITH HENRIETTA, , , ,, ,369 Park St, Hackensack N. J SIRKIS DORIS LEAH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,889 W1Baltimore St. Baltimore, Md. SMITH, ELIZABETH EVANS,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Linthicum Heights, Md. SMITH, NELLIE BELLIS,1, ,90 W. Greenwood Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. SNYDER REBECCA ,,,,,,,,,,, ,,4503 13612311 Road Baltimare M:1 SNYDER T1LL1E, , , ,7 N. Calhoun St., Baltimore, Md. SONNEBORN, LISETTE LOUCHEIM ,,,,,,,,,,,, , 6603 Eark Heights Ave Baltimore M5. SOUTHWORTH MARGARET ELEANOR,,, ,,,,,, 207 Doremus Ave1 Ridgewood, N J1 SPECTRE ANNETTE... . 3710 Woodhaven Ave., Baltimare, M:1. SPIESS CHARLOTTE ROSE .3006 Rue:kert Ave., Baltimsre, Md. STAFFORD JOSEPHINE ROSE , ,,,,,,,, ' ,275 Pennington Ave., Baltimore, Md. STAMBAUGH MARY LOU ELIZABETH 515 Fair Oaks Ave., Oak Park, 111, STAUFFER, SARA ELIZABETH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 926 Prospect Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. STEWART, CECEL1A COVINGTON, , , ,, ,, 4135 Roland Ave., Baltimore, Md. TANNER, ELEANOR LUDMAN,,,,, , ,386 Eairmont Ave., Zanesville, Ohio TIFFANY, CHARLOTTE STUART,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,, Manassas Va. TIFFANY, MAY FLETCHER,1.,,, 1, 1 ,,Warrenton, Va1 UEBERSAX ELEANOR ANNA, 00 Een Ave Baltimore Md. USILTON ELINOR MARY, ,,,424 Rosecroft Terrace Baltimore, Md VAUGHAN,MAR1AN JACKSON, ,, ,1101 Federal St Lynchburg, Va. WAGNER ELIZABETH ,,3708 S St, N.W., Washington, D. C. WASCH MURIEL JANET , . ,85 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. WEBB, EILENE CECEL1A ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Fort Howard, Baltimore, Md. WEBSTER, DOROTHY WHITMAN,,, ,, 4528 Pawsono B1vd., F1ushing,N Y. WEINSTEIN, PAULINE ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , 2,809 Quantico Ave. Baltimore, Md WESTBROOKE, OL1VE EL12ABETH,,, ,,,,, 620 W Washington Ave., Jonesboro Ark. WHEELER DOROTHY MARION , . , . ,,,,, 83 S. Mast St. Goffstown, N H. WHEELER, MARJOR1E LOUISE,,, 83 S1 Mast St1, Gosttown, N H. WICKER AUDREY CATHERINE ELIZABETH ,,,1727 East 29th St., Baltimore. Md. WILLS CAROLINE ELIZABETH ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 127 Wi1lard St, Baltimore, Md, WOLKOWSKY, EDNA ELIZA BETH,, ,, ,348 N. E let St., Miami, Fla, WOODS,WIN1FRED KATHERINE,,, 112 Hemlock Ave, Kane, Pa WRIGHT, ANNE GILBERT,,, ,, ,398 Upper Montclair Ave. Upper Montclair, N. J WRIGHT, ANNE PHELAN . , , ,1 , ,,,901 Second Ave, Rome Ga. Unclassified BEACH, VIRGINIA JANE,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , 203 Southway, Baltimore, Md. CASEY, KATHLEEN ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 251 Baswell St Batesville Ark. HALLIDAY FRANCES ASBERR ,, ,.,3505 N.Ca1vert St Ba1tim3re Md. HURLOCK,LUC1LE DAVIS, ,,4309 Charles Street Ave Baltimore, Md. NANKIVELL MRS JULIA KNOWLE , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Greenwood,De1 SHEARSTON HELEN, , ,,,, ,1226N E126thSt1,Miami E131 TREIDE MRS. BELL BAKER ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4201 St Pau1St. Bailtimore Md VINCENT DOROTHY LEE, 4012 Maine Ave., Baltimore Md WOOD MRS1MARY LEE HUTCHINS ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 805 N. Broadway, Baltimore Md.


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