Hartridge School - Tempora et Mores Yearbook (Plainfield, NJ)
- Class of 1946
Page 1 of 88
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 88 of the 1946 volume:
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I I I I s I I I i I I f E I QQQNQX UNQKXQSLSIS PAGE TWO TEPNPDRFX Q6 MGRG5 ff -X gl A XJ, xl .-,,, 'X'x .N N QB- To M iss H cmnay X+Y:Z seems an impossible equa- tion until you supply the components: 'X as our class, something of a mysteryg Y as You, Miss Hannayg equals Z, our wonderful, zany years at Hartridge which you have done more than your part to make wonderful. We thank you. PAGE FIV ' .. A Y I ' K , fi r 'Tail' 4. 1 A-u at 41' I g li L nga ' ,V i 1.5 o Frances Hurrey Harriet Sleeper Barbara l-litchings Mary B, Wells lanet B. Eine Barbara I. Morse Agnes Hannay IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII PAGII SIX Faculty Elizabeth Colie Olive Ware Iuliette Escoffier Elsie Goddard Virginia l-luyler lane Crowell E. May Tennant Mary Andrews Mary R. Corwin Hope Reid Dorothy H. Lyall Sylvia Miller Elsie Nelson Kathryn Ondrice Elizabeth Stover k 9, new 1 . 4 n F E W its WJ Wesley Martin , Mary Valiant . . . Mary Rock ..r. Patsy Ann lvins lane Scott . . . A Peggy Loizeaux Frances McBride Elsie Goddard .... Frances l-lurrey Student Council loan Kelly - President . ....... Vice'President . , . . Secretary-Treasurer . . . Senior Representative . . . , A . . Iunior Representative . . , Sophomore Representative . ..r. Freshman Representative ,. . Sulo-Freshman Representative . , . . . , . . Faculty Representative Ex-Oflicio llnunununmnnlnlnlnllllm PAGE SEVEN lllllll lllll lllllllll IIllIIllIIllIlllllllllllnllllllllll Iltlllllll Illllllllllllllllll llltllltllllllllllltllllllllllllllillltlllIllIIIllIllIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIllllllnmllllllllIllIInIInlnlllllllullllllllll lllllll There was a man in the hospital Annual Board Editor-in-Chief ,. Assistant Editor . . ,. . Business Manager . . Assistant Business Manager Assistant Business Manager ,. Assistant Business Manager . Literary Editor . ,, , Assistant Literary Editor .. Photography Editor . ,... . Photography Editor ,. . Art Editor ,. Athletic Editor ..,. , Assistant Athletic Editor ,. Assistant Athletic Editor . , Wesley Martin Betty Buttertoss , Marilyn Baker , Ioan Kelly Frances Hummel Carol Mygatt , Mary Rock . Virginia Linke ., Mary Valiant .. .Esther Borow . Helen Butttield Ioan Henwood Marjorie Bishop . . . . Sara Wills InIIllIIIlIIllIIllIllllllllllllllullllllll I llmllllml llllllllllll lllllll ll It I llllllli ll I llmll llllllll lmllllll I ullllllllllllll I ll uullllllllmn Inu l I llll PAGE EIGHT SENQOQQ3 F3 f ' X A .'QX?Ng, 172 J, Ev- ,J J Q ' llllllllnmllllllllllllllllllllllnllllllIllllllllllllllll llllllllllllrlllllll llIIllIIllIIllIIll0IllIInIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIllIIIllIIIlIIllIIllIIllllllMIIIIllIIllltlltlllllllllllvllllll Class H istoofy THE HAVING Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak September And each kindergarten member threw her blocks upon the floor. While Val nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping, As of someone loudly rapping on a solid wooden door. That is Buttfieldf' poor Val muttered, pounding on my noggin sore. Only this and nothing more, Time passed by in Oakwood's hallways, as time has done almost always- Second grade found Wills and Henny standing at the Mushroom door. We were growing slightly bigger, learning how to read and figger Playing dolls and building houses as each other's hair we tore Teachers life was grim and weary, but it never was a bore With this devastating four, Presently our frames grew stronger, we were louder now and longer. Tiny, but efficient Wesley added to our clan one more, We were prodded by Miss Sleeper, then our Guardian, Guide, and Keeper To labor, vainly labor, over things that were a bore, Over many a guaint and curious volume of forgotten foren- Now, alas, forgot once more. Academic darkness fearing, long we stood there wondering, peering, Till our Borow stood beside us with her fund of facts galore, Rock and Didi with their crushes, and when kidded violent blushes, Fortified our numbers, bravely, as we entered the last door Led by Fine and Wells and Hurrey, deep dark mysteries to explore f And remember, nevermore, Then we struggled with mathematics, logarithms, and quadratics, Ioined by energetic Marl and by loannie-'What a roarl Hummel, then, and also Ginny, then the lanky, long, and skinny Butter added the last members to the class that onward tore - To be Seniors, gallant Seniors, getting by---but little more. lust a very little more, Though wi: wait with breath that':: bated for the day we're graduated And we think that a diploma is the thing we'd most adore, When our living we are winning, or the baby's diapers pinning, We will think with fond remembrance of the days that are no more And we'll wish that we were back there at the Hartridge School front door, But we will be, nevermore, H. S, B. '46 IIIllIIllIIllIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllInlIIIIIllIIIllIIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllIAlllllllllunllllllullll IILIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIItllIIllIllulllllllunllullul PAGE TEN f , , ,, D ruff 1-4 1. 4 x.. MARILYN SPEIR BAKER Slats Marl Lynn 1500 Charlotte Road f Plainfield New Iersey v-Ll.-,,fV,f,, 5r0,u,4.L ff QAAA- X A uw IInun?Turin2nuunx 5:ulunnnnuun4WJllunilnvun I wi-Mlllllllll quuunruunvkj 141' I --I . i I.r.,,. nv, ,UK ' his Hg Entered 1942 Bennett Iunior College ' 2 fmt'-f.'-:1,f:i'7,g f 4 , l:.i1ff,Ls-2,22'ii'9?'Q3flfT?-Q Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. Glee Club, '43, '44, '45, '46, President of Glee Club, '46, Dramatic Club, '43, '44, '45, '46, Art Club, '45, '46, Green Hockey, '44, '46, Class Hockey '44, '45, '46, Varsity Hockey, '46, Class Baseball, '44, '45, Class Basketball, '45, '46, Varsity Basketball, '46, President of Class, '44, Treasurer of Class, '46, Libra- ry Committee, '44, '45, '46, Treasurer of Library Committee, '45, Chairman of Library Committee, '46, Chairman of Tin Can Committee, '45, Assistant Business Manager of Annual, '45, Business Manager of Annual, '46, Dance Committee, '46, IIIIIIIIIIIIIllIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII PAGE ELEVEN ,PLC lun c6.00l, min tion cum QOIIQLY those duqs an Loxmvn I gui School and CLY thi Ll-bd-L-fl. 5LU11NMCc1.m , IVY' 'Plnfi V0 'U'b'a Wim- CLI! Null' Quit , lllls so tbl' B ,-2' ,. 1. poner, but not sad, Cl 0-U Qfflhl' '1 dl blUl1fll.LYL,A bu? lim muhux adlmay ri-U5 psinr. MAR1oR1E LAURA BISHOP L00-ds uf lu.LK rn rifle Didl Digit Blip 831 Madison Avenue Y Plainfield, New Iersey l 'ai Entered l94l Vassar Dramatic Club, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, Art Club, '43, '44, '45, '46, Green Hockey, '44, '45, Green Basket- ball, '44, Class Hockey, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, Class Basketball, '43, '44, Class Baseball, '44, '45, Athletic Representative, '46. 'llIIllIlllIIlllllllllllllllllllllnlnll PAGE TWELVE 1 i I 0 J ESTHER IVY BOROW 934 Park Avenue Plainfield, New lersey Entered l942 Bryn Mawr ' Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow We diet. Dramatic Club, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, Glee Club, '43, '44, '45, '46, Secretary-Treasurer of Dramatic Club, '45, '46, Librarian of Glee Club, '46, Class Hockey, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, Class Basketball, '42, '43, '44, '46, Class Baseball, '42, '43, '44, '45, Student Council Representative, '44, Vice-President of the Class, '46, Photography Editor of the Annual, '46, Iunior Var- sity Hockey, '46 lulluluunulIumll:ulnllumlmlnnlul PAGE THIRTEEN Que 94ZZ.,T,g,,..,fm4,f.Mf6:e2.75,t371-M magg- .ff-L al, HJ., awww- H ,wifefkff ff-Q 4' ' Qwqufitwffi' ,W-.iff-f WZ ' ,. . 1 , .. ., 1. 11 1 3 . ,, .,1 , , , , 1., .. ,. . 1 11 , 1 ,. ,,,,,,,. .M 11 11 1 1 ,11,, 1,,M , ,, , 11 , , , 2' 1 if 1 A' 5 lfiave silence to the qods, l'm but human Class l-lockey, '45, '46, Class Baseball, '45, Varsity ' Hockey, '46, Dramatic Club, '46, White Baseball, '45, Assistant Editor ot Annual, '45, Iummmuumunnmmnnnnnnmnun PAGE TOURTEEN ELIZABETH EMILY BUTTERI-'OSS Butter 48 Bonnell Street Flemington, New lersey Entered l9-44 Skidmore t' .l HELEN STEVENS BUTTEIELD Burphy Steve 7 Myrtle Avenue Plainfield, New Iersey Entered 1933 Wellesley Hold the fort! I am coming! Class Hockey, '44, '45, Class Basketball, '43, Varsity Hockey, '46, Dramatic Club, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, Glee Club, '45, '46, Art Club, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, President of the Art Club, '46, Library Committee, '44, '45, '46, Secretary-Treasurer ot the Library Committee, '46, Chairman Grounds and Trattic Committee, '45, Assistant Literary Editor of the An- nual, '45, Art Editor of the Annual, '46, Secretary of the Class, '42, llllllllllllIllIIllIllllllllllnlllilllllln PAGE FIFTEEN Camel daqn - Cxccd k-- V. Q . use, Y Laos -1'NsDNRJkQ, 39 D NX5Nx'-m-- x,LbQ.XQ s'XC--XNxaNX.g vl X? x'.'iT--:xxx 'Bali ae x A ht'lHSAlllliEsIE llllillarflml!II I IIIllIfIl JIIIlllhlllllllll lmf7'mh Illfx v dbQb1.1...N A,-5-' 3, ,VLQQ Q5 SN KDQA-A ', -,fl xi inn., C-Q sux Cross-. UQ WXOTL. :sh-11 g-- q Q moi' 2-K.:-A aasdi' Neil' QASHENWOQJXJX A V1 qyoqEsHwr1wf1 3f X175 iemifssti-Cari Q-Ne sf f'fNuN..c-xjb Entered 1936 R-l g, Little, but oh myl Dramatic Club, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, Cflee Club, '43 '44, '45, '46, Class l-lockey, '42, '43, '44, '46, Varsity Hockey, '43, '44, '46, White Team Hockey, '42, '43, '44, '46, Class Basketball, '42, '43, '44, '46, White Baseball, '42, '43, '46, Athletic Association Repre- sentative, '45, President of Athletic Association, '46, Chairman of Lunchroom Committee, '45, '46, Ath- letic Editor of Annual, '46. 'uiImmmumlmnunnlunnmnnn PAGE SIXTEEN FRANCES THOMASON HUMMEL Fran Hum lUl4 Field Avenue Plainfield, New lersey Entered 1943 Lasell Class Hockey, Cross Represe Assistant Busin Class Baseball, Speak to her ol Iacob's ladder, and she would ask the number of rungs. '44, '45, '46, Class Basketball, '44, '45, '44, '45, lunior Varsity, '46, Red ntative, '46, Class Secretary, '46, ess Manager, '46. lllllIIllIIllIIllIIllIluIllllIllllllllllllllllllllll' PAGE SEV!-INTERN fl-5355-il old. Q-2.e.xA. - U - 1 x ' ' . ,QW V 5 W., , ,FJ 'fb .:'nJ'Y3 A515 I F732 cj- 'Jsierfwq-'- Q X ,M 5 M qj 1. Al-A S-R-Q35 .Q g.r,KD'Lf XJQ sl-f-L, X-JJL' K fkli-lk 'ff 'f ff f 'ff f '1 -----'-- --' we oa'.,..s..H' - 1-9.,LiQ::l c.c.c:,.s-. - Lau ,YQWL :P-4,, - Q21-V 1' Q. gg Dslkslk,-1 E IOAN NICHOLSON KELLY Ioannie 999 Woodland Avenue Plainfield, New Iersey Entered 1942 Skidmore Worry kills many men---Why die? Dramatic Club, '43, '44, '45, '45, Glee Club, '45, '46, Chairman ol Assembly Committee, '45, Chairman ot Red Cross, '45, Library Committee, '44, Green Baseball, '44, Class Baseball, '44, '45, Secretary of Class, '44, Assistant Business Manager of Annual, '46, President of Student Council, '46. l L -mumIinimminnIuuummnunium I 5 gl W 'lm PAGL lllGH'l'l,llIN 4- i 1 X' iii J t , ' ' ' ' -X . A. - ff - x.- --- -wi., n x . x ' , - I ll I I Ill I I IIII Illllllilllllllllnllllll fl I x ,', K ,I ,i ' fn' xxlx'. 'X. l.w I '. ' X - 9 ' VlPGlNlA ELIQABETH LINKE X ' Q l 5 . ' x . I X . , X, . ' Ginny Girvinia Link l 225 Evergreen Avenue Plainfield, New lersey Q 1 . - .. .. . n Entered 1943 Smith A f - 5 I lt's nice to be natural when you're naturally nice, . , I Student Council Representative, '45, Class Presi- dent, '46, Chairman ot Red Cross Committee, '46, 1 Chairman of Service Committee, '46, Dramatic Club, '45, '46, President ot Dramatic Club, '46, Art Club, llli , '46, Class Hockey, '45, '46, Class Baseball, '44, Assis- tant Literary Editor, '46. uummnmmlmilmulunuluullul PAGE NINETEEN CL.. tim. .em , and 4 S134-55 CIQUDG-up Zinultq- chu: ok! 'QE-'Kmmuao:a..1r.an.eDn.LfaI Q-Aolkdtulxn Milk me 1 C511 hm- -QU'-N Q'2'01CQi - Ccinxquqsmr. asm U I-Exten NDA- qw: 2-943114 ,amp +0915 4 hah- - WESLEY MARTIN C3220 ' Wes Wesel V 1130 Thornton Avenue Plainfield, New Iersey R Y ix f 1 Entered 1940 Vassar She dares to walk where angels fear to tread. Class Hockey, '45, '46, Red Cross Representative '44, Library Committee, '44, '45, Dance Committee '44, '45, '46, Chairman of Dance Committee, '46 Cflee Club, '45, '46, Dramatic Club, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, President ol Dramatic Club, '45, Secretary of Class, '43, President ol Class, '45, Vice-President of Student Council, '46, Editor-ir1fChief of Annual, '46. mlnunnuIIIuIlunnnnmnnnnu PAGE TWENTY beau Ccmrol. X Qask sco.es'5.L1gQ','z. oem, neo! q,t,gJg,h.x Selva t'COq'J,- -PW C-smplq . Qkecur s'f'CLq, CJ-LFC 0 Lol? lfkupqitf QU L-LQLJLV LQSQA O20 L,Uc,,-LCQCH, M V? 1 mk-illllllll?-9KE iIIllIIIlIII :l3l 4hlEl3nl G EF 4 ,Le at Yedgel-. I -f ' MARY WORTH ROCK i Murph Rocket 830 Second Place I Plainfield, New Iersey Entered l94l Women's College of University of North Carolina There's lots we may say of you, but one Word will suffice, nice, Class Hockey, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, Class Softball, '44, '45, White Hockey, '45, I. V. Hockey, '46, White Softball, '44, '45, Glee Club, '45, '46, Athletic Associ- ation Representative, '45, Student Council Repref sentative, '46, Library Committee, '45, White Team . Captain, '46, Class President, '43. InIIInmllnIII1mmmnnnnllnnnnnnmm PAGE TWENTY-ONE - C - ,s. ALP --.1.uv'L 1 '- f-.1.. 1... ... ...--t r-Q ' 'W' '1-..f.- fs -, f , , - h 2...- '.J. .4r..4, ,.... f'.,f --3 ,.., 4-'-.,'- --. 'W' ,Q 1,3 , 1,5 ' 'I -. - , ' ' l I f .1 4 .5 J 1 ! Q J -' 'fa Q ' - Q 'Z .1 If ' ' 5, F ' K ' I X. 1 Q - , U ' 5 Q tllllllllllll IIillllIQIIINIHPIWImllIIllIilIllI'IllllllDH'llllmIllYlYmlllfllmlIllIIINOINIIHIIIPIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIILIlillmlllIIIIlllllnlifllnllIIIXIIIMIInIIIQIIIHIIllllllnlllllglllllllnllfil K. 1- , ,, - , , - V if - 4 4 '-O' 'xv I , Q 'HF' Q. 4, ,,,',,1',4 X . . f -' ' ' H - A '- ' ' u 5 - ' 5 -J - 1- P Q r if K ' 1 .-, 1 . Q K ' ' 9 f -1 I - fic f- L I MARY ELIZABETH VALIANT I ' ' . A , 1 Val Valerie Mary Val JI it if Entered l933 Genius means the capacity for taking trouble, Class Basketball, '43, Class Hockey, '42, '43, '44, '45, '45, Class Baseball, '44, '45, lunior Varsity, '46, Dramatic Club, '44, '45, '46, Glee Club, '45, '46, Li- brary Committee, '45, Student Council, '43, Secree taryflqreasurer ot Class, '45, Secretary-Treasurer of Student Council, '46, Picture Editor of Annual, '45, Chairman of Salvage Committee, '45, ll2U Putnam Avenue Q, 5 - Plainfield, New Iersey Wellesley 'IIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!III4IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illlllllllllllllllllll Ill llllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I PAGE 'l'WlQN'l'Y-TWO I ,: .',1, SPECIAL STUDENT SARA MORRIS WILLS Sue Wings 1200 Martine Avenue Plainfield, New lersey Entered 1935 Undecided Annual, '46, he came, she saw, Will conquer Glee Club, '45, '46, Class Hockey, '42, '43, '45, '49 Varsity Hockey, '45, White Team Hockey, '45, Wlriitc Team Softball, '45, Assistant Athletic Editor of the nununuunnnnnnnmnmunmlmnunnnul PAGE TWENTY-THHF Class Prophecy CAPI.JUNElMD,I956 .... DE. E.IIW'BOEOWIWOHLDIHf NOWNED SCIENTIST DISCOVEES NINETY SECOND ELEMENT EOE HOWNIHN .... FLASH!IHNIOO-INMATES!VVO5SININGAON-THE- HUDSON HAVE ELECTED HSTEVEH EUTTFIELD CHIEE WARDEA EOH LIFE .... MHS. JOAN KELLY PEW WIFE OE THE PHESEY- TEHIAN MINISTER IS KNITTING ANOTHER HALO. SHE HOPE? IT WILL HE A PINK ONE THIS TIME .... THE THHSTEES OI HAHTEIDOE SCHOOI.HAVE ANNOUNCED NEWLY APPOINTED HISA TONY PROFESSOR OE. MAHJOHIE EISHOP. PH.D. LL.O. M.E. O.Y.H. HEH ONLY HEMAHK HI MADE IT EELLEHSIH .. FLASH HWINGSH WILL5 VOTED MISS BHILLO OE I956I... MADAME MARL LA BAKER UNVEILED HER EXPLOSIVE NEW LIP? STICK AND NAIL POLISH SHADE HHHEHA HHHHAH .... HUL LETIN HHOTACVPYU LINKE HAS.HIHT WIELISHEE HEH LATEST EYE-OPENER HMODEHN WOMAN I5 AE5OLUTEH.... PAGE TWENTY-FOUR Class Prophecy . . . .JOANNIE HENWOOD POST-DEB HAS FINALLY MADE HER CHOICE AMONG HER MANY SUITORS. THE PRESS HAS NOT YET REEN INFORMED OF HER INTENDED .... MIMI MARTIN ERST- WHILE ACTRESS BREEZED. IN FROM THE WEATHER STATION TO TAKE OVER FOR CORNELL IN HER RE-REVIVAL THE BAR- RETTS OF WIMFOLE STREET. QUOTH SHE IT'S WET UF THERE .... EMERGENCY! NEW YORK FLOODED! FRANCES HUM-- MEL CUT HER HAIR .... ROCKET TIMEOUT FAMOUS BASKET- BALL COACH GOES ON THE ROAD NEXT WEEK WITH HER OWN TEAM OF RED-HEADED BROWN-EYED SONS .... NEW HOUSE MOTHER AT WILLIAMS THIS COMING YEAR WILL BE MARY VALIANT. THAT IS HOW I FIT IN MY WEEKENDSH SAID SHE .... FLASH DOUBLE FLASH FIVES JILTED MR. X MARRIES FORMER FOUR! . . . .IJ. S. SEE LAST PAGE OF ANNUAL. IIuIIumuInumnunumunumnu PAGE TWENTY-FIVE. Last Will cmd Testament Article I. Didi leaves with anticipation to Ioanna those dark nights at Eaglebrook. Article II. To Ruth Ann, Henny heartbreakingly relinquishes Chester, you lucky girl! Article III. Esther stoically hands on to the whole class her history note- book as a monument to Friday afternoons. Article IV. On loanie Burke, Hummel bestows the honor and distinction of having the drooliest hair and the deepest dimples. Article V. Buttfield happily hands down her horrific cubby to that neat female, Barbara Begert, dig in, kid! Article VI. Wills begueaths to Dawson, though it hardly seems necessary, her Powers model figure, her attractive blondness and scatterbrainness. Article VII. To Carol Kuentz, Mary Val leaves the tremendous privilege of banging on the milk bottles for all announcement-happy seniors Article VIII. Ioanie Kelly Wills to Mygatt a certain ID. bracelet to clear up any remaining mysteries. numImmmIIumummimmumnnlu PAGE TWENTY-SIX Last Will cmd Testament Article IX. To the whole class, Butter leaves the BIRDSEEDI l Article X. Wes gleefully leaves to Pat Wight the privilege of taking in her stride various out-of-town week-ends. Article Xl. To Barbara Sauer, Ginny beaueaths her endless supply ol little green pills, hoping they Will help. Article XII. Marl leaves to Ioanie Windatt the numerous Pingry problems and pleasures. Article XIII. To Ivins, Rock hands down her love l?J ot making speeches in Assembly! Article XIV. Last but hardly least, Mr. X just leaves . . . , IIIIIIIlIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmllulllllllll PAGE TWENTY-SEVEN Name Baker Bishop Borow Buttertoss Buttlield Henwood Hummel Kelly Linke Martin Rock Valiant Wills Mr. X Senior Symptoms Usual Occupation Having a chat with l. B. Dodging the faculty Counting money Doing her homework t?J Running .... Talking to Mrs. O. Comloing her hair Cracking a joke Throwing wonderful parties Blushing Cracking her lingers Getting out ot sports Looking for loanie Whistling 'llIllIIllIIlillulllllllllllllllllllllllllllllollhllllll PAGE TWENTY-LIGHT Putois Ghhggggaa .... Awr, cut it out, tellers lzat right? Ashaclap But I don't smoke ..,. . . . later Oh, really? Y'ole bat Listen, kidclo- Ye Gods! Theoretically speaking I wanna get married Oh, l don't know Oh, honestly! Call the plumberl Rough Spot ' Taking too much troubl Preoccupation Overaloundance ol tact' at the wrong time Impossible! Procrastination Blaseness Forgetlulness Talking her way out of i Reserve Run-it complex lnferiority complex Sensitiveness lrresponsibility Unavailability Pet Love Clothes Eaglebrook Ir. staff ngrid Beagrams, her dog Beer cmd cheese sand- Wiches lI'he Gay Life J.S. Coast Guard Vlinisters Dachshunds All of 'em, the dears Corporals D. W. B. Things she can't have Seniors Senior Symptoms Pet Hate Bandannas Put-on accents Toast or onions Obstacles Chickory-chick Cats Quack-quack Ministers' Wives Dripping Water Snakes and worms Tickling under the chin Martyrs Womenl Telling little girls Where to get oft at Saving George ' Eyes Spurts of eflervescence Nose The Maroon Dodge Wit Petiteness Good-naturedness Quip-ability Hands The actress in her Brown, brown eyes Dependability Wowl Are you kiddingl ' Grace is sick. Name Baker Bishop Borow Butterfoss Buttfield Henwood Hummel Kelly Linke Martin Rock Valiant Wills Mr. X IIllIIllIIllIIllIImllmIIlllulllllllllllllllllllll PAGE TWENTY-NINE Song A A A Cigarette A Program A A A Sport A A Drink A Magazine A A A Stage Actor .A Stage Actress AA Movie Actor AA Movie Actress A Dog A A AAAA A A New York Store Orchestra A A A Tooth Paste A A A Movie A AAAAAA A School Subject A Flower Author A A A Play ..,.AA, Car AAAAAAAAAA Men's College A Soap AAAAAA A A Book AAAAAA Cosmetics A A A Newspaper A A Poetess A A A A Poet A. AAAAA A A Popular Record Classical Becord -Inlnuullnllmumlmmnuin PAGIT Tlll HTY Senior Favorites A Because A A AAAAAAAA Chesterlield A Portia Backs Up To Life A A A AAAAAAA A Swimming Strong Stutt LIFE and New Yorker Harvey A. Margaret Sullavan AA Gregory Peck A A lngrid Bergman AA Lost 'n A A A A Lord and Taylors AA lrium with Miriam You Came Along A A A AAAAAA English A A AAAA Gardenia A A Lloyd CA Douglas A A A The Desert Song A A A A A AAAA Zephyr Princeton A A A Palmolive, not on your Lifeloiioy AA AA A AAAAAAAA The Babe A A A A A Bevlon A A A A A Herald-Tribune A A AAAA .Edna St. Vincent Millay A A A A A A A A A A Bobert Browning A A A .Artie Shaw's Dancing in the Dark A A A A A A A A The Warsaw Concerto FRCFQOGFMC il!-X-Q LE4i35g-1321-rs, I 5'f ':1'-fir '3f , 1' K' Ns' U X3 Q 'rat -x-Q vb F o I K ' 5 X-5 . , i . . 4 'Cl- :tU,g ,,:,, -X ,, -. 1 rw Illlllllllllll IIlilIIIIIIll2lllILIlIIIlIIIlIIlnl Ill IlIIIlllllllllllIllIllIllIIllIIlllIllIIHIll!llmlllIillllimllllllmlllllllll mlrlllliIl Il.llllklllll lmhlIII Hill, .tn 1 v ,x , fX..,ggprf,,J . N I KFQW ,iLf 4Vx'gfL - K J , , ... Eruuu fglum. -M 'sparc' - , with! , 1 - ' sn! mar . fuss: - 2 it , uv- bil' ' ' ?lB3 M 11' 1- I 'LH SHI' OsUQ' ' - i fWl' ' i CU I . ss 5 as 50' if Y 1 Q , H v A i 'N y S IQXSA' 'qi' 5 X K7 A., r V! x Sr' - A' 25 ti I C f ns . . . f , 3 Fourth Academic i v' X 0 1 3, m ,v ,S , - 1 0 f' e 1 P I x N N 4,1 3 r J ,, ,,-.-I' P.-'1 SPX 1 Q i Q 5 5 Ioanna Vaarhis P President I Ur 4 J rv I '- ' . f' r ' '. ' 1X ' P 5 'X ,P U. 1 ' .xx Barbara Begert Carol Mygatt X V' KL X ! . 4 : M . X 5 , c ' ' K' .- ,L - Ioan Burke Ruth Ann Sansom ' JI GX Y 'K 'Y N' ' I N .5 Barbara Dawson Barbara Sauer A I 5 3' ll l . X , M a , , ', + ' ' Patricia Ann Ivins Ioanna Voorhis R 1 X 1 1 1 . fx f 'T Carol Kuentz Patricia Wight J, i - . '- U' Ioan Windatt il' Qi' If ' .I , ...PPI sf- -V-A- eQAi1 -U. - N A 'lllmllllllllllllImlllllllllllllmlllmlll t L K L V r F VJ- 1 M K . . J tk 1 llllllllll llllIIIllIllIIllllllIIIIHIIIlllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll I llllllllllllllllllillllllllIlllIllHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllIlllllllllllllllll I m H f- fw - - ., .Wiifi-gi-ax u.. P' 'G wvnk X-A. f'.xNS- -,--'YV'-so 1 - ' 4 ' I 'pt I, ffl gg IS Lal-9 'S Y 1 -'N-I 53- J . Y g 9Ln4' .'a Ar'qJw'I- . ,J'J.r-x,g as , R , 5 4. is-J , . JZ! H ff ,?Th1TCi,ACdd6WlllC -5 4-' 'S r ,. 3 J I , f., X, 41 i 4 '7 s . x J Q7 - B -'P' 'J A' f J I . slang Q6 , re,s1 ent r 3 1 s ' w. 0- 'o v 'P' s 5- lt e Qydj -s jAnne Morrell xx KJ sw. ,::fCaiolyn Blokixiw is Leslie Muskat C 3 - Caroli1?gCaTver 5 Patricia Nash ., 0' u Nu' Y' S 3 n ,L Rutl'1'lT'fQ6lc Virginia Bausch 6' 4' Pdtiici Gray? lane Scott 'F 1' .f Yatr' a Laing Polly Steele . A4 f .1 .fx V 'T - TMGE Major Betty Van Buren ' 7' iv ' Helen McMurray loan Williams XT j lllullllllllllllllllllllllll PAGE THIRTY-THREE l -q-9.-.-i--- ..---- ---M' , . .,,.....c,.....-W IIIllIIllIluIIllIIllHIIrlIIllIlllllllllllllulllllllll PAGE THlH'I'Y-FOUR Second Academic loy Mooney Kathryn Barbehenn Ann Scott Chambliss Barbara Dailey Sprague Du Bois loanne Goosman Francine lupp Kathleen Ladd - v- President Peggy Loizeaux lean McPherson Ioy Mooney Peggy Mueller Cynthia Olsen Sue Randolph Nancy Stirling Magreta Volk F 1151: Academic loan Cynthia Barr Dale Bishop Ellen Brockway Ann Conley loan Du Bois Du Bois'--President Martha lane McAuliffe Frances McBride Elizabeth Pfannmuller Connie Pierce Barbara Tofte Fairfax Urner PAGE THIRTY-FIV IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllIlllllltllltllllllIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIllIIllIIltIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll School Calendar September i9-Brace yourselves. Schooll September 26fFirst assembly. The subject: summer jobs. Outstanding speakers: Miss Hannay on Walter Reed Hospital, Wes on Calco. October 5f-Friday afternoon-everyone comes back for hockey practice. You see we can co-operate. October 8-lnitiations. Barbara and Kitty prove themselves as 'ballerinas, and Ianie's southern drawl brings roars when she stumbles through Stoopnagle, The eyes of Esther's famera take the whole thing in. October lO-The lll's, lV's and V's take preference tests. The average pupil wishes to raise washing machines on a social service farm in order to discover a pitless cherry with the help of forest rangers, October 27fDidi said farewell gladly to a constant companion, her appendix. October 29--eDr. Minez gave us cr health talk on witamins. We've all given up smoking, and as for the future, who knows? November 21-Thanksgiving Vacation. What we can't cram into our stomachs and a long week-end. December 5-Mrs. Sidney Greenbie takes over assembly. Glamor and biological vitality become aims for all. Never let your face be dead, girls, Hollywood hasn't got anything we haven't got. December 7fl-lartridge-Pringry-Pearl-Harbor dance. Need we say more? December 14-Christmas play-'Twas the night before Christmas Vacation, and all through the gym creatures were stirring and raising a din. Corny? But really the play was ct howling success. Christmas Vacation-ahhhhhhhhhhhhh. Ianuary 7eWe brace ourselves again! Ianuary 16-The sixth grade better their previous standards in their play. They are sensational. nInInuninuInuninnuInumInuImmIIuIImmimImmIInIIIummnuInumIIuImmIInumumiIi1muunnmuummnmnumnlImnumlnuminiiIumIIuInununnuumnuml PAGE THl RTY-Sl X IllllllllllllIIllIIllIIllIIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllullllllllIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIllIIIlIIItIIIlIIIllIIIIIIllIIIIIIllllllIullilllllllllllllllllIIIIlIIllIIllllllllllllllmllllllllllllllll School Calendar Ianuary 23-Mr. Ray Foo Peng speaks to us on the World Student League in China. After breakfast, talk awhileg after lunch, sleep awhileg alter dinner, Walk a mile. Peanuts, and a Whistle! Ianuary 30-February l- EXAMS. Ianuary 3OYEnglish exams are over. Miss Cobbs and Pine Mountain give us a chance to relax. February 7-Bargain Day at the Service Committee Auction with the lower school the most persistent bidders, February 9s-Lawrenceville Glee Club and dance! S'wonderfull S'marvelousl Use your imagination. February ll-The Monday after, mail arrives cfo Hartridge. February l3-With the help ot Patsy Ann, master ot ceremonies, Ioanie Williams wades through stones, water, and stewed tomatoes at a hilarious Truth or Consequence program. February 14-Feb. 14 and Valentines Day Brings true love-or so they say, But gosh, gee, it don't work that way. February 15-SKYTOF February 20-There is no snow. lean Steck makes it, and Esther is not spared the introduction. February 27-We get a glimpse ol nature. Thank you, Mr. Todd. But the question is: When will we get our homework done? February 28-Silver jingles as the l's give a play tor the benefit ot the Service Committee, The Dramatic Club will prosper with talent next year. March 13-We're understood at lastl Dorothy Waldo Phillips spends the day with us. March 15-We Wash our hands ol the whole thing. The Annual goes to press. IIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIllIIIllIIllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll PAGE THIRTY-SEVEN As Hair AA Ability A Eyes ,,..., Disposition A AA Nose ..,... Poise A A Smile ...,.. A A BestfDressed AA Pep ....i.,,. Funniest A A A Good Sport A A A Legs ,..,,, Big Flirt A Athlete A A Noisiest A A Actress AA Quietest A A Figure A A A A A Good Looks A AA Most Popular Happy-GofLucky IInllunnnnnunuuuuunnnnnul PAC,-l THlll'I'Y LllGHT We See 'You Leslie Muskat A A Peggy Loizeaux A A A A Anne Morrell Helen McMurray Mickey McAuliffe A A A A A Ann Conley Pat lvins A A A Ioan Williams A A A A Pat Wight 4 AA A A A Patty Nash Ruth Ann Sansom Ioanne Goosman AA A Carol Brokaw A A Greta Volk AA A Carol Mygatt A A A 4 4 Mary Major AA Ioanna Voorhis 4 A A Ginny Bausch A A A 4 Dale Bishop A A A A Pat Wight A A Mr. X ELEf lENTF3R.V 2? fi- M 4214 ,s?Qf49-L59 X 31229 Q -VTR Q- y fig ill QEZZ5' 'L U11 lllll mlm lulllllnllllllllllmllllllllllllllnlllllnllnlllllltllllllllllllll InllllInIlllllmllllllllllllll llllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllulll llllllulnllllllllllllllll mlnllllllllllluullllllnl llllllll ' I t '1 '1 at Iv -tw Elementary SEVENTH GRADE- Carol Benedict, Elizabeth Boyer, Ann Burr Clevenger, Sheila Gal- lagher, Sally Henry, Elizabeth Anne lanke, Suzanne Kenny, Marybet Kler, Valery Martin, Merry Roll, Anne Marie Seybold. SIXTH GRADE-Dorothy Dunham, Lucie Ann Gallagher, lune Haley, Barbara Henwood, Martha Iennings, lean Lott, Katrina Voorhis. FIFTH GRADE-lean Ackerman, Kitty Chamberlain, Pamela Clark, Barbara Cook, Peggy Davison, Doris Dawe, Robin Gribbon, Cornelia Ladd, Sheila Langert, Sonia Loizeaux FOURTH GRADE- Suzanne Bartlett, Lois Callahan, Christine Loizeaux, lane Maior, Sandra Morse, Lindsay Muskat, Penny Schroeder, Gay Siccardi, Betsy Squires. THIRD GRADE Alden Iohnson, Sally-Ioyce McConley, Elizabeth Nash, lane Saxe, Marian Srnithers, Ianet Werner. SECOND GRADEiFredricka Butt, Beverly Day, ludith Geary, Betsey Hansen, Elizabeth Hayes, lean Lobrovick, Katherine McBride, Margaret Miesse, Laura Pritchard, Ann Romer, Iune Schomp, Nancy Scott, Carol Siccardi. 'lllllllllllllllllllllllllmllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllll ll lullllllllllIntllIIllI1llllllllulllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIlllIllIIllllllAIItIIluIluIInIllIllllllllllllllllllllllll PAGE FOHTY Certain Seniors Will Never Forget . . 1. Ooli pooli. 2. Creeping cheezes, pussy-footing around. 3. Privilege of sitting on a chair. 4. 36.00 for two hours. 5. My mother bought me a panty girdle . . 6. Somebody laid an onion in Hamlet 7. Our power of concentration in French class when other objectives appear in view. 8. Yes, yes, certainly that. 9. Rub amber and things cling to it. 10. The father of the son of that fish there. ll. Pahshunl I ..... l2. To the ten of us .... l3. 14. 15. Butter and the sailor. Take out your notes on the Flavian emperors, buurrrpl The day behind the Clara Louise. l6. Goin' down somorel l7. lf you make a smell you don't expect, go under the hood. l8. Bucky's. l9. Butter's quitting Latin 'cause she didn't want to come back Fridays. 20, International House, the Cafe, Mr. X ,.... 21. 22, 23. 24, A box of Snickers to that ladyl Would you mind coming in a little later, Helen? The Birdseed Girl. Miss Fine: uloan, what is the past tense of come? Comed. PAGE FORTY-ONE lull IIIIII Illulllll III Ill I I I I ll I llllnllllllltl llll ll I I I llllllllllllllllllllll I IIIIIIII II I lllllllllllllllllllll I ll I I lllulll gf' I , f ,I my ' 'At' , 1 1,- nx'QY R. -gs I i x i if 'Fr MEw1 f nf- 'IIIIllllIIIIIllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllll I I llll I llll lllllllllllllllll lllllllllllll I ll If ll Il lllllllllllllllllllll I I llll I PIXGIT FOHTYYTWO SPORTS mf, fax -2 J Wffm f'f' ff-45 4,1 I XX 'Q' I X HSE l I I ll I ll ll V Marilyn Baker Marjorie Bishop Esther Borow Ioan Kelly IV Barbara Begert Carol Kuentz Carol Mygatt Ruth Ann Sanisom Barbara Sauer Patricia Wight linuanInumaninuuuanmulnlmI l I n li PAGI, I'Ol'I'l'Y I'OUll Green Team PATRICIA WIGIIT Captain III. lane Boyd Carol Brokaw Ruth Frank Patricia Gray Helen McMurray lane Scott Polly Steele Betty Van Buren II, Kathryn Barbehenn Ioanne Gaorxman Kathleen Ladd Peggy Loizeaux lean McPherson loy Mooney Sue Randolph Nancy Stirling Magreta Volk I. Ioan Du Bois Martha lane McAuliffe Frances McBride Barbara Tofte Fairfax Urner llllnlilllllltm nlmlImInlllllllllllllllllllklmlltl mltlllt ll lllnll llllllllllllmlllllll I lllllllllllllll nllnm nunlnuniuullulnnulnnnInnumunnnnmminn inunnnnnmlmnuniumlluuunnllmnnnnnnmmnnlunnnnllnlmlnnnmnIunuuulllllllulnlinnmnnuniulullnnlnlmln A. :ii LL LAI i . Y , Y 1- 1 , - V. Betty Butterfoss Helen Buttfield Ioan Henwood Frances Hummel Virginia Linke Wesley Martin Mary Rock Mary Valiant Sara Wills IV. Ioan Burke Barbara Dawson Vvflfiite Team MARY ROCK - Captain Patricia Ann Ivins Ioanna Voorliis Ioan Windatt Ill. Caroline Carver Patricia Laing Mary Major Anne Morrell Leslie Muskat Patricia Nash Virginia Bausch Ioan Williams II. Ann Scott Chambliss Sprague Du Bois Francine Iupp Cynthia Olsen l, Cynthia Barr Dale Bishop Ellen Brockway Ann Conley Elizabeth Pfannmuller Cornelia Pierce Il ll Ill III Ill Ill llll Ill llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllulll llllllllllllllllnllllllllllllilllllllllllull llllllllllllllllllllllllllulIullllllllllllllllllllll llllllnlllllnlnllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllnllullulllllllll PAGE FORTY-FIVE Varsity H oclqey Team PATRICIA WIGI-IT - Captain Marilyn Baker Esther Borow llelen Buttlield Barbara Dawson Patricia Gray Ioan I-Ienwoocl Patricia Ann Ivins PAFI FOI-ITY-SIX Helen McMurray Anne Morrell lvlagreta Volk loanna Voorliis Patricia Wight Ioan Williams Ioan Windatt Varsity Basketball Team BETTY BUTTERFOSS A Captain Betty Butterfoss Ioanne Goosman Patricia Wight Helen McMurray Barbara Dawson Anne Morrell Ioan Windatt Marilyn Baker Mary Rock 1Inununnnnnnnnuunnllumullullmlu PAGE FOHTY-SHVEN Athletic Association Ioan I-Ienwood . ,. Caroline Kuentz . , Marjorie Bishop .. Ioan Windatt I ., Helen McMurray . , . Ioanne Goosman Martha lane McAuliffe Kathryn Ondricek . . . llllnInunununnninnnnnnmnllnnul PAGE I'OllTY-UIGHT President Secretary-Treasurer V Academic Representative IV Academic Representative III Academic Representative II Academic Representative I Academic Representative Faculty Adviser Sports Events November 2fWe had two sizzling hockey games with Kent Place and came out on top with the Varsity. November lU-We went to the hockey tryouts at Vail Deane, and Helen McMurray graciously saved the day for us. November l2fefAtter an almost maneto-man battle, the Green and White game tied. November l6f-We all came home in an absolute dither as We had defeated the unbeaten-for-six-years Vail Deane hockey team. November 19-The luniors embarrassed the Seniors by walking oft with the class hockey victory. November 26-The Greens and Whites tied again! lt was a Wonderful game. March 1-We were duly embarrassed when Kent Place walked all over us in basketball, but then we car1't take all the honors. March 4-luniors are much too goodg they played a ripping game of basket- ball and came out on top. March 6-The shivering Whites met the uncontrollable Greens for the do-or- die basketball game. Everyone screamed, but the Greens were vic- torious. Score 29-27! lllmllnllumulluInIInIlllullnulnnlnlnn PAGE FORTY-NINE I I I I I III I II IIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIII II I II IIIIIII IIIIIIIIIII Ill I I Il P45 e. P' wm- qfiuf LGL5 e,aIwL ,gk 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIII I III IIII IIIIIII PAGE FIFTY CLUBS 345 fp? , 1 f fd g I f A - f X-'VK Afwfxfw 'W FN fd xfx' j ,X -'fl' 2 . I7 J J J J ,X 3 HSE PAC! IIFTY O I Marilyn Baker Marjorie Bishop Esther Borow Betty Butterloss Helen Buttlield Ioan Burke Barbara Dawson Patricia Ann Ivins PAGE FIFTY-TWO Dramatic Club Virginia Linke 4 President Esther Borow - Secretary-Treasurer Elsie Goddard - Director V Ill Ioan Henwood Ioan Kelly Virginia Linke Wesley Marlin Mary Valiant Carol Mygatt Patricia Wight Ioan Windatt Carol Brokaw Ruth Frank Patricia Gray Mary Major Il. Kathleen Ladd Peggy Loizeaux Leslie Muskat Patricia Nash lane Scott Polly Steele Ioy Mooney Sue Randolph muuunmulmnunnmmnuunuuununn lu in n I in mmmuumln I n lu mn: n ui 1 num unmun Imuunuunuuuununn mn nn In nm nun THE HARTRIDGE SCHOOL DRAMATIC CLUB presents HABBIET by Florence Ryerson and Colin Clements Characters in order ot appearance: Auntie Zeb Henry Ward Beecher ,. Catherine Beecher . , Harriet Beecher Stowe , . Calvin Stowe ...,,... William Beecher ,. Edward Beecher ..,.., Mary Beecher Perkins , Charles Beecher .,,., Thomas Beecher . Isabella Beecher .. Dr, Lyman Beecher Mr. Tuttle ..... ,. . Mr. W-ycherly . . ,..... . .. Celestine .. ., ,. . Freddie Stowe tas a childl , . Mrs. Hobbs . Freddie Stowe tas a young mani , Georgie Stowe ,. . ....,...,.. . . . . Hatty Stowe Eliza Stowe .. , Ierusha Pantry Lowell Denton Sukey . . . Haley .. , Barbara Dailey ,. Mary Major Virginia Linke Wesley Martin Mary Valiant Sue Randolph . . , ,, lane Scott , Patricia Nash . . .I Kitty Ladd . . . Ioy Mooney , Carol Brokaw Patricia Gray ,. Leslie Muskat .,.. Ruth Frank Polly Steele I AIoan Henwood Ioan Kelly Peggy Loizeaux . Patricia Ann Ivins Barbara Dawson , Patricia Wight , Helen Butttield , Ioan Windatt Leslie Muskat Ruth Frank Act I -- The dining-sitting room ot the Stowe cottage in Cincinnati, Scene I -The winter ot l836. Scene II -Some years later. A Iuly morning Act ll - The back parlor of the Stowe house in Brunswick, Maine. Scene I -A spring afternoon, Many years have passed. Scene II --Late afternoon The following December. Scene Ill--Some months later. A sunny afternoon. Act III-eLiving room ot the Stowe mansion, Andover, Massachusetts. Scene I -April, l86l. Scene II --Iuly, l863. Scene Ill-Two weeks later Scenery Painted in Art Department under Miss Elsie Nelson, Helen Butttield, Ioan Kelly Properties-Carol Mygatt, Ioan Burke Tickets-Esther Borow President of Dramatic Club--Virginia Linke Dramatic Director-Miss Elsie Goddard IIIIIIIIIIllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnlmllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllnlllllilllllll 1 lllllllllll IllllllllllllllllIIII1IllImlIllllllllllllllllllllnllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllullnmllnlluI PAGE FIFTY-THREE IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II IIIIII I I IIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIII I IIIIII II III IIIIII I IIIIIII IIII II I II III I II IIII II III II I IIIIIII II IIIIIII I IIII I IIIIII IIIII ,I l . ...I Marilyn Baker Marjorie Bishop Helen Bultlield Virginia Linke I:IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII III II II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII PAGE l'Il I'Y FOUR Art Club Helen Buttlield 4 President loanna Voorhis 'Secretary-Treasurer Ill. Carolyn Brokaw Caroline Carver Anne Morrell Belly Van Buren IV, l II. Kathryn Barbehenn loy Mooney Peggy Mueller Cynlhia Olsen Magreia Volk Barbara Dawson Cynthia Barr Ioanna Voorhis Elizabelh Pfannrnuller IIIIIIIII II Illllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIII II I IIIIII III I IIIII II II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII III Il IIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIII llll Ill IIII Glee Club Marilyn Baker f President Patricia Ann lvins f Secretary-Treasurer V. Marilyn Baker Esther Borow loan Henwood loan Kelly VVQ-sley Martin Mary Rock Mary Valiant Kathryn Barbehenn Barbara Dailey Sprague Du Bois Francine lupp Kathleen Ladd Il Inu Il IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Il I Il Esther Borow e- Librarian Patricia Wight - Librarian Dorothy H. Lyall -- Director IV. Barbara Begert Barbara Dawson Patricia Ann Ivins Caroline Kuentz Ruth Ann Sansorn Barbara Sauer Ioanna Voorliis Patricia Wight loan Vlfindatt li. Peggy Loizeaux Peggy Mueller Sue Randolph Nancy Stirling Magreta Volk III. lane Boyd Patricia Gray Patricia Laing Mary Major Anne Morrell Leslie Muskat lane Scott loan Williams I. Ellen Brockway Ann Conley Ioan Du Bois Martha McAuliffe IIIIIIIIIII I IIII IIIII IIIIIIIIIIII I I III IIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIllllIIIIIIIIInnIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII PAGE FIFTY-FIVE Library Committee Chairman A . Treasurer ..... .... Fifth Academic Representative Fourth Academic Representatives Third Academic Representative .... .... Second Academic Representative Faculty Adviser ..,.....,.,.,... , . . 'llllullllnllllulumlllllllllllhlllul PAGE FI FTY-SIX Marilyn Baker Helen Buttfield Mary Valiant Barbara Begert Carol Mygatt Ruth Ann Sansorn Helen McMurray Sprague Du Bois .Ianet B. Fine lllmlullmlmlnlllnllllIIllIIInIllullulllllllnlllllllIIImllulllullIIllIIllIIulIIllIIlllllllllullllllrlllllll LKTERQRV iff W xaifjw PM QR? dyit! USB lgfvm... X Q6 wit-'sb IIInInnllnlmllllllllllllll nunlmlllllllnlllllullulnllu PAC llllllllIIIIIIIllllllllIlllIlllIlllIlllIIIIlllllllIIIIIlllllllllllllIIllIlllllllIIIllllIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllIlllIIIIIIIIllllllllIIIIIllIIIIIllIIlllllllIllIIllllllIlllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 'l'I1i1fdfFow'tI1fFiftI1 Academic Prize Theme COMPANION FOR AN HOUR I was strolling along the beach one afternoon. The sun shone and sparkled like green crystals through the slowly pounding breakers. They heaved a final great sigh and crept up to my feet. The sand was a huge shining fringe of gold, which stretched as far as I could see. Gulls swooped lazily in the cloudless sky, and their shrill screams were cut short by the stiff sea breeze. Looking ahead up the beach, I saw a small figure sitting in the sand. I shaded my eyes from the glaring sun and looked again to make sure it wasn't just a shadow formed by the rolling dunes. Yes, it was a figure. As I came closer, I saw that it was a small child. It was seldom anyone came to this desolate spot, and I was amazed to see so small a child. It was a little girl. She couldn't have been more than five years old. She definitely wasn't pretty, but there was an appeal about lier. I sat down to rest quietly beside her. Turning her head she smiled cheerfully. Hello, I said. Hello, she whispered. Isn't it a lovely day, especially here by the ocean? I asked. it Oh, it certainly is, she whispered again. I do love to sit looking out at the ocean and pretend. I like to hear the music in the wind. Yes, I said, it's always here on days like today. We sat in silence listening. She staring at the sea, and I looking at her. Her plain brown hair was braided in one braid down the middle of her back. But it was her eyes which fascinated me. They were huge, dark wells with long thick lashes. But they had no feeling, they were the eyes of a person who had seen too much. The rest of the young face radiated peace, and we both sat there perfectly at ease with each other. It was peculiar, this feeling of contentment with this little girl I had never seen before. While we had been sitting, the wind had increased. It was blowing violently, when suddenly I saw, out in the ocean, a rolling mountain churning toward us. It's strange how on calm days a strong wind will come up suddenly and change the ocean into a madly pounding monster. Look out therel I cried. That wave will drench usl We had better move quickly. The wave was almost in now. I jumped up and pulled my companion to her feet. Back this way fastl I shouted as I ran to safety. I didn't look at her in my excitement. I thought her to be right behind me. I turned just as the gigantic wave thundered not far from where we had been sitting. There was the child wandering helplessly down to the ocean. Her face was wretched with terror, and her thin arms were groping ahead of her, Although I couldn't hear her I knew that she was screaming for me. I raced down to get her, but not in time. The wave had knocked her down and was dragging her along the sand. The water tugged wildly at my feet, but I kept a firm foothold. As her fragile body plunged past me, I grabbed her skirt and held on, until the water had foamed back to the ocean. I pulled her up, and half dragged, half carried her to the dry warm sand. She didn't cry as she gasped for breathg she didn't utter a sound, and it wasn't until I had helped her dry off that I realized it. She was blind. B. D., '47 llllIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIllIllllllllllllIIllllllIIllIllllllllIlllllllllllIIllllllllllIlllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllIllIIIIIlllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII PAGE FIFTY-EIGHT Illlll I D I III Illllllllllllllll Illlllllllllllll llllllll IIIllIIllIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIllIIIllllllIllllllllllllllllllll IIllIIIllIIlllIIllIIllIllllIIllIIIllIIIIIllllIIllIllllIIllIIlllIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllll Third-Fourtl1fFifth Academic Honorable Mention Theme PATIENT SLEEPING I'm all right. Sure I am. I'm line. I've been a little nervous, but I'm all right now. I'm having a rest-cure. That's what they tell me, anyway. I'm having a rest-cure and I can't see anybody. Only the doctor and the day nurse and the night nurse and the floor nurse and the head nurse and the tray girls and three or tour orderlies. All I have to do is eat and sleep and not worry about anything and rest. And that's just what I am doing. I may not look it, but that's what I'm doing! A hospital is just the place to do it in. No one disturbs you. Not until seven o'clock, that is! And then all they do is wash you and give you some breakfast and wash you and clean the room, and then you can rest. You can till they wash the windows. And then you can rest till they want to clean the bath- room. You can rest while they clean the bathroom. You can. I can't. Not while the hospitals use tin basins, I can't. Certainly I'm not jumpy. I'm fine. I like having the basins banged around me. And I don't mind a bit il the nurse sings while she does it. It doesn't make me nervous-it makes me sick, but it doesn't make me nervous. And alter they get the floor scrubbed, I can rest while they clean the rugs. They'll take them outside to clean them, and that's very considerate. They understand. They know I'M resting. They'll wait till I'm asleep and bring them back and drop them beside the bed with a nice dull thud. But I don't mind. I'm fine. And then I get my rub, and that's won- derful. All up and down my spine and I get sleepy again. And then the nurse tiptoes over and opens the window and tiptoes over and pulls down the shade, and then she moves all the furniture and washes a few tin things, and then she goes to lunch. Well, suppose she does leave the door open? I can get up and shut it, can't I? I'm not sick, am I? I'm just in tor a rest, And alter I shut the door, I can go fast asleep. I can till they ring the telephone. I know they have orders not to, but anyone can make mistakes. And, of course, they have to send up Ilowers. Even it there is a sign on the door that says, Patient Sleeping, it doesn't say don't wake her, does it? I'm not complaining. Alter lunch I can rest, Unless the doctor comes. Well, I can rest when he leaves. I ought to be able to. It's quiet here. It says so in the street. There is a little riveting next door, but who minds that? I do, but I can't stop it, can I? I can't stop progress, can I? And I can't stop the radios. It certainly was a swell idea to put radios in hospitals. I wonder who thought that up? I don't mind visitors across the hall. They have to shout, I don't mind it. Alter all, they have to cheer the patient upl They can't come in a hospital and let the patient think'he's sick, can they? They have to be hearty. Sure they do. So stop biting the bedclothes, you dope. After dinner you can rest. Alter dinner and alter your bath and after your milk ol magnesia. Then you can rest. You aren't nervous, are you? You aren't going to let a little thing like a rest-cure upset you, are you? Certainly I'm notl I'm calm .... I'm swell. I'm not screaming .... I'm resting! I. K., '46 IIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIllIllIIIIllIIllIIllIIIllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIlIIIllIIllIIIllIIllIIlllIIllIIllIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIIllIIllIIlllIIllIIIllIIlIIIIllIllIlIllIIIlllIllIIllIIlllIlllIIllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIllIIllIllllIlllIllllIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll PAGE FIFTY-NINE IIllIulIIllIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIlllllllIllllIlllIllIIllIIIIIIllIIllIIllIIIIIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllllllIIllllllIlllIlllIlllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllmllllllll FirstfSecondfl'hivd Academic Prize Theme THE POWER AND THE GLORY I always knew that Highball would get Pete in the end. It was frightening. to realize that, and I lived with that terror in my heart throughout the Rodeo season, knowing that in time everything would be over. Pete had worked for us for two years, when I was about fifteen and he nineteen. He was the best cowboy we had ever had, and that year if I remember correctly, I thought that I was in love with him. At any rate, he paid no attention to me and did a beautiful job of horse-breaking. Now, after almost five years, seeing Pete again, I noted that he was still as tall and lean as ever, but more sober and serious, quite a change from the debonair boy he had been. He was friendly and nice and we spent long hours reminiscing. We laughed over my old crush on him and discovered that we were staying at the same hotel, the Belvedere, across from the Garden. We had good times together, but I felt pretty low, mainly because of Highball, and because Pete was like a lost child, clinging to me for support. The strangeness of everything made him feel like an outsider. The first time Pete met Highball was the second clay of the Rodeo. The master of ceremonies announced, Peter Dfunn, in chute number three, rides Highball. I was sitting astride the chute gate helping him on and giving him a pep talk at the same time. Highball was a well-known killer who had murdered many riders and had bucked every one off, so you can see why Pete needed it. As Pete eased into the saddle, Highball turned his head ever so slightly and gazed back at Pete. There was respect in his eyes for Pete as well as loathing. I looked at Pete to see the same expression in his eyes. My heart skipped a beat. Before I could say anything the chute opened, and Highball was out like a streak of lightning, running and bucking at the same time. I-Ie would gallop a few paces and swing around in a dizzy circle, and then sunfish and jackknife, and begin all over again. It was a frantic hateful struggle between the man and the horse. The horse was outdoing himself to kill the man in a devilish, scheming way, and the rider was straining and forcing the horse to break. I began to feel how Pete must have felt, that awful detached way your head feels from the rest of your body when a horse bucks the way Highball did. Pete's face was strained and determined, fighting as hard as he knew how. Iust before he went off, his eyes sought mine and the despair in them caught at my heart. His head began to wobble and his knees to weaken. I screamed at him to STAY ON! He buckled and went off. Highball's eyes gleamed satisfactorily as Pete got up and limped toward me. It was a grand ride while it lasted, Pete, I said and he smiled wanly, but I could see in his eyes hatred and determination. He would stay on next time if it killed him. Then I knew. Pete wasn't scheduled to ride Highball till the next week again, and I lived in an agony of waiting. He was the fifth rider out and I stayed as near to him as possible. Before he got on, he smiled at me confidently and slapped me affectionately on the shoulder. I whispered, Good luck. Highball was out like a shot bucking savagely. No other rider had stayed on Highball, and each one had taken an awful beating. He was bucking in a new way, crow-hops and spinning, every inch of him fighting madly and cruelly to kill Pete, but Pete sat him like no other rider had ever sat a horse. The contestants were aware of the terrible struggle and the magnificent way Pete rode. My heart burst with pride, and yet I was in a nervous and clammy sweat. Suddenly the buzzer rang, and I was filled with a relief that flooded my body. I turned and saw the audience relax. 'IllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIlllIlllIlllllllllllIlllIllIIIIIllllllllIllllllIlllIllllllllIlllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIllllllllIIIIIIlllllllltllllllllllillll PAGE SIXTY Suddenly a woman screamedl Every moving part of me stopped. Highball hadn't finished. He had kicked a pick-up man's horse and Pete was still on. His face was white and every muscle in his neck and face stood out in straining cords. His head began to snap and his eyes rolled. I-Iighball swapped ends viciously and Pete tumbled off, As he went down, Highball kicked him resoundingly in the head. The crack echoed and re-echoed through the stands, and all was silent. I-Iighball walked away and stood defiantly. Pete lay on the ground a crumpled, broken body. I stood frozen, no breath left in me to scream, Suddenly I found the strength and ran out into the arena. Oblivious to everything else, I went on my knees beside Pete. I gathered him up in my arms, crying his name. I looked into his face and saw the blood gush across it. I put him down and stood up stiffly. Terrible sobs racked my body. I stared blindly ahead. As I stood there, I realized too late what my fifteen year old heart had been trying to tell me. S. R., 49 I O I Sixtl1fSe'ue'ntl1 Grade Prize Theme Tl-IE COMING OF THE LADY SLIPPER - Once upon a time, many, many years ago, in a country known by few, there lived a youthful and exceedingly beautiful princess. She was in love with a neighboring Prince of slxteen years or so, but by unfortunate happenings the Prince was exiled with his father, His Majesty the King, on an island. Upon hearing this news the Princess mourned for his love and so became useless and was beyond consolation. After a while fat least four monthsl the Princess fell ill from no exercise and under- nourishment. The King, being very close to her, summoned the best physicians from all over the world. Upon examination, it was found that only eating what was put before her, and complete happiness would cure the child. When asked what could be done to make her happy, she feebly replied to bring the Prince to her. She was promptly told and without much thought, but not unkindly, that it was impossible. But after looking up ime portant data, it was found that he could be set free. No one thought to tell the Princess and presumed that they would surprise her with his presence as soon as possible. As you might know, with entanglement of legal rights and such, it was thought that it would take at least two months for his transportation to the mainland. Upon hearing that he would be reconciled with his beloved, the Princess, he was overjoyed. But in the midst of the secret preparations, the Princess died, I am sorry to say, merely from disappointment. Upon arriving, the Prince expected a royal reception, but instead he received only the mourning peasants and the sad music from within the castle walls. When he got there, he asked to be ushered to her chamber before she was carried away for the burial ceremony and procession. When he saw her lying so pale and thin and remembered her as being so lively, he dropped to his knees and openly wept. As she was carried out, one of her delicate slippers fell to the ground unnoticed. As the Prince left the room, he saw it, and knelt to pick it up to fondle it. But as he stumbled down the stairs behind the procession, his heart failed, and as he reached the bottom, he fell, dead of a broken heart. When the slipper, wetted by his tears, fell from his grasp, it took root and so became The Lady Slipper, a flower, V. M., '51 Illllll IlIIllllllllllIIllIIllInlIIllIIIllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIlllllllIIllllllllllIIllIIllIIllIIllIIlllllllllulllllllllllllll IIllIIllIIllIIllIIIllIIllImlIlllIlllIllIIllIIllullmllllllllllllllllllInlIIllIIIllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllli PAGE SIXTY-ONE I I ll I M iss H 1,mfey's Commencement Addifess 1945 Your Senior year at Hartridge has been a memorable one throughout the world. By dedicating your Annual to the Hartridge Alumnae in the Ser- vices, you have shown in one way how this war influences all your thinking and planning. War years throughout history have always been full of sor- row and confusion. lt is only by your reactions to all this chaos that you can make something out of this period of unrest and turmoil. Let us move for- ward with strong and active faith, was one of the last sentences written by the late President of the United States. You will find faith in the years that end this war and follow peace. But your faith must have a strength behind it, strength that comes from the honesty of clear thinking plus the kindliness of true brotherhood. We hope that you have started this way of thinking in your years at Hartridge, and that you have learned to act in accordance with it, for a passive faith cannot survive. You go out from this school with our thanks for what you have taught us and our faith in what you will make of the years ahead. The members of the class of 1945 were: Mary Wetherford Alden Helen Lucas Bishop Shirley Robinson Burke Ianet Speer Coan Barbara Ioan Davis Special Student: lmIIrlIInIulIuIlullnllumlnumunu PAGIT SIXTY-TWO Ieanne Eleanor Fezandie Nancy Ann Mulford Florence Felicia Bunyon Priscilla Atkinson Tietjen lean Evans Martwick lean Asta Packard mllllnlvllmllullulllmllllIllllllllllllIINullllllllllIIllIlllllmllllllllulI1nullllllllllllllnlllll lllllllllnlllIInIInIulnullullIulllulnllmnlimllmlllllllllllnlluullullnlnllmllllllulllmlluln Alumnae Notes ENGAGEMENTS MONTA RHEA CAREY TO CHARLES W. SCHWEP NANCY DARSIE TO GERALD R. PUTNAM NORMA FINNINGER TO WARREN TAYLOR MARY ELLEN LEGGETT TO DAVID POST EVELYN MCGEE TO CARLOS H. SAMSON, IR. MARRIAGES ELIZABETH M. BARR TO CHARLES E. LOIZEAUX, IR. CHARLOTTE BURKE TO ROBERT N. REPP ADA CHILDERS TO LT. II.G.l G. F. LANE, ZND BETTY CUTLER TO IOSEPH W. MATTHEWS ANITA ELMES TO IOHN G. HENDRIE LOUISE MORSE TO ANDREW MELLICK TWEEDY, IR. IEAN NELSON TO IOHN KERR COCHRAN HELEN POUCHER TO DAVID D. THOMPSON ELIZABETH RAMSEY TO HOWARD S. WOOD CATHERINE TICKNOR TO DONALD CRAIGIE COMBIER PATRICIA VOORHIS TO CARROLL C. GRINNELL BETTY WALES TO KENNETH EOLSOM BIRTHS TO LOUISE I-IUNN BARKER, A DAUGHTER TO BARBARA GRAHAM BEATTY, A SON TO ELIZABETH WIGTON BOURS, A DAUGHTER TO DOROTHEA RICE BROWNING, TWIN DAUGHTERS TO AUDREY BOWLBY CANNIS, A DAUGHTER TO BETTY HARDENBERGH CARTER, A DAUGHTER TO EMILY ROWLAND CHILDERS, A DAUGHTER TO NAN LAING COCHRAN, A DAUGHTER TO PHYLLIS BOOTH GREENE, A SON TO MARGARET SUMNER HENDRIE, A SON TO EVELYN IACOB LEAKE, A DAUGHTER TO DEMETRIA HAMILTON LOOSLI, A DAUGHTER TO CAROLYN WARING MACLEOD, A DAUGHTER 'I'O MARY ELIZABETH SHOEMAKER MINER, A DAUGHTER 'I'O LUCY VAN BOSKERCK POTTER. A SON TO BARBARA RAUSCH PRIESTER, A SON TO DANA TREWIN WIGTON, A DAUGHTER InllllIllllllllllllullIllllllllllllllllllllllllnllllllllllllulllullllnllmllllIllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnllllllllIllllllllullllllllmlmlmlllllllllllnllllllllulllllllnlllIIllIIllIIllIlllulllllllllllullul' PAGE SIXTY-THREE Autographs U ffP COMPLIMENTS OF THE PARENTS OF THE SENIOR CLASS OUR A E SE I A Y. i. A 1 2 1 . ' U 'Q 'V L Rl '1-.'l R R gi l1I ,- 1 r 'I llflx R, . U Jlllu ,1 VI -23.11. 'R '1AII,7 U7 llwlll Ll A ,mi 1 -nl-. ? ,. R ' V dl- A R I PLAINFIELD. N. I. OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PBTRONAGE umlmIllInulluInIInIInIlmInIIllIIumlmlullnmllnmllnlun ffw COMPLIMENTS OF CALCO CHEMICAL DIVISION American Cyancrmicl Company BOUND BROOK, NEW JERSEY InInllllIIllllllllllllululllulnunllmlnImumlnllnlnlnmnuIlmnnulnlunlnnnnnmnnununlmnmnn OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE COMPLIMENTS OF THE DRAMATIC CLUB COMPLIMENTS OF THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION coMPLnv1ENTs OF 'I'HE SECOND ACADEMIC COMPLIMENTS OF THE FOURTH ACADEMIC Complimenfs of Compliments of THE FACULTY THE FIRST ACADEMIC coMPLnvn:NTs OF THE GLEE CLUB COMPLIMENTS OF ROSENBAUM'S GEORGE W. BANTLE Keep Your Spirits Up 440 WATCHUNG AVENUE Plainfield B-9601 IllIIlllmullIllIIlllulllllllllllmIllIIlllIllIllllIllIllllInllllllllllllIlllllllullllllIllIIllIIllIunulIlllllllnllullllllmlllllllllllIllllllllllIllllllllllllllllmllllllllllllllll OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE SHE SAW NAUGHT BUT BEAUTY IN VANITY THE VANITY SHOPPE COMPLIMENTS OF CRESCENT FOOD MARKET ilulllullullullnmullllllIllmlllllllllllllllllunullIllllmlmnmulullllllllmllllllllnlllnllnllllllllllllll OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE COMPLIMENTS OF VOGEL 6: TANZER 564 SOUTH AVENUE, PLAINEIELD Telepllorlet Plainfield 5-9373-A-9374ff9375 D R E I E R ' S P PlcJir1lield'S Leading Sporting Goods Store CAMERAS -4 PHOTO SUPPLIES - SPORT GOODS - LUGGAGE TED'S RADIO SHOP 127 WEST SECOND STREET Plainfield 6-1918 Illllullllllllllalllllllullullml1nllmlmlmlllnlllnlllullllnllllllllnnmllllllmllllulllullnlllllllllllllll OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE Helen Elliott IllllllllllIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Compliments ol WONDERFUL HOMEMADE The peg Grant Shop CANDIES SPORTSWEAR Plainfield Morristown N. I. Nl L Opposite Public Service Building RIVELES' Margaret Davis Shop COSHIGHCS OCCASION 227 E- FRONT ST- PI-P-INFIELD 623 Park Avenue Plainfield, N, I Next to A 6. P Phone Plainfield 6-8666 Eleanor lvl. Milne, Owner Plainfield 6-7765 Andrew Haye 6: Son FAMED FOR FARMS 167 North Avenue Plainfield 6-1617 AL. WEIL Fruits, Vegetables and Groceries Fancy Fruit Baskets Made to Order 713 PARK AVENUE Phone Pl. 6-2954 Phone Plainfield 6-6891 Phonei Plainfield 6-8686 The Wishing Well 166 East 7th Street i' Gifts and Books for Any Occasion llllnlllllllIllllllllllllIlllull:Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllullllullllllllrullllullllllll The Garden LUNCHEON g DlNNER l2iUU--2:66 6:66 --8:00 SUNDAY DINNER 12:36--4:66 150 EAST SEVENTH STREET PLAINFIELD, N. I. CTWO Doors West ot Watchung Ave-nuel nnmmnlmuu1:unuznumunuuunnmmmmnummuum umumn unu- OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE vllllllltllllllillllllllullllllllnllllmll IIll1IllllllllllullllllllllllllIllllllflllllllnllllnlull Adding Machines Repairs, Supplies Typewriters Sales, Rentals Thompson Park Super Market Typewnter Exchange 187 NORTH AVENUE P::x 4I' Park Avenue at Seventh Street M- N. THOMPSON Plainfield. New Iersey Sales Representative Telephone: Plainfield 6-3545 MERLE RADIO RADIO - TELEVISION - REFRIGERATORS RANGES - WASHERS and APPLIANCES 110 EAST SEVENTH ST SALES AND SERVICE PLAINFIELD. N. C0mPlim91'lTS of Compliments oi The Park Florist Iane Logan Snyder Bros. Compliments of FLORISTS LAZAAITS 314 Park Avenue Plainfield 6-2286 E- 2nd ST- and WATCHUNG AVE. IllIIIllIIllIIllllllmlllllllllllllllillllnlllllllmllllIIIllllnllinlllllllhlllllnlulllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE TAYLOR'S IEWELRY STORE 115 PARK AVENUE PLAINFIELD, N. I. Plainfield 6-0820 Established 1868 SWAIN'S ART STORE Pictures - Framing - Paintings Restored 317 WEST FRONT STREET Telephone Plainfield 6-1707 COMPLIMENTS or SEARS, ROEBUCK 6. CO. ,f GREGORY'S MUSIC CENTER 'fl New Iersey's Finest and Largest Music Shop EVERYTHING PERTAININ G TO MUSIC AND RECORDS 330 WEST FRONT STREET. PLAINFIELD, N. I. Plainfield 6-8549 EXPERT REPAIRING nunumulmllmlullulmmnnmnnnmnuumnululunernlnlsllll OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATHONAGE 1 mnnuInIanmlIInInlIInunInlnnIuIullIInlulullmlmlmlulnluuunlunlmllulvllmn Established 1921 Tel. Pud. 6-9555 NUSBAUM'S If Interior Decorators Gifts Makers of SLIP COVERS. CURTAINS, RODS. DRAPERIES. VENETIAN BLINDS 222 West Front St. Plainfield, N. I. Compliments of Montgomery Ward 19-35 WATCHUNG AVE. PLAINFIELD, NEW IERSEY ladies' ond Mens Garments Remodeled, Altered, Repoired Compliments of REWEAVING FUR vvom: Coletta Brothers C. L. Thorn TAILORS Est. 1895 lU5 West 4th St. Plainfield, N. T. Cor. Pork Avenue Telephone 5-2611 EOR GRADUATIONW .ASK PoR Eooifs EoE YoUE LIBRARY THE PLAINEIELD BOOK SHOP, INC, 321 PARK AVENUE Phone 6-4415 IF IT'S NEW AND SMART IN SHOES AND HOSIERY YOU'LL FIND IT AT VAN ARSDALE'S PLAINFIELD. NEW JERSEY The center ot the business center llnuunlnluununllnumlluIannuInunIIlnnllunlnnnmlnnumlnnnnIInullnunnnllmnmmum OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE COMPLIMENTS OF C. M. PERLMUTTER IO-IO'S SHOE REPAIR ADDS PEP TO EVERY STEP 143 WEST FRONT STREET PLAINFIELD, N. I. Plainfield 6-2770 COMPLIMENTS OF VULCAN DETINNING COMPANY DRAKE COLLEGE WILLIAM C, COPE, DCS, Pres. FRANKLIN G. HOAGLAND, BS, Mgr. Courses: SECRETARIAL - ACCOUNTANCY - STENOGRAPHIC 40 SOMERSET STREET Phone: Plcxiniield 6-0344 PLAINFIELD, N. I. Open All Year v DAY - EVENING Ask for our new Catalog! Illlllllllll mllulllllllllllln Iullrllullllmlllllllllllllulllllllllllllillllllnlll tlllulnnllnlllllll lulllllullllllllllllllllllllllllllll OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE ICICI GGVGII Compliments ol 402 PARK AVR Ioseph E. Church Plainfield 6-33639 1 COMPLIMENTS or-' THE THIRD ACADEMIC COMPLIMENTS OF ANNE WRIGHT REAL ESTATE nnunuuullnunu nnumnnnnnmnmnnnnu 1Iluulumnnnnnnmnu OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND TRICKS AND IOKES AT Compliments of Simon's Toy Store 214 Wcxtchung Ave, A P1c1ir1field,N. I. TEMPORA ET MOHES COMES WITH OUR IMPRINT The Recorder Press wiskes a successlluf career to eczcfz memgver' of The Class of 1946 510 WATCHUNG AVENUE, PHONE Pl. 6-2860 PLAINFIELD, NEW JERSEY PRINTERS TO THOSE WHO APPRECIA TE FINE PRINTING We'1l Furnish Proof 'lllllllIIlllllllllllllllullIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllmllllllllmlmmlIImlmlmIllIllllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllulllllllvlIlllllllunlllululllllllllllllllnllllllllullmllnlmlnllulnlllllulullvlllllllw OUR ADVERTISERS DESERVE YOUR PATRONAGE THE CLUB FOOT SERVICE WITH A SOCK AND SHOED OUT BETTY E. BUTTERFOSS, Proprietor Ab SOLE 1utely no HEELS Allowed nnmlnunun:nunnnnnunnnnnnulnllnnlullullllllllmul:nuunnlulnllnllnnnlnllnnulullul OUR ADVERTISERS DESEHVE YOUR PATRONAGE 6 i P I l 5 X, is 0
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