Hartridge School - Tempora et Mores Yearbook (Plainfield, NJ)
- Class of 1943
Page 1 of 60
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 60 of the 1943 volume:
“
f ,J ,ww v --lx -f..., 14, alfa., C 'Y M. Y px AU M ul H. 1' , . ,K , . M , . . . u 'V X A v 1- I il u 4 , w f I '. A Y r,. --s , ., . kfr-.dl 1 Ji rv.: - 1 rl .a .. . , , f .A ry X w ' 1 G E,rvV w wr' 1 7 , '... xl 3 .,1 ,',, . , v , f ' - v 'Ti' L Lf V L. ,,. K f , 'z ay, , 1. Qt. 4 D: w ' . I. , W ' '11 I T. W. ' 'lp ' I - if 1 -HH, X, .aff -Qf H - . 'af xx ' . fa ,, W1 ,Q .. . :-. ,-Eu? J' . A RE, 1 1-A , -pl 'fu L1-riff' F wg.. 3. Av . :Ti N- .M ,' ' -X ,:,, I . A. ELE11.. . ' fu ' ' V S ' r 1 ' , , g.. 'vi V 'il ' I W - f 6 'I' . A V.,'g3,.:5,f14'--.'3Qm if ' X I N ' I' ' -4., , .- . V ' :mp 'ggi' QS!!-s-3-L1 .gf g3.:g1i,,.2.i'I m . -Q -. ..?'5-1 1391- 4 .. u H qu V J Q 5 I '3 P L 1 1' , T1 ,,, '. 1 rx I . . -. ., ' ,. . K.. .,' '-il gt .-.-, 5 V K . A W J ' ' ' 4. VV r ' v 'hilfsl .' -. ' 4x X uf ' '-'u 1 v , r r 1 ' V' ' 'L .r . v Q, , 1 1 .31-N.-L Q , 34,1 -H Q- . --1-VI,-xg'-3: V- , A ' ,:' -.1 - fw .-:.r'-PF! . f .p- ' -4:9-Q' ' -'vg,tl,,' ' rf ', . .-'f'.2'4fQ-' ,1 ' 'V 5 .Wiv- W -- ' if f' .1-b-'vvi' 1. '1 w. ' 1 ' .. .- . ' ' ' i':f,ft,' 79. '- nm L .. 91... , . ' , il., 1 4 .--Mfg' 'T' 1.71 ' ...f a? U j',,f,L. J' F- .' nailz 2 .. 4 -I -fj, ' . . - . - Q. . ' 3. --...qv ' ,,1. ia ln,-X -fglfzifg 1. ' ' Q7 ,I-'14, ,.'!f Ji , -3. 1. ' , A ,- ' X Iva- 5, ' -. . Q... AL., .If A A N . ff -N .I -A:?i 'Ji.. A .' 5 , . K .L 'Af'1x', -911W ' K X - ef.'7'..H ' -5 ' -.1f?ff.I' Vgifalj-!?,?'31 ff., ' 'W , ' ' 1 , -' l f . ' gwlm' .! 'r!'f '1 ' '-12:1 P' . Ji.. . ' D ' . . ' . ' ' ' ,L-.IL fir 'fwfr A' ,I ', --fl wg: -.,I7,' , , xl' .,,,-, J 55,54 jr . V. - V '-, 1 . A-. .3--H' z, g JL' ,'xs.3f,'.',!5:x. -in S' .,.4r '5' tr- A, i- w,-'.'q.,' 5 '-'ix A q'...- , '31 L, ,L sq. :.3'J'nL1,.. .iii - - :Wg .,,. -15' .sw ' - Y '----Hwy w 5, 1 HQ.-,jx - f, ',,....n..- 1 v ' 1 , . -.3 i,-' .. I 7 3 f'-i'-' ' 1: .' '9 . ' .3 - :f'- .'.i. ' ' RQ. -i!!?'fgl-E:Edi59'lig:g 'Tz' -5'n' -1Qg',f3. .5 Q. ,li5QFEq,fE,g'gf1Ng...g-j , W . V.r.m,..-Q56 ,.,,-..,1f2'. Q ' 'Xrf'- f fl--Nh: 'E ...4.W'r:f,,vx:'rf- ':p'Pw.1 1 , ' 1-:,.:.+' ff .---. 'g,,'jL+:17'. -1',!, 5-K ' J. . -4 NP v- -' -4- lm- 44-iffy ' Y'-X 'Y -1 e' -L 6 N., fl'31?f ,y -fig.: ' i'Q. 'fQ.g '4 3'.4Mzs. .LfTi 1' fy r r .jf ' ff '-im.. A '.'w1i.1.f1:n.-'Q- .. ul' .. '- -' T 1 . mf., ' ,,-lr ' M- QL N -'. H, , ew, rl. H 39... .. 1' EQ-5 Jlfifig.. S .7 -. ,vw .jJ1..,- , ', ,fx ,111 . '-w lj. '- .- j '-lwir.-5: .vw-R, -',.f E51 ,,. Q v -'E'ii'jJ XHLV- Sn-Q . . ff'-,r ,Tw Q-i If Jigaif-'+i:g.., Tl -4.-..l...'1 :J-,.I.-r ' .P'ff5.f L' ' 'i 1 . -' I -nlih'-.-i,' wif 'mil' :??lff5?fg . . qv .S 111 U- Z. ..'f.f1i. . , J,E'1f',.'j..,f-:li-Q fxjlgyw A 1. ,Ai ' 4'!m,..If fm? .z,QI:f!i,51JL I . f 1 531 up u-,Q, ..., ik ' -if '3:'-J..-wa.: .,-H., 'A'-21,5541 t. .ku -' , Us 1 GH. , ., ,,1 - ,351 !f:,u1,1!q45a,5,,,': f..,,- - -, -1 5 if--.,5..,..:,. it 2.4. . - lg ll, s, ,.-bl' -- .N .Q-',J..f: .. T .',:..i ', ggi?-1,7'i1,!' , ,,,.. I . .uv ?3fr ' 'fmt 3' T. -' .J 49. wg :Tf.gq4.A.?..f7jQ3i. q:.E..iA . 4 .i. YI U manga? li -3, V .. m..,.,gfi5,g-S 7- .. Qgqf- : .-fg--Q I. 13-1: -I 4 u ' 4. . ,Q f mp 1-..- , . -G. -V 1.. ,. - QP. .1 '- '- 'x '- -f ,L,.-11?-TM.. 9- 5 .: V ,. A1,u.5,-1- . 311- u ,iff-Ll-Qs, 45.-2 -. - if H. fi ., A 2.11 J --1 FT-- .?grs'52Wh- miiysf. . yu x 'ffdf?ir'.5r:- 'L -T z1'nf '..-'gy .- fiw.w Ff e1Q..f?:-' ,-,m,. vw: J' pi. -A-fp I. . . - f . -:W ' 'w,nI.., ,.'EfRw.7tfz: Qijafifle.-g'f131 -T5 ' . X 2 ' - ' z,fmq,ffatJ - . 1 : 'V -,yfgm n -.. - Q .X ,I - C- frblf. .5r,....11.: .J . Q3 ' ' 'f -- 5. '-5. '.2n'Sf .14'4F,' hr' 'r3:L!:?-nv ,fe Q- 'f. .5941 Ng li 'SI W4-- vg 1? 7' 'I' fT !'li55Li4:'5. ! i ':'-5'-F ' -' '51 -'j51,1.QQ--2 dw'f1fPy.A'-if if 2: its 1.-f:i',.-':'.,..g,4' 2 jig' 1 -I if .I glvxxh I: 4 : 'JI-villvjyr u b 4 H ' U-ff 9 Qi -fl-f 'L 'WT-.' ff -U af A -'59 ff TL' e4i .,Z,:- .1 ' -' , - 'ffl' 2--V 1 -fu' 2 -Y A-, g ...A Y,' ' g . .175 .k ..,.1.2. ., , 8 . fl-ff'. - .g..-,- .. ' I ' ' X ' .. -. 1.-FH'-. .,,.,. . W. .,.-W, ,, inn., .. u .- is., -J. T X . fr ,. . Y . ..-. '. A 4Ai4ff?'f fs g,' -, 3. . Axim .ge e ,Qu N. AJ' -52+ W1 'ff'-' 3 .5 ge-My uf ' f Q 1 .. 4,.,kf ,,5,, 1 3 L., ff: .2 QA.. 35-n'., , . .,., .. . . ' ' - . ,K ., .W . I f.-,qu k, -.,,..3,,m ., I, zyn . . gy' 1 -- . . ,L -b X. -'gy .V J ,gy 1. ,.':f' - 1 .mr-fl . 1'4 fr':3f'- vi 'Y F . .5 ' -:r.n-gli! In.:-,fr-ty., 1 . H--M. - 'f : .- -'wx A pm.. .. ' 'I V 1. , . V. , .- . . . A - . . f . I. -Q , J , , ' H' I. .J . rv ' -i . gl I P .lt ilk-g...i QA ,H l ' . .E . V H ' . M.. 1 s RN x 4, . PA? ...gc q 5 ,I .. .H l 1 , . x .-. I .x ,J . val.,-A ' ' ..-, I .V E J - h w -'QA -.5-L.A K A V' IN MEMORIAM IllIIInIInrIn1lmlumllnllnllIlllllulllllllIulInuIllIIIllInullllullllllIllnllllllllmllllllllullllllllllllllllll. 11101 vn Hallersav ll7fYc11'fr1'ofqe 1871 1 1949 PAGE THREE IN MEMORIAM Of these three score years and ten, one halt were spent by Miss l-lartridge in building up our school and in making it one with a line reputation for high academic standing, recognized alike by the col- leges and the other schools with similar high aims. At the beautiful memorial service held on last October llth, at the Crescent Avenue Church, Dean Thompson of Vassar College paid tribute to Miss Hartridge's achievements as an educator. As she reviewed Miss Hartridge's early lite, she made us understand how, more than all else, she cared to go to college, and then how financial reverses almost prevented her from finishing her course at Vassar. We understood then why education for girls became her lite work and also why she so swiftly and generously came with scholarship aid to her own students who faced sudden need. In close collabora- tion with other principals in the Head Mistresses Association, she achieved distinguished results in raising the standards tor all inde- pendent secondary schools. Dean Thompson praised highly Miss Hartridge's work as Presi- dent of the Associate Alumnae of Vassar College when during those depression years they successfully raised funds for the new sports building. In many other ways she gave ot her time and energy to advise and work for her college. We think of her as carrying all the detail of the school, the sched- ules, the advice on college preparation, teaching Latin, and taking any class in the absence of a teacher, equal to every emergency and always planning ahead something better for the school. Her great interest in each girl as a person with fine qualities to be developed as well as with weaknesses to be cured-of this all her pupils were PAGE FOUR IN MEMCRIAM aware. To meet her standards one had to be honest, courageous, able to do hard things, developed to enjoy the fine and beautiful things, ready to assume responsibility in the school, in town, in col- lege, in later life. Plainfield owes to Miss Hartridge much beside a distinguished school. That the Monday Afternoon Club has today its tine club house is due to her planning when she was President of the Club. The formation of our very efficient Red Cross Chapter and ot the lunior Red Cross during the last war was due to her initiative. Before Muh- lenberg Hospital had even planned a Childrens Ward, our school under Miss Hartridge's direction was holding yearly fairs to furnish the ward when it should be built. And that today the school enjoys the spacious grounds and beautiful trees of Oakwood is also due to her plan for a Country Day School with all the requisite equipment. We all remember when the school library was dedicated two years ago to Miss Mapelsden, how bravely and humorously Miss Hartridge related the history of the early days of the school. She wanted her girls today to have in mind the traditions of the school, and when you, as alumnae, read again that record and Dean Thomp- son's tribute, the essential qualities of Miss Hartridge will live again tor you-her bravery, her ideals, her humor, her capacity for hard work, her vitality, and her vision for her girls in the school. M. B. W. PAGE FIVE DEDICATICDN To our fellow conspirator in plans for wild treasure hunts and gay picnics, to our com- panion on exciting sprees in French movies, our savior from irate French Waiters, to Mrs. Morse our sincere friend as well as loved teacher, We, the class of l943, dedicate our Annual. nllllllllllllllllllllllllll 5 I PAGE SIX FACULTY Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Frances Hurrey Harriet Sleeper Barbara G. l-Iitchings Ianet B. Eine Mary B. Wells Patricia Basset Dorothea Morse Barbara Gumrnere Elsie Goddard Agnes Hannay Elizabeth Colie Mary N. Whiteside lanet Alison Nancy Whiton May Tennant Ann MacMillan Barbara Bourn Mary B. Corwin Betty Brokaw Frederick Coles Sylvia Miller Clarke Barbara Beatty Esther Zerega Kathleen Brown llllllllllllll PAGE SEVEN STUDENT CCDUNCIL mlnllIan11unulllllnlllllllllllllllmlulll D-uzviofd 1 mm, new-frxq . 'Cl SSLLIQ L15-I hr!! runt- .HCu-N7 Q. TUC-bi1wvS5 V-'sh-Cb 'buvnv 0','4 'Mx Marjorie Oloughlin, President Elizabeth Rausch . . . Vice-president Elizabeth Ann Whitehead . . Secretary-Treasurer Edith Goddard Senior representative Mary Alice Young . . lunior representative Florence Runyon Sophomore representative Mary Valiant Freshman representative Kathanne Harter . Sub-freshman representative Mary Corwin . Faculty representative Frances Hurrey . . . Ex-officio '1lllllllulllllllnllllllllllnllllllll PAGE EIGHT fl' U ,-'-A se! ' v f. -. . ,4- -x.,. - f P I in 1 , .,' 1 ' K K.-, I ' db, ly In Dramatic Club '41, '42, '43, Sec- retary - Treasurer of Dramatic Club '43, Glee Club '43, Annual Board '43, Secretary-Treasurer oi Class '41, '42, '43, Class Hockey '41, '42, '43, . EDITH PINDELL COPP Coop, Hap 711 Coleman Place Westfield, N. I. Entered l94l Undecided Favorite expression: Weil, Well, im- agine that! Usual occupation: Fort Hancock Pet aversion: Waiting for buses Saving grace: Good Nature. What senior's sports uniform has never seen the light of the gym? The telephone number of which of our more popular assets keeps the Fort Hancock calls sizzling north? What perpetual treasurer never has to bor- row movie money from her funds be- cause of her constant military escort? Who makes up for being last to arrive in the morning by being first out in the afternoon? What Tepper's sales- girl was the cause of the men's buying their own ties last Christmas? This, friends, is Copp, who keeps the sen- iors' fast ebbing morale up in the glum days of exams with unexpected re- marks, and tears it down again by slyly slipping into the one Warm sun spot in the English room before her shivering opponents. PAGE TEN I II I I I IIllIIIllIIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIlIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Ill IIIIII I IIIIIII I ll I I I IIII IIIIIIIIII IIII I II I EDITH VIRGINIA GODDARD Goddard 1415 Watchung Avenue Plainfield. N. I. Entered l94l Undecided Favorite expression: Oh gravy Usual occupation: Singing Pet aversion: Sewing on buttons Saving grace: Optimism Across the scrambled basketball court is screamed a hearty Sink it, Whitesl in a second soprano voice whose volume bears witness to the tact that it is accustomed to the corn- petition hurled by two husky brothers. Or perhaps such a vocal outburst was trained in the Cornell rooting section, certainly it is not to be credited to the Hartridge musical department, unless of course, that is the subject of those dreaded hourly phone calls. The enthusiastic claimant ot yon screech is Goddard, who daily gnaws to a mangled pulp that green person- ally inscribed pencil that is to be ex- cavated from the buried remnants of the era of Hartridge civilization tive hundred years hence. Possibly those same archeologists, turning their tal- ents to twentieth century trinkets, will make the discovery, now under much speculation, as to Whose picture ap- pears in thatlpearl and gold locket. Class Hockey '42, '43, White Hockey '42, '43, Varsity Hockey '42, '43, Class Basketball '41, '42, '43, White Basketball '4l, '42, '43, Varsity Basketball '41, White Baseball '4l, '42, Varsity Base- ball '41, '42, '43, Glee Club '41, '42, '43, Treasurer of Glee Club '42, President of Glee Club '43, Dramatic Club '42, '43, Student Council '43. PAGE ELEVEN Q.oiloX 6003: -5- own 00 Xen eu' 'QYMXQ em one.,- efge Rn '-YVNG ficmemgeef 5 0'A3X'XYT1C.6 we M. NSQQL f?5'WnuQ.e-, Skt Q my Co fhrwffx-meffli -K' GAY'-0 Vscadf' Um' Cx rss' L, , Class Hockey '42, '43, Green Hockey '42, '43, Varsity Hockey '42, '43, Class Basketball '4l, '42, '43, Green Basketball '4l, '42, '43, Dramatic Club '42, '43, Glee Club '41, '43, Athletic Associa- tion '42, Treasurer Athletic As- sociation '43, Library Committee '43, Red Cross Representative '43, Annual Board '43. llllullllllIllllllltllllllilllllllllllllllln eo Nxws- ' v, BERNICE ANNE GRAY J Anne, Ag, Gray YSTN.-F39 Sherman Avenue Plainfield. N. I. Entered 1941 Iefferson Hospital Favorite expression: Oh my lord Usual occupation: Rummaging through locker Pet aversion: Music for assemblies Saving grace: Generosity. We introduce Anne Gray, known to a new member of the younger genera- tion as Aunt Anne. But we who went through Hartridge with her know her as the senior who gives her lone two classmates nervous prostration for fear she'1l leave them alone with the maps of that first afternoon class while she enjoys a quiet luncheon at home. She is our windblown adventurer seen about town seated beside a uniformed chauffeur in a light-weight, olive drab vehicle otherwise known as a jeep, peep, beep or what have you. She's that demon worker who can be heard through our fogged, blank minds to rip page after page of lengthy answers from an official com- position board. We add that she is also that female Horatius whose sec- tion of the hockey field is never in- vaded recklessly or otherwise by raid- ing opponents. PAGE TWELVE 'ln MII X062 MARIORIE IANE O'LOUGHLlN Midge, Mag 2000 Woodland Avenue Plainfield, N. I. Entered l930 Smith Favorite expression: I don't know but- Usual occupation: Parsons Pet aversion: Mustaches Saving grace: Legs. A lustily bellowed Show me the way to go home- and Midge, perched up on the saddle ot a tough, bucking, blue and black victory bi- cycle, lurches from gate number two of the Oakwood driveway. A lip- stick, already poised tor instant appli- cation, miraculously does as directed. A purposeful toss of her halo of rap- idly growing curls and a new Eber- hard Faber No. 2 falls from its station behind her ear, bounces on its eraser on the curb, and disappears with the desired finality into the grass for the duration of the weekend. Midge's hand plunges into a bulging pocket, her face lights expectantly as she draws out, wrapped in colorful waxed- paper funnies, a lump ot bubble gum. Enthusiastically snapping out pink bubbles, she rolls oft to a mysterious weekend. We'll see you on Tuesday, Midge, Class Hockey '39, '40, '41, '42, '43, Class Basketball '40, '42, '43, Dramatic Club '42, '43, Glee Club '43, Library Committee '43, Annual Board '43, President oi Student Council '43, President oi Class '39, '42, Fair representa- tive '40. PAGE THIRTEEN Class Hockey '39, '40, '41, '42, '43, White Hockey '41, '42, '43, Var- sity Hockey '43, Class Basketball '39, '40, '41, '42, '43, White Bas- ketball '4l, '42, '43, Varsity Bas- ketball '42, Student Council '40, Class President '41, Dramatic Club '43, Glee Club '43, Captain of White Team '43, Secretary of Athletic Association '43, Library Committee '43, Annual Board '43. lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllll MARY ANN STILLMAN QUARLES Quie, Mary 139 East Seventh Street Plainfield, N. I. Entered 1938 Mount Holyoke Favorite expression: But I really wasn't doing anything. Usual occupation: Snake studies? Pet aversion: Formal parties Saving grace: Appetite. Who, at the cautious Whisper of Arizona, snaps to attention from a vision ofa chocolate, marshmallow, peanut sundae just dripping with whipped cream with a pert cherry calling to be eaten? What senior spends almost more time Worrying about the horrifying possibility that the dentist might change his office hours from Wednesday than about keeping up that senior standard in a junior-infested Virgil class? Who flut- ters recklessly about the ice-skating pond in a last desperate effort for some painless, temporary disability be- fore her annual struggle With the scarcer element of formal society on the scene of the Hartridge ballroom? This maiden, fair readers, as you have probably guessed from vague hints purposely dropped above, is our fight- ing captain of the Whites, Quie. PAGE FOURTEEN I I I I I III IIIII ELIZABETH RAUSCH Libby 1001 Rahway Road Plainfield, N. I. Entered 1938 Smith Favorite expression: They can't do this to me. Usual occupation: Clearview Radiant Pet aversion: Chamber music Saving grace: Sense of humor, Wednesday, Ianuary 27, Richard Beatty is the man of the hour, but Eliz- abeth Rausch appears with lipstickl We recover sufficiently to hear it casu- ally mentioned that Clearview Radi- ant is wintering at Hedgerow Farm. What provoked this alienation of af- fection? Surely it Wasn't insomnia brought on by cheese and pickle sandwiches and gallons of milk before retiring, nor the fact that Lib's bed lies directly above the piano-but that fu- ture classic, that masterpiece of mono- syllables, the Annual. Even after a year of dummy Annuals plus a history notebook, the ed is still under the spell of her ABC's ei la stencil. Speak- ing of traditions, with the way that you're upholding the traditions of Bar and Nan, beware, Epaminondas, of the next pie you put your little foot in. I I I Il I I I III Ill I Class Hockey '39, '40, '41, '42, '43, Green Hockey '40, '41, '42, '43, Varsity Hockey '41, '42, '43, Class Basketball '39, '40, '41, '42, '43, Green Basketball '40, '41, '42, '43, Varsity Basketball '41, '42, '43, Glee Club '43, Dramatic Club '43, Student Council '41, '42, '43, Captain of Green Team '43, Class President '40, '43, Annual Board '42, '43, IIIII IIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I I IIIII III IIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II IIIIIIIIII IIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I PAGE FIFTEEN I IIII II IIIIIIIIIIIII I llllllll Class Hockey '40, '41, '42, '43, Green Hockey '40, '41, '42, '43, Varsity Hockey '41, '42, '43, Class Basketball '40, '41, '42, '43, Green Basketball '40, '41, '42, '43, Var- sity Basketball '40, '41, '42, '43, Varsity Baseball '40, '41, '42, '43, Glee Club '42, '43, Dramatic Club '42, '43, Art Club '43, An- nual Board '43, Library Commit- tee '42, '43, President Athletic Association '43, Athletic Repre- sentative '40, Captain of Green Team '42, Glee Club Treasurer '43, I IIIIIIIIIIII I I llllll ll I I UI IIIIIIIIIIII I I ll Il BARBARA LOUISE WEIGEL Wiggle, Nickie Inman Avenue Plainfield. N. I. Entered 1940 Skidmore Favorite expression: Oh, honestly. Usual occupation: Running errands for papa. Pet aversion: Bowling Saving grace: 1-lair. Seven seniors suppress choked gasps as we hear a well-meaning, in- dulgent dowager refer to Wiggle, our bundle of smouldering T.N.T. in a shapely skirt and sweater, as a sweet, blue-eyed reserve of innocence. We glare menacingly at her, sitting de- murely, hands folded, in a corner. That couldn't possibly have been a note she smuggled behind her back, could it? And, come to think of it, didn't the swish that efficiently whisked a sec- ond plate of ice cream from under Mrs. Martin's watchful eye bear a striking resemblance to Barbara? Having watched smooth perform- ances in all forms, are we to believe that her caging ability is confined solely to the basketball court? And by the way, maybe you didn't know she was a potential bowling cham- pion. lust wait till some one leads her to the right alleyl IIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II ll I I I II I Ill I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIII Illllllllllllllllllllll Illlllllllll II I I PAGE SIXTEEN C 3 xdmo iQ,',,,.,, , y X Wsauea.3lQ.e-D.hln1l' Uwxlt.. Aww, Waiysysunr wil' x.1kl:u.CSmqe,.U.H, ELIZABETH ANN WHITEHEAD E, A. 1340 Watchung Avenue Plainiield. N. I. Entered 1939 Smith Favorite expression: What do I do now? Usual occupation: Looking innocent Pet aversion: Pin-striped suits and what goes in them Saving grace: Complexion. A tall, teetering tower of history ref- erence books, swaying precariously off balance on shiny handle bars, is seen being laboriously pedaled by two small moccasin shod feet up the Oakwood driveway. Peering over the edge, chin thrust forward in an agon- ized Boy - how - l'd - swear - if-I-weren't such-a-lady look, puffing with what might be called slightly rapid respira- tion, we have our I-lartridge saving grace. Yes, friends, meet E. A., whose chief ambition is to spend a long morning in bed before relapsing into a tub of luxurious, soft, pink bubbles at the late start of her self-designed day of doing just what she wants, when she wants, and most important if she wants to do it. ' 32 Y Q I Class Hockey '39, '40, '41, '42, '43, Class Basketball '41, '42, '43, Var- sity Hockey '43, Glee Club '40, '4l, '42, Glee Club librarian '43, Art Club '42, '43, Dramatic Club '42, '43, Council representative '42, Secretary-treasurer of Aca- demic '43, Athletic representa- tive '43, Annual board '43. PAGE SEVENTEEN CLASS PRQPI-IECY Homesick N. Y. C. tourists in Tuscon, Arizona, longing for a touch of Ye Olde Home Towne, flock optimistically to beckoning lights on the black hori- zon. Expectantly leaping up glass brick steps, they pause briefly as chro- mium-trimmed, transparent doors swing inwards, directed by the beam of a hidden electric eye. Forth glides the former Mary Quarles, the eminent brain surgeon, slimly svelt, having finally built up the necessary will power. For our fortunate intruders Have stumbled on one of the fortnightly dances spon- sored by Doctor Quarles for her nurses. Because of the electric bedmaker in- vented by her and her snakologist husband, the personnel of Quarles's Quiet Quarters for Quaint Quacks can enjoy many such spontaneous, spirited sprees. ,F ,F ak ak E-I-S-E-N-H-O-W-E-R, Eisenhower. Barbara gazed with satisfaction at the carefully grouped letters arranged from her red volume, Generals Whose Names are Most Often Miss-spelled. lust a minute, Steven, darling, she purrs to replica No. 6 of her dapper husband, noting with contentment that he is already acquiring that Princeton Campus strut. This is quite understandable considering the tiger rug on the floor of the third trophy room of the golf section, and the butler who trucks in, flouncing around in an autographed beer suit, gingerly syncopating his gait between dreaming setters. I-le balances the six graduated beer mugs clearly labeled in orange and black Nassau lettering, Moo juice. BK PIC P14 Pk Stalwartly plunging through a bombardment of accurately fired Coke bottles bouncing with deadly thuds off the bald spot of a swearing umpire, we pitched headlong into the nearest foxhole fto use MacArthur's approved terminologyl, to make an unceremonious crash landing in the no man's land of the Red Sox dugout. Through the sparkling red, white, and blue stars floating before our eyes emerged-lo, it must be an angel-a feminine figure! With a menacing brandish of a spare bat before the subdued eyes of her battling pennant winners, a barking of orders with a rapidity that would mortify a marine sergeant, stamped the fiery coach, manager, and owner of the Red Sox, the mother of the towheaded champion bat boy, in short, the former Edith Goddard. ak ak ak ,S At the vanguard of a long, undulating safari of trunk-laden redcaps wending its way down the platform at Penn Station, swept the mink-swathed Lady Cecil Neville-Smythe of London and the Union of South Africa. Having thrown into a dither the cream of Mayf-air's social climbers by the issuance of some of her sought-after, gilt-edged invitations, the former E. A. Whitehead further fired their ambitions by descending on Manhattan to preside per- sonally over one of her renowned cocktail parties. Five minutes after her heralded advent, New York's usually callous popu- lation was seen to gawk at a flight of shining black helicopters impressively bearing the proud Neville-Smythe coat of arms, alight on the lower garden terrace of the family's regal Park Avenue penthouse to deposit the mistress and all her impedimenta. 'IllIIIIIIIIIIlIIIllIllIIIIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllll ll I I I I I PAGE EIGHTEEN CLASS PROPI-IECY Here, Hancock, Dix, Kilmer, Edwards. Four purring paragons of Per- sian magnificence pad into the glistening red and white kitchen. A flurry of long ruifly apron bows bustles in, plunks down four pans of luke-warm milk, and swishes from the room to hail the bus for the monthly executive meeting of the Philanthropical Fellowship for Faultless Felines of which she, the Mrs. Fort Iay, is secretary-treasurer. A hasty caution to junior not to tease little sister, a warning to both not to touch those tempting swirly sandwiches laid out for four o'clock tea, and the former Edith Copp dashes out the French doors. Pk Pk Pl! FK Right away, Dr, Brown. The official tone carefully inserted into the well modulated voice oi the hospital switchboard operator vanishes as she yanks out the ' Dr. Brown plug and launches again into her animated gossip with the third-floor attendant. Yeah, Maizie, no kiddin', I got it straight from Iamey. I always knew she wasn't all starch and crackle. But gee, a superin- tendent of nurses gettin' married, l'll never get over callin' her Miss Gray. Oh, oh. Speak of the devil. There she goes. H'm. Say, that disinfectant around here smells strangely of gardenia.-As I was sayin', my sister, lesse- she's the hat checker at the roof garden-says the super was there with him last night. She knows her on account of her appendix last year. Oh, oh. There's Dr. Brown again. l'll call you later, Maizief' Ik Pk Sk PF On the linoleum floor of the laboratory-nursery, Midge sprawls on her stomach, feet waving gracefully in the air, delightedly engrossed in the test tubes of the bright new Chemocraft number twenty-five, purchased for little Duguise's third birthday. Duguise's first reflection upon her juvenile dis- comforts was that her gingiva was irritated due to the eruption of the- gum tissue permitting the protrusion of her four incisors. Her first complete sen- tence was an opinion on the shortcomings of Darwin's theory of evolution, Possibly her mother's chairmanship of the Women for the Presidency or Else League originated with the prospect of this potential political dynamite for future campaigns. P14 PIC Pk ak The Citadel. a sleek white yawl, dipped its way into the East Blue Hill Harbor after a three months' cruise along the east coast. Iust as much at home at the tiller as on one of her famous horses, reigned the former Eliza- beth Rausch, mother of the little twin fishermen whose gleaming red hair is easily recognized by yachtsmen from Sea Island to Bar Harbor. Now that this trip is completed, will she hop right off again to the tenth reunion flight of the Smith Flying Club in South America, or will she satisfy her anxious public by perhaps publishing a supplement to her world-famed treatise Matchmaking, 101 Tried cmd Approved Methods? Anyway, she cer- tainly has retained her old habit of keeping everyone guessing. III IIIIIIIIIIII llIIllIlllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIII IIllllIlllIlllIIllllIlIIIllIllIIllIIIIlIIIlIIIllIIllIlllIIIllIIlllIlllIlllIlllIllllIllIIlllllllllllIIllIIllIIIIIIIllIIllIIllIIIIIIllllllllIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllll PAGE NINETEEN Will and Testament We, the class of l943, having had our ego deflated, our talents belittled, and our questionable superiority utterly ignored by our tar from humbled underclassmen, resist the temptation to cut off this disrespectful following to declare this our last will and testament. Article I. Edith Goddard leaves to Marian her carefully acquired talent for maneuvering obstacles in tri-colored tweeds. Article ll. Midge leaves Norma her black satin slip, knowing Norma will do justice by it. Article Ill. Libby, lacking suitable possessions for Mary Alice, instead thanks her for her enlightening and obviously highly practised technique demonstrated for Hans. Article IV. A definitely bewildered senior class leaves Iohonet a much discussed copy of How to differentiate betwieen Toscanini and Koussevitsky in the ninth passage of the fourth movement of the tenth symphony by Beethoven by Hallford Roger, with confidence that she can decipher it better than we and pump the author for further details. Article V. Mary leaves to Ioann those convenient Wednesday afternoon dentist appointments knowing that loann will find that even going to the dentist has its compensations. Article VI. Copp leaves Brownie her silent-ringing bedside telephone that will be frightfully convenient for conveying sweet nothings from the wilds of ta New Iersey town more fascinating than Plainfield. PAGE TWENTY Will and Testament milllllll I IIIIllllllllIlllIlllIIllIllllIIllIlllIIIlllllllllllIlllIllllIIllllllIIllllIIIIIllIIIIIIIlllIlllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Article VII. E. A. offers Marcia ten easy driving lessons on back roads, certain that the instruction will be mutual. Article VIII. Barbara leaves Mel her old sailboat, certain she can pick up an experienced, uniformed crew. Article IX. To Stu, Midge leaves a package of Whitman's Cigarettes knowing that she will understand. Article X. An elephant as quoted from Webster, is any of certain thickset, mostly huge, nearly hairless mammals . . Having studied this definition, the individuals of the senior class, considering themselves well qualified, will Nannie their publicized profiles as models for future master- pieces. Article XI. Mary Quarles, after her sojourn in the post office, has se- cured for Iacquie three hundred three-cent stamps. Please, lacquie, make them last at least a week. Article XII. Anne wills Beverly her well-tried, effective method for en- tertaining service men at dinner and thereafter. Article XIII. Pitying lake for having to miss those last minutes of Thurs- day afternoons, Libby leaves Radiant to her, believing that lake will accept this one horsepower in preference to the proffered hundred twenty horse- power and a chauffeur. PAGE TWENTY-ONE The Seniors Will Never Forget 1. Guess what, girls! We've found we can offer you seniors Current Events and Bible this year. You lucky people. Z. Wednesday afternoon is the only time the dentist can see me. 3. Miss Wells, what map is this? 4. A two overheard in the locker room- I wish the seniors would do something with their hair. 5. Is Barbara cutting this class too? 6. Cortex with a southern accent. Maryl, 7. You are my beau, I love you so. 8. A junior helping to write the senior last will and testament- The seniors don't have anything worth leaving us. 9. Two days running two seniors take the Camp Kilmer bus to get home by accident. Or was it? 10. The wonderful financial aid given by the Ones on this Annual. ll. Texico and Mexico war. 12. What happened to Dark Eyes '? 13. Anne, where are your stockings? 14. On February 24 a droop in drip's make-up yawns through four Hartridge classes before passing judgment. 15. Grief-stricken seniors mourn Bessie's newly developed hole. 15. Fond farewells to a love-sick lieutenant witnessed taccidentallyl by an embarrassed faculty member. PAGE TWENTY-TWO A 1152 A IIU 115 M IPI HU fbvwzdf Qomcl- Pfkl 5u.xS.-zkaff 5-.m:Hs.e? 'iinfil Tak-5, mm, oi? ,n f f' Y . H ,' Yami . Wfqf favmmam 1,m.Q,m kim. - und k.-my xiwf ?a'4sQmiX: ' G s -i .mf x W 'N in 2 QmfJffn-- ' '- ' Mow hNTrfQQ H- um wmv! Vw 21. his ajmrmf Lffwlg manq -- 'ix1sl:V 1 - cmfm ,579 Www? B Kim f- 1 - .YM QMS -SMRJ Po 'Qfnz 1 S dpi Uuuzg. 'fa A FWQV Wim SSL K 0-L w been 'EQ-nd Pidmas WSL pod . gown deqai 0 WWW' HQ Bcffilbm 'Y 0 sez L-PM QNAWQ , , In Q' G I Vex? MQGFO . fiif ' Wal CIYGICX ' Q19 'fe 'TQ x M33 -so PAGE TWENTY-FOUR 220110 CAI CIIWIOUF ' e 3L '2..,'2 sig. Y. a1 Kash? Iam.- X A T. ' nv ' Mn 1 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIIIIllIIllIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll O , . . 4 .X ,. ' 'W . gb? - '31-:CN R Vw, 1-- .Q'.C?Do li. gn ' w rfj'-Jflia D- ,QQ VANQN -Q r'-, 'f, , X Cv. pi l-f-' y-rv W C, , 1 19?-U 1' I cw Y' , A ' Y, 5' W., Mm L 0 ,JY fs S ' X ff-'if f- -1 'if' ----H , ' ' ,' if 5 Q A M H . N p Q, , f-, 1, Vi u -3 F 1 Us 3, ., x, Q fi C , Y lx lllllllllllllllllllllllllIIllllllIIllllllllllllIllllllllIllllllllIIIllIIIllIIllllllllllIIIllIIllIIIllllllIIIlIIIIIIIIllllllllllIIIlIIIlillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll Y . , N PAGE TWENTY-FIVE 1 Q , g',-L W gf- Q y J k-, 1 trxx 5 'X f A C QQWN . I up . l . V.,- ,.k x j 5, V . X Xu, YP I V. , ,, J QL Q luv,-' 'V' V ! L: iw glllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIII IIIIII Inmllallllp u-J' , ' gf' dw' kg iw g '1ImlllllllllllllIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ,xy xx 1' - .1 v-1 v 'l ,J v ' Y V ,N 0 V31 J , 3 J H 4. 1 Q. W xx llllllllllllllll IllllllIIllIlllI EmlIllIIImBIIIIIII lIIllIIlIlIlIlII lIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllll hi , qv gy Ng-qxqqm Eiga TY-slx N ' , Y X qw XFWY vm CGS '2-'Za faxwbsqf Sx1Qou-'.x:u-VBNQ: Lf-QQNOQ WRU -Xbwfb 'afokb cn X XuQQ, 'tg-n oxx s G:nt'?Q-X Cwvga ' ii! Q - v 'I I 7 'ha- 'l csv econ beg-.gil-L QQYM JV! ea I ,WJ 1. .6 rf U J NX fy XJ ,-3 - 7,-Q . qs mr mm? 1-Deaf 1? aiuamp Qxeage Fm QSO ACK 53... sw-Q X05 E, 3- X- ifaqa Q, dbh 'al uofn Q' qu' Hop -'nC1 ' :KL W 'BJ auf' A0-W5 Yhccli all 3-U' Fqcqm boi. B B B C . Ch ff ff 3 up 1 Ea ffl Af B 1 3 JL: 'J .57 A H ,J I g .33 44: 'fl ll' ff. Q fi' ff ff? .4 ' . V 9 37 6 'EQ K2 Q2 3 F4 : J 512' dz' ff? U ELEMENTARY lnAnlIIllIllllIIlllllnllulllllllnllllnllnIInIIllIInIIllInlullIIllllnlllllllllllllllllllInu SEVENTH GRADE Carolyn Brokaw Patricia Gray Virginia Bausch Lois Carpenter Carol l-laye lane Scott Mary Darsie Donna Martwick Betty Van Buren lane Elliott Anne Morrell loan Williams Patricia Nash SIXTH GRADE Ann Scott Charnbliss Patsy Perry Sprague du Bois Susanne Randolph Kitty Ladd Margreta Volk Ioy Mooney PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT Wm, In -mf SENIOR FAVORITES Radio Program Outdoor Sport Indoor Sport Stamps . . Soft Drink Magazine . Movie Actor Movie Actress Bicycle . Animal Dog . New York Store . Band . Popular Song Cigarette Tooth Paste Movie . Subject Flower Author Play . . Stage actress Boys' School Men's College IIIIIHIIHIISHIIIHIIHIIIIIHIIIHllllllllllllllllllllllllKlllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIllIIllIIll!IIllIIIIIIIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll . Bob Hope . Riding . . Eating . Out of Town . Coca Cola . Reader's Digest . Ronald Coleman Ioan Fontaine . Victory Horse . . . Setter . Lord and Taylor , Claude Thornehill . Miss You . Old Gold . Squibb . . ,Mrs Miniver . Bible COnce a weekl . . . Carnelia . Rachel Field . ,. Lite with Father . Cornelia Otis Skinner . . Andover . Yale PAGE TWENTY-NINE CALENDAR SEPTEMBER l6THfA gorgeous day. The sun- beams slant through colorful, swaying boughs. m Harkl A robin trills-and guess where we arel Your assignment for tomorrow, girls- OCTOBER SRD-Scientific problem-What proper- ties does glass exhibit under the impact of a size seven and one-half shoe heaved at approximately twenty-five M.P.H.? Procedure and observations -crash, Conclusion-a new pane of glass costs 52.50. Note-This experiment was successfully ? performed by the sub-freshman class. 3' 1 NOVEMBER 7TH-Eight peoples arriving in Mont- clair in Miss l-lurrey's coupe doesn't lend dignity to the fair name of our Alma Mater. Only Barbara Weige1's victorious playing rescues us from dis- grace. NOVEMBER l3TH-Have you ever seen a face behind a mud-pack grin? Did you ever hear a voice shriek in pure joy from behind mushy sod? Have you ever watched par- tially submerged, mole-like creatures instinctively move unhindered toward their destina- tion? These sights marked Hartridges victory C4-Zi over Kent Place. NOVEMBER 19TH-Lost-One hockey game on the I-lartridge field to Vail Dean and its convoy of spectators. When last seen was dribbling through the Hartridge goal posts. Finder please return same with our compliments next year. NOVEMBER 23RD-Do you see names and authors of books floating before your eyes? Do you awaken with visions of painstakingly alphabetically arranged catalogue cards marching to disorderly, scattered positions? Are you lost without your bottle of aspirin? If you have suffered from this condition, you can imagine Miss Fines relief at the com- pletion of the library. NOVEMBER 24TH-The dramatic club presents Letters to Lucerne with the usual smear- ing of grease paint, straightening of permanent waves into the styles of old men, and desperate last-minute reviewals of lines. DECEMBER 4TH-Never underestimate the power of a mouse. DECEMBER l6TH-The play, The Emperor's New Clothes. starts off a long vacation, but not long enough. The seniors find their literary genius critically limited when cramming four themes into the last two days. vnlllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllIlllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllulllllllllllllllllllllllllllnllllllhllllllillllllllllllllll Inu PAGE Tl-HRTY CALENDAR IANUARY 29TH-Opera guild day finds Hartridge practically snowbound. On hearing the official communique that the opera-goers may stay home till train time, the entire stu- dent body apparently notices the charms ot music tor the first time. FEBRUARY lST-STH-Midyearsl Ot course I didn't do a bit of map work. I need a good stitt drink. Did you get minus the 4th root ol eleven-thirteenths to the xth power for the fifth? What was she driving at in that third comprehension? Did you ever see such titles for compositions? Ah mel FEBRUARY 12TH-The Wrath of the patriotic gods avalanches on Hartridge for its non- observance of Lincoln's Birthday. Eight forty-five: Fred is taken to the hospital with appen- dicitis. Nine o'clock: Valerie Martin slips on the ice and is taken to the doctor's. One p.m.: Pat Gray shoves her hand through a Window. lust to finish it oil came February thirteenth. FEBRUARY 13TH- Hello. Is this the Hartridge School? The hospital calling. Miss Sleeper has just been brought in with a broken leg. Are you kidding? FEBRUARY 15TH-Let's go out in the snow to get warm. School pipes freeze. FEBRUARY IBTH-l7TH-Console yourselves, girls-no school. Six cheers for defective plumbing. MARCH 4TH-a. A student rushes shrieking to us. I saw it l tell you. It had orange hair, no eyelashes, almost no eyebrows. No, ladies, she's not drunk. But she's seen the results of two days' handiwork by a bored freshman. b. Quie sings Carmen. MARCH l5TH-Ermantrude Was kidnaped and replaced by lsidore, who in turn got mixed up with Timoshenko. Do you follow us? MARCH 17TH-Oh the ignominy of itl The disgrace! The misfortunel We shall never live it downl School will never be the samel Why should this have to happen to us? The faculty-oh shame, I can't go on-beat the students in basketball. Think up an excuse, girls-quick! MARCH 19TH-Spring vacation and time to catch up on all back studies. Oh yeah? MARCH 3lST-This is where I came in. lllllllIlllllllllllIllllIIlllIIlIlllIIllllIIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllll llll ll Illlllllllllllllllllllll lllllll Illllll ll I ll I I llllllllllllllllllll I IIllllllllIllllIllllIlIllIlIlllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllll PAGE THIRTY-ONE SUPERLATIVES IllIIIIIIlIIllIIlllllllllnllllrllllllllIlllllllllllllllll Hair Eyes . Nose . Smile . Hands . Figure Humor . Pep . Poise . Best-dressed Best-looking . Barbara Browne Elaine Heminway Ioan Henwood . Patty Ann Ivins Gretchen Beyer Barbara Browne Helen Bishop Norma Finninger Mary Alice Young Helen Buttfield lean Martwick PAGE THIRTY-TWO GREEN TEAM V. IV. Edith Copp Anne Gray Marjorie O'Loughlin Elizabeth Bausch Ccaptl Barbara Weigel Barbara Browne lacgueline Carey Norma Finninger Evelyn lacob loann Pierce Marcia Van Deventer Marian Vans Agnew III. Il. I. Shirley Burke lean Martwick lean Packard Cornelia Register Marilyn Baker Dorothy Baxter Gretchen Beyer Marjorie Bishop Esther Borow loan Kelly Eiti Perlee Martica Urrutia Polly Barr Barbara Begert Elise Besthott Carol Mygatt Patricia Wight Martha Young Betsy Zerega P 'XGE Tl-HRTY-FOUR 110-Il'0 gsfblo :gn-8 Cpuoo 'I' 004 9' '6' f 'Iac' aaa' QW n-ua-0 +54 do-nh 016 64493494 431 gum, 0004 1' Vifiooza 1,,J, Ja L, 3.010290 Samet, l'B l0 eh. 'yvvv-J .9olnaU.o.:vna ara. ha:-no 54' 140-Or +555 +. ' L, 6 'J' -W 1 .-,:..,m.-I WHITE TEAM 930'-sou illlllllllllIlllllllllllllllIllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllmllllIlllllllIIIllIIllIllllIullIlllIllllllllIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Qofq, 1.1, llllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll V. Edith Goddard Mary Quarles Ccapt. Elizabeth Whitehead III. Mary Alden Nancy Barr Helen Bishop Ellen Fezandie D i II. Helen Butttield Elaine I-Ierninway Ioan I-Ienwood Wesley Martin Audrey Iacolo Mary Bock Nancy Multord I-Iarriette Stuart Florence Bunyon Mary Valiant IV. Beverly Braverrnan Nanette Brokaw Iohonet Carpenter Mary Ellen Leggett Mary Stuart Mary Alice Young I. Ioan Burke lane Cole Barbara Da WSOD Katharine Harter Patricia Ann Ivins loanna Voorhis Sara Wills PAGE THIRTY FIVE lllllllllllll TEAMS Gretchen Beyer Helen Bishop Barbara Browne Varsity Hockey Edith Goddard Mary Quarles Anne Gray Elizabeth Bausch Ioan Henwood Barbara Weigel Norma Finninger Mary Ellen Leggett E. A. Whitehead Varsity Basketball Barbara Browne Mary Ellen Leggett Elizabeth Bausch Edith Goddard Mary Quarles Barbara Weigel Anne Gray E. A. Whitehead Green Basketball Barbara Browne Elizabeth Bausch Patricia Wight Anne Gray Barbara Weigel Marcy Young lIllIIllllllIIllIIllIIllIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllll PAGE THIRTY-SIX FQ 5 Ill ..1I F-4 President-Mary Stuart Bishop, Polly Barr, Mariore -,-4 Barr, Nancy Brokaw, Barbara Browne, lacque- Nanette Finninger, Norma rey, lane Cote, CI ne-C ti Mary Multorcl, CY Nan Martwick, SGH I E1 zabeth Ann Stuart Mary Alice Young, Whitehead. CD CD -4-I 1-1 O ary Libr Faculty Advisor-Miss Ianet B. Fine Stuart President4Mary lacque- Burke, Sh rley Brokaw, Nanette Finninger Anne Gray, Norma Fey, Ca E lin Pierce, Mary GHI1 Midge O'Lougt'i1in, Io 9. D Van Marcia tuart, S ary M ries, UG Q eigel. W TG Barba Venter .-Q 3 .Q 45 U L. Finninger President-Normcr OPP C dith E CISUTSY cretcrry-Tre Se 6 Chu rmcm of Backstage Committee- Els e Goddard Director-Miss 5-fd: ' U-gc CIOC 255 2? Q59 fiflm 02:- C025 CD C3 Z ?-CID IT-10.1 533' E19 555 gutia H -E 11:55 O :TLS HM: 58.2 CDCQ .2 :1 P. E 2 45 ID L: il OJ I Qi. f-54 F-4 :1 no w UJ 7: .c cn U' U O O E 5-4 0 Z Li D. o U :E L5 I-4-l 3 o U Cine , l Carey ninger, rl c L-4 U 411 L: SI 'fi FO. Le U -cs 1:1 O LD E :E Lu .E LM be 2 cs Ln. al U 3 .E E GJ IL' CD .E E m FO. O O 3 C CU I S21 U 2 C U CD L-. E. 'C U 2 by ID T2 an 5 33 E3 M L: U o L-. :ff .E b L.. 45:32 awww 3.0.9 ODE :-'EU OEE33 ID . -93: .-UHCD EQE X cn FQOKD gem js.. 25.9 5 sw :QE U20 ZQU Jn. A4 .2423 sm F- :L Udo 2:02 L: C1 Ib .Q U L.. U 2 3. U: C U D C ,Q L: 0 E 'c o 2 UI an C UU 'QC Q ga B :rf ui E Uw L: :S o rf an U -rc gr we 35 U L1 U -Q 5-x U CQ M. 2 L: cv :Q an Q E. . Q Z' E D.. TJ. U an .c FQ 3 on an ri! President-Edith Goddard Treasurer-Barbara Weigel Librarian-Elizabeth Ann Whiehead :Z c oc: 71 E O 5-c O Q LJ Q2 L-54 C5 ED L1 3' ': cu 2 C. ID E 'ffl 7, B1 U 2 GJ E U: I-1-I s-4 ri o 4: Z' ID E 0.1 B IE CI KD -Cf 2 UI L: U M. 2 V11 lclcqueline CIVGTHICI Beyer, Beverly Br 3 O x-. O CU Li L1 O O :E L5 m M. 2 CI CD Q 5-4 ca U an L: o .G O .- by as L-1 U U E an IE an E E I-rl S cu B- U KD KI CI -ft U. L-1 U -o 1:1 O U :E L6 I-I-I L: 2 Lu: be F-4 U E FQ. O U U J- FU CI 3 El' , LL: FQ. O U cs .L-. IP- 5: GJ 5- 'U C9 Pier TID of 2 E E on 3 0 rl O Q1 U1 'O E C CL' L-l U1 U1 0.2 , Florence Rausch zcfbeth , Eli rles Quo 5: L. U 2 UT L: U Tb L: o I C E if 'S L-1 L- D U 2 'C U E C. IJ CC O .5- E Q L: 'QC :E GJ 4: U .E E E. .Q 0.2 3 U 51 U .Q L: 0 no 3. 411 c on 'fl' w E an no 03 CI 3 O IP-1 Q1 U QE by L4 L: E 'ri U GJ ,C 92 E IP ,. ci UL GD :- KD lNl Miss l-lurrey's Commencement Address-l942 You of the class of 1942 are privileged. A great deal is being said right now ot the hardships that people are undergoing. This is all too true-tragi- cally so. But you are going out into a world where things that are real and fundamental are being rediscovered. We are all acquiring a new perspec- tive, and the truth and clearness of it will stand you in good stead throughout your lives. For in this perspective We are learning to see the importance ot things we have too long taken for granted-simple eternal values. What counts more and more now as materials grow scarcer is what comes from within you-the joy of doing a hard task well-the sharing ot work and sympathy with others -the feeling that you are necessary to something outside yourself, These are lasting satistactions which really endure. So, no matter what anyone may say to you, remember that it is a good, a real moment in which to be alive. Go then-use wisely and well the new understanding and sensitivity which you will find in yourselves and in the world today. The graduates were: lane Buckner Brand Virgini-a Sprague Brandegee Mary Evelyn Demler Emily Adele Elmer Margaret Anne Fezandie , Elizabeth Banks Garretson Phyllis Ann Houston Audrey Legh lupp Carol LeBaron Ladd Frances Dayrell McClure Mary Aileen Moody Barbara Allison Murray Beverly Loizeaux Paulson Frances Gillespie Sayward Margaret Slocum Anne Sparks Patricia Ann Voorhis Elizabeth Wales loan Williams PAGE FORTY ALUMNAE IllIIIIllllllllIlllIllllIIllllllIIllIIllIIIllIIIllIIllIllllIIllIIllIIIllIIllIIIIIIIllIIllllllllIlllIIllIIllIIlllllllIIllIlllIIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIllIIIllIIllIllllIllIIIIIIIllIIllIIIllIIIllIIIIIIllIllllIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllt ENGAGEMENTS LOUISE HUNN TO EDWARD BARKER MARY CARTER CLAYBROOK TO GORDON BADGER BOOTH MARGARET ANN WIGHT TO ROBERT BERRY BARBARA CLAWSON TO FRANKLIN DANIELS HERNDERSON NANCY RAUSCH TO ROBERT HASTINGS LOUNSBURY BARBARA RAUSCH TO PETER F. PRIESTER MIMI PARSONS TO T. MITCHELL FORD RUTH C. CLARK TO PAUL A. CURTIS, IR. RUTH FINNINGER TO CHARLES PROCTER BARBARA S. SMITH TO EDWIN H. SCOTT DOROTHEA H. RICE TO EDGAR L. BROWNING MARRIAGES MARGARET SUMNER TO ROBERT POWLER HENDRIE SONIA MOGENSON TO PAUL AHLERS SUSANNE RAMSAY TO IAMES YANCEY BRAME ISABEL ANN LAING TO HENRY DOUGLAS COCHRAN AUDREY BOWLBY TO IOHN P. CANNIA THEO WELLES TC RUSSELL ELY BURKE III. MARGARET KATRINA VAN OSS TO HAYES GORDON TOVE MOGENSON HOLLINDE TO TALLE MOGENSON FREDERICA COER TO PETER GREENBAUM KUH MARION A. CAMPBELL TO DAVID PORTER SHAY SHIRLY EOFF TO BURGESS YERKES WANDA ANDERSON TO ROBERT LATHAM OWEN ELEANOR C. HOOEY TO THOMAS R. VAUCHER KATHERINE TWEEDY TO CHARLES WILDEY WARING IEANETTE WIGTON TO LINDEN STUART, IR. ADA LOUISE EGGLESTON TO IOHN BRADLEY AVERILL BARBARA WEDGWOOD ANDERSON TO IOI-IN MYER BOWERS IEANNE MARIE ALLING TO HUGH B. SWEENEY, IR. HELEN YERKES FLANDERS TO CHARLES TRIMINGHAM HOLMES IEAN BAKER TO FELIX IOSE BONILLA-NORAT BIRTHS ELIZABETH MCCLELLAN CHIMICLES, A DAUGHTER BETTY SPARKS ELLS, A DAUGHTER BARBARA GRAHAM BEATTY, A SON PATRICIA ROWLAND RHETT, A SON RUTH TROTH GIBBON, A SON ELIZABETH RUSSEL SCUDDER, A DAUGHTER VIRGINIA HOWELL SOSKIN, A SON NANETTE HOY NICKERSON, A SON MARGARET LOUISE UPHAM OFFERS, A SON IANET DUNNING VAN DUYN, A DAUGHTER DORIS LAING VOM LEHN, A SON DORIS APPLEGATE WEIL, A DAUGHTER DOROTHY LIPPINCOTT WHITE, A DAUGHTER MURIEL SPEARE WILLIAMS, A SON RITA SCHWEP BASS, A DAUGHTER ELIZABETH CRAMPTON BOOTH, A DAUGHTER ELIZABETH WIGTON BOURS, A DAUGHTER LOUISE BROOKE CHRISTENSEN, A DAUGHTER HARRIET CLEVELAND DOBBINS, A DAUGHTER RIDGELY VERMILYE GILROY, A DAUGHTER MARGUERITE ANDERSON BUFF, A SON ROSEMARY EVANS HINMAN, A SON MARGARET MORSE FARGO, A DAUGHTER ESTHER BARLOW PERKINS, A SON ANN TWEEDY ARDERY, A SON IEAN SCHOONMAKER MORRIS, A SON IOANNE HUGGINS TITBALL, A DAUGHTER IIIllllllIIllllllIIllIllllIllIIIIIIIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIllllIIllIIIllIlllllllllllllIllIllllllllllllIIllIIIllIllIIIllIIIlIIIllIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllIlllIIllIllllIllllIIllIIlIIIllIIllIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll PAGE FORTY-ONE TEPPER'S A X. 5 L .. ll I ' - , 1 Qi: - V f'c'.gs - Q' 2 We ' O f w ' QE J I 1 1' .W 5 'I O11 VFHJ' - E fl6qI-P-5:1 3 -1I VFj J5 HF Vi . 2: , I l ! il'?'21fw.l0:1Ke4+'L4P 1 I 'P K sl ,L .t- '14 SAFE PLACE TO SHOP Plainfield, New Iersey OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE Phone: Plainfield 6-4263 M. E. Willoughby FLOWERS 0 401 Watchung Ave. Plainfield, N. I. Compliments of Taylor's Specialty Shop PLAINFIELD. N. I. Phone: Plainfield 6-8686 The Wishing Well 106 East 7th Street 0 Gifts and Books for Any Occasion For Graduation- Ask for Books for Your Library The Plainfield Book Shop. Inc. 321 Park Ave. Phone 6-4415 O Eddie's Beauty Salon 518 Park Avenue Plainfield 6-5821 0 Phone: Plainfield 6-9601 George W. Bantle KEEP YOUR SPIRITS UP 440 Watchung Ave.. Plainfield. N. Compliments of The Peg Grant Shop SPORTSWEAR Opposite the Public Service Building Compliments of The Clara Louise Tea Room 219 E. FRONT STREET Telephone: Plainfield 6-2852 lllllllIIIllIIItIIIllIllllllllIIllllIIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIllIIIllIIllIIllIIIllIlllIIllIIIIIIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllll OUR ADVE RTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE lllllllllllllll TO THE FACULTY AND STAFF TO THE GRADUATES AND STUDENTS WE Ex'rEND oun CONGRATULATIONS R O S E N B A U M ' S Plainfield's Metropolitan Store , Compliments oi Comphments of Park Stores Market M. Perlmutter PLAINFIELD, N. I. I DRAKE COLLEGE WILLIAM C. COPE, D.C.S., P res. FRANKLIN G. HOAGLAND, B.S., Mgr. 40 Somerset Street Phone: Plainiield 6-0344 PLAINFIELD, N. I. Courses oaA,1-9 Open all year SECRETARIAL DAY EVENING ACCOUNTANCY oo ,jo 1 STENOGRAPHIC LLEG Ask for our new Catalog! THE PLAINFIELD COURIER-NEWS 0 A clean. dependable home newspaper llllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllll IllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIIllIIInnrlIllllllllllllllllllllllll OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE Compliments of Luke Gray-Florist 0 Route 29 and Mountain Ave. North Plainfield. N. I. Phone: Plainfield 6-4963 The Utility Shop ANTIQUES - WEARING APPAREL 519 Park Ave. Plainfield, N. I. DISTINCTIVE EYEGLASSES AND SPECTACLES Established 101 Years Gall 6. Lembke, Inc. 633 Park Avenue Plainfield, N. I. Full Line of Optical Goods Phone: Plainfield 6-4027 Mrs. Hadden's Shop HOMEMADE PASTRIES 428 Watchung Avenue PLAINFIELD, N. l. Gates' Highway Furniture Shop 415 Park Ave. Plainfield, N. I. Highway Goes to Town Open Thursday 6 Friday Evenings Brown and Keller's CLEANERS AND DYERS Cold Storage - Rugs Cleaned Main Office and Plant 12-18 Washington Avenue PLAINFIELD. N. l. Plainfield 8-1037 Louis E. Saft GUILD-OPTICIAN 528 Park Ave., Plainfield At Seventh St. Hours: 8:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. Tuesdays and Fridays Until 8 P.M. Compliments oi Vogel 61 Tanzer S64 South Avenue Plainfield 9373 Telephone: Plainfield 6- 9374 9375 OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE I EG. o. KELLERQ U Cleaners - Dyers - Rug Cleaners Launderers - Cold Storage Phone: PLainiield 6- Corner SOUTH and LELAND AVENUES O 0100-Other Towns: WX-2100 lNo Tolll O 127 PARK AVENUE PLAINFIELD, NEW IERSEY ESTABLISHED 1868 SWAIN'S ART STORE PICTURES - FRAMING - PAINTINGS Rssronsn 317 WEST FRONT STREET Telephone Plainfield 6-1707 Telephone: 6-0175 C. H. Hall 6 Co. P H A R M A C Y 506 Watchung Ave. Plainfield, N. The ability oi the Physician to deter- mine the medicinal ingredients need- ed, the ability oi the Pharmacist to compound these into medicine in small individual units is the ver I Y cornerstone oi scientific medication. Illlll Illlll IllIIllIIllIIIllIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll IF YOU DON'T KNOW FURS. KNOW YOUR FURRIER I. BUY AT Kurtzman's 31 Years in Plainfield Phone Pl. 6-1938 200 Watchung Ave. OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE , WW Q W' COMPLIMENTSOF VJ' ' THE FACULTY COMPLIMENTS of' THE IUNIOR CLASS COMPLIMENTS OF THE SOPHOMORE CLASS COMPLIMENTS OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS coMPL1MENTs or THE SUB-FRESHMAN CLASS COMPLIMENTS or T HE GLEE CLUB COMPLIMENTS or THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION COMPLIMENTS OF THE DRAMATIC CLUB P NG II it's new and smart in When the usual just won't do . . SHOES and HOSIERY Yolfve G We Wifh YOUIII It at Van Arsda1e's SPORTSWEAR PLMNFIELD' N' I' Park Avenue at East 2nd Street The center of the business center PLAINFIELD. N. I- Compliments oi V 0 g e 1 5 FURRIERS A. A. Prudhon 206 East Front Street. Plainiield. N. I. GREGORY'S MUSIC CENTER NEW IERSEY'S FINEST AND LARGEST MUSIC SHOP Everything Pertaining to Music and Records O 330 W. FRONT STREET PLAINFIELD, NEW IERSEY PLainfield 6-8549 EXPERT REPAIRING BLOSSOM HILL FARM ICE CREAM LOUNGE FOUNTAIN - LUNCHEONETTE MILK - CREAM - ICE CREAM Produced on Our Own Farm Lebanon, N. I. 205 E. STH STREET Open Daily and Sundays PL. 6-6364 8 A.M.-1 A.M. lllllmIllIllllllllllllvlllvlllllll lllllllllllIllIIllIIllIulIIllIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIvllnlllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllvIllIIll5llllllllllllllllllllllllIllvllllll lllllllllllllllllllllll lllnlllllllllllllllllr OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Phone Metuchen 6-0774 OAK HILLS MANOR Luncheon and Dinner Cocktail Lounge Banquet Facilities PLAINFIELD ROAD Wm. A. Petersen. Prop. METUCHEN. N. I. COMPLIMENTS OF A F R I E N D the graolucztes of The ffIRTRlDC7f ,QCHQDQDL fzave reacfzeol cz C!6IlI'l1l'fC stage in f!16l'I' cufucalrion So tfzose ofeafing with T146 ECORDEK PRIISSD fzave reacheol a LJGIIIIHIIG goof in Hne Prirzlrirzg We'11 Furnish Proof 'f Phone Pfmlirxnelal 5:2850 510 IY,Uf4'!7ll'7S 1 JVGUU !,!l'liIl!I'l'!LL AXVUIV .yerscy Q TEMPORA ET MORES COMES WITH OUR IMPRINT Q IIIIIIIllIIIllIllllllllllI.IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIII'lllllwlllllllllllllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIllIUIIINIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllll OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE ruiI X .WI--.X X I XX ,II ,I X X X ,X In .r' - fl -- X . it XX. - XX I ,IIIII 5 X X. , . NX ' XXXX1 'J - , if X 4 . , , -. uw X n X X ,. I I QI' ' ,YI.X.X-X .XI 'I I , I X I- I .X'- I ' , . I X X - . X I -'F X- 'X,1lI. I X -. ,. . . T X , - X X , X?'A - X' ff .A f .Q I V- - I X ' '--' X ' YY - ,- JI II .I I I I - -X 'X - ' - 1 X. K Q . 1XXll,:,fX.- ' I ,,.. I I,,.III . XI I I ' X ' X 'X ' 5 'T ' .' X X -. '. I, ' . UV III ,X-.IXI-2,3-.Q I X X X X- , X. X .. X -, . ,X , X X X' ' ,-rg. .. - X ,- Xn I X-II.X,X, I 5 ' 'Q A ,,'X.-ffX.X . +XX'u' -3 - . . -. . , 'XXXL XX-' X I X., -,III .I,X. . X X . I-I- A 'X ' ' :X V. .X ' X, , .X . X- 'Q .. 5 2. .1.' X . L ' 'X :I . ' X- X X'1I'X 'X , Nur, ,, z.X.1X., ' -'X' . -X XX . X 1X 'IX X' XI, X. Us aIXlLX,I1II,IIIs.I'-QCII IIX I I? 'I 'X :II . I'4.'fI-XX -I .I,.lQ,fX' g, ' , , -' Xj. '.,.r1g' .I X. X -- 1- . '-:XXX ,JI,.,. I I If .. . X 515. -'sv .. IX X .ti Ii- X fI X- -i- - - 'X ' fX.X'X X 'z ..,- . -XXX.. X. X. X- XX ' II I . . I. -'X F, ,I, X.,,., X, 'IXX. II' I X X X X 'X ,,, . X- XjXg,I X Q. X X X- ..X .X X.XI I X- ,XXXj-IM. . I X . I . . IIIII.,IIq 5I..,I. , X ' ' .,,fI.X.-.1 ,' . X . X' 2 .. .fXXXX'--Sf'-X1 X X27 ' K.. .N X' X' ' L'i.X LX' TXf.:E-M XX1,: 1 X X -. X'-' ' ' 'XvX1.XXT 1- , '- . -V5 X1 1'-X, -. X- .. . 1. Xff' , -- XJ-X'-'X I X - X X:wXX1'-X. X' if - X ' - X-.y 'I , XXX -jp . X XX, . X,.k-'Y - .- - - -1 X alia-X-r-Y -X X '. 'X ' X- r .jX'- , Q-.Iv 'vJ 1 'Hi' - X' ' f , X wig ,I -' 'jf -, X: 1 -XXI XI, . . , . L, . XP. .XF .5 JXI -,. - ,. .XX X X .X 3. ',,- -X-LX X- - X, . - I- n'T -l..' X-.1.':-.-X -X, ff .. ,X -4 X . .I .39 , Xu,-f1.. I2I X- X X' XXX 'X X .:X' 1' -g,X,X+,s-, .: X., , , ,- 11- Mm X--yX,. 9' -XX,-'. ,,1' .I,i-X-- II . IX X, sf, XQX-X X, 51.-Ir' gI- 'fi' .:'I.Xu'VX'XXI X, - X-..X 5 X ,.JXX:- -,, -LXXX ,1 , , 1,1 X ' , - X., ax: ---. X X- 5 X-XX ,YX,,, 1 X I X X I, X X X .V . ,IXXXI ...-.f. I If I ' .. -.I II IIIIIUXI. .XIX 1:IIII,I ,X X I- II:.'IX X- . ,I .Y ' X ' 'I ' 1. 5- 'X . l'f'r.',+l! ni 43 1 -X ' -1' F5 Af -P XX' fl'-314 if-9 1-97 X, XX X X- X . X RE'-lick-11.11. .XXX.gq.XX.X . .. . XX XX . . . XX X . . X .X X, X I,I-, . yn.,-.X.II.II Jf X-'XPHXX V .XXXAX:'-.rj-ffl II X IIIX,IX IIIIIX X I ' XIIXQQIIK X!!UIIXrLfXIgQj XjX:Ig-JITXI ,. 'X' I ':lcV:-':: .-X 'X'-'XX-' I X- '- 7 X . F' ' f 'XXX'-' ,- z . -MX.-. .XftX - g. XX, X-XXX-XXX--iff: 'i X Xjl IrX ,. 11X-'XM I II., I . -,5x, 'XJ X5 .Xa I M.. I III1 .,.II ,WL X III I . I.I. XYII., ,,.1f..II4I V, IIJIIIW Z X-:L-'X X-: q -'-fgkf X' W Eu-X5 X- ' . , I, .X U - X. X ' X u. 3.f ',' V '. - 1 'XX Jn! J ll' J. X.: PC J' X'I ,I'-VIII ' . '-.' 1' .IH IXeJ, 'Fg,.'vLv. r . ,L-JJJI . :' X - '. . . X - L.-'XUT 'XL X Y' X' 3 I 1 X-, X. X X' ' , 952' ' I X. I l- IX . X- I, -. I-,XXX I I . V TII IX .WI ,- I, II . III Ix,,Il , .I . - '1,X Q' ' 1-I - X X- Vi X. ..XXX I I XI . I: XI, I . X . XX XII l ' X X '-1 XI X' X .Xqf, .,. 'X -. I I-su. .,,,,,g...., s 1 , 1 , I s .1 , 1. ,r ,v .I n . L. ,, I , f 1 f ' 1, 4 5 ,, . , ,, gg.. 5. fu..-. A31-4, if yr.. I -.e-.4 4 1 I 'uw-. 55.1- '- 1-5'Y,H',., .2-I, -' I . 1 'Af '.: f. 3 .1I4'fF1'-3: -. 1 , f' I .f4. 1-' ,wa - -.. ,:,,--kg: 1 r ff? . ' - 1: , . . II I J .I 'W ' ' , '1':' .Qwjf V' 4, - -' ' ., 'if MP1 v' I mf- . . . .III 1 - 'z . A S ' , ., FW fi' .. ,fn - I ' , -.45-n., 'f'.IIIW1' 1 ' . J- , v A- .gI. 3 I 'fI,, H . .MD . , ,, II .. If IIII I .f-fit . , i, . V I .I I 0, I QI . , . 5. .I .L If A , I I., . : 1,3 -ABL, f '- 5' la . 1-M. I v' I Q . I . , 'f 4- . J:-. .? 3 . Il- V ' .. ,I I - 'gi 1 'A ' . 12 ' L ., ' .-: 1' , 1 ' ' .4 4- ,143 51' M E H .f-1 , ' t -iff ' IIS I.- :IIVI 'I 'vf I II . I. H ' II, I I FI 'I wg '.y..- V f 3,5 ,ff Y '1 fx . .- - . , H 20.1. T 1'. , A' w . - 517' . 5, J-, ,U y N H .1 -I -,sg-f - Y A55 -- as H W... 3 - I J I I , . . I I .IIII 7551- if X H X fel, I 44' J- ' f 1 . ' r ' .xl 3 --, . ,T I v I' 111, W-.. X . ' : 25 ' '. T! ' ' 41 , I N .I Q . I I ., ' I . - ' ' 5 ' ,r Ir. f ,- nr, J.-,:f ' ' . . V .. V- Iv, ffm, 4 I Im I 1 I . I ' - ,,. .4 w M. .A f . . P .. 1. . A V, 3 V . - YI ,K -gp Il. . .-,W .5II fa. 'M 2' S+-1 171.-f fQg' 've li I if . 1: .-f S: 2 QI: 'F I ,. ig . ' ' il ., s wg ,I EF I ' . A qi 'f If I -' I w .34 . I , . . . r . . r - 1 P . - Ku- I 1 ,' K- ' L w 'g'I .. 'sf ,L 42 , Ir f 1 I I' . I Th gx I ' ' Q- Iwi-V A 1, - -- ' . 1 ... .F , . .. ' - F , 1 I, I -1 X ' 1 . - 'f s . 'J - 1. , iz II:IwI EI II I '. , . r 1' 1, ., , , I . -- , ln A---.. 1 . 6 . 4 :V ' . .I v ,UK 1, I ., I I ,.I '1 m g' ' ' X I- I i' , - fn A .. ,I , - ,AI 'E . 'Qs -1 ' 'Skt .:. , 'F A 1 3-1. I II ,- 15' ri' -- . 1 I , 9 9 - . .I - I . I L - ' 1. ' vu. . 'T' 2 - - 4 . . . 'wil IL .IIIII . IIJ-I.. I , ,III H .jq I f1jII,.I,'..uI, jv -P N5 . . . . .f .-.. , .41 -n I I.-I .- ,. L- . '- ,, . im' W. . ' - - U,-,gf - f . D V. I MI I I . -.W DI,-'I 1 . I 1 ff. . R3 vu' ':!I. VF I v fklfu- ' l 1 f- G KJ ' ' A' I . fi I I I :I ' I 1 Tx' -. .,' EJ . ' - 5' . ' - wg . h A- V .:, - ' I . .Q - . w 1 I II I5 I . .j .'.,- V' : , 1 yy . . . .., N - 5 II L3 3.5, I, I, . . I ,fig , I ' -, . ' I - D ir' 5 3 5 II ' ' ' uni 1 9. ,I I I 1-if I-' -- . A , f II .s .Lg , ' ' .gqw A j:z. I., sg --,ef f I --I .,,' Inpiflkf, '- 'JI III, - v. . Il FI Iffsi. If ...:III III?,3I.'li- , II' gif 1' -Tiff. 4 . - -. . I - . .,, 1 I I f 'i ' Q w YW: ' J 4 I VF V92-N. ' A! V . ' ' X 1. x 1 1 rI ' , j,I-I IIJI.. '.i-ij: II II j. II ' 5 af, fl I , - , . QkS2'ii'f 'f1i1 ,f il .U T' - , k , I I I 'p I ga' ',,f2u.f'1r '4IIII.1- .' 'I 'II V' ' f f L 1211 if III L ff . Im IIIWI . I I II . 5. . 5, 3- ,. . wtf. J. 1 F' -' M 2 -.nw-. 'Q W- - 1 w .M . W tfffagsfw' - A--.mv IW L ,. ,.f III.. , . NI ..1.-.U-L --I LI . J: II 1 ., . , - -.. wma., .,: , ,J-3 3 1-I 1 II .-.x HI ll L. I . ' , 2' 1 , 1 1.1 I w 1 , -PJ 1 - ,?r 'I .L . . II 5 5,1111 4 '. ,-1 1 E ,WI qt . I .I ...rg-. ,, .fi 'ZTJ' , .-ffl -J .,l' 1'Y,-IQJ'-: '7 i'n'I:1. 1 ffl? 'tl' E ' I'-.1 I 'j in-' 4 ' I ' 'QAM an .1 , ,1riffI, I-JW... I II. I F--' 'Ig ' , , M 5 I . , .- ' 337' hr. lfgiugfkgfi. 7 'IFF 'rH'.afgezQu'f5iIh'ETl3 L' if .' '- H-I. I- .- W S II 21' an 'Y 1' 1 52228 '12 W :L . t ' H ' .. f '. ,. bfi:-f , I -4' .'...'P..P: -' 5 .4-Uri. ' avi?-:A'li1.:, -...... , ... 'z..A.E. 'B J' ': ' X YN I LM
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.