Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY)

 - Class of 1954

Page 1 of 136

 

Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collection, 1954 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1954 Edition, Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1954 Edition, Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 136 of the 1954 volume:

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Xs X X - un, ,, k A Nw ' K Q. f 5 . an V Www - - ,., N.. I vb? . 7 'nfsmng YAM-mp-,,, ' Q 'Hb ev- Ac , y-, Q, -XL f ,Q f':.wX3w.fx'l, ,X. X In 'Minnie 5 ' ' 'Mmwih:g,,'Qgy,V1 N X f,,,5rw,g, 1 : 'K 'W'ww-- f ,X A Xfq-no-fw,,.,hwan.-an H , 1 'PP X an Qfiymgww V: ,A, ' ' ' 'sb . W ' 0 ff X 'WQIIHW KX, . A , . . an X, .1 f ' . : , V151 N W H 5 ' ,,l H . I ' L H H 2 ' , M ' ,WT M N ' 'Q H : ' ' .l. , ' if . iw-H V- - b5TERg WTH 1871 MASTERP C for the year Dedicated to CAROLINE A. WARD Because she is an Old Girl who has never flagged in her loyalty to Dobbs, because she has carried out with such good spirit the many tasks both great and small which are so necessary for the welfare of the school and the comfort and well-being of all of us here, because she is always so kind, helpful and friendly to everyone con- nected with the school, we dedicate this book to Miss Ward. 1 4 fa ?'f52f - an S, 5 x Miss LUCY K. ROBERTS Teacher of Mathematics al Dobbs 1916-1954 An ppreciation For the high slanclarcls she has set which have made us accomplish more than seemed possible, for the youthful vigor and the enthusiasm with which she has gone about her task of teaching generations of Dobbs girls not only mathematics but clear and logical thinking, and for her cheerful manner, we appreciate Miss Roberts antl will greatly miss her when she leaves. Contents-Prose Dedication ...A.,... ,Xu .tlppreeiation .....,.,.........,................... .. . Letter to the Seniors-Miss Cochran .... . . Class Poll ......... .........,................,,... Class Will ...,........., ldeul Dobbs Girl .....................,.........l.l......,.,........................... Class History-Polly Benson, Elizabeth Mayer ...,.... The Kettle ........ The Calendar ,,.,. . ln Memoriam ........,. Student Addresses .-Xdvertisements Editorial Staff of 1954 MASTERPIECES Co-Editors ............... ........... l 'olly Benson, Elizabeth Mayer Business Managei '...... ........................................... . Xnne Rankin Business .Nssistants ........, .......,.. Y 'irginia Evans, Margaret Reid Vllotography Editors ...,,. ...........,. H ilda Chapman, Lee Masselman :Xrl Editor '.....,............. .................................... ll lary Anne Groves Favulty .'hllVlFC'I'.. ....,..............., ........... M iss Alice V. Waldecker 8 Contents-Illustrations The Circle Walk, with a view of the Hudson.. ..., . 2 Miss Ward ......... 5 Miss Roberts ......... ..... 6 The Administration .... ..... 1 0 Mrs. Johnson 11 The Staff ....,....... ..... 1 l The Faculty ......................................... ......................... ...,. l 2 Senior Class Divider-Mary Anne Groves . ..... 15 Senior Steps-Dorothy Buck .....................,. ..... l 6 Senior Photographs ......... ........................ ..... 1 8 Ideal Dobbs Girls-Linda Scott ....................................................... ..... 3 7 Senior Class Candids-Hilda Chapman, Lee Masselman ......., ..... 6 1 Undergraduates Divider-Mary Anne Groves ..... 67 .lunior Class ........................... ............,.......,.............. ..... 6 8 Sophomore Class .......... ..... 7 O Freshman Class .. ..... 72 Lower School ............................................ ..... ,,.,, 7 L 1 Organizations Divider-Mary Anne Croves ..... 75 Organization Pictures .............,......... ..... ..... 7 6 Muriel Dolmetsch .......,.... ..... 9 8 Small Black and White lllusrations by Elsie Axford, Almira Baldwin, Joan Barbour, Mildred Broome, Mary Case, Mary Augusta Clay, Clare Fooshee, Patricia Cordon, Mary Anne Groves fArt Editorj, Frederica Johnson, Ann Lawler, Grace Littell, Lee Masselman, Heidi Meier, Mary Anne Newlands, Sarah Pennell, Laird Trowbridge, Lynn Trunz, Suzanne Warner. 9 PAULA DRESSER Associate Headmistress Administration ELIZABETH BROOKE COCHRAN H eadmistress MAUDE-LOUISE STRAYER Academic Dean To Mus. H. MANTUN jmixsox out of Tliornpsmi House-, wc' wish lo vxprc-ss our grzili lumix' anal say wc- shall miss lic-r wlwn slw lvavcs. ST A I-' lf' Svzllafd--Mrs. lflinme llramlrelli, Mrs. Anita Uirmlxxoml, Mrs. Mabel Paulson, Mrs. Helen Vfolf. Sllllltllillg flllrs. Mz1i'g111vrilv Uorski, Miss Gladys lrnlz. Nliss Kalliarinc Mulfurrl, Miss Uomlhy lNla1'l'lierson. Miss Marion Vvficler. Miss Sally Van x7l1llil'lllllll'gIll, Miss Ruth lhlswell, Mrs. lioclerick 51-oil. Miss lfarolim- lfripps. 11 For her kimlm-ss to all of us who limi- lwvn in uml HISTORY DICl'All'I'MlClXT lmfl lo r1'gl1I-f-Misses Cornelia lflirgoll. Helen Cole. lfvelyn Clark. Alive xvillflf:'1'li9l'i ICNCLISH lJlIl'ARTMEN'I' Svulvrl-flVlrs. Muriel Dawkins Miss lr? flalflwell. SfIlIIl1l.lI1.f 'lxlI'S. ll ivhard Han son. Miss lflizalielh lficllilz. lVlrs Alfred Hall-Quest. Miss Wlini fred Crum. Mrs. Holman Hur vey. lllllllf lDl'Il'AliTMKXT lmfl In riglzlflllisses Amy lleli fuss. lllancle-Louise Strayer lilizalrelli lVl4-Comlie. lm MISIKI Ill-iI'AIi'I'MlCYl' fvjl 1. In riglil Miss llrvlv Sullun Yvulvzl Mrs. juvksmi xil'l'l li mimi. Miss xiLll'Q1lll'l'lll' Nul- ill'IIl0l li'iumil. Mr. Harring- l xaillim-sm: lxiniu- Prmim lion S1'illlt'il'll'l' 1i'iaum D . ami bingingb. Mrs. NV. :X MAX'l'Hi'iM-X'l'llfS ANI? SlIllfNlfl'f Ill-Il'AXII'l'NIlCX'l' 1-ulwrl Mrs. Dum-an l'ur4'vil lliiulugyi. Mrs. Nulmwl lim'- lvlgzil 1Ni1llill'Illilii1'S ami Svi- erin-XD. flllltilillg Mrs. l'i1imumi Slill mam iixIiliilt'Illlllil'Sii. Miss l.m'y ix. Hulwrls lMillilt'Illalli1'Si. Mis l ulrmlv Link iivlillilK'llIilIll'S 1 iivaui of lin' Lmxvl' 5K'llUUii Miss Ihivln-I Hangs il.Il1'llIlSil'y I umisi. 1Arl P. Miss jc-un Xie-hui ll,ulm Hoiriuy frl'lDllIrSi. gflllllhllg Mr. Iiii-Inu-ii Sp tvxrl. History of fxrli. Ml Miva- Miallvr li,iiiIAill'iLlIl I. Mi Irv Ball Vliypingi Iiililv. Ili luryb. Nu! prvsvril Mrs. Helm-m' l im maui I Slmiv Slllwlw :sur D. lux l,AlYlll'AClCS DICPARTMICNT Svulvdf -Se-norita Maria de Una- muno tSpanishj, Miss Evelyn llookle tl.alinl. Slunding- 1MlIe. Louise Courlois ll'll'0lll'lll, Mlle. Germaine Calle-l tlfrcm-lil. Mile. Gabrielle Viar- gues ll'lI'CIll'lnlD, Miss Amy Lois Seasholvs tl.atinl. PHYSICAL ICDUCATION lil-IPARTMICIYI' Seaf0dfMisses Selina Smith, Mar- garet Malcolm. Standing-Misses Jean lloyd, Sally Fitzpatrick. 14' XX yu rv, :JW Bmpr y 'U 'ua av 1 'E' ' ,. -' .KL , Q X 4. , LY x vt! ,, 1, A ' D. f'f 'QF- ,- A, .gif ,i .. .Q A ......... ,H Q' ,- X- iv : L5 q 'f' 'fv 'ff ' ' em' 1: SHARON LALLY WINGER Mead Street Box No. 35 Waccabuc, New York President of the Student Council Wing Ding Says: That,s out to lunchlw Usually found: Twirling my tresses Stumbling block: People who call me Pinky Aspires to: lt,s open for suggestions HELEN PARDEE LEISENRING II 531 East Frank Street Berwick, Pennsylvania Vice President of the Student Council Penny Says: 'cWe'd really betterli' Usually found: Forgetting something Stumbling block: Making speeches Aspires to: Psychoanalyze Freud 18 r ELSIE AXFORD 1009 Electric Street Scranton 9, Pennsylvania ' Vice President of the Senior Class Else Says: Shh! Usually found: Around singing Stumbling block: Who knows? I haven't met him yet. Aspires to: Be a friend in need CAROLYN SHERWOOD HALL 1250 Clover Street Rochester 10, New York President of the Senior Class Carolyn Says: May I ask you a question ? Usually found: In a little more than bare feet Stumbling block: Worrying Aspires to: Fulfill that which was meant for me 19 D M' ' 0. . Gannqv' Oth mn spot' vs Ma bear Jobs? Quantity 8203- in Qtr. than loon- awwmzttafaqmmfarta tw- LW Jrlltt-009a 'l 1fx11Y.lylAR'l'Hfx RMs'l'RoNC7'l0n.l' Wt!! AON-l UDLDAU 8VVNiXa2Y.U-5VKl.l-0- Q l27l Wheatland v me Qazbauu l.an1'aster, l'ennsylvaniaLulA Ettdtocnbl-Q:n'+app1ndaW'-1162.3 Uueryis w nwusaysz Sh-ugaru W uq' Usually found: lf you look hard er Qndwi' I Stumbling hlork: Making the at-qa Q 0 of ve t n people qooo wo? Aspires to: Uet from Grand Central 0 Mdl'e11l1 in rem-ord time. ! Q 1 u at 2 3 5 22 3 ' 3 ' 3 uf - 03?-,IE 0 T . 32'f'2l3'23,33Q2 ig .225 2-3 3 3' Q' Wfnnlbkmv. Cp 5 lnmwi l1n1xfAn'lvw-QfA'u VLM-pvwfknnonl as mftaaamaewaaram 1 3 RENEE LXNIC ADRIANC' I Q1 M S- f 1 W QW' hk N Y k 35 Sff-f1f:0tflffiif1f1-fe'f'Trtiw+'-3'- !rS1 t -1f'r+0f 'Y ' ' J, da' 1 Say. : so Hhcet at AN. .9 A llsually found: Gathering nuts in January 53 Z Stumbling block: Post-weekend sehlumpl Q 3 3 Aspires to: Hit that dirty low note . . XA!! ' nwmbg we ibut ecw MMM WM? , ltdltiwtt mt 114 5 lX ' Na 1. 5 att 2515 ,,Q,,Xi3 'ETbQ'fX'fE 'dgiltlflm ft1tt+.E?Ctt 2 Nbkvorxii wx 9-ku . Sqtilmul- 'mglvr r'v ' s rr1 ':F'7 i ' 'nf' ' ' ,' Y -- v-1---W - --'f - 'w Y 1 - . , 1 -5 A-ini t ALMIRA STEEDMAN BALDWIN 34- Westmoreland Place Saint Louis 8, Missouri M ydie Says: Hi, come on you all Usually found: Singing off key or in the closet Stumbling block: Anything that adds pounds to the hips Aspires to: Clean up the corrupt world lhzmifezrm- fqoo-, km cknq uapyomnla '. Llciingfifug- 34 ufrfzn. zxotlq Lf rin. luis Tome- qi 1 - u'1fLtmf-1.i.suf fa1f.:s- rl W' wfrf- , ' '-I L 'JOAN EDWARDS BARBOURU- - - 2- e 1 Ar1'g4Hgf4s,2s a 11 A it A . il-T 7 'li L' 1 f -3- ' U' Sand Spring Lane U 'li-I X' L url'-H ' ry, x, .y .. ' yy 1 z' iq' Morristown, New Jersey L Qt, LL' f' . is f te- zwfm df 1- s f 1' YV f was i- 3-Says: Who,me? '. Q' 1311 ' r K I jA',Usually found: Looking for the lost chcfrd Stumbling block: Love! ' ' 7- - -7 '- 7 . Aspires to: Run a sanctuary for neurotic l-fl. fy ,science-fiction addicts .1g,wt-ifmif. - .1 Ru' ':jt.',,. if 21, f iff -Qu I 'Y-.moux N-Xku-.Xxx Ccu..-5 N-XGXJ.. Qcg-fx XLQAQ b.S.zso..D.J1 C'-9-9' xl-: ' .A Lis XJ MA. X .3 ' Q 3lu .og ,qua EVELYN DIANE BATES N-I-uni' 1120 Park Avenue CNA Maul, '-Nl-IN rx New York 28, New Yorka ' 'N E, , NMR Ou HB4 W7 Nag X..l.,,.,5 I Says: Grin and bear it'i gm uall found Writm poetry Lau-ul.. VS X i N g L-Q cxxnu. Stumbling block: Math ...Lk . . kg x'c. 'b'- Aspires to: Accomplish her aim' GN.:-o..Aa-4L4.s-l.Jxx.u.. QXQXC, Gum.-.n.-.. down-m.n. Mow o ':...u.. vas- Nko-qu 3-'-W '5- -'- L,.SXA.-5-3-lx-LDCA-0 gS.u'x.s...q....,.s. -r '- 'MW W-. was-SN ., gk- Q,-53, X.n.....s.. s-Xenas CX NXCW-'- N-' -'- 's-5-4-ea...Q.h.. YZ.-L CN!-.5 gikjah.-has-4 La-J-CJ'- - 'X.x CLA ' XCX:-D.. MARY ALICE BARNES 18 Maplewood Avenue Dobbs Ferry, New York Tinker Says: 4'Where'll we go? Usually found: At school too early in the morning Stumbling block: People who drive on the left hand side of the road Aspires to: Ring the Ere bell ,til the rafters rock 22 'mg-'S qisws . 4.-:aa k No Noe- W- was . xuge-A. -Nd.u.s. l, CAQA 'am MA 'N'-sinh Qgnsn.. Xuan. :swag mga Nba N'ab.u..NQ.iNs-Q Q., PA'1'R1e1,x ANNETT15 BATES 'S-N Wxfil- ok'-Nl 1120 Park Avenue New York 28, New York Palsy cs.:4L.L. si-B. 15-S, ?f11!'S1l'4ITeelfcgt ily an gbwiexb Q sua y oun : urrymgz up ler roommates . . ig1f:'3gE':if1:f:f,E.-4?:':f51:,1i,1 3:3::'vN-170'--W USN-S. emu.-B 'S gughi wkcxp, 'YQ QGNB-'SVS- Q 'No CASUAA. cu...Q 003-Li U-A . Nkqy-,S ' genes QQ vhgkc. , G N59-Q, Nb 5 'Ni-A. Q VAN 455 is 4.5:-Akin. Q-LAS djiajg eta-Us q,,,,,g Sxu-s e-S,wQ.':.B 'TRQLARB-5-QQ -Ddulmggns ' Q3-Q. cork' K-XX'-s -XUNRQ Ko 53.3, , C-Naoel XQLXQQA . kph.-1 Ca.:-:s0.S. g,..s..s..v,sS...N LISA BECKER R. F. D. No. 1 Castleton-on-Hudson New York Lisa Sava: 'gDoes anyone have anv chan 9 I sually found: Defendxng the Navy Stumbling block: Spelling Asplres to: Run a zoo 23 vas, W- f--L-ff .-vw..rnwr-,pw 1, -- DOROTHY LEE BOARDMAN Manursing Island Rye, New York Daisy Says: The devil is afraid of music Usually found: Happy Stumbling block: Sewing belly buttons on sock dolls Aspires to: Successfully combine poetry and philosophy POLLY BENSON Meadow Knoll Farm Dundee, Illinois Polly Says: That is a good question Usually found: Rushing around and waiting Stumbling block: Deadlines Aspires to: Slide down the Estherwood banister Y 24 JUDITH BROOME Elm Road Briarcliff Manor, New York Judy Says: We're as different as black and white Usually found: Borrowing Stumbling block: Waking up Aspires to: Stand up straight MARGARET SPENCER BOWER Woodlands, Croton Dam Road Ossining, New York Peggy Says: But l'm not ready yet! Usually found: About to work Stumbling block: All forms of lateness Aspires to: Be organized 25 qu QP ff?-.?, 1:- bi, O 5' 0 m ,. X X1 en is A '4-. ts, G1 I K.. Q Q is 'W Ks S G .W 'aa an 1 vawyf. . W 5, at . 0 F 5 'X .f S 'sq X., ,wa 6, e 4, S s M-, I ,r 5 N I 5 ' 3, , ' Q , , ' If 'Q N ' , .. ,I Q a La 1 A '5 ' 'N N, Q ' A w,,.5 5 , ' 1 xi, , K1 A FS, fa. . 'ft . F 9 DOROTHY WEEKES BUCK it Oyster Bay M M I M Long Island, New Yorkff Dottie A' 51- A i Says: 6'Now that sounds reasonable X Usually found: Answering letters Stumbling block: The Long Island Railroad Aspires to: See this worldwbbefore the next 'K' if ,Q ., f. - H- ms -i ig' A 0 n 'f ,E S 2 1 U . '5 'rf 'P A fs X T' ,. I, o MILDRED LESLIE1BROOME V Elm Road ' i Briarcliff Manor, New York My Mitzi Sayls: lim white: W Usually found: Where she's not supposed to he , Q W Stumbling block: Bedboards Aspires to: Control her impulses F . F E , Q X O 26 -Q-,-,fn In-f. 7' -- W. ,W-w-,gg-v5EW!gW..5s'9!1vpff',.,y.w V ' i . . 4- ' ' PENELOPE SUSAN CLEGHORN 19 Commercial Street Adams, Massachusetts Pen Says: Flips! Usually found: Wandering vaguely Stumbling block: Rules and regulations Aspires to: Stay out of trouble 27 HILDA IVES CHAPMAN Pawling New York Hilly Says: There's trouble! Usually found: Behind sun glasses Stumbling block: Determination Aspires to: Be the fly on the wall Fugmsw- sv -1-nv-1-vnuuefw-wrpunui. 9 9 -f-,,---vvw--1.-,.......,,Y,..-,..M...,..- -vw--,.1.-v...- :.,.r.,---nw - Y-y T, .,,- A , H OLGA MARIE CON ROY Box 170-A, Indian Hill Road Cincinnati 27, Ohio Frog Says: Great day in the morning Usually found: Playing Tugboat Stumbling block: Southern hospitality Aspires to: Have the world on a string JANE MCNEELY COCHRAN 6 Upper Ladue Road Clayton 24, Missouri ,lane Says: How amusing Usually found: In bed at 7:20 A.M. he Stumbling block: Now one, now t Aspires to: Be a red hot mama 28. other ,Vbwaigpf Vw wc? -My oy XM V. a is . Q, gp ' NNqll'l3 ' ' yfyyP.Wga,,1 f50'yAM UW M A ' -B. ,ow AO 1 M bfi QW' Q3 Qwwfgw V 'ffl ffI f1TFHQ f ,Q2:?5'QM14 Q 91 Niiey VJ' i'S1fai1y:f0um11llrmimma rill g mm Qwyv W ' sw' 'kwfvyy My www ,BWWAQQ wi W' fi W M M9953 NYM? ,WM WW .UK W N M WWSFQQSQI wi' W YQSWWJSW SWNQSVX A. 3x WWW N53-W,95XQ,,0g,yxm0f www V' M XRD XRI' T LR XMI4 R C OXHFHXD VIRGINIA BEVERLY EVANS 47 Old Brook Lane Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan Ginny Says: You know what I mean Usually found: Doing her bit for Uncle Sam Stumbling block: Envelopes trimmed with red and blue Aspires to: Be a stranger across a crowded room KATHARIN E ANNA DOHRMANN 364-9 Vineyard Place Cincinnati 26, Ohio Katie Saysi What a panic! Usually found: Answering chain letters Stumbling block: No batteries Aspires to: Be the Princeton Tigress 30 KATHERINE ISHAM FARWELL 765 North Sheridan Road Lake Forest, Illinois Kay Says: Oh, you're kidding Usually found: Counting days Stumbling block: Anything when she's not wearing glasses Aspires to: Be Mrs. Alfred C. Kinsey GAIL STEPHANIE FARACO 101 West Broad Street Westerly, Rhode Island Gail Says: But I didn't hear her say that Usually found: In the wrong practice room Stumbling block: Keeping those weary eyes open Aspires to: Understand popular music 31 MARGARET MAUREEN FLYNN 127 Country Club Lane Pelham Manor, New York Peggy Says: But I don,t understand! Usually found: Out after lights Stumbling block: Getting things done on time Aspires to: Be emancipated ANNE FISKE Sheldon Avenue Tarrytown, New York F iskie Says: What's new? . . . that's true! Usually found: Eating Stumbling block: Blushing Aspires to: Be an optimist 32 M' W W HW- NANCY LEE FREEMAN White Thorn Road Wayne, Illinois Nance Says: I'll do it tomorrow Usually found: Across the hall Stumbling block: That eyebrow Aspires to: Write a new and be fiction story tter science 1 . CLARE FRASER FOOSHEE 1000 Forest Avenue Rye, New York Clare Says: My gosh! thanks for telling me' Usually found: Looking for something Stumbling block: Organic functions Aspires to: Be the Blarney Stone 33 LOUISA GILBERT 15 Calhoun Drive Greenwich, Connecticut Weeza Says: Boy, am I tired? Usually found: With something the matter Stumbling block: Drop-seat pajamas Aspires to: Have long and short hair at the same time PATRICIA CADE 1476 Grove Terrace Winter Park, Florida Patsy Says: Excellent Usually found: Composing letters out loud Stumbling block: My old flame Aspires to: Tutor Einstein in English 34 MARY ANNE GROVES Byram Ridge Road Armonk, New York Mary Anne Says: Oh, you just don't know! Usually found: On the phone Stumbling block: Dobbs health breakfast: prunes and bran muflins Aspires to: Be a little less confused PATRICIA GORDON King Street Armonk, New York Pat Says: Oh, dear Usually found: Behind a book Stumbling block: Decisions Aspires to: Know where I'm going 35 I- Y- -v -1 A,'f wg: - ,wwe rw-ygvrvr-1-9-V vvb' 2. ivfvrsvw-..-,-Q, W W mum-Q,-wfwqnwnt CORNELIA FALCONNET HAYLEY 115 Morningside Park Memphis, Tennessee C 0 rnie Says: I'm hopin' Usually found: Waiting under the Stumbling block: Large earrings Aspires to: Be longwaisted clock BARBARA HAWES 74' Hampton Road Scarsdale, New York Barb Says: It's terriblei' Usually found: Taking notes Stumbling block: Being Calf's Head Aspires to: Sing on tune 36 HARRIET THACHER HERRICK Route No. 4, 915 North Signal Street Ojai, California Heidi Says: Veery goodn Usually found: Wafting Stumbling block: Grilled cheese sandwich Aspires to: Increase the surplus population 37 ELIZABETH PHELPS HEMINWAY 50 Hillside Road Rye, New York Betsy Says: If you only knew- Usually found: Carried away by fantastic ideas Stumbling block: Elbows Aspires to: Be the tape recorder in a bull session n N INA KATHARINE LUCKETT Riverview Road Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Nina Says: See you aroundv Usually found: On numerous campus' Stumbling block: Pals and post cards Aspires to: Have a long talk with sometime you ELIZABETH LORINC 2 Thomas Street Portland, Maine Bets Says: Oh, stop Usually found: Drinking coffee Stumbling block: Mainely accent Aspires to: Be protected by a private dick 38 HELEN lRlVlGARD MAHLER 88 Old Army Road Scarsdale, New York I rmie Says: ull would he the greatest l'sually found: Talking to some one Stumliling hloek: limotions Aspires lo: Sell lfstherwood to Charles Addams Wit W LEE SIFXLDING lVl:XSSlflLlNl:XNrl 'QFOX-Run West Redding. Connecticut Lcvzy' Says: Uh, you know what I mean., l'sually found: Giving that glance Stumbling block: Those never taken ends Aspires lo: Be far sighted week- 'W W' 19 2' Jw vtwmgf swsf--sv 'wmv wf,,.,-X: ,W-4.-. -,,- . 1.-, ww -f yr'-'wfq F, M HEIDI JOAN MEIER 32 Bonaventure Avenue Ardsley, New York Heidi Says: Wha'd you say ? Usually found: Trying to see over the dashboard in spite of a pile of pillows Stumbling block: Straight eyelashes Aspires to: Laugh without wiggling her nose ELIZABETH LOVETT Old Bennington Vermont Mimi Says: How dull ! Usually found: Hoping Stumbling block: Intuition Aspires to: Lead a revolution 4-0 MAYER EQ.: Wvxiix ikxmmmtmmm cnet t Xe wow- tvoax lam Ks. Q Xe, Sosa xosmzsls. Qmokximmxilwohi A mpg. gum Xxcnsx Xgksjiwnxe. 'QNAQ NL' Qe..Q.'QooS.umAm'Qe Xen thai Nmwiii. Quexzme. Sxlgvekkvmqkiuv Nw:-mx Yme.bsg.G.XQRwe. ' Vms-mgx x mic., XmXe.mseQx., gg all mmm: Ama. Cmu.n'Q.e- BQ-vie Q-Yiwu! X .. umm 'me mv Sakum mm x:1'Sx1Rq2x2Q+QlQ5Wff'SQxe SmDDA ut. 052- X091-1 ,xmum FlCl,l, MICRWIN V912-'Q' lk' . f . YN - Xkmsng. Bl00Illlll l0ll. II Ill lb x S.. OKQQBS- 'LQXKN v,x,Q,v ' Qf.gQ,Y'-5x9-UQYXN -3, gee. xkqm Gxen:-5.1111 N226-N 52lyS: Nothing lmul sl1arpl m e 'tv lisually found: Forgetting things wgytkb Stumbling block: 5 a.m. alarm QQLR X32- Aspires to: Kick the 2nd floor fire bell ag. Lx Sx. Q.s.s-'zemdxv 6'-N9-'3NE-Y'2- - kmuanuaq Q mxmus X SWR tl.-XROI. IJUVCLASS MILLHOLLAND Says: A lot Vsually found: Un Stumbling mor- ': little tim A g Q 29 Beecllclale lload llolwlws Ferrv Ne X rlx .. N Xpire. to' treusorerll . I . , 4 if . ,JI z 41 SQKQQXQQ. In F l W ll. Q KNa.1Rwm.xx1is3:se I wg. as-,cvQ3s.520 ,ast ilhllllnltlll trvet,Q-vm, 3 Y. .-' 1--f--m-'---,-wiWw1'-- ,--- Ie -'hm'-v'1 ww.1,,..- v--ggngfwafwvfwugpvrmuuwruwwwnww-1-:w1' wtf., -A ---v vw- ---w-wmv'-f-'H 'W---W --1 -Dio.: mimi -' J 'Bfcolun l'mAo fwmdbaq nicf ,J wwf Li W L03 bwwqt 071 pw 'E wwnnuiseisad ,A , M4-ll-131600 - um- 'MJ9os.c004-f Wbwlduoafabtwn? Iwqt fnlc Alojp -SFU Uwlwwoo. -to www: otfwduz mxowawlpi mwvqi MARGARET KRISTI NORSTRAND lm qowro Jgsfouln .l CD Posffjlfq - New York, New York WW' aldatfful Kristi 277 Park Avenue .fn ' G, el 76431 Muclqw S HB ays: ut we have lots of time! fl toads! Usually found: Late 'E lcd: Stumbling block: The Tuesday deadline 'lo -5 for weekend rmissi wth t olld g tha us swunuoamq amp mm bowl P40144 U1 ,mmm :xx foam 24 .M in afhvgxesld dura?-f . of C, M td Ouhd Ur-. fo vuvuda wwifi-loeqbti Aw MQ941001-0 A gf-Ouwub .Afu Oj'dfffln'iJ12 nwf qsoug. ! 6LLw.14vyuuv. :ff I M212- flnufcutpown ffhod qoubf. pu.: Pmaufwz jgsvf- Swv-Q1 WPG' WML JD Smula- 4h44uwisaon.lson naw comcvu noelwifnskcw -in wi Wu lsau-,impojstsu - Lfoubr- bsf'vnCf0tf1 O'IUfM ,CCW mi rm qw.rvwM1-.9 I wow 'fb-M Swgiffwl' Wwf. mn in mg. If qows waz Qss,06wg1.cL ' ou-f pe ons rf 'JIOQ Aspires to: Make the turn at 5th and 53rd ' i ou c i in wi h gimp bm an oc AQ ms-cd - 4 il IbzidSl.aLuvw1if1, fm n0LwcvvfCj-. Uri IULUJ Slhqlov-c0 L'lL12dc0vE1Q.j mwitq wbilmbipu CfbC1i1C,1slA,4i 4,9011 JUDITH MARJORIE Moom-3 f arq,1,u.oc,Q 5120 East Boulevard if A A Canton 9, Ohio Wtcj-539. -4 2 Q' Judy ionrbwxiam 9 'ICU Sfl Says: Honest t'Pete! lid SGW Ji f e Usually found: I'm not NMLJ1 L47lf'-I , t Stumbling block: as keys ,ouuis Aspires to: Say or do just one thing right '42 SARAH PATRICIA PEN NELL 21 Roland Road Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Penny Says: Who've ya' heard from? Usually found: Dodging the kitchen table Stumbling block: Sweet nothings never written Aspires to: Acquire Houdini's skill for escaping SUSAN MARGARET PILLSBURY Balm Hollow Middletown, New Jersey Susie Says: You're so stupid l Usually found: In search of wearing ap- parel Stumbling block: Laughter at midnight Aspires to: Be a flashlight in the tunnel of love 43 ANNE BRADLEY RANKIN 2960 lVlorley Road Cleveland 22, Ohio Alllll? Says: S'Lel's not arguev l'sually found: Doing flips Stumbling block: Psy:-hoanalyzing people Aspires to: Get the facts R ,M MARY GAYLE QUISENBERRY Barkers Point Road Sands Point, L. I., New York Qu I: Says: I'm so confusedll' llsually found: Wondering Stumbling block: llnilorms Aspires lo: Do something about it 44 ELEAN OR HUNTINGTON REYBINE Skipper Lane Orient, L. I., New York Mujy Says: You know what I mean Usually found: Wishing the impossible Stumbling block: Ping Aspires to: Have appeal in warm-ups! MARGARET BAIRD REID 75 Abbey Place Yonkers, New York Peggy Says: Forget it Usually found: Hunting for nickels Stumbling block: Yonkers accent Aspires to: Speak French fluently 45 '1 lTW'Pvgiuwfw1wiff . . . '-? f ff ' fr. 'K 4 , LAEL FRENCH SCOTT 939 Federal Avenue ' Seattle 2, Washington Lael Says: Come on, you guys Usually found: Unfortunately Stumbling block: U. S. mail . . . male? Aspires to: Be a treat instead of a treat- ment MAGNHILD SAN DBERG Limhamnsviigen 18 Malmo, Sweden Magna ays: How do you spell it ? Usually found: In the permission office Stumbling block: English dialect spires to: Come back to U. S. for a year at college 46 S A , , . ,..A,,,,m W-. Wvi. -.-W .V 77,-5-5 s:,.,V Vv,,i,,.x.. ,,n-Er-wr' ,I , MARY ELIZABETH SELLERS Stonington Connecticut Bunny Says: I can't bear it Usually found: Steaming in Stumbling block: Poof Aspires to: Be bilingual sin LINDA SCOTT Southampton, Long Island New York Linda Says: I pity Usually found: In her den of iniquity Stumbling block: Being observed by all observers Aspires to: Be a bolshevik 4-7 - ASTRID liI,lZABlC'l'H SOMMER 87 Buena Vista Drive llolihs Ferry. New York fl Sl rid Says: OIL really! l'suully found: ln a dither Stumbling block: The tam-tless two-V.l Aspires to: Marry a lVlr. Winter J MADlCl,ElNIC HILDRlC'l'll SM l'l'll 4184 Cwynne Road Memphis. Tennessee flladcflvirzf' Says: all don't lrelieve it Vsually found: l,ate Stumbling blot-k: Those ad inhnitum ex cuses Aspires to: lie in the Olympics -18 Jclmsata-n.+ QS. Qleaozsiqn Scan-D.-l'l--faq l Liam.. ka.,-Q. in eemxqqaat ' 'i Says: Who, m Usually found: Planning Stumbling block: Curfews Aspires to: Inspire LOUISE MILNE STOVER 5 Belmont Drive Ardsley-on-Hudson e?99 l'C-LLL.!.l:-I-lyk-DJX New York Weeza 49 K- H U..Lu..v..s Kit, 1+iZ'lff'.f.w., rua-.L aaa - ,, fCioelu:.a.a.aIbc..:lc. in l'o -l4 : J-'-I-I-I gl:-0-'l-'-IAC. ' 54.1 ya...-all pwaotcm in lcxvajitiuaq cu-40. animal vS.a-quxot 1+-Pbr1su..l. K DIN SO LLL!-l.C.ls biz:-Q.. 19 ul-L q QT -lo 1QQ1?Jverbrook af: G-,EA Westover Hills W Wilmington, Delaware Qfe' the ' 3 do Qu at WUXUX illy'H'Q-f'QQLl.L62JJ-Q.L.L.Q. Ou.-A gas: I almbslxliclca bird P' if-NIQ 1'-ig gmail? fou5d:kUsg1glF13Jsi hyperbcges. hg,04-MADS4. G- . um ing oc : ri e c eesesan wic es 1 l ' As ires to: Take over the Platinum Plumb- G 1 'bQL?uYuAcI 'X-Y Q44 in qc'-an QA.-.49 6-0.9 'WL ' L kan 'Lo gigkyia 8,14-og EKKAC1 ALQQA-I-15 4.,....c0 4l.s..s.nn....v. Llscivua. S -Q ' qqlyg, -qiuq. Sli-'IL-X Smwq asf QU W3kl'21.alf.+ in and asm mmm mme. w'x46f-14+-be-L00-34M-Wg'-39'- t' .' . P lin qs -. Smc,-5 u..m.4.o-e.u.qeA su K5 LNQAQ ' Clrcablc-4.-VL' IU-Ok n 'Xl'9lC i i'l'eaAS 4 Koo-oh' TDlkL.u..rvxS -SNQQYX IfNk.n..s...g,xlobblL. -l'lNa...s. QQ ANN BARDWELL STUHLER 110 East End Avenue New York, New York Stu Says ' Yes what am I doing here Usually found Making rhythm Stumbling block. Bemg a Fen Asplres to Slmk mysteriously around corner HELEN LAWRENCE STRATER 1460 Lombardy Road Pasadena 5 Callfornla Hell Says I m lookmg for a pardon me Usually found Making jungle noises Stumbling block Being called Sarah Asplres to Be Big Brother 50 . f 9 . , . ' : ' a 9 ,sas - 1 pa MARGARET LAIRD TROWBRIDCE 16 Miller Road Morristown, New Jersey Laird Says: What'll I do ? Usually found: Worrying Stumbling block: Well-wouldn't it be yours? Aspires to: Recreate the tree scene with Stewart Granger ELEANOR DOW TAYLOR 25 Lake Street Lakewood, New York Ellie Says: It's a woman's privilege her mind Usually found: Changing it Stumbling block: Letter writing Aspires to: See the saints come in to change marching 51 JANE WATTS 1876 River Road Jacksonville 7. Florida fam' Says: nliul why? Usually found: ln the closet Stumbling block: Breakfixt Aspires lo: Have a middle name EMILY VISSER'T HOOFT 64 Cleveland Avenue Buffalo 22, New York Emmy Says: You golla nickel ? Usually found: Xvilh a DA Stumbling block: Just one Aspires lo: Be the fifth ace I 52 of those things MARY CAROLYN WHITE 307 Forest Drlve Short Hllls, New Jersey M.C. Says' I schwear Usually found: Revlvmg memorles Stumbllng block: Black and blue marks Aspxres to: Be Tarzan's mate LINDSAY RACHEL WENDT East Lake Road Tuxedo Park New York Lms Says Too much or not enough Usually found On the mantleplece Stumblmg block Organlzatxon Asplres to Meet hlm 53 9 - . 1 . - . . . . - H 5. V., ,I I LOIS LOUDON WILSON 81 Osborn Road Rye, New York Lois Says: What will I do now '? Usually found: Wishing Stumbling block: Bottled sunshine Aspires to: Stardom L BEVERLY DEAN WILSON 81 Osborn Road Rye, New York Bev Says: Umm-Boy! Usually found: Bewitched, bothered and bewildered Stumbling block: Capriciousness Aspires to: Have triplets 54 Senior Poll DONE THE MOST FOR DOBBS ...,.,O.,. .,.........Sharon Winger DONE DOBBS FOR THE MOST .......... .....A........ L inda Scott MOST TACTLESS ........,......,,...,,,.,........,,,.... ......,,.........,..... L ael Scott MISS RHEINGOLD ...,....,..... ..,................. R enee Adriance HOT-AIR MERCHANT ...................,,.........,.,. ......,...., C ouncil, Lois Wilson WINNER OF THE ALTAR RACE ,,,,.i..,... ......,,,.,.,.........,,....... I ,isa Becker RUN 36 MILES TO .......................,.....,,,.... .,............. L ose a pound BIGGEST BLUFFER ............. .........,..,... P eggy Bower CLASS CLOYVN ..,...,.,.... ...,,...,,...... H illy Chapman LAZIEST .,.,...........,,...........,,...... ,,...,,........ P eggy Bower BIGGEST SOCIALITE ......,. .,............ T he Bates twins MOST CASUAL ,...,,.,..... .,,.,,....... B rooks Brothers MOST GULLIBLE .,....,,...............,.....,.....,.......,,............ ...,....,,.... J ill Merwin MOST DRAG WITH THE FACIILTY ,,..,...... .................... H ennessy MOST ARGUMENTATIVE ....ii.i.i,,,,....,,,...,,,........ ,,......... L indsay Wendt MOST OPTIMISTIC ..........,,,,.... .....,...,...... E leanor Taylor MOST PESSIMISTIC . ,.iii..,.. MOST APPRECIATED ........i.... .......,,,....Laird Trowbridge .....,..................Weekends MOST UNCONSCIOUS ............ ....,........ C lare Fooshee FAVORITE PASTIME ....... .............,.........,., W e'll never tell DREADED FATE ....,,....,,.................... .,....,........ MOST FUN TO BE WITH .....,....... MOST EXOTIC .,,...,,..,....,..................... MOST ENERCETIC ..,.....,. r lalr .I 4 '- N UT P. G. course at Dobbs .....,.....,..Dobbs regulations .........,.,....Myclie Baldwin 55 fri' Q' L, iio hflf D A495 f fl, I U Y 1 lv we 4045 , U97 ,4 I 3 :SVS I fwrf' ,Vx L if rx-6 Q 1 X .N 3 'mx ,,,, - we uma' 4 ng., ff J WIS? 1 xx Class Will E, the Senior Class of 1954, being sound of body and mind, do hereby bequeath these our most precious worldly possessions to our successors, who are faced with the almost impossible task of following in our footsteps. We, M. C. and Hilly, will our suppressed desires to Debby Jenks. I, Mitzi Broome, do hereby will my teeth to any junior who needs a conversation piece. I, Lee Masselman, will my after weekend confessions to Barbara Ann Peddy in the hope that she will blush less at its reference than I do. We, Elsie, Ginny, Louisa and Peggy, inmates of Stalag 3-12, will our Hcomfyi' corner to anyone who is tired of living spaciously and privately. The Five Room wills to the next occupants their hilarious quiet hour sessions which can be heard under Miss Cochranis dryer. We, Irmy and Muffy, do hereby bequeath our questionable talents to all those Junior plays to come. I, Kay Farwell, will my gift of gab to Wendy Harris. We, Patsy, Jane, Bets, and Laird, of Estherwood 3-10, will our eighteen lights to the roomis next occupants, in hopes that they can get them all out faster than we can. I, ,Ioanie Barbour, do hereby will and bequeath the last three letters of my last name to Sarah, in order that she may go through life unashamed. We, Weeza, Barbara, Anne, Nina and Carol, do hereby bequeath our excitingly eventful six-year passage through these halls to any seventh grader desiring adventure. I, Ann Stuhler, do hereby bequeath my Birdie to Ann Lawler in the firm conviction that she will know what to do with it. I, Clare Fooshee, will my unanswered mail to anyone who wants to take the trouble. I, Bunny Sellers, do bequeath all my 'igoodn magazines to Diane Tietig. We, the Chemistry Classes, do bequeath the rubber stamp of R. D. Bangs to anyone who doesn't like to correct experiments. We, Penny Cleghorn and Judy Moore, will our ability to maintain perpetual chaos to Lib Ledyard and Karen Dudley. We, Kristi Norstrand and the Bates twins, will our ability to prolong weekends and throw schools and universities into quarantine panic to anyone with a sadistic sense of humor. We, Astrid and Peggy, do hereby bequeath our C. O. D. service to any non-resident junior living near a drug store. We, Polly Benson and Mimi Mayer, do hereby bequeath our executive ability to the Editors of 1955 Masterpieces twith our blessingsi . 56 l Pgrsf---Tile Browne' twins la xx L X v Ideal Dobbs Girl iniplvsr M.tQ.Wl1ilc Hands CIill'0I tNlSilPt' lignrv --'- Marlelvinc Smi rriasze'-llenny Leisei iring Hair lznnly X IhSl'l'l lfyvs Put liortlml lil Xosv llvifli llc'rrim'k Smile Ann? Rankin li0lllllIt'Xitlll Katy lfarx Clothes' Nladeleim- Smith 57 X! null it-ll Class History 55 N our way rejoicing, as we homeward move- forever. Though we cannot quite believe this, we are now able to look back on these past years and realize how quickly they have gone. We can still remember that September afternoon in 1950, when we arrived, terror- stricken at the formidable sight of Estherwood and ALL THOSE PEOPLE. We met, and promptly forgot the names of those with whom we would be spending the next four years. There seemed to be a rather confusing aggregation of girls in white, teachers, parents, and tearful daughters. We were greatly relieved when our old girls led us, practically by the hand, to First House where we met Mrs. Girdwood and Rocky, as well as the fifteen other freshmen, none of whom, we were sure, we would like at all. We showed this conviction within the next week by changing room- mates at least twice. Time passed, and life became less complicated, in fact we actually started enjoy- ing ourselves. Our fun began the night that Penny Cleghorn was found sleep-walking on the roof. This was the first of a series of incidents that neither we nor Mrs. Cirdwood will ever forget. Among those that stand out in our memories was the death of the piggy plant. It seems that Mitzi was supposed to take vitamin pills. She was sure that the piggy plant needed them more than she, so one night she fed the pills to the poor plant, and the next day Mrs. Girdwood was very much amazed to find it dead. One of our favorite means of self-expression was beating out the passionate rhythms of the jungle drums of King Solomon's Mines, a movie which had made a deep impression on our young minds. Vile would gather together in Renee's and Helen's room and sound out these rhythms on laundry boxes, walls, and heads, until poor Mrs. Girdwood would nearly go out of her mind. Besides being so musically inclined, our class was extremely travel-minded. On Saturday night one might se rather chubby figures perched on the window sill, elaborating on their prospective trips to the moon by singing in loud, raucous voices Up in the air, Junior Birdmenf' Unbelievable as it may seem, we did manage to do several constructive things in the course of the year. The first was completing the task, along with everyone else in the school, of picking up the fallen shingles after the Thanksgiving hurricane. 58 The next constructive use of our talents was the German, the theme of which was composers. We had the extremely hard one, we thought, of doing Stephen Foster. For this we covered ourselves with black grease paint and sang a take-off on Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair, whereupon Stephen Foster turned over in his grave. We won the prize for being most original! However, one sad aftermath was our inability to remove the paint until 2 A.M. ln fact, there remained traces of this blacking for the next week or so. That spring, Miss Cochran decided that, as another constructive project, we should clean up the Jongleur House and plant flowers around il. We spent weeks doing this, but we have not since then seen any flowers in that general area. During this whole time, helping us with the constructive, and scolding us for the destructive, was our Senior Council adviser, Posy Palmer, who couldnit have been nicer to sixteen such rowdy little freshmen. All the things we did made the year go very quickly, and soon it was time to leave school for a short three months. Returning in September, we found that the class had been divided into two houses, for many new sophomores had arrived. The Cushing group started off with a smashing success in the form of the Cushing fair, which was run by Judy and Mary Anne. It made the surprising sum of 8159.00 for the Harlem housing project. But soon Cushing fell from these heights by reverting to the standards set by our class the previous year. Bells were stuffed, tennis games were played in the halls, and one Sunday afternoon the faculty on the Hill was alarmed by a fire drill about which they had not been previously warned. Apparently several of us had been standing around the fire bell saying how funny it would be if it went off. It did. The glass slipped down, and as Kay was trying to put it back in place, the alarm went off. Poor Miss Malcolm, naturally upset, rushed over to tell us to get outside but we airily replied that it was just an accident. Order was finally restored and the glass fixed so as never to fall again. The climax of our Cushing career was a slumber party in Mydieis and Polly's room the night before Christmas vacation. We had prepared for this loud and raucous affair hours before by the removal of mattresses from at least six beds to the appointed place, This ill-fated gathering was subsequently discovered and almost jeopardized a day of next yearis Christmas vacation. lwe are now going to moralize by saying Let this be an example to any future party plannerslwl Second House had neither fairs nor large parties, but it did produce the first class president, Penny Leisenring. There were, as usual, small gatherings on the roof and in the Third House kitchen-this last for obvious reasons! As a class we were able to obtain our own dates for the first sophomore tea dance 59 in Masters School history. We also set another precedent by giving a party, com- plete with pony rides and gooey sandwiches, for the children of the Masters Day Nursery. Our class will always be remembered by Miss Dresser for the day that some still anonymous member put a set alarm clock in Lee Masselman's desk in study hall. It went off just as Miss Dresser was walking past. Needless to say, she, and everyone else, was terribly surprised. After minutes of frantic search, the clock was found and peace restored. The school found itself again in a panic with the arrival of the glorious Seventy- fifth. It was due to our class that there were chairs to sit on for Class Day and Commencement, i.e., we set them up and took them down and set them up again. Moreover, we served as ushers for the whole affair. During these last few days, we spent much of our free time admiring the Junior lloom and anticipating the joys of the coming year. The summer passed, as most summers do-too quickly. We returned, brown and sleek, looking backward over the past summer and looking forward to the exalted state of at last being upperclassmen. We were soon divided up into various committees for the purpose of keeping up the appearance of the grounds and the school buildings. Now for the first time, we really felt like an organized, ellicient, and extremely capable group. However, we soon discovered that there was much hard work to make up for this. But there was a tea dance coming up in the near future, which encouraged us all. Since we were in two adjoining houses, Thompson and Strong, we could get to know each other. In these two houses we managed to find time to entertain ourselves by various means. Thompson House excelled in practical jokes, such as moving M. M.'s mattress and bedclothes into the showers one night at 9:55, leaving the poor girl to maneuver it back down the hall single-handed. Another night several of use decided that it would be funny to take all of M. Cfs clothes out of her closet and sell them to the girls in Strong. Poor M. C. practically had to buy them back. For more active entertainment we turned to such sports as playing hockey with mops and tennis balls, and having water fights up and down the halls. At the same time the inmates of Strong House occupied themselves in a more discreet manner by totally disregarding the 10 o'clock bell. During these late hours there would be parties. large, loud, and generally undiscovered. Sometimes themes would be deposited at Miss Caldwellis door, since she had unwittingly and jokingly agreed to accept themes by midnight of the day they were due, never dreaming that 60 she would be taken seriously. On the more humorous side there was Oscar the moth, who had been taped to the wall at his death and displayed to the public with a large sign bearing the words Moth: species Oscar. Oscar was worshipped with great salaams until finally removed by Mrs. Corski. These incidents were forgotten in the excitement of the coming tea dance, a party which everyone anticipated very much, because the one previously planned had not come about due to a most unfortunate man-shortage. This one, however, had plenty of men, mostly from Millbrook and Choate, and on the whole was a great success. No sooner were the dance, and March, over, than we began to work feverishly on the Junior play under Mrs. Harvey's often despairing direction. The play itself, Maeterlinckis 'fBluebird, offered great possibilities, there was dancing, singing, lovely backdrops and properties, and above all, wonderful acting, particularly by Muffy and Irmie, the main leads, who gave excellent performances. On the morning of Class Day, however, we had our doubts as to the success of the play. The day dawned cold, wet, and altogether inappropriate for such a per- formance as ours. Being generally superstitious, especially at that time, all the Juniors gathered together in the Thompson-Strong court and did an impromptu sun dance with appropriate songs of praise to the higher gods. Needless to say, our prayers were successful and Class Day proceeded in bright sunlight. The biggest moment of Class Day was the Mantle Ceremony when Sharon, despite a sprained ankle, climbed up the steps to receive the mantle and become the President of Dobbs for the following year. Senior year, the best and last, began when we received our Senior pins the morning after our return to school. We had always been told that this year would be the most important of all our school years and here we were. At first it seemed like all the other years except that we had twice as much work to do and half as much time to do it in. However, this was soon softened by the appearance of such rare but well-earned treasures as Senior privileges, the first of which was permission to play radios in the morning. Among other anticipated pleasures was the dance with the Yale freshmen, who arrived, with six or seven too few boys, over an hour late. Nevertheless the food and orchestra were excellent, so almost everybody had a good time. On the whole, this year has consisted of much work, occasional but gay week-ends, and worries about colleges and the future. Now on the point of leaving forever, we hope that our successors may have as much fun as we did, and we wish all the luck in the world to every member of the class of 1954. 61 ,J 4 ' z mfg my 'gr-wg rwrvx 'Y' iv W Lf?'xi 'f ',i'1.'f'fZF F?.Q',,x-U EAN T K 2 vigm'-,v,i.i W I E X R 1 1' Z ' '-x, 4 . f V: . .gjyiw ' .14 AJS Mxxii' K .r 9, 1, 'ff' ,W 7-54 f, , - Y .,,V., , . . 7062.53 xg. f A , 'iff 1 2 ' - '3,4.,'Q+Es : ZEYDWAM Q. .Nv- x,,. ,,,f ,,.-uw R M 555 T ix, A.. 342135, R23 bl fm x 5' 1-15. Q Q, M 'E3fi?5'-T Q,sf21fa?f Q Ax s .1 fx ' - WPT 2 . f 511 , R531 AS., 1 i 1 l ISZE I 'K L na' .KV ,, 1 ,M 'ri gg' sggfigginwgfigwf zgL.-Mi. 4 , f- pi M ,, f uf ,- JT, n , ' N 'Nvgw -4 -. '.,.n,,?A4.,,.x'.,c3,,fx Q, - : 6, ,Q ..,.Ua-pw A., QA., , X. T. yi. -17 ' ' . . ,-. J , , wg.: L ' uw -f-Q F9545 .xg .4 - ,,. MJ Y A 4, X X, - 1. :- .. ...Av -N .. , Q fa . u ' r w QM f 14'-i ,.f. Y. -Q V fra I I l 1 I Guan 71' '1 E-P1 '1Q!'h'ftQ 1..f.- fx .,9,.,3,k Ki 'J v 0 ii 1 1 5 NK lllm xl! 1 I ll III III xx md ry ll I :ml mu I I .M .1- 'QE-si' Q iss ,. .,.. , ., .. mx l'rr.- 'nu' ,l. II2ll'l'l5, II. he-lly. I., Lappe-I. NI. Nllll-r. IJ, In-Ill. N. Iilvllzlnwlmll V ' 2 ,I. Iillnmn. If. IIHIISUII Is1'4'I'1'IIll'yI. S. I'iri1-. S. Ilurlwr. X. Kurtis, ,I. Ilznnlin W ' 'W I . . Mx - .gt'!'lIllll rnu' It, ,low-5. I.. Iirmxn. NI, Sumiln-rg, fl, IIuws--. NI. I'.. Iimlmzm X ' wx 1 If, I5uIn'm'k. N. Ilvxxm-y. I., Str: III, II. Iim I. II. I'ri1'e-. 5, YI'IlHlIlIl50ll. NI. .-X 3 Ne- Ia 5. I.. NIAI I 'yu .I. I.. IIll'IU'l4. - 1 ? Q, ' Tl' ' Ii. I-'if-Ill. N. RRHIHISII. If. IIOH, YI. Szllllvy, If. 1Ir'I.:1it!re-, 5. Iloln 5 - I ' N. I I. ' ' .ll II Illlmlllun 'Y :mx nn. I., Int. Ix. I.lIllI. ly. IX. IN'll'uu-IK, ,I. Spv- 3 , ' ' , .. II-1 F II. IIill'IU'I'. S, wv2lI'llt'I' lYi1'e- I,l'!'SI4I4'IlI D, XI. Clay. II. 'I'Il1Il'Il4III'U'. l'.HIlI'IlI mu' I.. Kouros. D, U'IIrin-n. .I. II:-kmu. II. Tmnkinx. If. I'ri4'IumI Nl. AX. Iiupp. Ii. Knox. II. Walk:-r. Ii. limos:-11. .I. Iv-mp. IT. 5n1itI1i:-N. I'. 1I4 Sola. K. Iollnsoll. S. Nlvrwin. II. I'I0rIu'r. Fifth mu' Xl. I'rm-stun. II, I'zu'lmrigllt. XI. Iflnu--. If. I.:-1Iyur1I. Ii. Kiplw. ,I . . , . IIRHISNUH. II. XRIIIIAIIIIIWII II l'Q'hl1I1'llII. A. I.amIf-r. ,l. NIi1l'II0lll'II. II, Ilaunpzzml II. ,lvuks. 5. Ixvnyon. Ix. Ilndlvy I Il'l'ilhlll'1'l'I. Sixllz mu' 'I'. SIPIIIIIHIII. NI. I'In-Ips. XI. flaw. N. IIIHIM2 ,l. Winston. S. Xluurv N. Balls. XI. Nlorri . Yu! pn'.w'nI A. Ilrum-, S, I rc-e-main. If. I.t'IZ!'l'Il'Il, S. Smith. NI, Wall:-r. JUNIOR CLASS UH vm... irxl mir- B. lfllintt. Xl. Kittwmlgv, S. .-Xlsnp. S, xllllllliiill. li, xlill'Sll2lll. lf. lllll'll4'l'. pl. liilvlliv. ll. Davis, V. Norton. .l. Vlvn-igl. Xl. wlnul. Svrunzf row- W. llairris, lf. ifrossfivlil. lf. lxlllSl', Nl. Elliott. Nl. liilllll. l.. . . . .,. . . , . . . lillllltlily. K., llzirris. ll. Brooks. 5. lrrry, 5, Hills. lx. ffomlmn. X, Hull. S. .I. Xlvlfalrroll. Tflirrf mu' -gl. Rvvml. D. linllins, H. Yllilll1'l'. M. BlNWl1'll. .-X. Ul'al4'e', N. Yiilul. ll. A. l'mlwly. Nl. Nlvliols, A. lllc-Dow:-ll. ,-X. Hour:-. .l, trout. 5. Starke. ,l. NlllllIl'l'. ll. llrvig, ll. l lms1'r. S. l.inm'0ln. H. lllillt. 'nurlli rnu' l.. KI'1'llllllt'l'. M. llvywortli. li. Wilson. .l. Smith. .l. llulrlwin-. . . 1 . ., . -. . l.. l.nnl. Xl. Lulv. lu. llrauly. P. lllll, VN. BQ-II, B. llamsvn. 5. XXPISIIIHII. .l. llrown. D. Rulain. 'iflli mu'--'.l. lilnptun. Y. liovhran. ll. lh-mls, ll, llrnss, S, Xluurlic-acl. l l'liilli H ' ' ' ps. .l. Nlutli, l.. lrunz, l'. hxnipson, l'. llusp. .l. 5pm-rry. Wixlh run -VS. Nlvliorimu-k. ii, lfoniptun. lf. Xlm'l'1lslmxiu-y. Xl, Burton. N. Crum lf. llull. l. Spurr. li. 'l'l'llIllllt'. Yu! pn-.writ-ll. Wolllislwrg: ophomore Class 71 O Q D' U' ' WD 5? If l iris1 mu' 'L Norris. 5. lillttn-r. N. SRIIIIIIUI. ll. llrigigs. IJ. SllI'lUlt'l'. lf. 'l'iII mam. A. N1'XXlilIlllH. L. NlilHmll:ul4l. K J? Swmlff run' -X. llrulnvlill. 41. FIilIl4if'l', IT, uve'-Ion. V. VI'I14Il4Q1l'l's1'll. 'L R1YllillNl :ff g Tllini run' II. 'I':lylm'. K. Nlvllltosh. .l. Kwok. ll, Nlvrritt. lf, l.m'nl. ,, f-I l uul'Il1 mu' Nl. l,. Xlzlltllvus. Y. .lInlsun. IT. Nnlvwts. U. Uunningl. li. Hlfllillf l'. Way. lffflfz mu' I , .IUIIIISUIL l,. ,IUIIIISHIL l.. Nmlggr-1's. I.. llllrlingl. Nl, I.:-Uluml. Sixlh mu' Il, Tim-tigz, K. Killgililllll. Y. .Illlll'illQ. Nl. H. IILIIIIY. H. l.llNQ1l'1'H. 4 Hilllly. I.. I.llll1Hl1'l'Ql. X411 pu-.wut lf. Nnttlv. K. Williams Freshman Class 72 7:4 lf 'Q' - o 6 iff 71 'vapgllhx Rl QQ , 1 . v I .I xfuf Firxl rnuv- Nlzlry Ann Nlvplfvr-. Susan Rosa-. Kutlmlm-n Nlvlton. ll:'i4li lla-vlul l,imlu Rfilllll. lluy 'l's1'l1ll1ly, .lam-I Burns. Sylvia llillon. Svrurzcl rou' Mary lflimlwtll fll'1llllllllSI. llc-tsy Tllornllilu-, Sully Szlmlc-rs Xlury lflizulu-tll Altgvlt. Susan llm-krm-yn-r, l.ouisf- fjuwpvr. fm- lfunsor. Tlzfrzl mu' l'utnum llnzvn. .lucly lfolggv. Diane- llomlml. Nzmvy w'!'Sl1lIl. lfn x llumillrm. lflizzllnvtlm Vimw-nt. llilllly S1'llllll1l. Lower School 74 1 if First row-Barliara Rowml. lfaml fllillholland. Marga- 17:1,' I4 V, ret floxheazl 1SH'retary-'l'rvasurerI, Sharon Wingvr fPresidentl, Helen l.eisf'nring: lVi1'f' Presiflc-ntl, lrm- -Ull gard Mahler, Almira Baldwin. Second raw-Carolyn , 7' Hall, Harriet Vanflampen, Louise Stover, Nancy Free- fg A man, Mary Elizabeth Svllffrs, Barbara Walker, Louisa K! Q Gilbert. 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Nllllly llUNllt'll 1Nllll'y llllfllllillll llllwlll-ll 'FWL .llllizl lll'0MII llXilllll'l'lllf' Yll'l,e'llll:lll llruisll 'IHL XSlIl4'y Nlolllw- lllalllie-I llalllliltllll Nlollrl- 'HOL lm- xlll5Sl'llllill! lFl0I't'lll'!' lillllgglllill xlil5Hl'llIlilll '2hL lll'l4'l'lj' llllll l':lf'ill!0l' livyllilll- llflllvl Fil-lll llvylrilll- 'ISUL lflimlwtll l.0l'll lllllrlltlly llill xl4'w'llllJlIllN 'QTL Killll' l'l'illl' l zll'xu-ll ll.lliN Nlilln-l' xx'1ll!'l'lll2II1 'lll, xlillf lflilzl- ln-Ill Xx'llll'I'lll1lll l :ll'xsl'll 'QIKL Killil .l0llllN0Il llflilallwlll llllplxills ,lllllllsthll HL l,1llliN:l llillwrl lllllllv' I-'isk xxilflllgj 99. IAHIIS4' xxilllllgl fllllwrl 2.51. llc-ll-ll l.:-ls:-ll' Tllljl llll-ll-ll lm- l':ll'lle-n- I.l'lNl'IlI'lll,LI l.5L Nlllll l,ll1'lx0'll lxlilfy SllflQ'N l,lll'lu'Il 'QOL Flrllllll Inu' li0I'lIlll!' lla' l.1li!Il'e' lllllsillllllllll l.i!Ile' lll' l.:liIIlkl' 'llll. xlillj l,l'4' Xllllllllwx- llflizzllrl-Ill 'I'lll'lll'l' Nlxlltlll-in 'QOL ,lllli.l xllllll lxlllfy lilllllllll li1lI'l'4lll Il, l,l-v liAlI'l'lDll xllllll 'QOL Xlllfy lflizzllu-Ill Fvllrrx llflillllrldll l':l'kl'I'l Fvllvlx '2llL llllllll llmlllllllll lllllllzl l.lllllx lux lla, lzllllllwlll lim Vllllplllzlll 'flL l'zlll'il'izl liilllt' lxlilllrl-ll llllllvl' llilllt' 'JNL Nllll'ggzll'vl lillxlle-alll lxlill'1lJll'l'l llllllglalsx lnxllvzlll 'ISUL x'll'QllllH lim-lllulll lxirgillizl l l'l-il lxrilglll 'llh, lil'- gllllgl rllglll l,lll'lH:lIl flll. l'.lIl1lll4'lll l,1'lly:lIll llflllil- lvl-Ill l i1lNlll'llN lrllyzllwl 'QOL lllll1Il'l-- Slllillliv- llllllllyx l'l-l'llalllllvz Nlllllllllfx ,ll L Xlilllllil Nlvlllll- llX1Illl1'l'IlI4' l'illHilI'llN Nivlllll- 'IRL Mil llI4',N1'lll lllllnllly llll4'lx 4lfllzll'lulll' l'0I'll'I' llllvlx 'URL .lillll'l lllII'l!N l.lzlll:'I l.llli4- lllllll- 'QUL lllllI'lI'l lll-l'l'il-li ll'illlllIIl' llllllllllll ll:-l'l'il-lx 'USL Xlzllkglml lxilllvllue- llxllllllllilll' l.l':llll:lll lxilIll'll,:1' HL 5llII1lI'il Flllilll lN.llll'y lrilllx Xl.lyll1'is 'IIL l'2lIIlIll lI'IIlllllt' lNzllll-y l2lI'I1lll lI'IIlllbl1' TH. X ioolfse Sf 0 Tap ,.. SM Grail S' ITT, 5 fuk li ow' I' 3 gif' ,.k' N' ' Q2 Qin 41' V M7 H -j K f C 2 l M, - X - I ' ik U ill Il 'Q 5 5 1 - 5 . , l g -1 u l! 2 ' rs! row- liilflllyll Hull, Elsie- Axfornl. Sl'!'0fld fIIll77'll'I1lgL2lI'll Mahler. Clare . 1 . lfunslw-, Nancy FIPPHIEIII. Polly HPIISKHI. Carol Millliollzlml, Lisa Befvkvr, Yearbook Board 49 WIP HSTERFIE CES If L E E Front row-Elizaln-th Mayer llfo-lfditnrl. Anna Rankin lllllsilwss Nlanage-rl, Polly Benson ICU-Editorl. Serum! row-Lee Massvlman. Mary Anne Crows. Third rnwgVirg1inia Evans. Hilda Chapman. Nlargarr-I Re-id. 78 Q 4 'N A JUN ,4 4. In ,,, J! ' 'ug LV if .15 9 -5 mf fn M- My ' iv . Fl ln Fmlllf-,Ill4ly Hamlin. -Xrium' llr-wry. f'ul'l'.Sl mu' Surah llnrln-l'. KRIITI Du ll 4Vl'I'1 lNlll't'I4, ll'u'ri:-I Yun Quill! rr-n 4l'r4- ide-ntl gll7'lIllll' V ' e-r fXi4's- 1 4 5 ., . . . .. 5 - . . ,. .nn I'r4-sialvlll I. lflizzxlrvtll Hllllilbll VI I'1'ilNlll'1'l' D, .N'rrn111I mu' liurlruru W-lllk4'l 'xllll l,auxI4-r. PIII:-n Knox, lfurlmru Hmsmi. Firxf mu' iluylv tJlliSl'llll4'l'l'y. llc-lvn l.1-isvnringl, ShilI'0Il Wingvr. Mary lililil' 'Il Lud , IIUIII Fvllvrs. Hilnlu ljhillllllilll. Clare- Fnosl1w'. .gt'l'0l1ll mu' 'Klmiru Bulduill. Nillll',' Frm-Q-man. lmlisal llillu-rl. Ililulsay Wvmh. Xlurgare-t ifoxlwud. lflsiv Nxfurmi, Hlizulwtll Nlzlyvr. lfurolyn Hull. 79 ' .PAUL f wb 1 72 f ', ,, 57574, ff.f,j ff ,. 4? fdpfof f fi 'xii First row- Linda Malolwy. .luliu 9 war, Suzanm- Warr1s'r. Isobel Spurr. Diana C . d , Davis, ,lf-ssiv Harris. Mary I':ln1e-s.l,Il1dilh Hamlin. S!'I'0fIll row-Mary Casv, Nanvy Frvvrmln, Margaret f:0Xhf'il1i, PillI'il'ii1 Bzllvs, Pzllrivia dv Sola, Virginia ffovhran, Hlsiv Axfurd 451-vrvtaryl, Harrie-t Van ffampvn, Martha Sattlvy. C 'tt Martha l'n'stnn, Carolyn Hall. Third row-live-lyn Batvs l'l'rc'asllrc-ri, Helvn l,c-iss-nring, Louisa Uillwrt Hlhuirmanl, Lindszly VVQ-ndt 1Vi1'e-flhairmani. Mary Hlizulwth Svllvrs, Sharon Wingc-r. Not prvswzt'-Vida Bull, Ellvn Bah- vovk, Dolorvs Smithivs. C D' First mu' fllvidi Nls-ivr f'l'rvus11rerD, llurul Nlillhullanwl fl,l'l 'Si1ll'IlIL Louise Stow-r 1Yi1'z--l'l'c'siflPnl!, Nina I.ll1'k1'll 151-VH-turyb. Scrnrzzf mu' Mary Elliott f xifglilliil .IllliSHll, Barlmra Hawvs. Murgxurvt Rf-id, ,luun 'l'iIlmun, Dltm 4 Q .Q T, ' 1 4 ' CARY: y , H0 Wa mf g- 15333 , W' QNT14 ' ur . F F 'L ' u W. ' Q 0 0 Q ' Ph ' First four-Beverly Wilson. Mary lflliott. llarliara Walker. lrrngard 'N i Sarah .lane M4-Carroll. Vida Hull, Margaret Bower. Jxlllllfll llalmlwin Nunn: row-Nlary Arnie Groves. Louisa Gilbert. Sharon Winger, l.ois Wilson llre I Pfnncll lsl1Hlll'Wl Illlfllllt lrle urerl, Eleanor Reylrine llJr1'si1lentl, Sarah i . A..4,i, i ll'resi1lvnt of the 'llt'l'lllliK'ili Stalll. lui.ll'l.llll Preston. lfwlyn llatvs Hayley. Third row---Karen Dudley. Louise Slowr, lflsie .-Kxfonl. Nana man, .lane Watts, Suzanne Warner, Margaret lioxhearl, llarlrara Grow. Knox. Not pres:-rzt-.Miele llrnve. Mary Clay. Sarah l r1-Q-man. We-nrly l ir N lflizahelh l,etzerieh. Ann M1-llmxell. l.ee Nlassm-lrnan. Virginia Norton irw Ann Rapp, Corrlelia Speakrnan, lleieli Wolllisln-rg. First mu'--lfmily Visser't Hoof! lSeeretary-TreasllrerU. Anne Fiske llfo-Vive Presidentl. Almira Baldwin ll'residentI. Cordelia Speakman llIo-Yive Presi- dentl. Sevonzl row-Anne Rankin, Nina l.uc'kett. Carolyn llall, Sarah Pennell. Penelope Cleghorn. Third rowflfllen Knox. Polly Benson. Helen Strater. Sharon Winger. I uurth row-Mary Elizabeth Sellers. Meredith Morris. Dor- othy Blu-k, Heidi Herrick. Olga Conroy. Nu! preswzt-Sarah Barber. .lane lloehran, Palrivia Cade, Ann Lawler. Martha Sattley. Sandra Smith. 81 D. A. A. 8 ' 'Cir ,. . 1 via? V214 .AW O R oyli Q W . Firxt muh Cayh- Qllisvillwrry 4Svvretary-Tru-asllrvr1, l,air1l Trnwlrridgc- fl'rs-si- llf'llIl, ,loan llarlmur lYll'f'-l,l'l'Slfll'IlIl, .lane liuvhran ll.ihrarianl. Svrmzd rnw Mzimlvlviilc- Smith. Marsha Vlbrmml, Sharon Pirie, l.ur'y Straub. ,lurlith Nfnora-, Susan Tluunpson. Elizalwth llanson. Margaret Flynn. Sarah llarlu-r. .lanvt Rm-fl, Sarah l.in4'nln. .-'liiiw Curtis. Lynda Yost. l'llizalbe-th lnringl. Thin! ron' Carolyn llall. RI llI'f Adriam'v. llarric-1 Yan lfampvn, Elena Honsvn, Kaia ,I0llllS0ll, Nina lilI1'lU'lI, Mary Alive llarnc-s. Nlargzarvt lic-icl. julia Sprar. ,lanvl Clan- l o0slu'c'. Carol Nlillhnllanml. Fourth mu'-llilda Chapman, Emily Vissvft llouft, l.ynn Yliruuz. Dvlmrah .lc'nks, Ann Stuhler. Anne- Fiskv. Syrlnvy ', Karvn Kipke. ,lvaune llorlwtt. Kristi Norstrancl. Patrivia Cordon, l.1-is:-lii'il1,L:. .Ynt prvsvrii-A-Nlilrlre-rl Hruoinv. lfnrinne- cle: Laittrv. Kathariuv uann, llvtsy lfloiwr. Ruth Cmulwin. Susan Mc'Cnrinam'k. Sarah Mills. R:-w l'rim'n-. Mary llanxl. Alive- RilVllIlill. Nlagnhilrl Sillllllbfxfgl. Sandra Smith. He-le-n Strat:-r. Mary Carolyn Whitv. Kc-nip, Moor: Ile-le-n Duhri J' A fgt 0 ' ,Q J' J J. I ll l 5 Q? ll i .. 'J' X 19 l U ! First mu'-l.aird 'I'rowhrirl,f16. .loan Barbour ll'rvsi4lentl. .lanv ffm-hi in nne f ' Curtis. Svmrzrl raw-Sydney Moore: Kern-v Adrianvv. Ann Stun: S1 l,in4'nln. Third row-Maclvleiiu' Smith. Einily VlSSf'l'.I lluoft. Farm lhrnl Gayle- Quisvnherry. Not IJl'CSl'fll'lxlilfll'Pll llroonw. Katharine- Dohrmuin Ruth Goodwin. Alive Havmlal. 41. ll, -,, K .1 11 f 1' 'wk i ,. 1 1- - . ' . J 1 TT t ' E , ' ',iz . First fun'-l'u!ly BQHISHII' llfo-!':miitol'!. l'utri4'izl flnnlnn ff1U-l':1hl0l'?.-.gftlllllll l'Ull'75llSilll Pillsbury 11,0-HIISIIIPSS xlilllil1l!'l',. lxurvn DIl4Hf'y, l,1lll'll'lil hzulv tfitl-RllSillPSS Mallzlglfwl. IN-m-lnpv Clvgxlmrn. xIill'gZAll'l'l Bow-r. .Nui lfrvsrlxl- - l':liZulwtI1 l,:-tzerivh, Kutlwrim- Limlsuy, lflizulrvlh Lnringz. .Uivv Rznmlul, Dmwrllxy Hman. lIt'f'lilIjl fxfiilllt' D4-wvy. ,lllllilll Nluorv. KdIIlill'iIl1' Farnvll. Kutlwrine Fvld. ', .-H. '. '- '- .Y . '. , ., 7 '.. ' J Nmmlm,g llmllet Nan f.dIllITFlL Sydney Mom:-, Lois Wilson. .Hmcnl Ihdlld p Dznis, lforimu- de- l.nit!rc-. Hu- Hull. Hoselnzlry Ke-Ily. Dorothy SIII'2l4lf'T. Frwl- riku giIllIlS0ll. ff, vf '- nw W W i 1 J 14' ' LU im. 822 1 3' I -L'l', 7X ' . ' x I7 ., J ,Qs I, V kr lfirxt ruwf.lauu- lluvisson lw'8l'Kll'lll!P Mistrvssl, Margaret Flynn lprvsirlvnll. . Gail l arug10 lVi1'v Prvsidvntl, lfornvlia Hayley 1Svvrvtary-'l'rvas1lrPrl. Svrnnd row---Molly llmulvll. .lilHf'l Kvlnp, Elizalu-th Hanson. Third ruw-Vida Bull. Mary Elizulwtll Rodman, ,lvnnifvr Vlfinston. Mary Fllizalwtll Svllffrs, llarlrara Walk:-r. Fllizzllwlll Tllffilvr. Nu! 1IfCSt'llfTEldlllf' Cr0ssflr'l4l, Ariane llewry. Carol Xlillholland. ' w First rawi'Kristi Norstraml. Ann Slllllllll' ll'rvsi4lH1ll. Mary Clay. Sw-nml rnu'-,loan Barlrour. Mary Anna- Newlands. Ann l,anlf'r, Clare- l 0osl1ev. Susan Nlvrxsin. .lvssie llurris. Nut 1Il't'St'lll7l':llZZllDPlll Tlwilvr. Xlillxrvy Wallvr lVi1'e- l'rf-side-nt I. 'Xvf 4 l 81 THE KETTLE Texture MARY ANN NEWLANDS Aluminum rain drops fall on a patchwork field So a tin-foil farmer's crops will yield, Tinkling noisily as they break On a near-by pink glass lake. A fat felt lady hurries out to get Her cellophane wash so it wonit get wet, And the farmer's daughter of bright green yarn Puts her cardboard chickens in the paper barn. A calico cow waddles under some trees Of polka-dot linen and falls on her knees To watch undisturbed the china sky Get everything wet while she stays dry. And the tin-foil farmer runs that he may Cover up quickly his toothpick hay, While a fat pink duck with evident glee Wades through poodle cloth puddles happily, But the combed cotton clouds soon roll away And a porcelain sun returns to stay. The Sound of Silence MARY CLAY Lying fallow on my bed And lifeless, sense benumbed, At eventide, My mortal body I hear the buzz and hum of life Cold, still, shell that once held Subside Myself And die away. Is quiet! Tossing, sleepless, nerves taut Then, through the night, a sound And stretched, Like falling snow The hot, still night against my heart Or branches whispering softly in Is pressed The summer air Painfully. Comes. Out of this sultry, calm, my thoughts The pattering rustle, which assails Reach up My soul, And soar away, to that ethereal world Is neither snow nor leaves. It is Beyond the stars The Sound Where dreams are made, Of silence. 85 ew York KRISTI N ORSTRAND HE stood on the balcony of the small apartment and gazed out over the wonderful city. The balcony was her private tower and from it she was able to see a large part of Manhattan, over to Fifth Avenue and the park, and down Park Avenue, and in the other direction, the East River. She could not see the river itself in the darkness but the lights from the docks sparkled against the sky and she was able to see the tiny busses and taxis moving as though mechanically on various streets in the distance. City noises rose from the pavements, honks of car horns, squeaks of tires, and the laborious groans of the Lexington Avenue bus. She heard them and understood them and yet was above them, an observer. They could feel the heat of a summer night, but she, up above the world, felt that the air was fresh and cool. Her balcony was not a part of those men's disappointments and ambitions but here she was able to watch over her city and see how small and insignificant its people really looked in contrast to the wide sky above. The city looked like a toy metropolis whose servants worked in perfect precision as though all were controlled by a master switch. The city was throbbing with life, hurried, tense, rapid life, and she loved it for she was a part of it. People of all different sorts were scurrying down there and each in his way was striving toward a common goal, working under one Universal Power. There was a ring of her doorbell and she heard the laughter begin as her older sister answered it. There were more such ringshthe cocktail hour had begun. She stepped from the balcony into the living room and closed the door on the city. Its life and security would wait there for her. The beat of the party became quicker and quicker, gayer and gayer. A swirl of laughter, talk, expression of ideas you didn't believe, competition, trying to keep up with the quickening pace, and the futility of straining for acceptance in a group to which you could never belong . . . insincerity . . . and then the discussion of evening plans, retrieving of coats, frenzy and laughter and finally quiet, all were gone. She breathed a deep breath as if to exhale some of the confusion, insecurity, and undesired truths which she had experienced that evening. She was not a part of her sister's life nor of her parents'. Life was just a fight to keep up, to understand, to be a part of a group with whom she had nothing in common. Slowly she went to the balcony and looked out over the city. Her city was still beating in a rhythmic pattern of life, the same miniature vehicles still inched along the avenues, the city was still sparkling with brilliant lights and there were still the same city noises, honks of horns, squeaks of tires, and the laborious groans of the Lexington Avenue bus, but somehow, despite these things, she felt very much alone. 86 Transient Figures SUE MERWIN The world is deathlessg then why must we be Transient figures moving o'er its plains? Born into the shallow light of life, We gain a soul and die to lose again. Why amidst the raging seas of time. Our lives, like turbulent waves against the shore. With clawing fingers scrape against the rock, Repulsed, they ebb away to flow no more. Perhaps in life we gain a grain of sand, Wrirri with that majestic rock, yet still It stands undaunted by the years, while we. Time-shackled shadows, live our earthly fillg Our treasured crystal flake fades fast away, And we who took life lightly Hnd Death stern In vain we try to live and understand, Life is a lesson -yet what can we learn To save ourselves from that untimely end 9 WVTICII all too soon the book is snatched away, Our pen lies rusting on the moldering shelf 'Ere we can use it 'gainst our own decay. Our patient teacher, Life, becomes the fiend Who 'ere we've searched her secrets, must bet The trusting pupils feeding on her store, And each slow scholar smother in the clay. Why is it that our lives must wend their way Along the road that leads to such a fate? We live for but a moment in the world, We live to learn to struggle . . . and to wait. ndrea del arte MILBREY' WAI.r.r:R In reach,'7 he said, '4One must one's grasp oier climb And yet from this he did himself depart, For in Lucreziais eyes he failed to find The soul which might have glorified his art. The faultless painter he is called today Supreme master of color and technique, Thereis beauty blended in the silver grey, The perfect eyes, the more than perfect cheek. Oh, Andrea del Sarto, with your charm and skill, You could have won undying fame. But love, too great for even fame to kill Robbed you of true feeling, stole your name, And, unrequited, failed to turn your eyes above- But what's a heaven for if not for love? ray A Cat creams When You Pull lts Tail ELIZABETH THEILER 66 T'S funny the way a cat screams when you pull its tail, Jan thought. There he is, clutching at the seat of the chair, his eyes round and wild, his ears back, his hair bristlingf' Hs snatched at her with his paw and scratched her hand. She drew it away and he ran into the living-room and hid under a chair. With a little scream of surprise and anger she followed him and tried to push him out from his refuge with her small foot. He must be punished. I'm his owner! I won't let him . . f' But he ran away from her and leaped on top of the television set. As she got up to follow him her father yelled, Quit playin' in the living room! So help me, if you break that set I'll spank you! We ain't even paid for it yetf' Her father was a tired-looking man with dark blond hair that fell across his square-jawed face. He was watching a fight on television. Leave that damned cat alone! Can't you see lim watchin, T. V.? Crestfallen, ,Ian murmured. I was tryin, to punish Tiger--he scratched . . . Oh, get out! ,Ian's mother came in and sat down on the sofa. She glared at her daughter. I told you to go to bed, she said. What'cha doin' in here? Then to her husband, Can't you watch something decent for a change?', You're just as bad as Jan, he snorted to his wife. She, too, was blond and could have been a pretty woman, but her hair was hang- ing across her forehead and her lipstick was in a tight little line around the edge of her lips. She looked haggard and strained. Tears came to ,Ian's eyes but she was too proud to cry. She had hoped that her mother would be more sympathetic that evening. Her friend, Barbara, and the other girls had been mean to her at school that day. .lan grabbed the cat and walked out of the room, but Tiger jumped out of her arms and fled into the kitchen. Wisht' I had the guts to follow him. But Mom would spank me. I want him more than anythingf, She loved Tiger in a way entirely out of proportion to her love for her parents who had not had time to show her much parental affection. Tiger was a playmate and comforter and her love for him was strong. Like a flame, it was brilliant, warm and protecting, but with a change of wind, it became dangerously possessive and destructive. Her fear of losing him sometimes made her treat him cruelly. After she had finished brushing her teeth, Jan went into her room and sat by the window looking out on the railroad tracks. Wonder why Barbara put water on my chair in school this morning. Mean, mean, mean! Barbara laughed. The other kids laughed. Why-why weren't they mean to somebody else? . . . Did they see me cry? Hope not. What did Barbara mean by 'Spoil sport-can't even take a jokef That wasnit a joke! That was mean. Messed up my dress-my one pretty dress. The boys laughed too. Mean, mean! I hate Barbara-I like Barbara-I want her for my friend. Mom scolded me for messing up my dress. She said, 5You,ve never got a good 88 reason for messin' u thin s. I'm not onna et ou another dress until summer!! P g g g Y Barbara has new dresses. Why can't I? Ian looked at the train coming along the tracks. It was an express. Goes like Tiger when he chases something-all smooth fast lines. Rich people go on trains. Wisht' I could. When it had passed, the dimly lit station looked lonely standing against the still, stealthy flow of the river behind it. Sad, sad river-sad trains- never stop for me-always running away. Tiger runs away. ,Ian's thoughts were interrupted by her mother, Jan, didn't I tell you to go to bed? Don't disobey me all the time! ,Ian jumped into bed. Her mother tucked the covers under her almost tenderly. .Ian was surprised and thought, Usually Dad comes home about now and Mom doesn't have time to come up 'cause she's fixing supper for him. Wonder why he was home earlyf' ,Ian's mother sat down on the side of the bed and held her hand. Jan, she said, I didn't mean to be so cross tonight, but you mustn't disobey me. She looked strained, but while talking she relaxed a little bit. Her rough hands held Ian's little paw between them saying more in their caress than any words could possibly communicate. ,Ian could not understand this new attitude of her mother, but she realized that it was good. I feel all warm and purry-wonder why Mom's holding my hand? Maybe that's what most mothers do when they put their kids to bed. Her mother kissed her awkwardly on her forehead and took an old teddybear lying in a chair and put it beside her daughter. She then tip-toed out of the room, returning a moment later with Tiger in her arms. Teddy neds some company, she murmured with a faint smile as she put the cat down on the bed. Then, snapping off the light, she walked out of the little room. Tiger immediately curled up in a round furry ball and went to sleep, purring. .lan felt like purring, too. She thought contentedly, Mom kissed me and brought me Tiger. Now I'm all warm. Mom really loves me almost as much as I love Tiger! The door's open so the night people canit come out at me from the crack between my bed and the wall. Maybe Barbara really was joking-sure she was-not really being mean! Jan turned over in her bed snuggling around Teddy and Tiger. She closed her eyes and began to doze, thinking about the fun she was going to have the following day. Falling, falling-ouch-bump-my tummyli' Ian awoke suddenly. Oh, I didn't really fall at all-only a falling dream. Mom and Dad are arguing-I musn't listen. Everything was so nice before . . .M But she couldn't help listening, for they were almost shouting. Yes, I was laid off! her father exclaimed. For what the hell else would I come home early?,' Don't yell at me-I . . . Now look who's yelling! Why can't you keep ,Ian out of the living-room-make her behave? I can't stand all the noise she makes! You try and make her behave when you have to work all day in a factory 'cause your husband can't support you! 89 4'0h, shut upl I work as hard as I can-and look what's waiting for me when I get home-a noisy brat-a lrowsy wife who doesn't even comb her hair-a rot- ten . . . Could you please tell me where I get the time to comb my hair? You go wash the dishes and l'll comb my hairll' Hell I will! Thatls your jobl Oh I see-I earn the money, keep house and take care of Jan and you watch the Hghtsll' Okay . . . ,lan's father stood up so suddenly that he knocked over his chair. You asked for itli' He stormed out of the living-room, slamming the front door behind him. ,lan had heard it all. ul-le's leaving again. Probably he'll go booze somewhere like he did before. Mom tried not to let me know. Hate-hate-hate . . . I think I hear Mom crying .... Oh no-please no-hate-meanlll Tiger was curled up in the curve of ,lanls waist. His motley-colored fur was soft and his whole body had a dull shine because of the light that fell across her bed from the open door. He looked as if he were smiling. There he is all happy and purring. Why should he be happy when lim so un- happy? Mean-mean! She pulled the cat's tail. lt's funny how Tiger screams when I pull his tailf' Memory JOAN BARBOUR Memory ls a bulletin board Where many-colored thoughts Perch precariously. Crowded, messy, Wildly gay, and tacked With blue and red barbs, It sways back and forth In your mind. Sometimes it jars, and, angered, You ache to rip out its disorganized jumble And be rid forever Of memorandum and reminder. But then again you see Yesterday and the day before that Before your eyes, happiness in bright Slips and slivers of glittering paper. You remember, and remembering Is sometimes worth all the pain. Never clear away the clutter. Bittersweet chaos Is Cod's remedy for blank despair. 90 ' ' F gf'Mf'7- 'WX Loneliness KRISTI NORSTRAND She sat there on the cold dry ground Her legs stretched far in front of her Looking out across a barren field Late afternoon idling in the west. The sun hung as a pale farsolf glow She felt it against her cheeks As she lifted her face Seeking its warmth. Lau But, it gave no warmth It seemed so far away The sky, though clear was empty In the breeze no l1fe They had all gone And taken with them sau, Hot summer days the cooleweet breeze ghter Only she, was there on the cold dry ground- Looking out across a barren field. A Laugh EVELYN BATES A laugh! What is a laugh? Something cold and cruel to cut you to the core? Like waves beat rocks to sand on a distant shore. Or is it high and tingling, full of gaiety and mirth? Or harsh and bitter sounding from the moment of its birth A laugh! What is a laugh? Come, tell me what it means. Did you just laugh with me, Or at me, as it seems? Future PATRICIA BATES Future-what does the future hold? I ran the sandy path, barefooted, With heart young, free and bold. I ran not turning once to see what I had left behind As autumn leaves did fall, and far the road did wind. I fied-short-winded, laughing Towards autumn's sun-lit skies- Towards future, dazzling with its spl The past, the past-good-bye. 91 endor Light Thoughts About Greenhorns Have you ever been a new girl In an Eastern boarding school, When the first few days, confusion Leaves you feeling like a fool? When you find yourself surrounded By traditions old and wise, And the rules by which you're bounded Seem to break before your eyes. When your family has left you To clear your path alone, With hosts of flustered others Who are wishing they were home. When your thoughts begin to wander From the cloister far away, 00 To the hearth that you remember And you wonder why you strayed. Well listen, prissy Missy, Donft you think that things are bleak 'Cause you'll be oriented Inside of half a week. When all the unfamiliar names Attach themselves to faces, And things that gave you fits at first Are falling in their places. Then returning from vacation In a less nostalgic state, You find yourself an old girl- And ain,t it simply great? CLARE FOOSHEE When stale to me seem former tastes for living, When brain is drugged and every weary sense Is full, I dream of ending all by giving Myself to lover sleep for recompense. I see him not, but at his courting call The flowers of my thoughts begin to fade. My eyelids droop and soon like petals fall, My body wiltsg and still sleep does persuade Till nectar-whispers leave resistance dumb. And all my doubts and cares no longer press. To dreams, to help, to journey's end I come, Embraced I lie in velvet senselessness. Though lover flees when heralded by dawn I stand refreshed to meet the world anon. 92 Down with society! Down with convention! fm going to live a life Devoid of pretension. Dream of purple lions in an alabaster Hour by hour- Watching . . . Yvaiting . . . I'll be hoping for the flower Of that scarlet-tinted hour To go bursting like a geyser Into blood-bespattered bloom After gloom. 'Till my brain is stricken dumb, All my senses overcome Ott Beat ANN STLTHLER tower With the pungent stabbing aura of perfume. In a gold-encrusted chair Just behind a platinum door I will spit upon the floor, And I'II make the gilded cower In my alabaster tower. I will stuff the proper primness of thei down their throats- Snakes and swine the lot of them Vipers! Shoals! And protection will no longer be Behind their moral moats. 0. and then l'll have a banquet Where they'll all sit down to eat Wine made of lemon bark and Sugar bitter-sweet. The main course will enter On a scorching, liaming spear And they'll eat -Very slowly- All their social-filthy duties Year . . . by . . . year. Their withered, patterned brains Will fall upon the floor And as they were devoid of thought So devoid of gore- l or they'll crackle. crunch and shatter r laces 93 When I grind them in the lloor Unve morel As the purple-coated lions in Anticipation tremble At the wildly happy thought Of treats in store. Mine will be a bed of blossoms That feel suede-like to the skin tFor l surely will be naked When I fold myself withinl Like unborn-calfskin pages Of a Lilliputian book Each separate glistening petal. Dip my hand into the brook Wash the apple that I took I'll feel foetal. So down with society! Down with convention! I'm going to live and die Out of breath-so out of sigh In an alabaster tower At least ninety-eight feet high. And there I'll lie Devoid of pretensionl Sept. Sept Sept Sept Ovt. Oct. Oct. Ur-t. Utl. .ill Uvt. .il Nov Nov. 7 Calendar Ulcl Girls return New Girls arrive' Dolvlms l'llt lCl llziy Missiomlry Night: Ur. T. Z. Koo Department of Urienlal Slnclivs lvniversily of lowa s Solo lhlrwes: lrenv l'l2lXKlll0I'llt'. pre- mivrv flallSt'llSP of The Metropolitan Opt-ru Co.. arm-orrrpurrie-cl by Kurt Arllvr Hymns: Traditional svrvire led by the Hezulnmist ross Vespvrs: Thr' llc-Y. llolwrt J. M1'Crar'li9rr liiwrsifle CllllI'l'll. New York City Critir-isrn Uronps: Led lvy Ur. I':IlX!'21I'fl lt. Penn City Collegge' of New York lA'1'llll'f.'-Dl Yll0llSlTillllbllI Dr. H. von liaravalle Atlclplri ffollvgrx Gartlvn Lily. l,. l. lfonnr-il Hallon Q-'en Party Current Events l,w'lure: Nlr. janws ll. Mr-llonulfl 'Sorne uspcwls of thc' Near ltast sllnu- tion.- Scnior 'llvu llanu- Y Nm' N111 Nm Ilcv. HCV. Dev. Dev. Dev. to Jain. jun. Jain. jun. lillt. HY Nlissim1z11'y Night: Miss Kiliililfilltx H. lim-kin Hin-1-toi' ol' Stnrlivs. linited Chiirch Training Sviiool. 'I'Ol'0tll0. Cilllilliil i,1'1't111'c': Slllllllllt' Siix'1'1'1'11ys. Sl'llillll'6'SS .. , w. , . Sister uf luimii bliY9l't'I'llN'S. ITBIQIIRIII AIlllHlSSilli0l' to the linitvcl States l,e1't111'v: HHUIISP of Magix- Thi- fiK'IIC'l'Zli ifh-1't1'i1' Corp. N'USllt'l'SI Tho H013 Huhc-rt Appi0yz11'4i Christ lihtm-h, iiI'0PtlNXit'iI. Conn. Niissiomlry Night: Mr.i,eo11a11'dNN'.N'iz1yn llirertur of Assoviutiurl for Aid of Cripplcd Childrvii and hivestigzatm' for Rlxililililiiiliitlll of Korean Chihirvii P1101-11ix Play' - Great lfxpevtatimlsi CiIt'iSlIIl21S Party at lfstherwood lih1'ist111a1s Carol and Caildlvligilt Servivf' f:ill'iSiIIlilS Nriltillitlll C0tlt'K'l'lZ The HtltiStltl Yzlilvy i,I't'ill'Sil'il NvK'Sllt'I'SI Ur. Howard 'l'h11rn1a11 Sviitml 0iTl11'uio5:y. Boston lilliYt'l'SiiN i.t't'llll'QZ Miss Helen Kirkpa1t1'ir'k Assistant to Ihr- pn-sifl611l of Smith tfulleglvz fo1'n1e1' l'11hlic' Affairs Ad- visur. lhirvuti of i'illl'0Ill'E1Il Alfairs Niissitniairy Night: Ur. lim-ll ll. CiliiilgilQ't' NY111'ht l'11ivv1'sity SPl'Yit'f' lfelw. 5 lfelm. 12 Felt. lfl lfelw. l9 l elm. 26 l'l6ll. 28 March 5 Vlarvh 12 Vlarvh lil- lVlarr-h I9 to April 2 April I3 April I April 9 April l7 April 23 Student llc-vital Parvnts llay lllissimiary Night: lllrs. ltotwrt l.. llclwarcls. llolrlis '37 llulmlms :Xtlilt-tiv Assn:-iatimi Carman . - , , Lmu-vrt: lan-lin huartlwut tlllrs. lat- rivk llaye-sl. Pianist. aml lecture hy Nlr. llayt-s lllissiunary Night: Mr, Winlvttrn T. 'l'homas Field llepresentaliw lor lndonesia, National Count-il ol the Churt-hes ol Christ in the lhilecl States Phoenix l'lay'-f- A Kiss lor Cinclerallal' llrama Class lllay Mllllv llivals Vespers: The llc-v. William l-l. Kirkland Chaplain of Vassar College Spring Vavatimi Convert: Nlinisink Choir Nlissionary Slllltliiyf llliss lllargarvt H. Stern llllu' llolhrouks: llramatir' Skit llUlll'l'I'lZ 'llalt Clee Clulv llam-1' llvvital: llolvlrs llance Clulm April 30 May 1 May 2 Hay 7 May 8 Xlaly 9 Nluy 14 May 15 Nlay 16 Nlay 30 Juno 5 June 6 June 7 June 8 June 9 Current lfyents: Hans Kohn. Professor of History at the College of the City of New York Senior Prom Nlissionary Sunday: Mrs. lnclnk Palilx Korea Student lleeitail Non-Resident Party l'i0llIlfl6I'S Day: Dr. Morgan Phelps Central l'reslvylerian Cl1llI'l'll. Nlontelair. New Jersey Dolmlms Nursery Svliool Party lfutllers' Day Vesper Serviee: Ur. llalpli Soc-kn Christ Methodist Clnireli. Park Avenue. New York Tower Singing Step Singing Induction ot' NllSSl0llilI'y Ullieers Senior Banquet Class Day: Junior Play. Mantle Ceremony Connnenvenient Speaker: Nlrs. Oswald l.orml lllll Noyes A ,n '- L ji i , '85 :ft MURIEL DQLMETSCH 1938-1953 N loving memory of Muriel Dolmetsch who in h er one year here at Dobbs loved the school as much as we do who have been here lonffer A mischievous e e z- - Y v 3 sympathetic ear, a ready smile, a quiet sense of humor-all these things characterized Muriel. We who knew her will not forget her. 98 Mary Anne Newlands '55 Alix Newlands '57 Student Addresses Alsop, Suzanne .......,...........,,,................,,..,............................,,.. 3 Rivercrest Road, Riverdale, New York Altgelt, Mary Elizabeth ....,.......... Meadow Brook Road, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Babcock, Ellen ......,.. Balis, Ann .......,,.........,. Barber, Sarah . .,....... . Barker, Barbara ........... Barker, Montie ........ Becker, Heidi ..,... Bell, Wendy ..,........ Bibby, Carolyn Bopp, Charlotte Bowden, Molly ........ Brady, Eliot .............. Braun, Linda ............. Briggs, Betsy ............. Brooks, Bonnie .. Brown, Julia ........ Brown, Lynn ........ ....,,...,,....Edgewood Road, Pittsburgh 15, Pennsylvania Kiaora Street, Coconut Grove 33, Florida New York Hudson Terrace, Yonkers 3, New York Spooner Road, Chestnut Hill 67, Massachusetts Clinton Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, New York 91, Route 1, Chandler, Arizona .............Hancock Place, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Park Street, Elgin, Illinois ..........,.Ardsley Park, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Hills, New Jersey Hotel Drive, White Plains, New York ..................,,..,,......Barney Park, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York School, Lakeville, Connecticut .....,,......Box 364, Tucson Nogales Star Route, Amado, Arizona College Avenue, Niagara Falls, New York Bruce, Adele .......,, .......... ....,. ..,....... .....,..........,,.. 9 3 1 O ld Post Road, FairHeld, Connecticut Bull, Vida .....................,,,...,..,.....,..................,,....,........., 5022 Waldo Avenue, Riverdale 71, New York Burling, Cindy ............,..............,,,.........,.,..,...........,....., 220 East Walton Street, Chicago 11, Illinois Burns, Janet ...............,,. Langdon Avenue, Ardsley Park, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Burton, Marcia Plateau Circle West, Bronxville 8, New York Canaday, Linda ................. .............. 44 Rockwood Road, Plandome, Long Island, New York Cappel, Connle ............................. ,............,........................... 1 115 Oakwood Avenue, Dayton 9, Ohio Cartwright, Rosemary .....,...... .........,,,......... 9 Crandin Lane, Cincinnati 8, Ohio Case, Mary ......,.....,.................,.. ......,.....................,,....,....... 2 8 Ranch, Buffalo, Wyoming Chase, Nancy ....................... ,,......... 2 I6 East Second Street, Perrysburg, Ohio Clapton, Joannah ........,.... ,,...........,,........................,..,.........,. M endham, New Jersey Clay, Mary Augusta ..... ..........................,.............,. R oute 2, Paris, Kentucky Cochran, Gina ............... ...................... C ross River Road, Katonah, New York Cole, Monica ...........,...., ...................,,......... W oodson Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee Collins, Deborah ......... Compton, Cynthia ........... Cowper, Louise ............................ Cromelin, Alix .,,,...........,.,......... Cronquist, Mary Elizabeth North State Parkway, Chicago, Illinois Station, Ruxton 4, Maryland Rockledge Avenue, Ossining, New York .....,,.,....1320 North State Street, Chicago 10, Illinois Hampshire Road, Bronxville 8, New York Crossfield, Elaine ............................ .......,....,...... L lewellyn Park, West Orange, New Jersey Curtis, Anne ...............,...........,,... Damgard, Barbara .....,.... Davis, Diana ............,....,. Davisson, Jane .............. Deeds, Barbara ,..,.............. deLaittre, Corinne .......... ..............2669 East Avenue, Rochester 10, New York Bluff, Ottawa, Illinois ............,......Wilson Park, Tarrytown, New York East 4th Street, Weston, West Virginia ............Mountain Spring Road, Farmington, Connecticut Minnesota Dennis, Nancy .............. ..,..,..,... 2 8 Huntington Avenue, Scarsdale, New York deSoIa, Patricia ............ .........,......,............,. S an Salvador, El Salvador, Central America Dewey, Ariane ......... ...,........,......................................,,. ' 'High Timef, Far Hills, New Jersey Dillon, Sylvia ............ ............... N orth Mountain Drive, Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Dobson, Sally ........... Dodd, Dianne .....,..... Dudley, Karen ......... West Brentmoor Park, Clayton 5, Missouri ........,.,.,................Marlborough Road, Scarborough, New York .................,.......Locochee Farm, Middleburg, Virginia 99 ...,............Waterfall Farm, R. F. D. No. 2, Ridgefield, Connecticut Dunning, Diana Eansor, Zoe ...............,. ............... O sborn Manor, 300 Broadway, Dobbs Ferry, New York Edge, Judy .......... Elliott, Barbara Elliott, Patsy ....,......,.. Elmes, Mary ..,.,.. Field, Deirdre ......,,,.. Field, Katherine Flander, Tina Flower, Betsy ............ Beach Hill Road, Scarsdale, New York Webster Street, Needham, Massachusetts West 250th Street, Riverdale 71, New York 492, R. R. No. 3, Albany, Georgia .......,.............Colony Cottage, Riverdale 71, New York East Third Street, Duluth 5, Minnesota Maplewood Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, New York Lane, Manchester, Vermont Forker, Peggy .,.............. .....,.,.,.................... 2 243 Grandin Road, Cincinnati 8, Ohio Freeman, Sarah ............. 1367 North State Street, Chicago 10, Illinois Goodwin, Ruth ......... ............................. 8 60 Rock Beach Road, Rochester 17, New York Grace, Anne .......,.. ....,........,,.......................,. 1 4 East 90th Street, New York 28, New York Grace, Natalie ....,...... ........... 3 5 Steamboat Road, Great Neck, Long Island, New York Greig, Gail .............. ..................................... 7 29 North 5th Street, Reading, Pennsylvania Gross, Barbara ......... ......,.......................,.......... P . O. Box 234, Greensburg, Pennsylvania Grout, Janet ........ .............. P eter Bont Road, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Hall, Eve ...........,.......................,.....,........ ................. 1 250 Clover Street. Rochester 10, New York Hamilton, Emily and Helen .......,.. .........,..,,,. 1 52 Brewster Road, Scarsdale, New York Hamlin, Judy ..,...........................,......................,.,................ 29 Gibson Street, Canandaigua, New York Hansen, Betsy .......... . ............,............,.,..,............ 932 Cedar Brook Road, Plainfield, New Jersey Hanson, L1z ........... 559 Bedford Road, Pocantico Hills, Tarrytown, New York Harris, Gail ............ ...........,....,.....................,................. 48 9 Grand Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota Harris, Jessie ............ ..................................................... R . D. No. 1, Wheeling, West Virginia Harris, Wendy ........ Hazen, Putnam ....... Hekma, Jacqueline ..........1380 Oxford Road, Grosse Pointe Woods 36, Michigan Oliphant Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, New York Street, Greenwich, Connecticut Heyworth, Martica ...,............................................. Old School Road, Libertyville, Illinois Hill, Florence ................. ..........,.,...........,,......,..... S an Salvador, El Salvador, Central America Hockmeyer, Susan .......,... ............., N orth Mountain Drive, Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Hosp, Priscilla ............... ................................... 7 0 Prospect Avenue, Tarrytown, New York Howes, Caroline ...... ....,...........,................. 1 0 Rayson Lane, Dobbs Ferry, New York Jenks, Debbie ...........,...... Johnson, Frederica Johnson, Kala ................ Johnson, Lee .............. Jones, Eleanor ............... Judson, Virginia ........... J uhring, Vail ........... Kelly, Rosemary ..,,...... Kemp, Janet .......,..... Kenyon, Susan .............. Kipke, Karen ...............,.,...... Kittredge, Margot Knox, Ellen ...................... Kooros, Leila .................. Kreuttner, Louise ........,... Kwok, Jeannette ........... Lawler, Ann ............... LeBlond, Mimi .............. ......,,..,.582 Rivard Boulevard, Grosse Pointe 30, Michigan Grandin Road, Cincinnati 8, Ohio Summit Road, Madison 4, Wisconsin Dorset Road, Scarsdale, New York Sunset Road, Lewistown, Pennsylvania Euclid Avenue, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York .........................................................Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Stuyvesant Avenue, Rye, New York ....................Ardsley Park, Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Huntington Street, New London, Connecticut East Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois Road, Montgomery, Ohio ....................Fargo Lane, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Riverside Drive, New York 24, New York Bellwood Avenue, North Tarrytown, New York Park Avenue, New York 28, New York Hemlock Drive, North Tarrytown, New York 28, Brill Road, Cincinnati 27, Ohio Ledyard, Elizabeth ......... .,.,,,,,.. 1 04 Moran Road, Grosse Pointe Farms 36, Michigan 100 Letzerich, Elizabeth ....,........ Lincoln, Sally ....................... Lindsay, Katherine ........ Lord, Betsy ...............,. Lowgren, Eva ................. Lundberg, Linda .,........ Lunt, Lidabell ................ McAfee, Mary Ann .................. McCarroll, Sarah ,lane McCormack, Susan ........ McDowell, Ann .......,.......... McEldowney, Elizabeth McIntosh, Karen .............. MacDonell, Jean .......... Maloney, Linda ............. Claremont Lane, Houston 19, Texas Street, Madison, Connecticut 4123 Lyon's View Road, Knoxville 16, Tennessee Illinois Oriole Road, Yonkers 2, New York .......,......Sleepy Hollow Road, Briarcliff Manor, New York Arnold Park, Rochester 7, New York .......................Matthiessen Park, Irvington, Bellair Drive, Dobbs Ferry, .........,..Barney Park, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York New York New York Upperville, Virginia West Street, Lake George, New York .....,,.......State Road, Bedford Village, New York South Cole Street, Lima, Ohio Ridge Road, Bronxville 8, Marshall, Kate .....,.............. ............... R iverview Road, Irvington-on-Hudson, Matthews, Mary Lee ....,....... ....................... 1 192 Park Avenue, New York 28, May, Penny .,,,.,.......,............ .......,..........,...,...................................,... A rdsley-on-Hudson, Melton, Kathleen ...,..... ........... 1 69 South Broadway, Ardsley-on-Hudson, Merritt, Debbie ............. ...,.........r,,,.........,.............. 5 Boulder Place, Yonkers 5, Merwm, Sue .......,............ Miller, Margaret .....,......r.. Mills, Sally ........................ Moore, Ashley .......... Moore, Sydney ......... New York New York New York New York New York New York 1320 East Washington Street, Bloomington, Illinois . ..,...........,,...............,., Otter Rock Drive, Greenwich, Connecticut Millholland, Louise .. ....... ..........,............ 2 9 Beechdale Road, Dobbs Ferry, New York ' ....,....,., 68 Sandringham Road, Rochester 10, New York . .............. 12 Elm Rock Road, Bronxville 8, New York Mt. Royal Manor, Duluth, Minnesota Moorhead, Sue ................,,......,....,,....,,..,....,.................................,,,...... Elmcroft, Harrods Creek, Kentucky Morris, Merry ........................ Newton and Prospect Streets, Philadelphia 18, Pennsylvania Muldoon, Susan ...... ................................................. 9 0 Pinewood Gardens, Hartsdale, New York Muth, Jill ......................................................,,.......,........... Old Annapolis Road, Ellicott City, Maryland Newlands, Alix and Mary Anne .......,,... 25 Hemlock Drive, North Tarrytown, New York Nichols, Martha ...........,............,,,......,,......,...............,,,,.. 7315 Indian Hill Road, Cincinnati 27, Ohio Norris, Anne ...............,,,................,.,,.,.,,,,......... Harriman Road, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Norton, Virginia ......... ....,.......... 1 75 East 94th Street, New York 28, New York Nuttle, Emily ............. .,,.,...,,.....,................................. R eturn Point, Easton, Maryland OiBrien, Debbie ........,., .................,.............. W indfall Farm, Salisbury, Connecticut Pauly, Marie Helene ........... ..... Peddy, Barbara Ann ........... Phillips, Leigh .................... Pirie, Sharon ......,.....,..... Platt, Elizabeth ........ Preston, Martha ...... .,...,.,.Apartado 194, Caracas, Venezuela, South America Park Avenue, New York 28, New York Park Avenue, Bronxville 8, New York Mayflower Road, Lake Forest. Illinois North 6th Street, Manitowoc, Wisconsin 69 Randolph Road, Chestnut Hill 67, Massachusetts Price, Rew .................,. ......,,..........,,....,.............,,....... 3 Woodley Road, Winnetka, Illinois Prichard, Elsie ......... ,............... 9 17 Ridgeway Road, Charleston, West Virginia Rand, Polly ....,......,.......... .....,..,... 7 Ravine Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York Rapp, Mary Anne ............ ....,....,..,............... 9 4- Pinewood Gardens, Hartsdale, New York Ravndal, Alice ...........,,,. ............................ 1 345 Spring Lake Drive, Orlando, Florida Reed, Janet .................. ............ 8 5 North Broadway, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Reybine, Brierly ........... ....i............... S kipper Lane, Orient, Long Island, New York Richardson, Nancy ........., ............................,.,...............,.. B aywater Drive, Noroton, Connecticut Ringland, Katy ............. 1 Cyrus Field Road, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Ritchie, Alix ....,.......... ....,,..................... 1 7 Country Club Place, Bloomington, Illinois Robbins, .Ioan .......... Towers, Greenwich, Connecticut 101 Robinson, Sandy ,............ Roberts, Dorothy Rodgers, Lucy .,,.... Rodman, Mary Eli Roosen, Elena ........ Rose, Susan ......,.. Rotan, Dotsie .,......,.. Rownd, Barbara .... Rutter, Sally .....,.. Samuel, Nancy ,.... Sanderson, Sally ........ Sattley, Martha ,...., Schmid, Cathy ....... Shrader, Dorothy Smith, Josette .....,... Smith, Sandra ........ Smithies, Dolores Spear, Julia ........., Sperry, Judith ,,,....... ..... Spurr, Isobel ........... 'QQi5Q5iiQ 'fff ..... ..,.. ' 2458 Wyoming Avenue N. W., Washington, D. C 2 Noel Drive, Ossining, New York ....,..,,.,,.,....... Plum Bottomf, Reedsville, Pennsylvania ......205 Hunter Avenue, North Tarrytown, New York 62 Circle Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York Scarboro Road, Briarcliff Manor, New York Piping Rock Lane, Houston 19, Texas 24 Park Road, Wheeling, West Virginia .....Meadow Way, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York ..,.....25 Erie Street, Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Stratford Road, Scarsdale, New York Vendome Road, Crosse Pointe Farms 36, Michigan Sunnybrook Road, Bronxville 8, New York 7 Willard Avenue, Pocantico Hills, Tarrytown, New York 14 Linden Road, Poughkeepsie, New York Slmpson, Fredrika ..................,......................,.,,,.............. .........cfo Smith-Fitz Gibbons, Cass and Collins Streets, Joliet, Illinois Farmington Hill, R. F. D. No. 2, West Bent, Wisconsin Calle 26, No. 58 Miramar, Habana, Cuba Tulip Road, Briarcliff Manor, New York River Road, Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York West End Drive, Fairmont, West Virginia Starke, Susan ............... 'gSunnybrook,', Sunnyside Lane, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Stauter, Jill .............,......,....................,.....,............ 102 Merlin Avenue, North Tarrytown, New York Steinman, Tobey .............. .....,.........,..,,,,,.,.,...,,........,....,,.....,... 3 12 Oakwood Avenue, Dayton 9, Ohio Straub, Lucy ............, ......,,,,. W aldheim Road, Pittsburgh 15, Pennsylvania Taber, Ruth .......,. ,. ....,.............................,,............... Hawthorne Lane, Wheaton, Illinois Taylor, Gerry ......,,....... ...,,,......................,,.......,...... S horeacres Grounds, Lake Bluff, Illinois Terry, Sarah ........................ ,.......... I.. aurel Hollow Road, Syosset, Long Island, New York Theiler, Elizabeth Thompson, Susan Thorgersen, Carla ...,...,............................ ............ Thorndike Barbar , a and Tletlg, Diane ......,............,...........................,...........,..... Tillman, Elise and Joan ............,.... Tomkins, Helen ....,....,............ ................,........,.,,,......,, ,...... Trimble, Carroll ..........,,,, Tschudy, Gay .........,. Trunz, Lynn ...........,....... Van Campen, Penny ......... Vidal, Nancy ........,.............. Vincent, Elizabeth ......... Walker, Barbara ........ Circle Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York 94 Creenacres Avenue, Scarsdale, New York .Dows Lane, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York Betsy ..................... Field Terrace, Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York .Given Road, Indian Hill, Cincinnati 27, Ohio ...,.......7I6 West 23Ist Street, New York 63, New York South Dartmouth, Massachusetts ' Maryland New York New York .,.,.......................,,,..........................,......,.........Brooklandv1Ile, ield Terrace, Ardsley-on-Hudson, Pelham Lane, Sands Point, Long Island, New York New York New York Cedar Street, Corning, Garth Road, Scarsdale, Inverness Road, Scarsdale, Hill Road, Westport, Connecticut Waller, Milbrey .......... , ,................................. Chickering Lane, Nashville, Tennessee Warner, Susie ..........,,........,.... ................ 4 Hudson Avenue, Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York Warwick, Katherine .......... .................,....,.,..,........ 2 6 Ledgewood Road, Bronxville, New York Weigl, .Ioan ..........,.............. ....................,....................,..............,,..................,....,............. C happaqua, New York Weisman, Sassy ........,...........,............... 304 Sound Beach Avenue, Old Greenwich, Connecticut Weston, Debby and Nan Williams, Katrina Wilson, Romayne Winston, Jennifer Wolflisberg, Heidi .,... .55 Wood, Marsha .....,,,...........,.,...,...,,..,,...,,,.....,,,.....,,,,,, cy ,,................... Langdon Avenue, Irvington-on-Hudson, New York ,15 West 67th Street, New York 23, New York 111 Mayflower Road, Lake Forest, Illinois New Jersey Cowdin Circle, Lawrence Farms East, Chappaqua, New York Hudson House, Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York 102 552 This nation is dependent upon the kind of citizen that is developed in the Masters School. We congratulate the newspaper-minded girls who produced The 1954- Masterpieces. BRUSH-MOORE NEWSPAPERS CANTON, oHIo EP 103 SPINNEY RUN FARMS, Inc Grade A Milk Q T f .A BOTTLED IN THE COUNTRY AYRESHIRE CATTLE 104- Q Compliments EVANS PRODUCTS COMPANY PLYMOUTH, MICHIGAN COOS BAY, OREGON ROSEBURG, OREGON VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA W 105 fw- Take the Road to LUWER PRINTING CUSTS Thousands of the nation's leading business and industrial firms have cut printing costs from 252 to 757, through the use of Vari-Typer. For books, booklets, sales forms, catalogs, house organs, promotion and direct mail material-in fact, any kind of printing job, large or small-Vari-Type: will produce composition comparable to printer's typography at its best. Vari-Typer has hundreds of instantly change- able type faces . . . in different sizes, with italics. For photo-offset, litho plate, mimeo stencil or other processes, Vari-Typer and your own typist will do the job speedily, professionally and at a BIG saving. Write for free booklet today. RALPH C. CUXHEAD IIURPURATIUN ' , 120 fnuuusuuvsln muuf . nfw4nus.u.J. 106 I , Q BEST WISHES to the CLASS OF '54 from A F R I E N D 55 107 Q PANHANDLE OIL CORPORATION 250 PARK AVENUE NEW YORK 17 N Y . Q I . 108 sie BEST WISHES I t THE CLASS OF 1954 Q 109 Q BEST WISHES to THE CLASS OF '54 BRIGHTWATER PAPER COMPANY ADAMS, MASSACHUSETTS Q I 110 52 I Complim t I O! A FRIEND I W 111 The Compliments of LAMBERIUS Cleaners - Dyers 15 CEDAR STREET DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. Best Wishes to THE CLASS OF 1954- from STERKIE 112 Congratulations to THE CLASS OF 1954- SPEAKMAN COMPANY Manufacturers of Brass Plumbing F ixtur WILMINGTON, DELAWARE BEST WISHES from DARTMOUTH COLLEGE 113 With All Best Wishes from MASSELMAN DESIGNS YV' llIlllfill'Illl'0l'S of U N ITOOL The Original All-Purpose Fireplace Iron X Q 5 :Q ','g,,:'i ,iw 'N nf K 5 S moon DESIGN Award 1953 by The Museum of Modern Art New York ff l TO THEE WE SING DOBBS GLEE CLUB 114 f:UIll1IIill10llfS Of THE HAZELTUN NATIONAL BANK ll .' ' 7 Fxesgg' 395399 fl O V , 4, X , X ' --ff X Aix -i::,. - 'T - Yp Sb, Q-TX Nw. 'X .. svg asiswf fs' Wife Rl' ' If ' - ' as-a t . I X 'Q X .cfvd gie w sir' C009 neo X' .9 i s '.' ' E ' ox 1 53129, ' nf'fif i Materials Ny use N fff , . pw 191,99 GSW J, SP 9, xg .4 X tureslxF1ran1edF and. Unframed NE !' S' K rtlstlc ramlng fy x 0 5 N - Q. 15 N Q969 9 Sly ,g ,X 4-36 MADISON AVENUE S, ,' A NEW YORK zz, N. Y. T N SANITARY SCALE COMPANY .,.. wp A -'I 52252IfE1I2E55fi5if25Q2555:z:s:f:s:::s.f2 f2'fffff:f1E:'2f '- ' 2 - ' .. ' Manufacturers of Computing Scales, Meat Saws and Meat Choppers Tenderizers, Slicing Machines 116 BEST WISHES from FAITHFUL GRANDMOTHER THE DANCE CLUB Compliments Extends f Best Wishes to THE CLASS OF '54 Oil FATHER, HUSBAND AND SON -IN -LAW 117 GABOR EDER and IRENE DREW ASSOCIATES PHOTOGRAPHER Official Photographer for THE 1954 MASTERPIECES PHOENIX ll Im-orporated 1869 THE GREENBURGH SAVINGS BANK DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. Total Assets 36,000,000 Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Compliments Of THE CLASS OF '54- Compliments of THE DAILY PANTAGRAPH Central Illinois Newspaper Since 1846 BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS Best Wishes to THE CLASS OF '54 Com pli ments THE HOUSE OF TRAVEL, Inc. 47 EAST 47th STREET NEW YORK 17, N. Y The Compliments Of THE TOOL STEEL GEAR AND PINION COMPANY CINCINNATI, OHIO M erriment A lways S ubdues T rouble E ffecting R eadjustment P roducing I nteresting E xperience C ontrolling E ventual S uccess Sports Equipment R. S. HENDEY, Inc. 206 MAMARONECK AVENUE WHITE PLAINS, N. Y. Say it with F lowersv ROBERT M. JOHNSTON Florist and Grower 217-225 ASHFORD AVENUE DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. Phone: DObbs Ferry 3-0311 HASTINGS RECORD SHOP 10 SPRING STREET HASTINGS, N. Y. With My Compliments and Good Wishes GEORGIA CURTIS School Uniforms FAIRFIELD CONNECTICUT Com pli ments Of A FRIEND Compliments Of DOBBS FERRY BANK DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. THE BARBARY COAST OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGE is available for your fall, winter and spring dances or parties. Recent engagements: Dartmouth Wvilliums Green Mountain Middlebury Bermuda T. U. Complimvnls of THE NEARLY NEW SHOP 2136 FAIRHILL ROAD CLEVELAND, OHIO The Sign of AMERICA'S Most Popular POTATO CHIPS X, f 00 .3712 Y , Gmnanms Q3 , , - 'N 7:3 EIUITILITIUJ I Nationally Advertised SCHERI SHOP, Inc. Lingvria' - Spnrlslrvnl .lvwf-Iry I0 CENA R STR EET 'Himsa I l'I'l'f If-0070 CON N IE-AN N MILLINERY SHOPPE Hats of llislirzrlinll JOIl'4'Il'-V - Bags - f4r'1'vssolu s 12 CEDAR S'l'REE'I' il0lSISS FEIQHY. N. Y. Congratulations from the I BERWICK NATIONAL BANK BERWICK, PA. FLOIRIIM IJIYORQIES Olsli SECURITY SECURITY ASSOCIATES, Inc. THE LEATHER DEN GIFT SHOP Gifts in leather to suit all occa tons and every purse. Also a Complete line of luggage. Sperializing in Leather Goods Repair Service HANDBOOKS - LUGGAGE OLD BOOKS REBOUND Restitehing - Relining Zippers Repaired - Replaeed ON ALL ITEMS Luggage - Trunk Hardware Replaced G. H. HAHN 23 CEDAR STREET DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. DObl1s Ferry 3-1108 Compliments vf FRANK DOBBS FERRY TAXI Tel. Dobbs Ferry 3-0263 F limb!!! - SPARKMAN 8 STEPHENS mconnonurso Naval Architects Yum Brokers Mu-ine Insurance ll EAST QQ!!! ST.. NEW YORK Speculations for THE BRAVE TREASURE HOUSE For Distinctive Gifts and Personalized Items 45 CEDAR STREET DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. DOhbs Ferry 3-4065 ERNEST W. CLINSMAN Broadway Arms Pharmacy Courtesy and Service B. NATHAN KESSLER, Ph.G. I CEDAR STREET Corner of Broadway DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. Tel. DObbs Ferry 3-0272 CARY'S PHARMACY Prescription Specialists 105 MAIN STREET DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. Tel. D0bbs Ferry 3-0008 Steamship - Hotel - Airplane Tickets and Reservations The Travel Counselor HAROLD L. SUTHERLAND EMBASSY BUILDING DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. D0lrbs Ferry 3-2217 Liggetfs Drug Store 18 CEDAR STREET DOBBS FERRY, N. Y. Tel. D0l1l1s Ferry 3-0520 'A' GIVE TO THE RED CROSS 'k 3. . h .sr 'EZ x 1 N. . 'vi We Wi Q. r K x I UN-5 .QEQJ hgixg 51 15' N .3-MX . 'EK . w'1'4 Q N W , V Q F 4 A L, k Q. an x . - ' ' ' 7 A iY,,j' , . X. . A 21 ' 1 , .5 .5 vb-gif 1 , 4' . . K , ,S , A xi A A S . 9 ,X .g ' 1 lm gl 14. K 'f A 2 ,cw-..wa..,..... 4 ,w - ,i . 4' . s- ' ' W - fa? . 4 5 Q 5 315: E Q if im? ' 1 35? gig-Y x 'W 'Vi.f. . M ' ,W ,AA f if wwf af. ,lr f , nw., N. 1 .ag .x 'JQY D sa WW ' Q - f4,.w1.aa.-fn ' M - Q Q . m L M ' 'if Jn ' W-'I'ff-f-wwfAmffwwfw ' ' ,M H :....g..- V' -SK - . -.aw k - '+ - ,. - if 4 . .' V V - -- - : ---- JP -. .... . ww . Mui me UWB W, . '- . . ..:..i'2 ...T in Q V - -4 ' ,ALfnwiw P'x..Q'dv-1f+3l '.:5 5 Y. , ' .Q . , ' ' ' ,Q X 2 ...,.l:., N ,' . .. . .. .2f: '2:' Z5 :,.,:'- .QW .,Q,f4-S.-3 -',,..' i, Q aj, -f ,. 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Suggestions in the Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) collection:

Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Masters School - Masterpieces Yearbook (Dobbs Ferry, NY) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976


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