Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT)

 - Class of 1937

Page 1 of 120

 

Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1937 volume:

N ' , I I Il NX LA' i I 4 1 J 4 UNTANV O o Qidw o 446 5 fi QQ- ,Q IB34 A O 4 TNEY VEQYA f f!fZ0'lLl LtliiIL ynnioz Wonffney, - 0TZWO'Co V X!lL'NVQ'Ll lrrom clay to Llay, our zxclmicvemc-nts tencl 'co lmvc' Iirtll- sig1n1iliu:111ce. But xvlwn we lmvf: reaCl1eQl tlw goal :xml glance laznclzwurcl, tlme steps ol progress stzxml out in lmolnl relief. ln 'clwse pages 'tlue stag lms zkterxmlatvnl to Llelineate llere as zncvL1x'ately zmcl com- plvu-ly as possilalc tlme scluolustic, athletic, social :mail cultural fneulzs ol :ncu0n1plisl1n1ent cluring tlne past year. cwlllflllld 74266 jV!l!I:Ildi66l'L Ltftigtdde jA,li?3ty-Adlfelfb Zin emuriam rlio tlxe iI11IJCI'iSl'l11lJlC spirit of Elmer Novak. None was more active. more fearless, n101'cinHuentf:1l, more clevotecl to the service of zu stuclcnt body who zllulwe- ciutc-:Cl his egorts and l1l0Lll'l1C'C1 his dC17Hl'tLll'C'. , W 1' W 1 w w w 1 4 1 1 w z 1 Q5e,Zzmfz0 ,f, ' D In Dr. 'lesse I . Bogue, president of Gx'een lvloun- tain Junior CKDIICQC, we dedicate this 'fllird volume of. time PIL-XIQS. I'lis magnetic personality, moral Integrnzy, COLIPZIQCOLIS determination, anal frnnlz gener- ositf' lmve nmcle Czreen Nlountnin 'clue exponent 01 the true ec1Llez1ti0n, 'cI1:1i: wlnell goes Ideyoncl lxmolzs and lneyoncl tlweory. .W M1 ..g-560 The bright sun shining fhrouglz. the fea-tlmry leaves Illrzkes pzzffvrvzs fmzfasfic as Hze spider 1a'eaz'es.,, In thine halls fill? lamp of learning Is IIFIII forth for IIS fo fukef' X SX H ow we shall long to travel back And tread again this time-worn track There may be shadows in our paths But after the-m co-mes golden sunshine. 5.13 -- .- '- J The beautiful -rests on the fozmdat-ions of the neccssnry sz 9 Gull IIIIILTS surlz niglzis, all rcvhife an SHI! Fm' as you 1-1111 fool' or lisfenf' N l Among the beautiful pictures That hang on memo1'y's 1c'aJl.,' i 1 4 A L I On their own -merits modest 'men are dumb. JESSE PARKER BOGUE, AB., D.D DePauw University Boston University Graduate Svhool PRESIDENT 'v v l it H i u-y. i,.-- W , 3- --a if + as LEGRAND SWANN, A.B., A.M., A.M. IN En. Union University Harvard University Yew York State College for Teachers Candidate for Ph.D., Harvard Psychology and Latin Personnel Director IsI?giSfI'!ll' CLARENCE E. AKERSTROM, B.C.S B B A Brown University Northeastern University Boston University Business -4d7IlillfSfl'llti07L Treasurer I M ERNEST A. VVINZENIHVRGI-zn, lN'I.E., SBI. Realgymnasium Geestemunde Brooklyn Polyteclmic Institute Harvard Engineering School Illatlzematics and Physics Supervisor Moses Hall ELSIIE IIATHAXVAY LEWIS, A.B., A.M. Colby College Boston University English Literature Dean of Hfomen Mzdwi, l L E. E l . l BIARJORIE HENRY B11oUGH'roN, A.B. Home Economics GEORGE EDGAR SHATTUCK, A.B., A.M. Biology, Chemistry, Physiology JOHN RI. HEFFERNAN, PH.B. Physical Education ,U X, Z Y fl Q3 -l,,,,0,,X,, RACHEIN ELzX13l' S9Gfl'L'fEl'iG Science .- w W Q art' xx ADAH NEXVlffd:UQE BOGUE, B.MUs. J ' Piano Rl:-'inf , ,V ,iq E L, if yr - Q. , Aw J -il' 1 Q- A lbpfix ri: I' It Y Qsfyvd Hx N ' p V sn FIM ERIILY A. Ross, BSTE. Physical Ecluca-tion ICENNETH B. HOLRIES, A.B., A.M. TVf'ster1z Civilizatioiz Q F I RACHEL ELIZABETH DEAN, B.lNI1's., M.MUs Organ mul Piano 2 it 1 yy English and Sp e h q . IBIOGENE I.E1'rN 1 Hogg A.B., A.M. ,E ' x gawk Fu h Composition v 'J . N BSL S l . 1 1 LITHORP, 'A-EB., A.M 5 h -. J - W I . , 1 J Unite. States History JoI-IN N. A.LLEY, A.B., AJVI. I IHTICIL and Germrm fl NA' le fn ,-f wr fl . Kf' . INGYR IVIARIE LIEN Violin - ' ' I 45 MARION I.. 1 H -I, .B ' rlislz, Qqmpositi 11, uno Q I Lf' RUTH M. ROWVLIXND, A.B. IN COM Secretarial Training Rid MIRIMI E. PERRY, A.B. Art FRASER B. DREW, A.B., DLA. Latin., French, English Literature l f au Bel' Luo XV. SCOTT, B.S., MS. C'lu'1ni.s'fry and Physics W CARLETON H. Foss, A.B., A.M. LLLAR01: J. ALLRR, AB. LlI2ffITlH'l' f K Biblical Literature NNE LUCY RICIIARIISQN, A.B., A.M. Emeritus Dean 0 W'omen, MMA 1 Horace A. Moses Jackson Townsend Howard S. Kennedy BOARD OF TRUSTEES Officers JACKSON TOVVNSEND, President FRED L. DECKER, Vice-President HARVEY F. CONNOR, Secretary H ' FRED VV. BARRETT, Treasurer K-. Hovzorary Presidents HORACE A. MOSES HOVVARD S. KENNEDY lil-l3lC'l'l1D BY 'l'l-Ili TROY CCNFERIQNCE Oli' THE N IETI-IQDIST EPISCOPAI- Cl-IURCH Term m'pires in 19.77 IEVGISNIC AVIS!-IMAX, Ph.D., Troy, N. Y. IAISIIUI' Fimxcls J. MCCoNX1cL1. New York City. Fimxic A. Gnfronn, Valley Falls, N. Y. Casslrs J. lVIn.1.x-zu, D.D., Albany, N. Y. Horuizu l'l1:nxs'rm':n'1', Gloversvillc, N. Y. Bvlrrox D. lWCCOIlMlCK, Ph.D., Albany, N. Y. Holmcl: A. Mosi-rs, Springlim-ld, Mass. Term empires in 1937 H,uxvi-:Y F. Coxxon, D.D., Hudson Falls, N. Y. 'l'. G. 'l'll0DIl'SON, D.D., Johnstown, N. Y. lilmuc Ku1.m:x', D.D., ,1.L.D., Cn.uu.1zs A. H.xoAM.xN, Albany, N. Y. Lmou DII1Il liNlJ0Rl', D.D., Troy, N. Y. Glionmc C. Dovniuxss, D.D., Cincinnati, Ohio. Am' I 1 rn l.. ADAMS, Johnstown, N. Y. l'Iow.x lm G. Albany, Fin-:xanax S. Albany, llIlAlll.ES M. H.xG.xMAN, D.D N. Y. KLIN1-:, D.D., N. Y. S1-Unox-rss, D.D., Bennington, Vt. 7'ff1'n1, empires in 1938 Y'w'n1. E.rpircs in 1939 llowmm S. Kiayxi-mv, Troy. N. Y. Fam: I.. Dlacmm, D.D., Gloversville, N. Y. Ecol-:Nu R. Nomox, Granvillc, N. Y. PIOINIER F. TI'1'1's, D.D., Moriah Center, N. Y. I.. RAY Luwls, Hudson Falls, N. Y. FIIJSIIQR A. Cownnzv, Peabody, Mass. A. K. Gl'I'l'lI1kN, Ph.D., Albany, N. Y. IQIJQCTTED BY THE TRUSTEIQS Tornz zfmpires in- 1938 Fmcu VV. B.umu'rr, Poultney, Vt. Y. K. Moons, .AlISElblC Forks, N. Y. NEYVRIAN VV. Ansrr, Term lfmpirffs in 1939 A1.v.uI H. Rooms, Glovcrsville, N. Y. JACKSON 'l'0wNs1sNn, Hoosick Falls, N. Y. PAUL F. DOLlGI.ASS, Ph.D., Troy, N. Y. North Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Poultney, Vt. lil-EC'l'l2D BY Tl-Ili ALUNINI li.-1Ll'll XVALIIO '1'n0Mi's0N, M.D., An'r1u'n L. C.xm'EN'rEn, C.mno1.L B. Ross, M.D., Cornwall-on-Hullson, N. Y. Fair Haven, Vt. West Rutland, Vt. ii i Williams Murray VVuld ron Sennett SOPHOMQRE OFFICERS Preside11.t ...... ..... . IOHN XYALDRON Vice-Presiclent . . . . . . .RUSSELL YVILLIAMS Secrvtary .... ...... R UTI-I BIURRAY Treasurer . . . . . .EDWARD SENNETT CLASS OF 1937 .ees CHARLES DoUGL.xs ABEL Main Street I-1101,-ff' Enosburg Falls, Vermont Sense is om' helmet, 'wit is but the plume, The plume exposes, 'tis our helmet sa-ver, Sense is the zliamoncl, weighty, solid, sofzmdg lVhe'n. cut by writ it casts a brighter IH.?lH'lI.U Outing Club, Treasurer of Science Club, Orchestra f2j, PEAKS Staff, Dance Orchestra CU Dentistry BERTRAND JOEL ANIJ1iEXN'S 10 College Street HBQ,-ff 5' Middlebury, Vermont I A little nonsense now and then ' Is 'relished by the best of me-n. Outing Club, President of Science Club, Vice-President of Freshman Class, PEAKS Staff, Resident Men's Council CU, Fencing Instructor, Dance Orchestra QU f2j, Band quirky- Jin- Medicine W I gl cv- 4,0949-,,, FULLER SUMNER ANDREWS Richmond, Vermfmt Brush An all around 17Itl'H, aclinirerl by everyone. Dance Orchestra QU QQQ. Teaching ALANSON Howfmn BARTHOLOLIENV Benson, Vermont Bart F Like little Jack in the olcl tale I fight my giants and prevail. Varsity Club, Football QU f2j, PEAKS Staif, Bowling, Track. 5 5 Teaching I ANAFE LEWIS BARTLETT Chadwick Street Po'rtlaml Portland, Maine And when the smoke ascends on high Then thou beholffst the 'vanity Of wordly stuff, Gone at a puff' Glee Club, Music Club, Dramatic Club, Outing Club. Globe-Trotter Mmuox Anou B.AseH 1764 Unfiflf' Street bb ,, ,-11,1 Schenectady, New York 7 ulmnr-0 is lnller but its frwt rx sweftp Intel tional Relations Club 121. Outing Club, Phi Theta kappa IFAKB tdff Honox Roll. Psychiatry EI .-uw 1j0RlS BF xen West Main Street 1,,,,,,, Vergennes, Vermont Vusir is -mwll mid to lm the speech of angels. Exuutne Commlttee of Music Club, Glee Club, Choir Qlj C2j, Orehes t 1 PRAM bt :ff Honor Roll, Operetta, Secretary of Resident VVomen s Studio mul Concert Muna Mmm Ausox B1 1 mm: 977 5Ch001 Street fjgmq 110,10 Watertown, Massachusetts 1 L Su4ppo:m the ire in your X , - 9 I gli, Jleltwl the fire of you 'A L 'f'h wr-0 L' What would you be? Phl Thetx kappa, Choir CID, Basketball Q2j, PEAKS Staff, Fenclng, Social Committee lj. Honor Roll, Operetta, Resident VVomen's Councll 2 B uying BENJAMIN 41 Pafk Avenue Vllhitehall, New York Wlmfs the use of worrying? It never was 'I6'.'02'fh'UL'IlfI0, so Pack up your troubles in- your old kit bag, Ami xmilrf, smile, mnilef' arsltx Club Blsketball flj, Track Q15 rf Engineering 'P' LIARCIA Lousis BlI.LINGS milton! Vermont 'The prive of 10-isclom is above rubiesf' Social Service Work ff FLORENCE ELEANOII BRIGGS Norton Avenue .KFIOH Poultney, Vermont So sweet, so lovely, an-fl so 'milcl ux she, Zlzlornrl with beauties grace and vi'rt1u2.fr store. Basketball Q15 QQJ, PEAKS Staff, Honor Roll. Secretarial llforh FAIL BROCK 127 Williams Street ffglwlwff VVhitel1all, New York IVhaI probing deep -' 2-,-'L A' Has ever .wlwrl the mystery of sleep? I - - I l Varsity Club, Football Qlj ' , a J ' Engineering Ii? ' L ' GRACE ELIZABETH CABIBELL Schfoon I-akef New York Gracie . Her 'ways are ways of plensmztlmss and Mal! MQW' Nlusic Club, Dramatic Club, Glee Club, Choir Qlj, PEAKS Staff, Operetta F I' . . all her patlis are peace. Teaching English MICHAEL CI-IOIINYAK 39 Church Street .qnkew Granville, New York ' On that best portion of cz good 'rnanfs life W His liltle IlCll716l6-YS, vmrenzefmberefl acts Of kindness cmd of love. C23- Engineering 0 I MARJOIIIE KATHRYN CONVLES 0 Mcfvdle Avenue ..MuVU,7 5 Albany, New York ff UI heart at leisure from 'itself To soothe mul xympcathizef' Int r Ional Relations Club 2 Phi Theta Kappa, PEAKS Staff, Fenc- ' Q C' in-wi CD, .4 onor Roll. Consultant Psychologist Varsity Club, Baseball QU QQD, Hockey, Track QU Q2j, Football Q11 I ELEIKNOII 1'lU'l'I-I Ciionwisu. 7' Adams Place 1 l -.C,.0,,,y'1 Delmar, New York fAmI bamltifiul as su-ent! .'17lll young as bf!!l1l'tlf'1ll.l And mf! as young! .-1 nu' gay as soft! .411-fl flll10!7H7If as gay! lntcrnutionrll Relations Club fflj, Outing Club, Press Club, PEAKS Staff, Fencing, Costume Director of Dramatic Club. V Secretarial W'01'k lll V 5 ,sw DAVID Imsri DEl'E'l 1'kI, Jn. Cllurch Street im H gf, -wD,,l.,, Poultney, Vermont . , 1 ' ',:bA 7 He .vlm'If'1I to sing as lm fucklerl Hua thing Tim! crmlrlwft be done. and he did it. - 5 Orcliestm flj QQQ, IJEAKS Staff, Operettn. Advertising I L . GEORGE EZDWAIIDS D1LI,1cNm:ciK F lt0m'mf'v New York ullmrfl musir- ix xfcccl, but lunlzvurrl music is .v1c'eetc1'J Science Club. Vete1'i11ar'y :ELIZABETH Dcrrox R- F' D- 1 ' 'ffl , , .1 1-i ffD51,1,',,'f Vkfoodstock, Vermont fp ' The j?11,1'.wt f'l!lI11lClll'0 is flmf rvlzif-ll gets things dovmfl ' Y Trcusurol- of International Relations Club, Basketball QU, QZQ, PEAKS L Stall, Debating Team, Honor Roll. f Secretarial Ufork f Q i- ',', j :': r,m.l?' if Efllll, BOND DVMQEI, 7f ml strc Q Ml ffjgu,,,k'1 har' Kew 'ork 1 do loathe lo folk. Press Club, Varsity Club, Tennis QU Q23 PEAK ta , lllvinager of Balsketlmll Team ,rnalism l I l ea. P PHILIP LAWRENCE EDDY I-Iinesburg, Vermont Phil Ile likerl his' 'work and :lid it well. 15 Outing Club.92CfL J AQ, 7 M A l' f Engineering An , ' ISE Fl'l'ZSILIBIONS SU e Street A A 1' South W'aIpole, NIilSSElCllllSCtlfS V There are 'wlmle 'veins of zlinmonzls in. thine eyes, Might furnixli crowns for queens of all the earth. efgnis QU, PEAKS Staff, Fencing. Honor Roll. Secretarial lVork JOSEPH CLAYTON Fomzx' 17 Grape Street -'gjoeff Fair Haven, Vermont Many receive advice, only the wise profit by it. Science Club, Tennis flj, Fencing. A jx Teaching Ronrzm' LOREN FROST 51 Te 'l'le Street Bob JD: Snow Rutland, Vermont Society is like rc large piece of frozen 'zcuterg and skating well ' . ,e great art of soeinl life. Science Club PEAKS . , Social Co nnittee Engivzeering ROLAND Emu' Gmroun , Avemle B .fGff-1 yy Cambridge, New York 'Z-lelrie-Uenzents are burn of industry. President of International Relations Club, Dramatic Club, Phi Theta Kappa, Glee Club, Choir CU QQQ, Treasurer of Freshman Class, Editor of PEAKS, Resident Men's Council flj, Honor Roll, Operetta, Bowling, Pub- licity Director. J0lll'71!lllS'lIL ROBERT IEDYVARU Ginn' 58 Skeene Street 1 ffgudu VVhitcl1all, New York A UT0 tlml llflullflfxlf f6IH1I07' of his 'I'Il-i'ILCf', y H 0 hath fi wisdom that doth guide his 'valor To nrt in xafffty. M6dl6il JExNE'1'TE Sl'TI.lFF HIXNES ,38 South Perf? Street 15111 Johnstown, New York 'fTlm fruit flwrizvffl from labor is the sweetest of plens'ures. .lnternrltional Relations Club QQ, PEAKS Staff, Honor Roll. Secretarial TVOrk Vp X wtf lhrf uzt iv av quick av fIl 0lllllI lily!! RIORILIS CHRISTIE HlI.I. sto es Ve' Cl:-rfs It l'ntr'luex. l 4 Music Club, President of Press Clubj Club, P 1- heta Kappa, Choir CTU, PEAKS Staff, Honor Roll, 1 'tor of The Green Moiivitaivieer, Social Committee ' Teaching HEIIISEIKT H. HOIDGEBIIXN Lowell, Vern' nf H01'I131 I For hix heart was in his wo-rk, ann th z, rt C7i'L'1'fh yrrrce 'unto every art. Science Club. 'Q Engineering , J ' ul, 1' 10 Potter Street AMES Emvmw Hom' -'-Xml Whitehall, New York full! flu' wealth I lim! Ran- in my veins, I 10718 a gc11Hem1m. Varsity Club, Football QU QD, Basketball flj CED, Baseball Q1 .. . Coaching 1 ,. KZ! it b lg ml' M' . ti H W 'Q l in l Col li I Qmmganmfjb 0u.i?.w-ev. 'T ' L-ifk' ff,,Jf.u-P ESTHEIL Foiuzns ISHAISI R- F- D- 1 Burlington, Vermont Thy modestyis an candle to thy merit. Outing Club, Glee Club, PEAKS Staff, Operetta, Resident W0men's Council. Secretarial Work A .C-19 , BARBAIIA EDITH JENKS 93 Edwin Street ffjenl,-,,y Pittsfield, Massachusetts Yo11,see, ear, it is not true that woman was made from man's ribj she was 'really -made from his funny bone. U 79j Secretarial Uforlc BIARLETA ELIZAMQTH JONES 13 Norton Avenue HMOUVU Poultney, Vermont Among the dwellings framed by birds W In field or forest with -n-ice cure, l 6 Is mme that with the little 'wre-nfs W 111 snugness may co'nzparef' . Basketball, PEAKS Staff. Secretarial Worlc ' ZXNTHONY JOSEPH K.-xisizn 77 Oakland Avenue .fTo,,yv Gloversville, New York .QIVQ1-:ls flowed easily from his 'mont ' U4 Outing Club. Qc M Law '04 GEORGE R01iE1i'l' KANA 15 Poultney Sheet uRub,,u Whitehall, New York 'Tho' modest, on his 1111-l?Il1bfU'I'Cl8S:!l brow Nature had written. :G011LlG1l1l11l. v Varsity Club, Captain of Football Team, Captain of Basketball, Base- ball, Track QU Coaching R..c'9'y f ff- 5 ' ELIBIETT ITREDERICK IQELLEXVAY 11 CWC AXSUWC , A 11130611 Rutland, Verrno VZ I ETllll'1l,.?li11 g thought And liiving rvisllom 'with each 8l'lLlU0'llf3 year. Vice-President of Science Club, Phi Theta Kappa, Hockey, Honor Roll. Dentistry ' X EORGE GOIIIJON IQINGSLEY +3 Morris Street Ngo,-,,i,,J' Albany, New York - What good I ser' h-umbly I seek to dn, zillvll live obedient to the law, in trust, That what will rrmw, and must come, shall 1-onm well. V! Music Club, Glee Club, Choir QU CED, President of Freslninan Class, PEAKS Staff, Fencing Instructor, Operctta. Teaching AXGELO L- LABATE East Main Street NDOMIH Poultney, Vermont An honcsl man., 1-lose-bil-Morfrl to the chin, Brozuiclolh Irilhnzzt, mul u 'wlwnz heart u'ithinf. Business A I I THEODORE Lows LAVRENZO 1093 Bf 'ftt Street ffL,u,g,7p1 Schenectady, New York He kncrc' his sports. ami played them ali. Varsity Club, Football CU Basketball flj f2j, Bowling. Teachin 'I P .. 1 ,X VV. RICHARD LAWREXCE Bradford- VCr '0 t R6lh A 'man' TCll0'N not afraid to say his say Though ll rcholr' io'zcvn'x rignivmt him, International Relations Club QU f2j, PEAKS Staff, President of Resident p Men's.Council ' f Education El? ANNA BIARGARET MAHAR 9 Smith Park Place -2-1 mf' Fair Haven, Vermont Her air, her neanne-rs, all who saw arlmi-redg C'ourlaoux tho-ugh cog and gentle though 'reliredg The joy of youth and health her eyes displayed, A-nd ease of heart her every look f'onz'eyetl. Basketball QU Dietetics GEORGE JOSEPH BIANDRONNA Brookville, New York AUHYIIHII 'night has set her silver lump on high Then ix the time for study. Science Club, Press Club. Sketch Club, Tennis QQJ, Chess, Bowling. 'X' QSYJNM Medicivze ' 1 ' fbi 5 Xl NM W D - K DN JOHN EUGENE RICCVESI 109 Hampshire Road Johnny N byracuseg New York A fool 'lllll-ll make money. but it neerls a 'wise man to xpencl it. PEAKS Staff, Honor Roll, Cn tain f B f p 0 owling Team, Phi Theta Kappa x Scieniifc W'orh HELEN R. Mmm ITT 4- Taylor Avenue - f.IVhut.kyv B!'lStOl, v'CI'Il10l1t X She looks' so sweet in the gay spring light 9 Her pofut is cute and her laugh is bright. Basketball CID, PEAKS Staff. Teaching English J OHN XVILLIAM BIINOGUE 46 .West Sheet 'f.Io lm n y Farr Haven, Vermont For he was studious-of his ease. PEAKS Staff, Football Q11 QQD, Basketball . Business l r fl! I Lf' 1, xv ., , 'f ' -- 'W Ls, .,,. 4. RUTH GRACE BIOERCHEN 6 Livingston Avenue -fSf.h,,5,.1,-ff Yonkers, New York f'Em'h nigh! I ymnse-rememberin,g-- Some fl!!-U. rulzventnroius. lovely thing. International Relations Club, Outing Club, Science Club, Music Club, Press Club, Sketch Club, Dramatic Club, Choir QU CQD, Glee Club. Penis Staff, Operetta Dean of Women, BETTY Lois BIORSE 1082 Townsend Avenue ffM',,,-,.,,,,1f New Haven, Connecticut lVhe-n life leaps in the veins When it beats in the heart, lVl:e'n it thrills as it fills every animate part. Outing Club, Choir QZQ, Busketball flj f2j, Tennis QU Q25 PEAxs Staff, Fencing, Social Committee f2j, Operetta, Cheer Leader. Coaching RUTH A. ltliirizimx' Comstock' New York P, H. I Thou, who has! the fnlal gift of lleautgf' Basketball Qlj CZQ, Secretary of Freshman and Sophomore Class PEAKS Staff, Honor Roll. Teaching English VVENDELL ALFRED NELSON 13744 Dean Street f:W,,,,d,, Schenectady, New Yo c A laugh is 'ZE.'0'I'llI, a tlzouxrm-rl groans in any market. 0' outing Club, Dramatic Club, choir Q13 qzp, Man 10 of Bas 3-11 415, Social Committee CID, Honor Roll, Operetta. ' I Banking RUSSELL EDGAR OWEN 27 Gfalfe Street 1-R,,,,..,v Fair Haven, Vermont The mofleration. of fortunate people comes from the calm. which good fortune gives to their tempers. Track qzp. 0 10.001 Engineering I get VVILLIAM DAVID OYVEN South Street -'fBi1l Poultney, Vermont A cheerful look makes a dish a feast. Orchestra CU f2j, Track CU filj, Dance Orchestra Qlj, Honor Roll, Science Club Qlj Q2Q, PEAKS Staff. Engineering 7' A li -' I! 'A C! IXIEREDITH PARRY K. South Poultney, Vermont Red K A time like this demands Strong mfimls, great hcarls, true faith, and ready h.am'ls. International Relations Club CU, Phi Theta Kappa, Varsity Club, Foot- ball flj f2j, Baseball QU QD, Hockey. Teaching FREDERIC HALLOCK PETERS, II South Hem, Vermont A F 'l'ur:1mf' Z In, serenity I fashion. A lfVith. quiet power and quiet passiorzfi .fe International Relations Club QQQ, President of Outing Club, Science Club, Varsity Club, Orchestra f2j, Football QZQ, Captain of Track Team. Agriculture, Pomology JOHN FREDERlCIi PHILLIPS 94' Fumace Street ffJm.kn Poultney, Vermont In every deed of mischief, he had a heart to resolve, a head to contri-vc, and a hand to e.vecfuLe. Football Q15 QQD, Hockey. Engineering X X LSON DUBOIS IJULVER NOl'lIllVlllC, New Xvilrk 'Balm lVhy should the devil hrwe all the good tfu-nes? Executive Committee of Music Club, Varsity Club, Outing Club, Choir CU f2j, Orchestra Q2j, Manager of Football Team f2j,'Basketball flj f2j, I Baseball, Tennis CU QZD, PEAKS Staff, Dance Orchestra QU Q2j, Band. Music f u g Rox' ARTHUR ROBINSON 15 PURE Street -fR,,bb,,-'P Whitehall, New York fl day for toil, an hour for sport But for at frieml is life too short. Varsity Club, Football CU, Basketball QQQ, Track flj Engineering PAUL Enwsnn Rori-1 40 Williams Street Whitehall, N v' York 'tlirzozcleclye is of two kinds. W e know a. slpkuuce our. ues we keno re we can find info' ation upon . Honor Roll. K N M 7 Teaching ROIDNEH' PAUL SCOVILLE BOX 102 -'fpoflf-' Niskayana, New York 'There's a man of quality for you. Music Club, Dramatic Club, Varsity Club, Outing Club, Choir flj Q2j, Orchestra QU, Basketball f2j, Primus Staff, Waiters' Quartet, Operetta. Q T N l 4, M Radio Broadcasting my C EDWARD JOSEPH SENNETT 38 Beaman Street NEW' , Poultney, Vermont Man, is his own star, and the soul that can Render an, honest and a pe-rfect man, - Cfomrna-rzd.-f all light. International Relations Club CID, Phi Theta Kappa, Varsity Club, ' Football flj f2j, Treasurer of Sophomore Class. Law ALICE IBLIZABETH SHEILBURNE North Pomffeti Vermont Betty -' ,4 .x .N ,is fzjxpux How sweet how gracious ever in common, speech ls that fine sense whrch me-n. call courtesy! Outing Club, Secretary of Sketch Club, Dramatic Club, Glee Club, Fenc- ing, Honor Roll, Managing Editor of PEAKS. Q5 X ' A - Secretarial Wort: 7 , ,tlr ,. WW R. ALLEN GUY SKIFF Middletown Springs Vermont Skippe9 ' Ilia prernehi-ng much. but more his practice wrought QA living ser-mon of the truths he tau-ght.j Debating Club, Prize-speaking. - .Ministry STANLEY Howlxnn SMITHERS 15 Maple Street b if ffsgmff Randolph, Vermont l' -'F' Y IV-ith melt-ing airs or 1m11'tial, brisk or graveg -fy? , N Some chord in unison with what 'we hear M Is touched 'within us a-ml the heart replies? ' J . . . . . . ,, ' Presldent of Muslc Club, Muslc D11'CCt0T of Dramatic Club, V3TS1tW Club ' Outing Club, Choir CU Q2j, Orchestra Qlj, Basketball, Baseball, Tennis, l U PEAKS Staff, Operetta, VVaiters' Quartet. J' A 1.jj . A .eff I. i, 18 NIARIAN LOUISA SPAULDING . US Q My 7 ffl! ithin her fender eyes The heaven of April with its c SUSAIQ Louise STODDARD Music Broughton Avenue Poultney, Vermont ha.-n.gi-ng l i gilt. Secretarial lVorlc Peacliam, Vermont uS,uve:1 To catch the thrill of a happy voice And the light of a pleasant eye. Dramatic Club. Dietetics ANNA GUNHILID SYENSEN 103 Colulnbia Road ..A1mu ' e Arlington, Massachusetts an LI burn my candle at both ends But Ah, my foes, and Oh, my friends, It gives If lovely light. 9' 455 xc L It will not last the night, L ti .f X' S B ketbm Q2j, PEAKS Staff, Fencing, Social Committee QU, Operetta, Chsfr Lxyder rv ,alfa Dancing GARDNER I.. 'lllT'I'EMORE IL Yly?5 df 390 Maple Street Burlington, Vermont Yom he sliouts. NUTS' he xings in llm rupture of his 'wings . ., .-111.11 his gc-mil licfuri burns inlfmxer will: Ilm sfrengtll of his ll0SII'0.' Outing Club, Science Club, Orchestra Qlj, Tennis, D C13 C23- PIKES'l't3N CAM P Torcru-:Y Mifflin ance Orchestra Banking Edinburg, New York Some arf- wmtlzr-m-isrf: xomn arf' otlwr:cise. Band E1.1zAm:'1'1-1 Bnirrox Tll1'TI4E f-rwizu Jlcieorologg fl!!! 114 Caroline Street Burlington, Vermont The niglitingnlc appcurerl Ilia first An-rl as hcr 'llllllflll-If sho sung, The apple into l1lo.v.vom burst, To life tlzc grass and 'violets spra-ngf, Music Club, Glcc Club, Clioir Qlj QZQ, Operctta. -JOHN lllII,LE1t VVALDRON .laz'k Ile rouplfrl guicty Outing Club, Science Club, P ii Class, P1-:Ales Staff, Resident ll L,1'.' o Concert W'ork 6:29 No Br nrly 'in venue Scl ea , Yew T k -' or Roll, lllaiters' u.t, I I eqggblfligjs tyEl6l,!Kf7f'fff' Tlx li: J , P11 id. of Sophomore ll a f LP Quartet. I' , lf' BERTHA llliimnn VVHITE Bart Engineering 10 I Washington Street Northfield, Vermont The milrlcst manners uml the gmzflest lIL'fl?'t.H Outing Club, VVomen's Council Tennis. PEAKS Staff, Fencing, President of Resident Kimlergarfen lV0rlc MM, W 6:1155 ?fjfMfff7f. D 39 Church Street RUSSELL IRVING XNHLLIAMS ffRu3sv Poultney, Vermont It may well be doubted whether human ingenuity can construct an enigma of the kind which lnuna-n iwryen-nity may not, by proper application, resolve. PEAKS Staff, Science Club, Orchestra QU, Honor Roll, Phi Theta Kappa, Vice-President of Sophomore Class. Engineering 91 SARAH :ELIZABETH YVILLIAMS R' F- D- 9 ffgallyv Poultney, Vermont A - . ' 1 f life Ala-ny the cool sequesteaed za e 0 They kept the noiseless te-nor of their way. Phi Theta Kappa, Honor Roll. Secreiarial Plfork FRESHMAN CLASS ONCE UPON A TIME There was once upon a time, in the quaint little village of Poultney, a beautiful castle-like college. At first blush you would think it was overrun with a great many political prisoners, but on gazing again you could tell by a certain greenish hue that they were a new type of student called the frosh. Now the king of the castle-college was His Royal Highness, Jesse Parker Bogue, the great, and he was very much pleased with his new specie. He had caught one hundred, seven score and seven of them. Scratching his crown and rubbing his hands together he would watch them mill about in wonder and bewilderment between the trees and through the long halls of his castle. So it came to pass in that year nineteen hundred six and thirty that this king began to wonder what he should do to amuse such a muddle-headed troupe trickling about his grounds. His cohorts, the man-eating Sophs, had journeyed to a distant country, and so he was left alone to keep them from mutiny. Besides all this, he had a great plague to combat, which was termed the malady of homesickness, which, if it affected any of these animals, made them strike out for their former habitation. So you see the king was troubled in his mind. Consequently he called together all his wise men and asked them what was to be done about it. Now the chief of the wise men, Lord Le Grand Swann spoke up thus: O, King, I have an experiment which I should like to try. Give me these Frosh and I have enough plans to take care of them for a fortnight. This speech pleased the king greatly, for you see that relieved him of considerable labor. So these Frosh were coralled in a little building called the chapel, where they had to submit to such torturous testing that they guessed right away that this Lord Swann was the ogre of the castle in disguise. But when the morning had been com- pleted in this inhuman way, some of the other wise men, who had compassion on the poor things, packed them into carriages and sped away with them far out of the clutches of the villainous Swann to the beautiful haystack heights, where they could ruminate among the clouds upon their persecution. ' R ,yfi 'X 5 1 Beaman Shew Prentiss Broome f Al FRESHIVIAN CLAbb OFFICERS i 1,7'C'.S'id671ft ..... .... R ici-IARD 1aEN'r1ss Vice-President .. ..... EARL Baoonm Secretary .... . . .ELIZABETH S1-IEW Treasurer . . . . .LEONARD BE ALIAW1' As darkness fell the good wise men would return to carry their one hundred and seven sc-ore and seven little greenhorns back to the castle. Each night was spent in merriment, for these men of wisdom knew that was the best preventative against the black plague of homesiekness. However, in the morning the stately Swann's spell was cast, and once again the poor little Frosh would file into his grim torture chamber. And every afternoon and every night, the other wise men would come to carry them out of his clutches. But, alas, alackl even this small bliss could not last. For the knights of the castle came riding home. Now when they found these many, many queer foreigners usurping their rights, they fell into a rage and there followed such a week of terror as had never been seen before. The freshmen bit the dust and were crushed beneath the iron heels of the enraged Sophs. How they fared will be told in the next story. HELL -VJEEK It was during the second week of our sojourn at Green Mountain that the great and mighty Sophs arrived and began their fun. Much whispering went on in secluded corners as they planned troubles for the freshies, and we, in turn, shivered in our beds whenever one of the many rumors that the Sophs were coming was heard. Many tales of the impending doom were being voiced by our more forward neophytes who professed to be in the know g the uncertainty was the most difficult phase of our initiation. Following a different program for each day, we appeared in public in many unconventional and uncomfortable modes of self-decoration, according to the rules laid down by our predecessors to the institution. Among other things, our young gentlemen struggled into all their clothing inside out and backwards, wore cosmetics and cork-black, and attempted to write with taped fingers. They were also relieved of the greater part of their hair by the local tonsorial artists at the command of their superiors, thus being definitely branded as freshmen for many weeks to come. The girls also yielded to the pressure put upon them by their elder sisters of College and Ames Halls. They wore their hose in varied styles, found difficulty in getting about gracefully in unmatched footware, used lamp shades .for hair nets, and, finally. struttcd around with built-on cushions in the guise of pillows attached posteriorally. It was a period of general discomfort for us and particular hilarity for the Sophomores. However, when we came to the two great inter-class contests held annually, the Hag rush and the tug-o'-war, we turned the tables on the bewildered second-year men and made history at the same time. By the time the day set for these contests had arrived. we had determined to make these bragging villains, who had been plagu- ing us by day and by night, pay for their fun. And we did! Carl King climbed to glory as he stepped on his adversaries and took the flag off the pole amidst the push- ing, pulling, squeezing, twisting, and general mauling that went on during that memorable event, the flag rush. Later in the same day, the opposing classmen lined up on opposite sides of the Poultney River and attempted to pull each other in. It was not long, however, before the victorious freshmen had snaked the dismal and disgrumpled Sophs through the river for their second victory. It was the second time that the Frosh had won both events! Peace was declared between the warring parties on Saturday evening when the first formal dinner and the reception by the faculty were held. These affairs gave a brilliant and fitting climax to our orientation by the Sophs, and the two classes began to specialize in providing trouble for the overseers of the various dormitories rather than warring against each other. Of course they believed themselves the most exceptional assemblage of green- horns ever to enter the stately portals of Ames and Moses castles on river Poultney Ctorrential streamj. But to show you how extra-special they were their history reads thus: Clj They were the most powerful in members ever to surge across the castle grounds. C21 One of their group, Sir Goliath Phillips by name, stood 6 feet fl- inches and made even the mighty Sophs tremble. Q3j They were the iirst to Lord Swann's psychological guinea pigs-quite an honor! They are now the brain trust of the castle and the hope and pride of good King Jesse I. They so overran tl1e castle grounds, outnumbering the royal Sophs about two to one, that they were able to muckle from them the desirable social positions in the brilliant court life. VVhile suffering lords betook themselves to some cloistered spot -by the hanging bridge or the concerta hall for a bit of peace-this was going on: The dramatic club was usurped by the muddle-headed and all four ofhcers were of this peculiar sect: President Frosh, betty bogueg Vice-President Frosh, ralph norvellg Secretary Frosh, bob marlandg Treasurer Frosh, dick prentiss. The Presi- dent of the ltiusic Society was a Sophomore-Lord Stan. Smithers, but the Secre- tary-Treasurer position was held by Frosh betty bogue. The Press town-crier of the castle was under the able direction of Frosh jean blundell. They stormed the I. R. C. portals and took over the outing club. Then after calling for this one and that one, flying their banners and blowing their bugles for the other, they elected as president of their class one of the Ethiopian members, a dusky Cmammyj-singing college frosh, dick prentiss. VVhen the town crier read the leaders of the castles new sect he called this: president ..... . . .dick prentiss vice-president . . . . . .earl broome secretary .... ...... b etty shew treasurer . . . .... leonard beeman They asked the wise and good Lord Drew, the dapper, to become their sponsor, protector and consultant. He was honored. ll'hen Maytime blew into the castle grounds, the daring Frosh invaded the Gym Hull and brought spring with them. By the magic words Crepe-ah-crcpe-ah- gluey, waxy, they transformed that Worthy structure int o a garden of fairyland. Here they danced to enchanting music beneath a magenta moon. And now my tale is ended on this seventh day of April, nineteen hundred seven and thirty. Lest you should not know this secret-each Frosh lived happily ever after. Csignedj KING,S CHRONICLER. FRESHMAN RGSTER adams, dorothy ngnes .,......... ....... ................ a lem, new york adams, shirley jane .......... .... .................... ..... c a s t poultney, vermont ohokas, emil uri'n11s.,Z'j4'T4aI . . . ,.-ifinahziliienburg, massachusetts allen, gordon warren .................. .......... ....... m i ddletown springs, vermont anderson, robert bradford ........,............ 5 .......... brockton, massachusetts bainton, winifred ruth. . .....' 45 . .... watertown, massachusetts hallway, carol edith .................,. , .. ..... Schenectady, new york barnard, charles l. .... ........... n ewport, vermont burr, ruth myrtle ....... .............. b abson park, massachusetts bartlett, anne lewis .... . .. . . ..... ...... . 1. . .portla.nd, maine beckett, ruth jeannette. . . . . . . . , . . g enwich, connecticut beckwith, pearl ,IQC . . . . . yrwhitehall, new york beeman, leonnrd marshn. ...... .. ...... ware, massachusetts benson, wallace melvin .........,...,.. .... Whitman, massachusetts bixby, daniel ........... .... .... . i amestown, new york bleh, virginia pulmer. . . blundell, jenn louise .... . bogue, mary elizabeth .......,.... ........ breed, ruth ann shaw ..... .......... ............. .......... brcwster, rosemary cadyxbftf. . .... .... . broomc, george earl ......................................... brown, john hull ....... ..... .... hrownell. evelyn louise. . . . . . . bulkeley, peter .... ........ .... , .... . bullnrd, ruth r... ... ..... ft' .... . .. . . . burt, jean isubel. . . . burt, robert clinto . . . l.'1. xi I .. . . hurton, dudlcy k. ................ . ........,... . campbell, alice mue .... . .... . , . . , .... ..... . . . . . .plattsbu1'g, new york . . . . . . . . . .corinth, new york . . . . . . . . .poultney, vermont Williamstown, massachusetts . . . . . . . . .underhill, vermont . . . . . Jeeshurg, florida . . .middlebury, vermon . . .johnsonville, new yo . . . . . . .rhinebeck, new york . .north hyde park, vermont . . . . . . . . . . .pownal, vermont . . .pittsfield, massachusetts . . .waterbury, connecticut . . . . .whiteha.ll, new york carle, dorothy parker. .................. .... m alden, massachusetts cassidy, edward thomas .....,.... ...................................... c astleton, vermont ehuffee, esther e. .... ws. .... enoshurg falls, vermont chapman, marvin bailey ........................................... north Williston, vermont cheshire, robert alden ..........,.................. ................ l iempstead, new york elements, alfred pa1il.fZ4!lrQ'!1f. . . . . . . .?. ....... westport, new york vii ww New f'x Q I clements, mary elizahethflilk. .XSD X31 . . . . . .59-r.'?. . . . M5 rsville, new york coffin, stanley edward ............................... ........ ....... u e chee, verment collins, dorothy marion ................. .... ....... q u eehee, vermont con fdon, clark arthur ............ ........ ........ S c henectady, new 'ork cook, mildred V . A f . .l.cobleskill, new yorkgyadalacaj crounse, donald h... ....... 3 ..... ....... .... c obleskill, new york eubit, audrey'lT5. A . . . . A- .... . . .middleburgh, new york curtis, marguerite stanhope. . . ............................, . . . . . . new haven, connecticut de baun, rena alicc ....... ,....... glen ridge, new jersey dcrven, margery in.. . . ....................................... ........ p oultney, vermont dibble, charles ryder .... dimichele, guy a. .... . . . . . richmondville, new york . . . . . . . .poultney, vermont donahue, raymond ...,...,,......................... .. .poultney, vermont dow, john arthur ....... ,,,..,,,. ............... ......... .... p r esque isle, maine durkee, mary kinsman .... Nl. . .... ..... c astleton, vermont dutton, paul bradford ................... . ..........., .... n orthfield, vermont emerson, ruth elinor. . . . . 94.1. : . . .... northiield, vermont ennis, jacob foss ....... ........ 4 . ..... . .. . ...... ......,.... h urlin on, vermont 'eld, eugene maleohn.. ....,........ X new britaiif connecticut fox, marianne albertax . . . RQLY. . gloversville, new york frantz, marjorie ellcn.at!'k'd. QW 7 .... allentown, pennsylvania gardyne, virginia marion . ....... ..... ..... n o rth troy, vermont grant,l.doris patricizfP .... ...... ........ ...... a m sterdam, new york greene, myrtle lizzie .... grover, reginalrl h. ...... . . . . . . .winchendon, massachusetts . ...... halifax, massachusetts hafner, arthur henry ........ ........... ............. .... ss a i nt johnsbury, vermont hamilton, philip blanchurd. ........................................ har isville, rhode island harrison, marjorie isnb llei0.q.AK,gy.laa,. . a o S, new york horning, arlene muy.. ..............,... ......... o versvi , new york jones, caroline may ............ .................... .............. . . .poultney, vermont keppell, ruth gwaltneyai-li Q F . TM . .richmond virginia kidder, dwight alton ...... ........... . . . . .. ........... randolph, vermont kidder, frank robert .... . . mandolph, vermont king, carl fish ........... ....... b enson, vermont leamy, margarct cecilia ............. .... ..,. f 4 mir haven, vermont lee, christine c. .... . ................ ...... ......... r u tland, vermont liebman, babette. . . U, ...... .0 .... ...... . . .brookline, massachusetts lincoln, james pratt ...... . J . . ......., .... T .... .... s c henectady, new york lincoln, leon Cm0Tj:.R-Q4 . . . . . ' ..... .... . . . .... taunton, massachusetts little, edwin lorcn ....,.... W ..... 14 . ..............,.....,.. . . .fair haven, vermont maher, malcolm harlow ..... Mc . j .. ...... . . . . . .... wilmington, vermont managun, robert thompson . . ....... . .f . . . . oversville, new york manning, warren kendall ..........,............................ ..... b urlington, vermont marland, robert tylcr ............. - ..... ............ .... c l anielson, connecticut mc cammon, beverly .............................. 5 .... ...... r utland, vermont mc kirryher, beth- evelyn , .Sv .v. . . . . .... rutland, vermont meade, mary elizabeth .......................... ................ u nderhill, vermont mellen, george hill ...... .... , ..... g rent barrington, massachusetts merrill, henry edson.. . ............. ............. b rattleboro, vermont miller, george franklin. . .......- . . ............. . . . ...... randolph, vermont mungall, janet claire. ., . .... ........ 1 . . . .schenectady, new york murdock, helen ruth. : .T Yr-.. :rar -. . . 7 .V .frm-.4 '. frrhii ..... middlebury, vermont murdock, james wesley.d..6,os.J .... . . ., . . . . .... iddlebury, vermont murray, marshall clycle.J0f.0'f.. . . rooklyn, new york newton, wright irving ........... ............... ............ m e nands, new york nocito, joseph p. ..,... . , . .whitehall, new york gl norcross, deane h... . norvell, ralph t... ...... . . .east hardwick, vermont . . . . . . .albany, new york o'brien, edward matthe ' .............. . ................................ castleton, vermont o'dell, robert tahef. C-. . ,bg-ag, . , A ffkeeseville, new york ottman, virginia fu:-H he.. . . .17!'lL.' ................. . . . .... . . .cobleskill, new york owen, janet mae.,, ...... ..... .... I 5 oultney, vermont pedro, elenor a. ............. ..... I moultney, vermont perkins. llewellyn robinson .,... . .,.. middlebury, vermont perry, thomas gcrard ........ ...... f air haven, vermont peterson, louise elizz1lJetl1. f. . . . 2 . .-figbafrutland, vermont phillips. leonard franklin ......... y .... .. .......... leesburg, florida phillips, mary jean ..... , .zww .... . ...... benson, vermont phillips, percy benjamin ..... . . ..... . L ..... . . .... . .,. ........ . .,. . .benson, vermont prentiss, richard burr As. .. .1. Egrlington, vermont randall, dorothy ewart. .. . .... cambridge, new york ransom, maris avery. .. reed, jeannette ....... . relyea, dorothy wilson . . . rice, anne gilmore ...... richards, wilma elizabeth. . . richardson, ruth ......,. rising, edith f ..,.. roberts, lorraine ..,..... rowlands, ellis maurice.. salmonsen, ann chandler. sanford. clark wheeler ................ sanford, Inman Kayn . . , . . . . . .woodstock, vermont . . whitman, massachusetts . . . . .new york, new york ..needham, massachusetts . . . . .fair haven, vermont .. .wilton, new hampshire P . . . . . . . .great barrington, massachusetts, . H. .... Qlpoultney, vermont . , ............... poultney, vermont . . .... schenectady, new york . . . .gIoversville, new york . .pittsf'ield, massachusetts Saxton, 'ose wh .....,.. . . . ..,....... . . . ...... . . . . .......... milford, new Vork - as v, , . scarborou fh, muriel elaine ....... . . . . , . . . ewton, massachusetts t f 1 . . schloo 1, Ilovd m. ........ .. .indian lake, new vork l , . sehnurman, lois marguerite. . wb. ww. f. . . . .allentown, pennsylvania schuneman, irene elizabeth. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... .... S chenectady, new york shangraw, earle l. ....,. . shank, mary elizabeth. .. Sherman, lethea elfreda.. shew, elizabeth billington. . . sloeum, anna phillips .... .. . . . . .chester, vermont ......,,. .. . . . . . . ....... .ponltney, vermont . . . ..... . . .north poultney, vermont . . .gIoversville, new york hoosick falls, new york smith, mildred CHlllf' . . . l . . . . . . .reed's ferry, new hampshire stannard, mary anne ...... . . . . . . .1 . .If ....... . . . ....... fair haven, vermont stevens, betty hope ..... . ' fm ......... . . .hrattleboro, vermont stymiest, benjamin lewis.. . . L. . .. . .... ...... x vestport, new york sullivan, rose mary .......... .41-LL . . . ...................... . . .providence, rhode island svendsen, sylvia ..................... 3 .... J ...... ........ . . . . .needham, massachusetts swart, jeanette grant ..... . .v. . . .... . . .amsterclam, new york sweezey, ruth ethel ............................ .........., .... m a lden, massachusetts thomas, harold william.. thomas, helen winella .... thorn, marjorie gr. ..... . thornton, john joseph. . tobin, eliot collins .... . . . .. . .-: . . H ........ ....... ....... s t. alba ., ermont .Il vamuu ....... I. .sm ...... i. tritch, virginia emily. . . trop, daniel ........... truscott, jean marjo.ry. . tufts. priscilla. ..... . vail, thomas IDC. . van denburgh, ella ..... . . . . . .poultney, vermont . . . .poultney, vermont . . . .hudson, new york . . . .cambridge, new york . .... gra ille, new york . QM. ?.!.n..... .... .n1eridale, new york maiden, massachusett: Q. . .... north bennington, vermont .....g1oversville, new york Q Effie Poe' van hook, carlton rudcliffe .... ..,.. . . . . . . vzirnum., eleanor ....... 6 ............................ .. I n videtn, theodore h. ...... J. . . . K4 . J. C .. wacllmrns, ann rosette.. ....... ............ . . wallncc, esther maude. .. waters, stanley 1. .... . wells, stanley ...... white, helen jean ...... . . . . whitney, mahel nrlene ............... -. .... ,. . . whittemore, miriam aluthea. . willizuns, r. newman ........ . .......... wilson, shirley lettie. . ..a!e0a0nl. . zcle, henry marcel. . ........... . . . .pitman, new jersey .enosburgr falls, vermont . . . burlington, vermont . . . iorrington, conn. . . .poultney, vermont .. .whiteha1l, new york . . . Avhitehall, new york . .canajoharie, new york south royalton, vermont . . . .burlington, vermont . . ,pou1tney, vermont . . . . ...1'utland, vermont torrington, connecticut DORMITORY LIFE ' '2- 'J . College Hall Parlor Isham Wziclliains Belding VVhite Lewis Meade XV0lVlllN'S RESIDENT CQUNCIL Ojicers President .......... .. .BERTI-IA BI. VVHITE Secretary-T-1'eas111'er . .. ...... 4ANN R. XVADI-IANIS Advisor ............ .... D EAN ELSIE H. IJEYVIS Purpose 1. To represent the resident college women of Green Mountain Junior College in an official capacity incident to the life of the resident college women. 2. To formulate, direct and provide, with power to enforce, rules and regulations for the general. welfare of the resident college women. Activities The crest of the council's activities has been in the sponsorship of a tea, a Christ- mas party, :1 steak roast, and in an attempt to bring commuting students into closer relations with the resident students. X Congdon Clements Moses Hall Lobby Waldron Lawrence Andrews lVlEN'b RESIDENT CQUNCH- Ojfcers President ...... ....... . . WV. RICI'IARD LAWVRENCE Vice-President ....... .... B I-:RTRAND J. ANDRESVS Secretary ..........,... ..... J oHN M. WVALDRON Freshmaln Represmztatiwfs . . . .... lALFRED P' CLEMENTS 2 CLARK A. CONGDON Purpose 1. To represent the resident college men of Green Mountain Junior College in an official capacity incident to resident student life at the college. 2. To formulate, direct, and provide, with power to enforce. rules and regulations for the welfare of resident college men. Activities By creating the spirit of good fellowship through the sponsoring of such activities as steak roasts, by lending a guiding hand to fellow students through personal conferences, and by helping to build a mutual understanding between college men and the faculty, the 1936-37 council climbed to higher peaks in its attempt to make the life of resident men more meaningful and worthwhile. During the month of February the Council was re-organized after a brief conflict with the Faculty Committee over a matter of authority of the student government. The Council was not recognized as having the power to intervene in the suspension of two students and consequently its members resigned. A student protest, in the form of a one-day strike, followed, but conciliation was quickly reached between the students and the Faculty Committee when a new Council, the one pictured above, was elected by a popular vote. SQCIAL ACTIVITIES BOY MEETS GIRL Characters : JOAN 13I.AINETNCXW' student matrieulating at G. BI. J. C. KENNI-:'ru KoRNELL-Same as above. ACT I SCENE I A New Stzulcnt Arrives. Lucky in studies, unlucky in affairs of the heart. That motto seemed to be .loan's. Surveying Green Mountain campus with its beautiful green lawns and old trees with their wealth of foliage, she wondered if she could not now beat the jinx. Students were all actively busy making friends and discussing the merits of their new school. One topic of conversation that surpassed all others was of the coming Freshman Party. Everyone attended, with or without an escort. .loan's heart skipped a beat when she heard this. SCENE II Frrnshfnzavl. Party-Scpfcvnlnfl' 19, 1936. Joan was all aglow when she arrived at the gym where the introduction of faculty and students was to take place. Like all Freshmen she wore a placard bearing her name and address. After her introduction, Jack Heffernan, noting her hometown, escorted her to a group who were also of the same state. Among them was a young man, Ken Kornell, who came from the neighboring town. He asked Joan to dance, after which they mingled with the other students. Refreshments were served and soon the evening came to an end. Joan went to bed with a date for the following day, and happiness in her heart. SCENE III Back Ca1npu.s'--Sepfzfmbcr 26, 1936. The week-end following the Freshman Party was the contest of strength between Sophomores and Freshmen. The Sophomores, realizing that the only way to win would be to kidnap some Freshmen, confiscated a truck and twenty-six Freshmen were taken for a ride. Much to the dismay of the Sophomores, all Freshmen ap- peared for the Flag Rush. In the last forty-five seconds left to play, Carl King captured the Hag, making the Freshmen victorious. Even to the tug-of-war, the Frosh reigned supreme, but, of course, only due to the bank caving in on the Sophomore side. SCENE IV F7'1'-911711611 Reception-September 20, 1936. The first formal dinner was anticipated with pleasure by all the students and faculty. Those who had birthdays in July and September sat at the beautifully decorated birthday table which was placed in Marble Hall. A formal dance followed sponsored by Doctor Bogue and the faculty with Reggie Sweet's Orchestra playing. During intermission Elaine Beach and Elizabeth Tuttle rendered solos in piano and singing respectively. After refreshments were served, more dancing ensued, and at twelve o'clock all retired to their respective dormitories, tired and weary from the exciting day which had just passed. ACT II SCENE I Steak Roast and Backrcnrds Dinwncr-Ocfober 3, 1936. Couples parted, to their dismay on this Saturday, the boys enjoying a steak roast at Lake St. Catherine, and the girls a backwards dinner which was served by a few faculty members who acted as waiters. SCENIC II Informal Dance-Uctober 17, 1936. This dance was sponsored by both Freshmen and Sophomores who cleared ex- penses to the surprise of the faculty. They said they owed their success to the inex- pensiveness of decorations. SCENIC III Sca'Uf'nger Ilzmt-October 24, 1936. First word of Anthony Adverse and last word of Gone YVith the VVind, news- paper printed in VVclsh, such was the gist of this hunt., among other objects amounting to the number of thirty-nine. Bob Frost's team winning with the greatest number of objects being obtained in the specified time. SCENE IV Ha.Ilozoc'cn. Parry-Ocfolwr 31, 1936. Four teams led by Frost, Prentiss, Kidder, and Anderson tried their skill in running, eating, composing, dancing, and whistling. The team finishing first was awarded a box of lollipops. Many, because of their hoggishness, were subjected to salts. Anderson's team received the lollipops. Not content with the fun enjoyed in the gym, many students decorated G. M. campus with signs and such. ACT III SCENE I Formal I-lrlnisiice DlZ1ICC-'NOZVETIZVIJCT 14, 1936. Following the formal dinner which celebrated the birthdays of students of the month of November, an Armistice Day dance was presented in the gym. Patriotic decorations of red, white, blue shields and crepe paper streamers gave the dance a right to its title. Cleve Fyles furnished the music to which somber tuxes and color- ful evening gowns dipped and swayed in rhythm. SCENE II Christmas Celcbrntion-December 18, 1936. The last event of the 1936 year was begun with a formal dinner, and also a birthday table. The birthday table along with those in the dining hall were all cleverly decorated with Christmas scenes. A prize was awarded to the most unique table, and also one to the most attractive table. Miss Perry's table captured the former. and Miss Grifiitlfs the latter. SCENE III Jack Frost Frolic--December 18, 1930. Ken and .Ioan entered the gym to stand amazed at the transformation which it had undergone. The setting appeared as though one were in a forest which had just been retouched by Jack l7rost's merry pranks. Reggie Sweet's sweet music made every one sorry that they were to leave the school the following day for their Christmas vacation. All anticipated the return to the school and to their chums, and many promises were exchanged to write letters to one another. Thus ended the events for 1936. ACT IV SCENE I Formal Difzner-1 ebr11ar.y 13, 1937. A new semester has begun. New activities are in progress. But an activity which will always be celebrated here is that of birthday dinners. Ken's birthday occurred February 2, so that he was one among many to grace the table which was arranged for them in Marble Hall. Ivashington decorations were used, or I should say red, white, and blue. After the dinner was over, couples dashed about to find their wraps and then headed for the gym where a dance was about to begin. .loan and Ken found one another without much trouble and also the other couple with whom they were going. Exchanging dances is and always will be a favorite sport at G. M. C. Thus, by this time, every one was well acquainted and asking for dances had become second nature. .loan had quickly and deftly learned the art of being a good dancer so that her program was filled. After an exciting evening of dancing and eating, every one looked forward to the last dance, and goodnights were gladly uttered. l-Vhy? Exams had just finished. Scum: II Posf Leap Year Dance-Fcbr11al y 27, 1937. Fun. and more fun. Now the girls had to pay the bills, but they liked it. They even had to ask the boys for a penny for each year the boy was old, plus five cents tax. At eight o'eloek the procession started for Moses Hall as the girls had to call for the boys. Many of the boys. out of fun, forgot their purses, combs, etc., just to keep their escorts waiting. The girls, not being as shy as the boys, young men they liked to be called, had all dances arranged beforehand. .Ioan did not call for Ken until nine, and he was on time. ll'hy? he had become a little panic-stricken for fear .Ioan was going to stand him up. Stags were of course present, and all couples were on their toes as the young women showed no embarrassment at cutting in. It wasn't the young man who received the tap on the shoulder, but the young lady, and she was free to relinquish her partner or not, just as she saw fit. The result of the dance was that another was asked for and it was granted. SCENIC I II Dlnrch 13, ,151-3'f-The Iri.9l1n1en.'s Brawl. This entertainment was sponsored, as you might guess, by the Irish of the school. All were invited, with one consideration, that they wear green. Anyone not com- plying had to pay a forfeit-maybe do a solo, anything they wished, but it had to be performed before the whole student body. An Irish supper was served, that of corn-beef and cabbage. Many Irish ways of doing things transpired and it ended as merrily as all the other activities here. SCENE IV .-fnoflzer POS! Lcrzp-Year 1JLl71Cf'-NIIIITII. 521, 1937. The looked-for had arrived. .Ioan this time arrived early. but Ken was not ready. lVheu he finally arrived in the lobby he had superfluous articles upon him which he immediately handed to Joan. Being the escort she had to take care of them. Joan, to show a few of her partners that girls aren't so dumb and that they are aware of what sometimes goes on behind their backs, arranged to have the stags cut in on her so that she might do as she pleased, either cut in on whom she pleased or talk with the stags. This evening ended with the girls wishing they might have been boys, and the boys glad that they were what they are. SCENE V Sophomore Hop-April 9, 1937. The biggest dance of the year-the Sophomore formal! It reached the peak even over the other dances put on by various classes before us. There wasnit any one who did not look forward to this dance. The orchestra was the famed Jimmie McGibbon and His Revelersf' They were new to us, but reached all expectations, and are said to be the best band that has been heard here. Even the decorations were unique. An underwater scene was portrayed, and as one stepped into the gym he felt as if he had been transported to the bottom of the sea. Strange fish were seen to be swimming about, fish we had never seen before, but which were explained to us to be the ideas of students of our class. Seasickness was averted by the sweet music which poured forth from the band. Four young men of our illustrious school sang with the orchestra. Three of these will graduate, and one will carry on their remarkable work alone next year. Toward the end of the evening, or rather the beginning of the morning, the poor fish were captured, and were glad to find a resting place upon the walls of their Alma Mater. They too shall be as souvenirs of the grand time at good ol' Green Mountain. ACT V May Day Festival, May 14, 1937. Today Green Mountain Junior College held its own Coronation Day. It was the first real observance of the crowning of the King and Queen of the May, John YValdron and Ruth Murray, respectively, who were elected by popular vote of the student body, as the two students who could successfully uphold the school standards of personality, brilliance, and honor. The attendants to the Queen, who performed the traditional May Pole Dance, wore evening dresses of pastel Shades, while the King and Queen were gowned in crimson and royal blue velveteen. The program, in honor of the Royal Family, consisted of a contrast between physical education of the past and present. This was followed by dancing, such as: Hungarian Folk Dancing, tl1e Virginia Reel, and character dancing. A dramatic fantasy Pierrot of the Minute was presented by Mrs. Imogene L. Holmes, and Miss Marion Gritiith, dramatic instructors of the college. The Freshman Hop climaxed this day of days. It was held in the gym which was uniquely decorated as a jungle scene. The University Club imported from Dartmouth College played. Thus ended a brilliant year of social events. Frost Kidder College Dining Hall - Morse Broughton Sx endsen G. M. C. ATHLETICS 'T . , e- -' Sanford 'Jygerly' Merrill O'Brien Little anning Murray Dimichele Laurenzo Robinson Rowlands Heffernan Tobin Trop Wilson J. Phil ps BrooTne Minogue Brock Bartholomew Hoey Pulx er Schimke Benson Oakman Noi 'l Chornyak Kana Parry I.. Phillips Wells Sennett .vigrx rlyllll -- Q 1- QQTBALL Green Mountain cleats banged out a savage victory tune 011 the gridiron this season as the Mountaineers stampeded with irresistible fury through their adver- saries in a half-dozen turf wars to emerge with but one blot on an otherwise spotless record of six wins. The impressive power of Coach Jack Heffernan's Green Galaxy was not to be denied and after a first-game slump they bombarded their opponents with a ferocity that could not be coped with to sweep to victory time and again. The defeat itself came at the hands of Clark, the only squad to score on last year's undefeated and untied Green and Gold grid machine. In a slovenly exhibition of football, G. lil, C. fell before their onslaughts 12-7. CHORNYAK SNARES OFFENSIVE HONORS But from that point until the end of the season, an almost completely renovated Golden Horde slashed and battered its way through to six consecutive conquests. Their might and skill constituted a dazzling offensive, while a line that outcharged its rivals on every play, dug in its cleats and set up a nearly-impregnable barrier to its assailants. Although brilliant in every department, the season's play threw into bold relief the pigskin Wizardry of Mike Chornyak, whose end sweeps and unerring passes were perhaps the most dominant elements in a sparkling Green and Gold attack. His open-field running and a passing ability little short of sensational, paved the way to pay dirt on nearly every occasion that the Green Galaxy pushed the ball into touchdown territory. NORWVICH BOWVS Following the Clark contest, the fiercely-Hghting Mountaineers ran the score up to 37-0 against a husky Norwich Freshman array before the final whistle blew taps on their efforts. From the outset the onrushing wave of green-jerseyed players swept over the Norwich forward wall in a continuous deluge that more than matched the afternoon's down-pour and they showed for the first time in the campaign the power of which they were capable. Every bit of their scoring punch was needed in their next fracas, when they barely nudged out a stubborn Nichols Junior College eleven, 8-6 on Jewell field. After a bitterly contested first half which ended in a scoreless deadlock, G. M. C. rallied to take the van for all time. The first counter came early in the third chukker. A steady, unrelenting drive upfield to the Nichols five-a drive in which Chornyak, Trop and Wells set the pace-culminated in a fumble that Nichols promptly re- covered to end the threat. As Nichols attempted to boot out of danger, however, big Red Parry blocked the punt into the end zone where Nichols backfieldman, Shaw, recovered for a safety. SENNETT SCORES LONE COUNTER The lone touchdown of the contest came in a hectic final stanza when the Greenies recovered a fumble on the Nichols thirty-six and slashed their way through to the end zone. Sennctt carted the leather across the last stripe on a plunge from the three. The Mountaineer's most potent rival, the proverbially husky University of Ver- mont Frosh grid machine, was the next to fall as the Greenies handed out one of their most decisive defeats of the season, 12-0. VE RM ON T ATTACK' IM POTENT Preventing the Frosh from gaining even one first down in a fracas far more one-sided than the score would make it appear, the galloping Golden Horde en- countered no difficulty in forging to another victory. Against the impressive drive of the Mountaineers and the equally impressive aerial tactics to which they cannily resorted at the right moments, U. V. M. had little to offer in defense while their offensive thrusts proved a negligible factor against a stubborn Green and Gold for- ward wall that refused to give up a first down. Although the Heffernanmen threatened often during the remaining minutes of play, the Vermont defense was most powerful with its back to the wall, and only once more did the Greenies counter. Late in thc third session, diminutive Rabbit', Hoey surged off tackle for a fifteen-yard touchdown romp. WILSON LEADS MANLIUS VICTORY lVith Freddy lVilson playing perhaps the outstanding football of his career here, the Green and Gold added another scalp to its belt by trodding all over Manlius to the tune of a 32-0 tally. There was no time during the fray when the overwhelming superiority of the Mountaineers was not firmly established and every one of the local reserves was utilized to a great extent before the game had ended. Tilton Junior College, a newcomer on the Greenies' schedule, proved to be the most deadly foe that the Heffernanmen were called upon to face this year. Although outclasscd in the final analysis, Tilton scored more points against the Green defense than any other aggregation, finally losing 25-lff. Tilton offered its only dangerous opposition in the second quarter when their attack through the air ended in a touchdown, Pigskins filled the skies all during this period, but the booting ability of Novak stifled their offensive to a great extent. YVells and Trop contributed two more touchdowns to the Green Mountain side of the ledger in the late periods to clinch the contest. G. M. C. XVALLOPS VERMONT J. C. Although Chornyak was lost to the Mountaineers for the concluding game of the schedule as thc result of an injury suffered in the first period against Tilton, his loss was not seriously felt. The Green VVave instead rose to new heights by com- pletely submerging a bewildered Vermont Junior College crew under a 40-7 count. VVith the victory, Green Mountain .lunior College completed one of its most impressive football seasons-a season replete with thrills and heady football-one that was second only to the undefeated year marked up in the annals of the school by the classic 1935 aggregation. QSM page 66 for football xeuxurznl racorrlj Heiicrn mn Iiaurcnzo 'Barnard Robinson Benjamin Hill Clements O Brien Norvcll Scoville Maher Pulver Bulkelev Wells XV1lSOI'l Anderson Phillips Prentiss Kana. Hoey l BASKETBALL Garnerin the most brilliant basketball record in Green Mountain court history, Coach Jack Heffernan's powerful Green Galaxy closed its 1936-37 campaign with a seasonal record of eleven victories and two lone defeats. Under HCECFHBIIYS adroit tutelage, one of the most sparkling Green lN'lountain squads of all time emerged from the rank and file of the thirty-odd candidates who checked in at the gymnasium at the beginning of the season. From the substantial dimensions of six-foot five Floridian Shorty Phillips to the diminutive propor- tions of Rabbit Hoey, they comprised a flashing array of hoopsters. YVell versed in every department of basketball legerdemain, in cutting and passing, on offense and defense, in angling the ball off the backboard into the twines from every conceivable position, they formed a veritable galaxy of court luminaries. As the bulwarks of the squad, Capt. Rube Kana, Capt.-elect Dick Prentiss, Rabbit Hoey, Freddie Wilson, Shorty Phillips, Dingle VVells, all contributed to a dazzling brand of basketball. Paced in the scoring column by Phillips' 182 points, the Green and Gold five notched a total of 4479 units as against the 319 chalked up by their adversaries. For three of the first five who donned Green and Gold jerseys, the season's play was their basketball swan song at Green Mountain. The ultra-successful campaign rang out a crashing finale on the efforts of steady, consistent Capt. Rube Kana, flashy, meteor-like Rabbit Hoey, and the blond and brilliant Fred VVilson, as well as a number of their satellites on the A and B squads. Not to he forgotten in the sharing of the victory laurels are the names of Clements, Bulkely, Pulver, Laurenzo, Smithers, Norvell, and the Freshman Squad Maher, O'Brian, Anderson, Kidder, who formed a powerful reserve strength. Only one cloud arose to dim the lustre of the record, and that cloud appeared in the form of a smoothly-powerful Vermont Junior College quintet, which twice fought its way through to victory over the Mountaineers to contribute their two lone defeats. In their other frays the Golden Gladiators were omnipotent as far as victories were concerned. Both contests against their traditional Vermont state rivals, the University of Vermont Freshman squad, ended in lopsided wins for the Green and -PH Gold while they thoroughly tronneed perhaps their bitterest rival, Nichols Junior College in Massachusetts, in the only fracas. Paced by the mammoth Phillips, the Green Galaxy opened its court season with a leisurely conquest over Castleton Normal, 6-L-24. Behind the redoubtable Phillips, who alone garnered enough points to have won the game, the Mountaineers turned the contest into a shambles with a veritable bombardment of counters. Granville Collegiate Center was the second five to fall before the prowess of the Green and Gold, succumbing by a 417-23 tally to the ravages of an offense too fast and too powerful for them to cope with. Against arch rivals U. V. M. Frosh, whom they had defeated in both hotly- coutested thrillers during the previous season, the Mountaineers keep their record clean by swarming over the upstaters to the tune of 24+-16 to annex a third scalp to their victory string. It was with these three victories beneath their belts that the Heffernanmen met their initial defeat at the hands of Vermont Junior College. In a lethargic contest the Capitol City aggregation broke Green Mountain's three-game streak by running up a nine-point lead. As the final whistle blew, they prevailed 241-15. W'ith its potent offense only momentarily damned, the pent-up power of the Green XVavc unleashed itself on the adversaries next to face it, and submerging all who stood in its path, rolled up a consecutive string of eight victories before defeat again resisted its turbulent onslaughts. Undoubtedly one of the most stiiiiy contested fraeases of the series was the Mountaineers' second collision with U. V. M. Frosh. Determined to avenge the defeat handed them by the Greenies only a few weeks before, the Vermonters gave them the fight of their basketball-playing lives during the early sessions before succumbing 32-25. The biggest upset came with Green Mountain's surprising fl-5-23 victory over a highly-touted Nichols Junior College crew. Setting the pace from the outset, the Green lVave was headed at no time, and forging into the van with a 28-10 lead at midtime, vanquished their bitterest opponent by the widest margin of any battle between the two outfits. As far as the final outcome in regard to scores was concerned, the tightest game of the season was the second meeting between the Golden Gladiators and Plattsburgh Normal, in which the locals eked out a bare 38-36 conquest. The final game of the season brought with it Green Mountain's second loss. As in their first defeat, it was before the driving offense and stone wall defense of Vermont Junior College that they faltcred, dropping the fray by a thirteen-point margin. 28-15, without once having snared the lead or spliced the tally. In spite of the duo of losses to that one aggregation, the past season's edition of a Green and Gold court squad will go down in the annals of the school as the most brilliant thus far of all Coach Heifernan's brilliant hoop teams. FROSH FLASH BRAND OF VICTORY BALL In Green Mountain's initial attempt at sponsoring a Freshman basketball squad, the experiment proved highly successful, with the cubs losing but one contest in their six-game schedule. Among their victims were Poultney High School Post Graduate squad, Poultney High School on two occasions, Fairhaven High School and Troy Conference Academy Alumni. The Italian Boys' Club of lvhitehall dished out the juniors' only defeat of the season by a one-point margin, 15-14-. CSM' page 66 for Iuzxlrzftlmll scmroiml recorrlj M-, 1 . G. --,,.l Bouck Ross Eaton Parry Smithers Fish G. Hughes Kana Heffernan Vlfxggms Holman Chornyak Wolinsky MacArthur Wilson Hoey Sweeney Q. Hughes BASEBALL Bingles blasted from the bludgeons of the 1936 Green and Gold baseball edition as it smashed out a seasonal record of 155 runs in its fourteen-game schedule to snare honors in the won and lost columns with ten victories, three defeats, and one lone tie in a fracas that went only four frames. The trio of defeats were well spaced by the conquests chalked up by the Mountaineers, but despite all efforts, the Union College Frosh, Nichols Junior Col- lege and Albany Business College each marked up a win over the valiant Green Horde. With the exception of the U. V. M. Freshmen who had the count knotted at three-all in a fray that was called during the early periods, the remaining outfits to face the Mountaineers were mowed down by the booming bats and airtight defen- sive play of the I-leffernanmen. Wlith Coach Heffernan building an aggregation around the small band of surviv- ing veterans, midaseason found Wilson, Hoey, Ross, Chornyak, and WVilliams vying for the infield postsg Holman, Parry, VVolinskey and 'Wiggins in the outfieldg and MacArthur and Hughes as backstops. Comprising a flashy twirling corps were Eaton, Kana, Fish and Sweeney, who all contributed mightily to Green Mountain's seasonal showing. The Greenies slashed their way to victory in the initial game of the campaign, 9-1, against Albany Pharmacy as Kana and Sweeney alternated on the mound to allow the visitors but two lone base blows. Pacing G. M. Sluggers was diminutive Rabbit Hoey who slapped out a single and tagged one for the circuit in his three trips to the platter. VVith a brace of conquests over Granville Collegiate Center, and with overwhelm- ingly decisive decisions over the University of Vermont Frosh, New York Deisel Institute and the Union College Frosh, the Green Horde had run its string of victories to six before meeting with its first defeat. Three of the more important games during this winning streak were against the U. V. M. Frosh and both battles with Union. lVith their bats cracking out a savage thirteen-hit victory tune, the Green Galaxy handed the Union squad a 9--L T1 loss in their first meeting with the Schenectady outfit. Ace-hurler Eaton of the Green and Gold bowled a sensational four-hit contest. as Chitzi Ross headed tl1e slugging roster with three out of four. On the following week-end the Vermont Fresh fell before those same slaughter- ing bats. 5-1. as Eaton turned in another sensational four-bingle performance from the mound. lllith the second collision with the powerful Union crew came the Mountaineers' first set-back of the season by the lop-sided count of 11-5. In spite of the fact that their :adversaries notched only six well-spaced safeties from the efforts of mounds- men Eaton and Fish. Green and Gold blunders lost the day. Bunehing their counters in three innings. the Dorpians had little to worry them and were headed at no time. Blasting their way to a place on the heavy end of an 11-7 tally against Albany Business College to again enter the victory column, in the very next game the Heffernanmen met their worst route at the hands of Nichols nightmare contest of the year. Loose play typified a contest mound work. a varied assortment of hobbies and blunders, and most complete lapse in knowledge of all baseball fundamentals. innings of play. four pitchers toed the mound and ninety-six Junior College in the replete with mediocre ton both sidesj an al- In the nine lethargic batters strode to the plate. lVhen the final out at last terminated the dull contest, the count stood at 18-12. Recovering almost immediately, the Golden Gladiators fell upon New York Deisel Institute 19-5, shut-out Montpelier Seminary 18-0, faced a tie score against U. V. M. in a game that was cut short in the fourth chukker, ran rampant over the Poultney A. A. 15-7, and in the final contest were nudged out 3-2 by Albany Business College for their third loss. SEASONAL RECORD Green Mountain .. .. 9 Albany Pharmacy .. 1 Green Mountain Union Frosh .............. at Green Mountain Granville Collegiate Center 1 Green Mountain U. V. M. Frosh .............. 1 Green Mountain Granville Collegiate Center .. 0 Green Mountain N. Y. Deisel Institute ..,... .. 10 Green Mountain Union Frosh ............ .. 11 Green Mountain Albany Business College 7 Green Mountain Nichols Junior College .. .. 18 Green Mountain N. Y. Deisel Institute 5 Green Mountain Montpelier Seminary .. .. 0 Green Mountain U. V. M. Frosh ..... .. 'S Green Mountain Poultney A. A. .......... .. 7 Green Mountain Albany Business College .. 3 Green Mountain -1 Totals 71 'Game called in fourth inning. Allen Kuna Scoville Bachman Peters Novak McShane XVillmms Robinson Benjamin Jones Owen Bartholomew French TRACIC Coach Bert Allen's Grecn and Gold trackmen emerged from last season's meets with a record of three victories and one defeat, dropping a 6+-52 decision to Rut- land High School in their initial appearance of the year. In the remaining meets, the lilountaineers vanquished a combined Fairhaven- VVL-st Rutland aggregation 99-19, downed Granville Collegiate Center 45-32, and were on the high end of a 67-50 tally against the University of Vermont Frosh squad in their most important fracas. VVell represented in all departments, Green Mountain lettermen for the sport included Kuna and Vifebster in the sprintsg Bartholomew in the S80 and Jones in the quarter-mile clashesg Robinson as milerg Bachman and Scoville in the hurdle events, pole-vaulters Chornyak and Benjamin, Peters in the weight and javelin contestsg and perhaps the most versatile member of the team, Frank Ross, ace broad-jumper, a menace in the shot-put and victor in the 100-yard dash event against the U. V. M. Frosh. During the 1937 season, track became a major sport at Green Mountain for the first time. New captain was unanimously chosen Fred Peters, weight man. Green Mountain ................ 52 Rutland High ....................... .. 64 Green Mountain . . . . . 99 Fair Haven-West Rutland . . . . . 19 Green Mountain . .. 45 Granville Collegiate ........ . . 32 Green Mountain ..............,. 67 U. V. M. Frosh ............................. 50 Erfitor's Note. Since the track, tennis, and baseball seasons commence after the Pr-:Arcs has gone to press, last year's season is reviewed and prospects for this year's teams given. INTRA-MURAL BASKETBALL Intra-mural basketball eansed the most excitement for Moses Hall since intra- mural football. Competition was close between the Berry League, the Gooseberries, Raspberries. liilderberrics, and Cranberries, and the Nut League, the Do-Nuts, Peanuts, Chestnuts. and Bntternuts. Emerging from dither of games, the Goosebcrries and Peanuts clashed for the finals and after a elose battle. the Gooseberrics were defeated. Although their brand of basketball was better. they lacked the man-power to offset the strong Peanut team eaptained by Gus Sehimke. The captain of the Goosebcrries, Charlie Barnard, was presented with a basketball since his team was runner-up. The two highest scorers were Pnlver, with forty-two points, and Maher, with forty points. BO XVLING In late January, the Recreation Room was reconditioned and put under manager- ship of Roland Gifford. Robert Anderson and VVallace Benson and bowling soon became increasingly popular among both the men and women. A nominal sum was charged to provide pin-boys and the enthusiastic keglers rolled 'em and bowled 'em day and night. Even the women faculty organized a team and used the alleys one night a week. Both regulation-size pins as well as duck-pins were victimized. During February and March a bowling tournament was held with six teams contesting. Competition was keen and the Recreation Room echoed strikes and spares every Tuesday and Vtlednesday night when the teams met for battle. Capt. Ralph Norvell and his Old Gold team came through with the championship in mid- March. Members of the winning team were Norvell, Mandrona, Barnard and Sehimkc. Each received a bronze medal as recognition of their skill. Each team bowled two stringsg one point was given to the winner of each game and one point was given to the team winning the total of the two games. The tournament record follows: Team f'aplnIn Tofu! Points Total Pins Old Golds .... .... I t. Norvell .... .... 1 4- -I-980 Wings ...... .... . I. M eCuen .... S 44653 Winners ...... .... B 1. Murray . . 7 4-683 Chesterfielcls . . .... R. Frost .... 7 .. . . Lnekies ..... . . . D. Crounse .... 7 . . . . Camels ..,. .... A . Clements . . . 2 PCD OL At the same time that the bowling alleys were reconditioned, the pool tables in the Recreation Room were recushioned, new balls were purchased, a bridge supplied, etc.. and students played for a reasonable charge. During the month of March a pool tournament was held under the direction of Bob Anderson and eventually Slim Norcross and Earl Dunekel paired off for the final. After a tense but decisive match, Slim, the under-dog, emerged the champion of Green Mountain with 100 points to Dunckel's 844. Fifty points were game in the preliminaries, in which Prentiss, Tobin, Frost, Eiehhorn, Mandrona. D. Kidder, J. McCuen, Maher and I.. Phillips played, but the final was a 100-point game. TENNIS Last spring our tennis team, Paul and Bill Sunderland, Red Pelling, Doc Clough and Johnny Northrup, had a successful season, winning every game but one. They defeated Castleton, U. V. M. Frosh, and Granville but bowed to Rutland. For the first time in Green Mountain's history, tennis will be considered a major sport this year. Several matches are being arranged and Prof. Jolm N. Alley will coach the teams. Despite the fact that there are no veterans of last season, Alley has some promising players. Among them are Bob Tittemore, Burlington flash who was No. 1 in the doubles in Vermont State competition, his brother, Gardy, Earl Dunekel, Stan Collin, VValt Benjamin, Don Crounse and Jim Flanagan. Green Green Green Green Green Green Green Green Green Green Green Green Green T Green Green Green Green Green Green , 1. Green Green Green Green Green Green Green Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain otals Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain otals Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain Mountain BASKETBALL . . . ........... 64' . -L7 SEASONAL RECORDS Castleton Normal ............ Granville Collegiate Center ..... .. .. 24- University Vermont Freshmen . . 15 Vermont Junior College ........ . . .. 4-0 Mt. St. Joseph Alumni ...... . Q9 Albany Business College 25 Plattsburgh Normal ....... .. 51 Granville Collegiate Center .. . at Castleton Normal .......... .. 32 U. V. M. Frosh ........ . . . . . 415 Nichols Junior College . . . . . 38 Plattsburgh Normal ...... . . . 15 Vermont Junior College . . . -l-79 FRES1-IBIAN RECORD . :21 Poultney High School P. G... . 29 Poultney High School ........ . 33 Fairhaven High School .... . 32 Poultney High School . :20 T. C. A. Alunmi ...... . . . 14- Italian Boys' Club . . . 1119 FOOTBALL SEASONAL RECORD 7 Clark .................. . 37 Norwich Frosh . ........ . 8 Nichols Junior College .... .. 12 U. V. M. Frosh ........ . . 32 Manlius ................ . 25 Tilton .................... . 40 Vermont Junior College 161 Q4 Q3 16 24- 98 20 19 25 30 25 23 30 78 321 11 14- 14- 14- 12 15 80 12 0 fi 0 0 1 -if 7 39 . Q ,LQ-A 42 O wwf' C734 fha'-rf KN cor-15 ON Ho N Wh Wf 'ff aim' ix V 'I - 1 O Y 'Rf uhm I lilll I 4-Q, C, .0 47620 994 f :ff mg Q I sf ,H 1: x 'A ,r ,S 5- L ,I H I I, ijt' fl' 7 1' HN S SVN L 9' 3 my 7 .QV I 'Q I, NE g M 3 ' ii ' ,fp E ll ' fn 'J I- 1,. Y iff , -,ff T' M Xu' ' Q ..,. g fp -l-,oajx CAMPUS ACTIVITIES Abel Kingslev Law renee Scoville Gifford VValdron Frost Owen Pulver Hill McCuen Nelson Deyette Smithers Andrews Bartholomew Thornton W Illxams Reach Cowles Morse Murray Merritt Sherburne Swensen Belcling VVh1te Doton Fitzsimmons Moerchen Cromwell Hanes Briggs Jones Jenks Isham PEAIC5 STAFF Editor-in,-Chief . . . Managing Editor . . Business Manager .... Advertising lllanager . . . Art Editors .. Sporis Editor . . . Hzznzor Editor . . Class Editors ... Club Editor . . . Society Editors .. Literary Editors . . . Alumni Editor . . Snapshot Editors . . . Correspondent Editor .. Frosh Editors ...... 1936-3: . . . . .ROLAND GIFFORD ELIZABETH SIIERBURNE . . . . .VVENDELL NELSON . . . .DAVID DEYETTE S RIORRIS HILL U 2VVILL1AM OWEN ...EARL DUNCKEL . . . . . . . .ROBERT FROST S RUTH MOEIICI-IEN ' ' ZBERTRAND ANDREWVS . . .RICHARD IIAWVRENCE SANNE SWVENSEN ' ' ' ZJOI-IN WALDRDN SALISON BELDING H ' ' 2 ALLAN SKIFF i.ARLENE FITZSIMMONS SRIARJORIE COWVLES ' ' 2 DOLTGLASS ABEL . . . . .JEANETTE HANES S ELlZABETIi BOGUE ' ' ROBERT CIIESHIRE l I Vim Hook Abel Shangraw Waldron Phillips Owen Mellen Kelleway Saxton Dillenbeck Miller Andrews Frost Williams J. Lincoln Murdock Mandi-ona Peterson Shew Scott Xvinzenburger Carle Hallway Kidder SCIENCE CLUB Ojicers President ...... ........ . . .BERTRAND J. ANDREWS Vice-President . . . . . .EMMETT F. KELLEYVAY Secretary .... . .... ELIZABETH B. SHEW Treasurer ........... C. DOUGLAS ABELL f PROFESSOR SCOTT Advisors .. 1 Pnoresson SHATTUCK lPnoFEssoR XVINZENBURGER Purpose 1. To provide unity and cooperation of the students and faculty members who are interested in any form of science. 2. To provide a satisfactory means of carrying on inter-relations between the different sciences. Activities The activities of the Science Club's program consisted of the local unit's affiliation with The Students' Science Club of America, the sponsoring of lectures and demon- strations, and the organization of scientific Held trips. The Club has the distinction of being the first chartered science club in Vermont. file mbe rs Abel, Andrews, Ballway, Brewster, Carle, Dillenbeck, Hodgeman, Kelleway, Kidder, King, Mandrona, Mellen, Miller, Moerchen, Murdock, Peters, Peterson, Phillips, Saxton, Shangraw. Shew, Tittemore. K, UNA 'Yq4. 9 Hil Kingsley Scoville Dow Hafner Beaman Pulver A ,, 1 ln 'luttle Crounse Moerchen Rclyea Blunclell Peterson Saxton Humplfi-cpu yn H Be 1ch Tufts Smithers Dean A. Bogue E. Bogue Murdock QM MUSIC CLUB Ojicers President . . . ....... . . .STANLEY H. SMITHERS Secretary ......... LIARY E. BOGUE Advisor . . . ......... . . . Prior. RACHEL E. DEAN Purpose To give every member a broader and more intelligent understanding and appre- ciation of music through the study of the background of famous compositions and by listening to good music. Activities One of the brightest higlilights of the club's activities was a three-day trip to New York City in order that the eighteen members who went might see the operas, Aida., at the Metropolitan and Rigoletto at the Hippodrome. Aside from seeing Elizabeth Rethbcrg, Norman Gordon and Richard Bonelli act in Aida., the club members visited Music Hall in Radio City and St. Patrick's Cathedral. Yon Pietro, famous organist, plays here. Some of the group heard Doctor Fosdick at the River- side Church on Sunday morning. In January thc Club sponsored the Jack Frost Frolic, which was held in the gym, transformed by bales and bales of imitation icicles which formed a glistening canopy over the entire floor. Reggie Sweet's Rhythm Boys presided and the affair was termed one of the best of the year. In early spring the Club sponsored a recital by two alumni students, Dorothy Larkin and Helen Yelton. Miss Larkin skillfully played several classical numbers at the piano and Miss Yelton, soprano., sang a variety of classical compositions. lllembers Barlett, Beach, Bcaman, Blundell, Bogue, Brewster, Burt, Campbell, Cook, Crounse, Dow, Hafner, Dibble, Hill, Humphrey, Kingsley, Moerchen, Murdock, Peterson, Pulver, Relyea, Roberts, Saxton, Scarborough, Schunerman, Scoville, Smithers, Tufts, Tuttle, lVallace. .?, + ft 'i Broome Smithers Dow Qcoville Hafner Gifford Waldron Ahokas Kingsley Saxton I-Iill Van Hook Beama Blundell Tritch Managun Frost Prentiss Schloop Morse Hum ph rcy Tuttle Shew Bogue Murdock Peterson Moerchen Tufts Beach CHOIR AND GLEE CLUB CHOIR Purpose To study the list of sacred and secular music and to foster an appreciation of good musical literature well rendered at the college and in the community. Peak of rlctivitics Special music has been supplied for several college services. The Lenten Cantata At the Cross by Protheroe was presented in chapel. A program is to be rendered by the choir at the May Festival of Music. I GLEE CLUB The repertoire of thc Club this year has included sacred as well as secular num- bers, and the Spring Concert of the Festival of Music and the chapel programs have been thc chief projects of the organization. ff Richardson Deyette Scoville Crounse Horning Stevens Emerson Lien Phillips Murdock Conductor . . . . . .Miss IPIGYR BIARIE LIEN Purpose To provide an opportunity for the enjoyment of ensemble playing and to acquire and intimate acquaintance with the finest music through performance. Activities The college orchestra presented several enjoyable chapel concerts during the course of the year. Each subsequent program showed marked improvement both in musical technic and artistic rendition on the part of the group. The conductor, Miss Lien also gave a series of worthwhile talks to the student body on the subject of the origin and history of orchestral instruments. M em bers Abel, Crounse, Deyette, Emerson, Fox, Horning, Keppel, Morris, Murdock, J. Phillips, L. Phillips, Pulver, Richardson, B. Roberts, L. Roberts, Scoville, Simpson, Stevens. M7439 Marland Norvell Prentiss Griflith Bogue Shcrburne Cromwell GREEN NIQUNTAIN PLAYERS Ojficers President ....... ........... ...... It I Any E. BOGUE Vzcc-President . . . ........ .... R ALPH T. NORVELL Secretary .... .... R OBERT T. NIARLAND Treasurer .... ...... R ICHARD B. PRENTISS Advisor .... ............ L Iiss MAmoN L. Gmrrrru Purpose To not only give social times to members but also to give an appreciation of theatre, both on and back stage, by studying playwrights and plays, and most of all by producing cuts and skits from recognized productions. Activities One of the peaks of the club's activities was presentation of Shakespeare Night in the chapel by several members of the Thespian group. Taming of the Shrew, the mad scene from Hamlet, the drinking scene from Henry IV, the courtroom scene from Merchant of Venice, and the balcony scene from Romeo and Juliet were among the cuts given. A unique feature of the meetings was the study of drama through the play- wrights. Cut were used from four of Henry IbSCll,S plays, Hedda Gabler, Doll's House. WVild Duck and Ghosts, In addition, reports have been made on current plays as Two Hamlets, Idiots' Delight, Taming of the Shrew, and You Can't Take It With You. The Club also made a study of make-up. The Players climaked their activities on May 14- with the presentation of Three Live Ghosts by Isham. A three-act comedy with an English setting, the play was given on the Poultney High School stage and was directed by Miss Griffith, dramatic coach. Members Anderson, Bainton, Barr, Bartlett, Beckett, Blondell, Bogue, Broome, Campbell, Clements, Cook, Cromwell, Crounse, Curtis, DeBaum, Dibble, Durkee, Fox, Gardyne, Greene, Hafner, Hill, Lee, Lincoln, hlarland, McCammon, Moerchen, ltlungall, Murdock, Murray, Nelson, Norvell Ottman, Peterson, Prentiss, Rice, Richards, Richardson, Rising, Salmonsen, Scarborough, Schuneman, Scoville, Sherburne, Shew, Smithers, Stoddard, Sullivan, Videto, VVhite. 0-Ufcers J Aclvisov' .. PROF. KENNETI-I B. Homns Holmes Gifford Videto Moerchen Doton Emerson INTERNATIQNAL RELATIONS CLUB Purpose 1. To cooperate with the authorities of Green Mountain Junior College in striving to afford to the students of this institution every opportunity possible for impartial enlightenment upon national and international issues of our time. 2. To align Green Mountain Junior College with other educational institutions which have a sincere interest in international affairs and problems. Activities The pinnacle of the International Relations Club's activities during the present year was reached on hlay 7 and 8 when the organization sponsored a Model League of Nations Conference in which more than one hundred delegates from New York and Vermont high schools participated. Throughout the school year the Club has held bi-weekly meetings to discuss current international problems and to study situations in foreign countries. Four Green Mountain delegates attended the Regional International Relations Conference in VVorcester, Massachusetts, in December. In March, nine representa- tives of the local club went to Radcliffe and Harvard where they participated in a Model League of Nations Conference along with 350 representatives of thirty-five other colleges. At the Model League, the Club represented Venezuela. Mevnbers Blundell, Brownell, Coffin, Cook, Cowles, Cromwell, Doton, Emerson, Gifford, Greene, Hafner, Hanes, Lawrence, ltianagun, lNIcKirryher, ltloerchen, Norvell, Ott- man, Randall, Schloop, Videto, VVl1ite. ' President .,.... . . .ROLAND E. GIF1 onn Vice-1 resident ..... . .Tnnooomc H. Y 1oE'ro Secretary . .. .......... RUTH E. Ermnsow Corresponding Sec1'etary..RUTH MOERLHEN fl'-reasurer .. ........... EJAIZABETH DoTov Officers '- UQ IIT7'-S'i!1f'1lf ..... . . .EDWARD J. S1-:NNETT I,iC!'-1J7'?8idf'7lf ..... ..lhlICIIAEL CHORNYAK Sr'cr1'ta1'y-Trvaszirer . . . . .MEREDITH PARRY A11-visor ...... Coavn JACK M. HEI-'ITEIINAN Sennett Parry Wilson Minogue Hoey Chornyak VARSITY CLUB Purpose 1. To encourage good sportsmanship. 2. To provide an organization of all athletic letter men which will sponsor ac- tivities associated with Green Mountain athletics. Activities The major event of the year sponsored by the Varsity Club was the annual smoker held on March 20. The program was a versatile one and besides including a variety exhibition of athletic prowess, it consisted of both round and square dancing to the music of The Quintsf' Another unique feature if this yearis smoker was an athletic auction. At this time G. M.'s discarded athletic equipment was put on the auction block and was eagerly sought by both faculty and students. The resulting clinking in the athletic coffers was a welcome sound, because it meant that it would be possible to finance Green Mountain tennis as a varsity sport. Menzbers Anderson, Bartholomew, Benjamin, Benson, Brock, Broome, Bulkeley, Chornyak, Clements, Dimichele, Dunckel, Hill, Hoey, Kana, Laurenzo, Little, ltlanning, Merrill. Minogue, Murray, Nelson, O'Brian, Parry, Perry, Peters, J. Phillips, L. Phillips, Prentiss. Pulver, Robinson, Rowlands, Sanford, Schimke, Scoville, Sennett, Smithers, Tobin, Trop, VVells, Vililson. Kelleway Waldron Parry Gifford Sennett Hill Cowles Swann Belding Ansteensen WVilliams Pl-ll THETA KAPPA Oyficers President ...... ....... . . .ALISON M. BELDING Vice-President . . . .... Mnnnmfru PARRY Secretary ...... ........ lN Ionms C. IIILL Treasurer ....,.. ...... R Ussnu. I. WVILLIAMS Council Nlember . . . ......... ROLAND E. GIFFORD Admsor ..... . . . . .... Pnor. REGINALD L. SWVANN Purpose To promote scholarship, character, and fellowship. Activities The Gamma Delta chapter of Phi Theta Kappa is the local unit of the national scholastic honor society for junior colleges. The requisites for membership are: Students regularly enrolled in college division of junior college, and who have completed at least one term or semester in the college division. Shall carry fifteen hours per week, twelve of which must be in Arts and Sciences. Must be of good moral character, must be within 10 percent of the regularly enrolled student body of the college. Eligibility shall be based on the average of all college work division previous to the election. Members Anstcensen, Belding, Bogue, Beckwith, Coffin, Cook, Cowles, Dibble, Gifford, Greene, Hill, Kelleway, McCuen, Miller, Parry, Schloop, Sennett, Shew. Tufts, VValdron, R. YVilliams. J Greene Blundell Mandrona Sherburne Svendsen .5 Q Mongol Schuneman Stevens Perry Truscott Moerchen Yr. Ojicers President ........., ....... .... , . . .SYLVIA SVENDSEN Secretary-Treasurer .. .... ELIZABETH SHERBURNE Advisor .......... .... B -Iiss MIRIAM PERRY Purpose To learn more about pencil, water color, and oil drawing and the practical ap- plication of these mediums. Activities The peak of activity was an exhibition in February of fifty paintings the students of the Club themselves. Over two hundred attended the exhibition held in the Home Economics Room and the Surrealist section much attention. 'lovers' Quarreln was considered the favorite by those done by two-day received who at- tended and the entire affair was considered so successful that a May exhibition was planned. Considerable fun accompanied artistic efforts. Once the group attempted to paint a sunset and delayed so long that they were enveloped in darkness before they were ready to begin the scene. At another time some of the Club stood waist high in snow banks with the temperature 4100 below zero while they painted Ames Hall In VVinter. Members Blundell, Dibble, Greene, Mandrona, Moerchen, Ransom, Sherburne, Svendson. Truscott. ' 'ls 'H PR ESS CLUB Ofcers President .. ........ .... R Ioams C. HILL Co-Editors . . .,.. MORRIS C' HILL RICHARD PRENTISS Advisor? SRIISS RUTH ROWVLAND ' ' ' IMR. Joi-IN M. ALLEY Purpose To give the students a school publication. Activities The peak of the Press Club's activities was the publication of the Green Mozivt- taineer and a Valentine Formal dance sponsored by the Club. Memlners Benson, Blundell, Broome, Coffin, Cook, Cromwell, Dunkel, Fox, Hill, Keppel, Mandrona, McKirryher, Moerchen, Norcross., Peterson, Prentiss, Rice, Rising, Stymeist, Sullivan, Thornton, lVilson. QUTING CLUB Ojficerrs President ..... . ...... . . .... . . .FRED H. PETERS Vice-President .......... BETTY L. RIORSE Secretary ...... . , . .SOLVEIG E. ANSTEENSEN Treasurer .... ..... D ONALD G. SCI-IIMKE Advisor .... . . ..,. Prior. .Toi-IN M. ALLEY Purpose To sponsor and encourage outdoor activities that are not provided for by the Athletic Association. Activities The club has encouraged the students of Green Mountain to engage in general out-of-door activities such as hiking, mountain climbing, skiing, skating and snow- shoeing. Due to the unusual climatic conditions during the past winter, however, the club was not able to carry out its extensive winter sports program. NI embers Abell, Andrews, Ansteensen, Bartholomew, Bartlett, Brown, Cheshire, Cromwell, Cubit, Eddy, Hafner, King, Lincoln, McCuen, Meade, Moerchen, Morse, H. Mur- dock, WV. Murdock, Nelson, Peters, Richardson, Schimke, Sherburne, Shew, Sweezey, Tittemore, Tobin, lVhite. if O SEEING IS BELIEVING l . D I X X N xx A ..t-3fl' - A .. .-- GM-JC WP CAN YOU lb IAGINE hir. Swann enjoying himself tap-dancing? Solveig Ansteensen giving a compliment? Baschie without an answer? Alison Belding enjoying herself? Grace Cambell without a smile? Gus Shimke as a toe dancer? Mr. Scott without his nose under a bed? Dick Lawrence slamming his door in Professor Alley's face? Bob Drew sitting still? Gordon Kingsley without his ball and chain? Roland Gifford with a date? Mr. Foss swearing violently? Ruth Moerchen not asking favors? Ed Sennett as a mental hitch-hiker? Earl Dunckel with nothing to say? Mr. Alley talking like Floyd Gibbons? Betty Morse acting her age? Mike Chornyak playing bridge? Miss Lien playing with Cab Calloway? Marcia Billings late for breakfast? Rod Scoville walking a tight-rope? Tony Kaiser dating Baschie? Marjorie Cowles without her camera? Miss Dean not being afraid? Bill Owen able to take it ?,' Emmy Kelleway lucky in love? Marion Spaulding without Russ? Elizabeth Doton being bold? Miss Lewis singing her favorite song In the Chapel in the Moonlight? Betty Tuttle singing a blues song? Florence Briggs beinglotfensive? Miss Rowland not envied by Ames and College Halls? Ann Swensen without a publicity stunt or fishing for suckers? Miss Ellithorp without digressing and with no grist for the mill ? Miss Clapp with blonde hair? Jennette Hanes without the latest scandal? Russ Willizims doing anything naughty? Mr. Shattuck without a joke? Susan Stoddard doing a swan dive? Maurice Hill fighting? Mr. VVinzenburger being a slacker? Mrs. Rowell not performing her duties conscientiously? Bert Andrews not being a good sport? Angelo LaBate without a cheery greeting? .lack Phillips doing anything worth while? John Minogue belonging to the Ladies Aid Society? Allen Skiii' as a bartender? Paul Roth writing a minimum length term report? Bert Vl'hite not with Greg? Beouesffs Bert Analrews leaves lVinnic Bainton to Truman Fuller. Bart leaves his bowed legs to Ruth Ants-in-Pants Beckett. Baschie leaves her reserved seat at Potter's to any three other girls that want it. Alison Belding leaves her air of sophistication to Monk Beckett. Benny Benjamin leaves his derelict car to Buck Jones' junk yard. Flora-r1.ce Briggs leaves for an extended tour of Poultney and llliddletown. Grace Campbell leaves her buxom figure to Mike Harrison. Eleanor Cromwell leaves her inferiority complex to Janet Mungall. Dave Deyette leaves his beard to Pussy Cheshire. Earl Dzmclcel leaves his soap box oratory to Red Burt. Bob Frost leaves a dead Social Committee. Roland Gifford leaves the Times to Slim Norcross. He seems to have time on his hands. Chris Hill leaves his excessive length to Shorty Phillips. Esther Isham leaves for Benson to complete her education. Doc Kelleroay leaves a nickel of which the interest is to be used for scholarships. Red Lawrence leaves his mark on G. M. walls of fame. Helen Merritt leaves her shadow', to Shucks Murdock. Ruflz, Moffrclzeri leaves for a swim in Crystal Lake. Betty lllorse leaves a mail man. illnrshall llfurraty leaves his voice to the fish peddlers. lfVen1ly Nelson. leaves his nose to the Dramatic Club as a ll'hite Elephant to be used in impersonations of Jimmy Durante. Bill Owen leaves his conceit to Tar-Babyn Prentiss. Balm Pulver leaves his hot trumpet to Don Crounsc. 13011 Scoville leaves his bass voice to Bob- Managan. Betty Slxerbzzrvze leaves with George Allen. Stan. Smitliers leaves his all around ability to Gus Schimke. .-111.1111 S-zcensen leaves her deftness of exhibitionism to Esther Chaffee. Elizabeth Tuttle leaves hcr voice to Lloyd Schloop. Jack W'al1lro11, leaves to Dick Prentiss his popularity with the sincere hope that he will overcome his dark handicap. Slmzlorc' Schimke leaves to Al Clements a little of his surplus so that Al may climb to greater heights Jokes Judge fto couplej: Caught on a park bench, eh? Wlhat are your names He: Ben Petten. She: Anne Howe. 1 Bob Anderson: I want to know how long girls should be courted? Earl Dunckelz- The same as short ones. 1 Father ltlurray: lVhen I was a young man girls knew how to blush. Ruthie: lvhat was it you used to say to them? 1 Marion Spaulding Cfollowing rapid-fire dictationj: Now Miss Clapp, what ic you say between Dear Sir and Sincerely yours'? 1 Professor 'winzenburgerx Now, Jack, if I lay three eggs and five eggs here how many eggs will I have? Jack VVuldron: I don't believe you can do it, Prof. 1 Betty Bogue: I wish I had talent: I'm just itching to write. lVally Benson: lvell, why don't you sit down and try scratching a little 1 Dean Akerstrom: Congdon, you can't sleep in my class. Doc.: I guess you're right, Dean, but I could if you clidn't talk so loud 1 Jim Lincoln: Pop, if you give me live bucks I'll tell you what the iceman said to Mom. Pop Call excitedj: O.K., Jim, here's your five. Jim: He said, Do you want any ice today, lady F 7 Moon: I don't like riding with you. You're too darned reckless. Bob: That's right. lVe've had some pretty tight squeezes, haven't we? Said the dean: Sir, the penalty for the first offense is 50 cents, for the second 82.50, for the third 385, and so on up to 315. In solemn tones the trespasser inquired: How much would a season ticket cost? 1 At a certain college in the northwest of New England the male students were not permitted to visit the resident lady boarders. One day a student was caught in the act of doing so and was court-nlartialed. 1 To spite Mamie, his girl friend, Leo married her mother, making Mamie his daughter. However Leo's old man married Mamie and then Leo's daughter became his motherg his father became his son-in-lawg his wife was his grandmother. Sud- denly Leo awoke to the fact that he was his own grandfather and now he wants to know what relation his new born son is to the offspring daughter of Mamie and his old man. PUTTING THINGS IN THEIR PLACES An adult-One who has stopped growing except in the middle. A bachelor-A man who has lost the opportunity of making some woman miser- able. College-bred--A four-year loaf, made with father's dough. Committee-A group of men who keep minutes and waste hours. Darwin-The man who made a monkey out of Adam. Echo-The only thing that ever cheated a woman out of the last word. Eskimos-God's frozen people. Gossiping-A keen sense of rumor. Hash-The substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things which have been. Home-The place where you are treated best and grumble the most. Light housekeeping-One canned thing after another. Matrimonial bureau-A bureau with a lot of drawers jammed full of a woman's clothes and one u1an's necktie. Pedestrian-A man who has two cars, a wife and a daughter. Platinum blonde-One who dyed by her own hand. Relatives-Inherited critics. Spinal column-A thing where your head sits on one end and you sit on the other. Vegetable soup-Liquid hash. -Ex-Gov. POLLARD. N :. '- '- ' . w A 1 M ,. , ' . - ', I J Q I -wif I ., J, If A . lv I i 5- ' If 4 ,. ff! 'X ' ff I-1 ' , X ,ff ,fix I 1, i . ' f- Q ,' .-Z,-E .F -1 ' X ' f f 1 ,h xt zz ' Gm ' N A I The fnseparabfe Coupfe 4 peach of 0 pair flame Beach ana' Gordon Mhgsfey fsfher fsham om1'!fowerJ Borfbafamew 7 N '14 bafb 177 5risfo L 5 farrlhy Heh: Mfffliff fren af Me Gqe of X8 monfhs A1111 .5-WIIISOII was H ge e 51 1, Hal' cherubfb expressfkm o'oe5f17 foo! us 1113 Rofofzrf Gsffforrf 5 54 ve DA! We auf fgfih ourf ff'fk fY 'Q' W 'f',4mf We 0 3 me cafe fffffe meer? WIS 0'1- 'flbfze offmr ffmn 07'ffe Jbckie Mifirafg our cfciss presiafenf 3135:-x '53 I .ll A - X2 'vi '13-A .Q ' ' ', H Zi F1 - b ' 'xi it P I A A N Why Wendy f1!el5on! , fire human dynamo fffeer Rafi Mzrrey 13 f'77fA'fWf fhli IS Lgerfy Morse mare 199411 a secrefery effzrl Demckef CLASS FEATURES GREEN MOUNTAIN XVHCT5 XVHCD Mosr POPULAR: I,Az1EsT: MOST AIEL-ROIVNDZ BEST IAOOKINGZ DONE MOST ron G. M MOST PEP! BEs'r ATHLETE: MOST CoNrfE1TED: MOST APT T0 SUCCEED MOST SOPI-IISTICATED: BEST DANCER: MOST Beams: SMOOTHEST LINE: MOST SARCASTIC: FAVORITE INSTRUCTOR : Boy Jack lValdrOn Vllendy Nelson George Dillenbeck Stan Smithers Edward Sennett Rodney Scoville Bert Andrews Jolm Minogue Dick Lawrence Roland Gifford Howard Bartholomew Ned Hoey Rube Kuna Ned Hoey Bob Frost Earl Dunckel Roland Gifford Edward Sennett Gordon Kingsley Tony Kaiser Bob Frost Jack Waldron Edward Sennett Meredith Parry Tony Kaiser Earl Dunckel Bob Frost John McCuen h Professor Shattuck Coach Heffernan Girl Ruth M'urray Alison Belding Marion Basch Barbara Jenks Ruth Murray Betty Morse Ruth Nlurray Eleanor Cromwell Ruth Moerchen Betty Morse Betty Morse Esther Isham Betty Morse Ruth Murray Anne Swensen Marion Basch Alison Belding Ruth Murray Alison Belding Marleta Jones Ruth Murray Anne Swensen Sara VVilliams Alison Belding Anne Swensen Alison Belding Bfarion Basch Anne Swensen Miss Ellithorp Miss Rowland OUR PAST Wle, the prospective class of 1937 arrived in the fall of 1935. VVC, afraid, were respectfully humble to the lorded Sophomores, but they, not satisfied, exercised their inherent power by subjecting us to a Hell VVeek. This, although not actually torturous, continually humiliated us. lVe were forced to appear in freakish costumes, to cat onions to the weeping point, to recite inane verses, and to obey willingly all their commands. Soon we emerged to find that we were to function as an important part of the student body. Election of class officers took place. Those honored were: President, Gordon Kingsley, vice-president, Bertrand Andrews, secretary, Ruth Murray, and treasurer, Roland Gifford. The Class Advisor was Miss Ellithrop. Several athletes became history makers, and some scholars were elected to Phi Theta Kappa. The Freshmen elected to the Men's Student Council were Roland Gifford and Richard Lawrence. Those clccted to the VVomen's Council were Elaine Beach and Betty Carr. The Social Committee sponsored two events-a rather unsuccessful informal dance in February and a vcry enjoyable promenade which took place soon after the spring recess. The decorations were green and white, the orchestra, Cleve Fyles of Rochester, Vt. . Higrliliglits during the year were a winter snow carnival, Communism Day, several formal dinners and dances, many informal and basketball dances, and a May 'Day celebration. Most of the class left school immediately after comprehensives but some stayed for the President's Ball and the Graduation ceremonies. Upon arriving in the fall of '36, we found our prestige heightened, our ranks slightly depleted, and ourselves well out-numbered by throngs of Freshmen. However, we held our own in the initiation, better known as Hell Yveek. Yet the Frosh won the Hag rush and the tug-of-war. Once again class ofiiccrs were elected and Jack VValdron was elected president, Russell iVilliams, vice-president, Ruth Murray, secretary, and Edward Sennctt, treasurer. Miss Ellithorp was again chosen Class Advisor. Sophomores elected to the Men's Council were Richard Lawrence, .lack Vlaldron, and Bertrand Andrews. Bertha lVhite, Alison Belding, and Esther Isham were elected to the YVomen's Council. In the fall an informal dance was held for the class and in the spring, April 9, the Sophomore formal-the most elaborate and enjoyable dance yet sponsored at Green Mountain-climaxed the class activities. Square-dancing and Boy-Ask-Girl dances were popular in early spring while the year book, term papers and play rehearsals constituted a menance to good times. Anticipating May Day, comprehensive examinations, two or three informal dances and one formal, the Baccalaureate program, Sunday, June 6, and Commencement, June 7, at which Bishop Francis J. McConnell is scheduled to speak, we bring our past down to date, confident that some of our readers will remember that there was a class of 1936-37. Class Scribe-M. A. B. PERSONALS Poultney, Vt., May 20, 1950. GENPIY'A, Swl'rzi:RLAND.-Miss Bertha YVhite was the recipient of a beautiful cup for winning first place in the skiing contest held today. She attributes her success to the training given her by instructor Fred Peters while at G. M. College in Vermont. NEW Yonx CI'I'Y.LBIT. Rodney Scoville and his illustrious wife were seen last night sitting in the front row of Madison Square Garden viewing the performance of Sonje Henie. CAMBRIDGE, N. Y.-Mr. Roland Gifford of this town has just been appointed circulation manager of the New York Times. He received this position because of his record distribution of this paper while in college. PODUNK, N. Y.-The great new bridge spanning the Podunk River sank into the water last night. The engineer, Mr. Robert Frost attributes the mistake in calculation to flustering by his secretary, Miss Eleanor Cromwell, who incidentally is more than a secretary. PODUNK, N. Y.-The tragedy of the falling bridge will undoubtedly ruin the political career of Mr. Earl Dunckel, mayor of this town, as he appointed this engineer. Bos'roN, Mass.---Miss Anne Swensen made her stage premier as a dancer last night on the stage of the Shubert Theater. The most notable dance was the Swan Sweepn in the Gloon1light. N. Y. C.-The Happy Home for YVanderlings experienced a treat today when their benefactor, Miss Ruth Moerchen, took the children for an outing in Central Park. POULTNEY, VT.-Green Mountain Junior College has just experienced its seventh annual strike because of alleged persecution of some of the boys by Professor Hill, the house father of Moses Hall. They are said to have acted in a kindergartenish fashion. GLOVERSVILLE, N. Y.-Mr. Anthony Kaiser is having slight trouble defending himself in a lawsuit for selling a size -1-2 suit to the 38 size John McCuen of Syracuse. PORTLAND, ME.-The former Miss Ann Bartlett has just returned from a six month trek in Europe with her name changed to Baroness Von Hoffnitz. PoUL'rNr:Y, VT.-Mr. Howard Bartholomew, '37, alumnus of Gu M. C. refereed a basketball game at this school Tuesday night. His son, Junior, played in the game and his daughter was cheerleading for the Gold and Green. Mr. Bartholomew is the coach at Middlebury College. N0'1'ICE.1lhI0IlSiCll1' Lui Luigi is changing the residence of his Salon from Schenectady to Buffalo where he will start business on a palatial scale under the name of Salon De la Durkee. His specialty is personality bobs for men, a new field in barbering. Booths for ladies. RU'1'LAND, VT.--In spite of the secrecy with which the two leading dentists of Rutland, Doctors Abel and Kellaway tried to have their long and painful sit down session in the latter's office, the truth outed. Evidently they exchanged services as they both emerged toothless. N. Y. C.-Xvho is this lone figure who appears every day at 6 A.M. on top of the Empire State Building-moistened finger to the breeze? Preston Torrey, weather expert. ALBANY, N. Y.-At last the problem of perpetual motion has been solved. hir. Russell Williams, already an eminent engineer who has been laboring in his experi- mental laboratory for five years has worked out a theory, infallible so far, that will revolutionize industry. PoL'L'rNi-:Y, VT.-Mrs. Russell lVilliams, the former Marion Spaulding of Poultney, has left her town where she will join her husband in Albany now that he has emerged from his laboratory a fam.ed man. TROY, N. Y.-A new English text is on the bookstands. A concise new treatment of grammar. Its name is A Background in English by Grace Campbell, a professor of English at Mt. Holyoke College. RUTLANU, VT.-Miss Marcia Billings who is a missionary in Tokyo is on fur- lough at her home in Vermont. ALBANY, N. Y.-Lainie and Gordic, the twins of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Kingsley, have left to pursue their further education at Green Mountain Junior College. Gordie is to take the physical education course, while Lainie, following in the foot- steps of her musical mother, is to major in pianoforte. CHICAGO, ILL.-Mr. Richard Lawrence, noted leader in the revolutionary move- ment in educational theory, delivered a booming and fiery oration. last night over the NBC. His context was pursuasive but his manner more so. BIONTPELIER, V'i'.-Justice Edward Sennett, has just received the high honor of being appointed a judge to the World Court at the Hague. His past record is notable and seems to merit him this appointment. Miss Jeanette Hanes, Secretary to the Senate, will accompany him. SITIENECTADY, N. Y.-Mr. VVendell Nelson, a prominent banker of Northern New York State has just returned from a week-end at his Alma Mater, Green Mountain Junior College. This trip was made most particularly for tl1e purpose of giving a speech in Miss Rowland's class in economies. Coiusrocx, N. Y.-Miss Ruth Murray's career as a Latin teacher at Vander- height Seminary was ended by her marriage to John Marsh. They will honeymoon in California. NEW HAW'EN, CONN.i'Ill1C tennis singles for English and American young women was easily won by Miss Betty Morse of New Haven, her final score being 6-O, 6-2, 6-il-. It is rumored that upon returning to the United States she is to put aside the racquet and take up the rolling pin. lxrIANI'IATTAN.TlxII'. George Mandrona has just been arrested because of his practice of all pseudosciences such as astrology, crystal reading, psychiatry and phrcnology. He charged enormous prices for consultations. GIilClCNXt'ILII-I VILLAGE.-Miss Betty Sherbourne will display her works of art in an exhibition in Craft Hall, Saturday, May 19. CAMBRIDGE, MAss.-Miss Helen Merritt has been under the knife for a serious operation for appendicitis. A quick and eventful recovery is expected. ALBANl', N. Y.-The second world Tree Sitting Contest was won by the leisurely Mr. Dillenbeek of Northern, N. Y. His record starts from June 6, the day before his graduation from Green Mountain Junior College, to date. ScHENEcTAuY, N. Y.-Miss Marion Basch, after eighteen years of study at Green Mountain Junior College, Syracuse, Cornell, and Chicago U. is hanging out her shingle as a psychiatrist. She will specialize in personality building and serious mental disorders. SLASIIEM, V'r.-Doctor Bertrand Andrews has dropped his forceps and is taking up his saxophone for a while. playing in his cousin, Fuller Andrew's Band, the Quin- tupletsf' GLov1msv1L1.E, N. Y.-Mr. Babe Pulver is the new organist at the Metropolitan Theatre in Boston. He is the successor of the beloved Arthur Martel. Sc'Hi:NEc rAuv, N. Y.-Mr. Jack YValdron has just been sent to Buenos Aires to open a new General Electric Branch. Bos'roN, MASS.-Miss Arlene Fitzsimmons, former secretary to the president of the Sharp Razor Co. has just been elected to the office of third vice-president. IiOSEMONT, PA.-lVe are glad to be able to boast of the acquisition of the worldis finest chemical engineer to take charge of sanitation. Rumors are that he may become a permanent resident if a certain Episcopal minister's daughter has her way. 'We hope this is so and extend our heartiest greetings to Engineer Yvilliam Owen. VV1n'rEHALL, N. Y.-News was received here of the appointment of Paul Roth as Postmaster General of the United States. HOLX'OKE, Mass.-Congratulations to Mr. Gustave Schimke, newly appointed treasurer of Green Mountain College. Mr. Schimke received all of his training under the able guidance of the late Clarence Akerstrom, the great business magnate. POULTNEY, h7T.TTllC citizens of the United States may be sure that there will be no call for Court Reform as in 1937 when they read of the appointment of the great lawyer Edward Sennett of Sennett, Sennett, and Sennett, to the Supreme Tribunal of their great country. New YORK CITY.-Rev. Allen Skiff, the grand old preacher from the hills, will succeed Reverend Fosdick on the NBC Religious Hour each Sunday. IillTLAND, VT.-Wlord has been received here that Dr. Carlton Stickney has sue- ceeded with a very diflicult operation-the removal of a corkscrew from a wooden leg. lV1i1'rE1-IALL, N. Y.-News was just received that YValter Benjamin the mighty mite of the WVhitehall A. C. won the pole vault in the Olympic games at Tokyo. GRAND ISLE, VT.-Mrs. Fred Peters, the former Florence Briggs of Poultney, yesterday gave birth to quadruplets. Green Mountain Junior College Publicity De- partment has already offered them free scholarships to their parent's alma mater. XVIIITEI-IALL, N. Y.-Paul Brock, VVhitehall's No. 1 card-shark engineer, has just returned from a trip to Italy, where he has been instructing Mussolini in the art of bridge building. POULTNEY, VT.-Citizens of Poultney were most happy to be informed that David Deyette has been chosen advertising manager for Gillette Razor Blades. VVe are hoping David will reach to great heights in this field. VVIHTEHALL, N. Y.-Coach Hoey, exponent of VVhitehall against the world, was elected coach of YVhitehall High School. He hopes to seduce his opponents with a serenading sax. PoL'L'rNEY, XIT.-xV0l'd has been received here that Miss Marleta Jones has been chosen the most sophisticated steno on VVall Street. VVe praise Miss Jones for her persistence. YVH1'rE1-rAI.L, N. Y.-News was received here late tonight that Coach Rube Kana, a concussion victim of intemperance, is recuperating. Kana is the only coach around here who will willingly speak at football banquets. POULTNEY, VT.-Angelo LaBate, the little winekeeper from Poultney, has just accepted a position as secretary to Secretary Perkins of the Cabinet. He says he will take dictation on her knee. Soivri-1 Poi7r.'rNr:Y, VT.-Prof. Meredith Parry, author of several books on psychology, has been appointed head of the education department at Bennington College. Mr. Parry's next book is to be on a psycho-analysis of X-rays and Tuber- culosis. ALONG LIFE'S XNAY ALUMNI NCDTES Elizabeth Schiefer '36, 11111 Grosvenor Road, Rochester, N. Y. Preparing for teaching History and Physical Education at University of Wvisconsin, Madison, lVis. Member of Orcheis, a dance society. Capital of the Ann Emery sports team. Solveig Ansteensen '36, 1156 Dean Street, Schenectady, N. Y. Taking Post- Graduate work at Green Mountain. Mary E. lVolcott '36, Bridport, Vt. Preparing for Secretarial work at Burling- ton Business College, Burlington, Vt. Lillian Serviss Gregory '36, Poultney, Vt. Employed at Green Mountain. Preparing for Ministry. VVilliam Sunderland '36, 1579 Central Ave., Albany, N. Y. Preparing for Physical Education at Ithaca College, Ithaca, N. Y. Alberta B. McAuley '36, 27 Elm Street, Rutland, Vt. Saleslady. George A. Dutton '36, Bona Vista Apartments, 362 Riverside Drive, Apartment 2A, New York City, N. Y. Junior in the School of Optometry at Columbia Univer- sity. Douglas Everest '36, New Haven, Vt. WVorl-:ing as store clerk in New Haven. Also for the Vermont Rubber Company. Howard Barnes '36, 715 Lawrence Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Preparing for hlechanical Engineer at University of hlichigan. Mary Brock Beals '36, 52 WVest 105th Street, New York City. Married Decem- ber 25, 1936 to Alan Parkes Beals. T. C. A. '31. Ruth I.. Jackson '36, Bridgewater, Vt. Oflice work in Bridgewater lVoolen Mills, Bridgewater, Vermont. Connie Lee '36, 27 Elm Street, Rutland, Vt. Salesgirl at Charles Stern and Com- pany in Rutland, Vt. Hugh Impey '36, 1 Belvidere, St. Johnsbury, Vt. Preparing for a B.A. in Business Administration at the University of Chicago. Marian E. Peters '36, Congreve Hall, University of New Hampshire, Durham, N. H. Preparing for Medicine at University of New Hampshire. Plans to attend University of Vermont next year to continue her studies. Dorothy Stiles '36, 22 Pierrepont Avenue, Potsdam, N. Y. Preparing for Supervisor of Music at Crane Institute of Music, Potsdam, N. Y. Member of Agonian fraternity. Richard Trumbull '35, -1403 South Perry Street, Johnstown, N. Y. Preparing for Master's degree in Psychology-medicine. Yvorked in State hospital in Psychological work. Engaged now in research in Child Developmental Psychology. Barbara Emerson '35, 59 Curtis Avenue, Dalton, Mass. Preparing for Ministry of Music at Wlestminister Choir School, Princeton, N. J. Doing special work with the choir and playing the organ at the Princeton Methodist Episcopal Church. VVilliam H. Holman '35, 917 15th Street, Golden, Colo. Preparing for Ferrous Metallurgy at Colorado School of Blines. Member Sigma Phi Epsilon social fra- ternity, Sigma Gamma Epsilon honorary engineering society, and a charter member of I. R. C. Club of Green Mountain. Franklin K. Hudson '35, 327 N. Ninth Street, Columbia, Mo. Preparing for Medicine at University of Missouri. Married June 3, 1937, to Frances Ann Humple, T. C. A. '28. Richard O. Bush '35, 1589 Ulster Street, Schenectady, N. Y. File Clerk in the Accounting Department of the American Locomotive Company of Schenectady, N. Y. Also Corresponding Secretary at the First Methodist Episcopal Church Sunday School of Schenectady, N. Y. Ivan C. Snell '35, 368' Grand Street, VVestbury, N. Y. Attended Rider College, Trenton, N. J. Now working as cost Accountant, Combustion Engineering Company, New York, N. Y. Harry Cleverly '35. Attending Boston University. Albert T. Strobel '35, Sigma Nu House, VVesleyan University, Middletown, Conn. Majoring in psychology at lvesleyan University. Member of Sigma Nu fraternity. Member of the William James, Club. VVesley.-an Field Band for the last two years. Glyn Jones '35, Attending University of Vermont. Member of Delta Psi fraternity. Caroline Chapin '35, Attending New Jersey State College for VVomen. Doris Boyd '35. lVorking for a wholesale corporation in Brattleboro, Vt. Elmer Travers '35, Poultney, Vt. VVorking in Granville. Thomas Wiay '35. Student at Syracuse University. Member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Marjorie Dean '35. Attending Syracuse University. Majoring in social science. Member of Sigma Kappa sorority. Burns Foley '35. Attending Tufts Dental School. Melville Pattison '35. Attending School of Engineering at Union College. Denzil VVard '35, Attending college in Florida. Marion Nichols '35, Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science. Member of Phi Omega Pi. Elizabeth Fredericks '35, University of New Hampshire. Member of Woman's Athletic Association, Christian NVork Association, and Girls' Glee Club. Elizabeth Mathias Massaelnisetts State Art Institute in Boston. Ruth Rowland '3-1-, Poultney, Vt. Graduated Ohio University. Teacher of eco- nomics, and typewriting at Green Mountain. Marion I.. Griiiith '3-1, Poultney, Vt. Attended Converse College, Spartan- burg, N. C. Now teaching English at Green Mountain. Merton C. Bromley '3-11, R. F. D. No. 3, Plattsburg, N. Y. Teacher of Science and Mathematics in Peru, N. Y. Donald Trumbull '31, Schenectady, N. Y. Married Barbara Cole, class of '341. They have two boys. Don graduated from Union College in 1936. Majored in English. Now working in public library and as assistant English teacher at Nott Terrace High School. Janet H. lVebcr '31, 1057 Lexington Avenue, Schenectady, N. Y. Employed in editorial department of Schevzectarly Union Star. John S. Maslack '31, Poultney, Vt. Junior Forester in the United States Forest Service. Preparing for B.S. in Forestry at University of Georgia in the Georgia Forest School. Member of a national honorary forestry society, passed Civil Service examination for position with United States Forest Service. Emytr Griflith '3Alf. Teacher at Poultney High School, Poultney, Vt. Geraldine Have Straight '31-, 596 Hawthorne Place, Chicago, Ill. Married February 1114, 1935 to VVilliam F. Straight. Richard H. Owens '31, 1373 Grant Street, Akron, Ohio. Viiorking in the Develop- ment Dcpartment of thc Firestone Tire and Rubber Company as a Mechanical Engineer. Esther I.. Page '31, Speculator, N. Y. Preparing for teacher of kindergarten and primary grades. Attended New Paltz State Normal School, New Paltz, N. Y. George Rickheit '31-, 477 Cumberland Avenue. Portland, Me. Field Executive, Boy Scouts of America. Freda Smith Adams '3AL. Married. Living in Woodstock, Vt. Gaylord Fish '31, Poultney, Vt. Married Mary Jones, class of '35. Gay is Superintendent of School Farm at G. M. Mary works in G. M. office. Secretary to Doctor Bogue. Mfilton Sweet '3-1-. Preparing for the ministry at Syracuse University. Patrick Ryan '3-14. Married to Katherine iVillard, class of '34'. lfVillard Strong '33. Doing graduate work in Business Administration at Uni- versity of Cincinnati. Mary Bertolino '33, Fair Haven, Vt. Married Dr. YVilliam BIacNamara. They have one son. Ted Hoffman '33, 36 Normal Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Vlforking as stevedore at Sears, Roebuck's warehouse. Stephen Sidebotham QGalloping Stevej '33, 32 Masten Avenue, Cohoes, N. Y. General utility man in Service Repair Shop and Construction in Niagara Hudson Corporation. Ida H. Murdock Stutzman '33, 1-L20 Chapin Street, N.VV., Yvashington, D. C. VVorking for United States Employee's Compensation Commission in Washington, D. C. Married on December 28, 1936 to VValter G. Stutzman. Gordon YV. Morris '33, 6037 Vlloodlawn Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Accountant for Illinois Commerce Commission making rate-making study of public utilities. Arthur P. Stebbins '33, Shelburne Road, Burlington, Vt. Preparing for Medicine at University of Vermont. Received B.S. degree from University of Vermont in June, 1936. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION VVhen the Troy Conference Academy was transformed into Green Mountain Junior College in 1932, the graduates realized the need of binding the T. C. A. alumni to the institution which was now offering collegiate training. Consequently the Alumni Association was formed for the purpose of recording all of the names and addresses of all graduates of the school from the first graduating class in 1832 to the current date. Even graduates of the Ripley Female Institute, a school which filled an intermission period in T. C. A.'s history, are included in this Association. At the meeting of the Association last June, over one hundred fifty graduates returned for the reunion. Frank Grippin, Rutland pastor, was re-elected president for a second term of office, Miss Hortense Parro of East Poultney was elected treasurer, and Miss Anne L. Richardson of Poultney was elected resident secretary. At 1 p.m. on Saturday, June 5 of this year, the Association will meet in the college dining hall. Harvey F. Connor, Hudson Falls, N. Y., class of 1907 and present secretary of the Board of Trustees, will give the after-dinner speech cele- brating the reunion of the Alumni. Proceeding on the five-year reunion plan, the classes of seven's and two's, that is 1937, 1932, 1927, 1922, etc., will be particularly honored. This will be carried out back as far as 1887, beyond that, all graduates will be honored. Class reunions will be held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday and the class of 1887 will celebrate its fiftieth anniversary. Six classes have graduated from the Junior College so far, and the largest class is being graduated this year. In the first class there was but one graduate, Ira Marcellus, a business administration student. This lone graduate of '32 is now operating a chain of bakeries which are proving quite successful. The 1937 class is expected to take part in the alumni exercises this year, as the class of '36 participated last year. WISE AND DESERVING Wa1'1'en Iiay xfantine Stlldicb IDC. QE? Qfaficial 11OJEOgI'21pl'1C1' Class mf 1937 T335 1937 O Serving the Home for Over a Century Conzplinzeuts of the Careful buyers from all over New England furnish their homes at Pa.ine's. They have confidence in the name. It stands for reliable merchan- dise and fair dealing-embodies the benefits of leadership. . Paine trucks make free delivery to all parts West Pawlet, Vt. ofNew England PA I N E Furniture O C 0 In p a n y 8l Arlington St. Boston YOUR COLLEGE COOKS WITH ?m'-fzii-'21 The Complete Gas Service F mCooking Refrigeration Water Heating BEYOND THE GAS MAINS LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR YVARD 8: SON 36 Merchants Row, Rutland, Vermont HOME OFFICE PYBUFAX DIVISIIIN CARBIDE AND CARBON CHEMICALS CORPORATION Unit of Union Carbide 86 Carbon Corporation 30 East 42nd Street New York, N, Y HULL'S TRIANGLE Corrzplirnerrzfs of Superior H u L L Flavors Cl riend VANILLA - LEMON - ALMOND These products are marketed on a basis 6 of quality, eiiieient service and fairness at all times. L Smrrplrrs .renf on reqrrrsf. A. S. HULL CO. BURLINGTON, VER1MON'T TI-IE POLHLTNEY NATIONAL BANK All fleposifs of 35,000 or less illSllI'C'Cl fbrozrgb fbe Federal Deposit I rzszrrmzce Corporation. CENTRAL VERMONT PUBLIC SERVICE CORPORATION POULTNEY OFFICE 41 Main Street TELEPHONE 67 THE FRED J. FAULKNER G0. BEACON, N. Y. DISTRIBUTORS MAYER CPIINA-WHITE-IVORY Sc MAYAN WARE CHINA R. Wfallace 86 Song Mfg. Co. TEL. CAPITOL 7628 OR 9 EST. 1884 G. Giovino 81 Co. Wliolesale Fruit and Produce f MISCELLANEOUS GROCERIES :SC SHELL FISH 1 NEW! ENGLAND DISTRIBUTORS CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE PRODUCTS In Hotel and Institution Sizes 1 SILVERWARE BOLTALITE TRAYS, GLASSWARE 19-21 Commercial gt, Durability for IgSi13Z1s-Hospitals- ree I ross Printing Cionfipany SCI-MIOOL . 1 COLLEGE COMMERCIAL PRINTERS Burlington Ve1'mo11t zinfeza 0 Mite AMAA Letter Press Printing anti Qgset L.i'ti1ograpI1y i W, -Vg -, Q7'!lL L,A pufL of nurlfafwrzl Foley Laundry CO' 7 .sjj 512. I as V--0 Cgcffcz wuz? PHONE 451 .+A FE W? xg lv, i l' U ' if iff ' RUTLAND ' a t H We use Permuiit Sofzfenczl Wafer bf mvzwi I f XX C om plimernzfs Of . 5 -' ie-wg' R C Reynolds, Inc MOI:IUMliNT SQ. TROY, N. Grocery FINE FURNITURE C00 3 EL'C'1'jflLbi77g for the Home! 'THE ewqnwm ' CAMPUS ' STCDRE Qgwves To be of service to students ' To provide scholarships ' To sell good merchandise . C0111pli1nc'111's of J. A. SANBURN MOTOR EXPRESS TRQY, N. Y. ' ' W. J. WILLIAMS FISH DEALERS DRY CLEANING Q , EFFICIENT SERVICE AT AT 6 UNION ST. REASONABLE PRICES Granyille New York E. M. BIXBY COMPANY, Inc. D. 85 I-I. CONE-CLEANED ANTI-IRACITE COAL, WOOD, POULTRY AND DAIRY GRAINS, FLOUR, SEED, POWDER, FERTILIZER, LIME, BRICK AND CEMENT SHIPPERS OF VERMONT PURE MAPLE SYRUP AND SUGAR E want to take this oppor- tunity to express our gratitude for the patronage we have enjoyed from the Troy Conference Acad- emy and its successor, the Green Mountain Junior College. We hope this patronage will continue in the future as it has in the past. RUTLAND CLEANERS AND DYERS Phone 898 Rutland, Vt. Serving your school for the past 8 years Dorling Products Incorporated 6 5 2-6 5 6 River Street TROY, N. Y. O CocoA BAKING POWDER EXTRACTS GELATINE - SPICES CORN STARCH CLEANSER BATH SALTS The Poultney Restaurant KAY at AB POTTER POULTNEY, VERMONT REGULAR DINNERS LIGHT LUNCI-IES ICE CREAM H are you 'L'iSif6'fI1 our Soda Fozmzfain? BUY OUR WELL-KNONVN BRANDS QEII4-Perfectionj-Pioncer-fBen-I-Iurj BANKER AND Comm' Bnooms for AISO WhiSk BFOOIHS GENERAL GARAGE SERVICE PIONEER BROIOIVI C0., INC. 0 AMSTERDAM, N. Y. CHEVROLET Ask Your Drulcr for Tbcm ZENITH RADIOS FRIGIDAIRES Pioneer Manufo I s of L L f Fo m B 'm H H A 'U 9 Svmm DINNERS, SANDWICI-IES sf COFFEE WHEN YOU GO IN BUSINESS LET US HELP YOU WITH YOUR BOOKKEEPING TALLMAN, ROBBINS 81 COMPANY 314-324 W. Superior Sf. z: Chlcogo, Ill. SODA FOUNTAIN SERVICE CONFECTIONERY, TOBACCO FRUITS - ICE CREAM PARLOR BERTOLINIYS smmz Complimeizlfs of Rutland Confectionery Company O STANDARD OIL OF NEW YORK DIVISION OF SOCONY VACUUM OIL CO., INC. MOBILGAS MOBILOIL MOBILUBRICATION THE UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT BURLINGTON, VERMONT 1701111111-il 1791 C oral and Profcssioiml Curricula are given in: Artsg Sc' ce B s e Secr r rial Studiesg Co mereinl Teaching, Elementary, Secondary and Musie Idicrilion, H LC o 'sg Agriculture, Civil, Electrical, :ind Mechanical Engineering: and Medic . Iliysical Education Departments with well equipped Gymnasiums, Playgrounds, T Co rts, Athletic Fields, Expert Coaching, Ixpcnscs are moderate and opportunities for self-liclp are zivnilahle. Many students arc assisted by Loan and bclmlnrslup l'unds. Wfriic' fm' Cafzzlogrlvs, Bzlllvfins, and Sjlecial 1l1f0l'llIllfi0l7 DEPENDABLE VARNISH Since 1840 The Deflolyer Varnish Worlis TROY, NEW YORK AT YOUR SERVICE For High Quality HARDWARE Sc PLUMBING MOORE 8: STOUGHTON Poultney, Vermont MEMBER OF FLORISTS TELEGRAPH DELIVERY AssN., INC. Fresh Cut Flowers for All Orcasions - O. E. HUNT 127-131 Church Street RUTLAND VERMONT James Blanch SANITARY BARBER SHOP POULTNEY, VERINTONT For Smart Apparel Visit WOLK'S STYLE SHOP Rutland, Vermont Collzplimclzfs of Leta Mae Shoppe Poultney Vermont GEO. E. CHALIVIERS C01 KODAKS-FILMS GREETING CARDS BOOKS OF ALL PUBLISHERS Rutland, Vermont Charles Sterns St Company The Service Store RUTLAND, VERMONT UWB GIVE THRIFTIESU Are you using THE ADULT BIBLE CLASS MONTHLY Q Review sample copy and be CONVINCED OF ITS MERIT Each issue presents a complete and varied treatment of the INTERNATIONAL UNIFORM Sunday School Lesson, Notes on the Text, Social Application of the Lesson, Appropriate Worship Service, and an Interesting MAGAZINE SECTION. O THE CHURCH SCHOOL JOURNAL For Teachers and Ofhcers Sunzplex mailed on rr'qur'xf The METHODIST BOOK CONCERN Cincinnati, New York, Chicago, Boston, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Kansas City, San Francisco, Portland, Oregon COMPANY O I Commercial Stationers OFFICE FURNITURE SUPPLIES DE LUXE LOOSE-LEAF BINDERS AND FORMS BERKSHIRE TYPENVRITER PAPER CARBON PAPER-RIBBONS BRIEF CASES-LEATHER ENVELOPES FOUNTAIN PENS-PENCILS 66 Franklin St., Boston, Mass ROYAL PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS 3537-50 549-50 362-SO Good used typewriters for sale or rental. Service all makes. Supplies all makes H. E. ROBBINS Gryphon Bldg. Rutland, Vt BOOKKEEPING as IQcaflor1altfl'a1nuzq l.ikc SlClTUg'l'ZllJlly :incl typcwritiug. it is of little vziluc unless it trains the stuclent practically for the busi- ness wurlfl. THE pathfinder COURSE IN EXECUTIVE ACCOUNTING nllers zt modern vocational training in practical looseleaf procedure It trains tlic stuclcut in twcsctlt-c,l:1v practice. All fcirins and practice set inziterial used for instrutttinn in the PZlfllf:lIlClCI' Course are iden- tical with the loost-leaf forms :mtl systems rcconnncuclecl by public accountants and usctl in actual business. This Mtvclcrn 1937 Tmiiiiixg is now avail- :tblc for classrtvuiu stucly in tlie Green Moun- tain ,luninr College. Today'x Students are Tomorrow's Executives ASR FOR FURTHER DETAILS CHARLES B. HADLEY CO. Cozy JAQolz gift shop FRED A. BOTSFORD Poultney, Vt. HART SCHAFFNER 86 MARX STETSON HATS FREEMAN SHOES CHEENEY NECKWEAR We are showing the latest styles in Men's Clothing J. A. VOGEL . Los Angeles California DRUGS, TOILET ARTICLES Comjnlimenis CANDY CIGARS AND PIPES of SODA FOUNTAIN STATIONERY, NEWSSTAND lVlcSHANE'S PHARMACY Cozlzpliuzwzfs of THE BARRETT INSURANCE C01 POULTNEY, VERMONT W. W. WILSON CO., INC. WHOLESALE GROCERS TROY, N. Y. Food Suppliers fo fbe College The Ford Motor Co. offers two types of engines for I937. The V-8 6o :md 85 horsepower. All steel body, new easy-action safety brakes. - Comfort of the center-poise ride, eco- nomical transportation. Af ' t Ht II A ypr of mr o mfr a your :Lancs ' O' 1 G. W. MCGRATH RUTLAND FAIR HAVEN C0ll1p1il77E72fS of GRANVILLE F. W. Barrett PCULTNEY, VT. GLENS FALLS BALLSTON SPA SARANAC LAKE Shoes-too f E What More ! ' f i H x,,1aRxonENM,EL V XA can you demand G'-OSS x of Paint? KX XJ L-.--5 Whiteness-Intensely white when applied, high in light reflection' value, Barreled Sunlight carries a definite surety to re- main White longest. Washability-The flawlessly smooth sur- face of Barrelled Sunlight can't hold dirt. XfVashes like tile, without wearing away. There is a Barreled Sunlight Paint for every surface, inside or outside. Flat and Partial Gloss also come in the new pastel shades. VVrite us for color card and information. CHAS. H. DAUCHY C02 DISTRIBUTORS 279 River St. Troy, N. Y. VERMONT ELECTRIC SUPPLY C0. EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL RIGHT NEXT TO POST OFFICE RUTLAND, VERMONT Collzpliilzelzfs of STASO MILLI G C0. Collzpllzlzelnfs of Compliments The Hotel of Poultney A FRIEND 1 ' ' ' ' Aiwa 57 ffiwfif 3 - I W M W4 WWMWF x.,..,...,4v. M1244-' ALM -fpmwgjjjs V Jw QM-4 LZ,-If M' j'f- !9,hf71.f-45,94-LQ-qqffljgwr' mm! QMMWLV Qiwygfw-mf. X4 ' J 'lwinfgdi 59-wcsv - J., ff-7. Z'L.,,LH - Gave A7 fb., .xl


Suggestions in the Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT) collection:

Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 11

1937, pg 11

Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 51

1937, pg 51

Green Mountain College - Peaks Yearbook (Poultney, VT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 103

1937, pg 103


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