Montclair State College - La Campana Yearbook (Upper Montclair, NJ)
- Class of 1939
Page 1 of 128
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 128 of the 1939 volume:
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H -. i. ly Jl V — - - - ' V- _- , Published by the Bureau of Student Publications of the Student Government Association STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE AT MONTCLAIR, N, J. Copyright 1939 Napoleon J. Papale William E. Gordon D A ' I JE tvhh to express our grcififiide to Dr. Charles E.Hadley, friend and teacher, in whose far-reaching knoivledge and ivise leadership are re- flected the growth and spirit of stu- dents past and present. As a tribute to his devoted service for the best interests of the college and student body y La Campaea « « 1939 • 6 HARMY A. SPMAGUE President CHAKLES W. FINLEY Dean of Instruction MAUDE L. CAETEE Dean of Wowoi CHAKLOTTE G. MAESHALL Registrar • 10 STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION D. Stewart Craven, President ................ Salem Oscar W. Jeflfery, Vice-President .............. Englewood Miss Mav M. Carty ................. Jersey City Gustav A. Hunziker ................ Little Falls Mrs. Edward L Katzenbach ............... Trenton Mrs. William F. Little ................. Rahway Miss Mary E. Merchant ................. Dover D. Howard Moreau ................. Flemington Joseph W. Mott ................. Atlantic City Carl R. Woodward ................ New Brunswick Commissioner of Education Charles H. Elliot Assistant Commissioner of Education Howard Dare White Director of Teacher Training Robert Hugh Alorrison Teacher Training Committee Mrs. Edward L. Katzenbach, Chairman Miss May M. Carty Miss Mary E. Merchant Gustav A. Hunziker D. Howard Moreau Mrs. William F. Little Joseph W. Mott D. Stewart Craven, Ex-Officio OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION Harry A. Sprague Charles W. Finlev Charlotte G. Marshall Elizabeth S. Favor Donald A. DeWitt Maude L. Carter Harriett V. Maxwell Grace H. Wolfarth Marcia Hibbs Carl Mostert President Dean of Instruction Registrar Secretary of Extension and Summer Session Business Manager Dean of Wome? Dormitory Hostess, Chapin Hall Dormitory Hostess, Edward Rnss Hall Assistant Dormitory Hostess Chef Margaret M. Wurts, M.D. Ralph L Alford, M.D. Jane W. Loucks, R.N. Louis A. Fralick Henry Steiner Nancy Reger Marjorie H. Grundy Helen E. Ware Dorothy Warriner Esther Beebe Matilda Quackenbush Edith Rose Levat Emma Fantone College Physician Medical Examiner Resident Nurse Superintendent of Buildings Assistant Business Manager Secretary Secretary Secretary Secretary Secretary Stenographer Stenographer 11 • FACULTY OF THE COLLEGE HARRY A. Sl ' RAGUE VirsiJn, CHARLES WILLIAM FINLEY Diiin of lus nutioii ami Professor of Biology HAROLD C. BOHN Assislaiit Professor of English EDGAR C. BYE Associate Professor of Social Sliitlies CHESTER COE CARROTHERS Sntierrisor of S inle,ll-Teachinx HARRY GREER CAYLEY Assistant Professor of Eti, lis j PAUL C. CLIFFORD Instructor in Mathematics LAWRENCE H. CONRAD Associate Professor of English GERMAINE POREAU CRESSEY Assistant Professor of French DAVID R. DAVIS Associate Professor of Mathematics TERESA DE ESCORIAZA Assistant Professor of trench ami Sjtanish DOROTHY DUKE Assistant Professor ami Director of Physical EJiica- tion for Women HOWARD FRANKLIN FEHR Assistant Professor of Mathematics AVALINE FOLSOM Assistant Professor of Social Stiiilies WALTER H. FREEMAN Acting Head of the Department of Languages ami Professor of Languages ELWYN COLLINS GAGE Associate Professor of Social Studies FRANCIS R. GEIGLE Assistant Professor of Business Education EARL ROUSE GLENN Head of Department of Science and Professor of Physics CHARLES E. HADLEY Associate Professor of Biology WILLIAM PAUL HAMILTON Associate Professor of English ROY WINTHROP HATCH Head of Department of Social Studies and Professor of Social Studies EMANUEL H. C. HILDEBRANDT Assistant Professor of Mathematics LOUISE GEORGE HUMPHREY Assistant Professor of English OTIS C. INGEBRITSEN Associate Professor of Psychology CLAUDE EDWARD JACKSON Instructor in Education and Director of Research RUSSELL KRAUSS Assistant Professor of English FERDINAND MEYER LABASTILLE Assistant Professor of Languages ETHEL FRANCES LITTLEFIELD Associate Professor of Languages VIRGIL S. MALLORY Head of Department of Mathematics and Professor of Mathematics EDNA McEACHERN Director of Department of Music and Associate Professor of Music MARY EULA McKINNEY Assistant Professor of English ROBERT WILLIAM McLACHLAN Assistant Professor of Science HARLEY P. MILSTEAD Associate Professor of Geography PAUL S. NICKERSON Associate Professor of English ERNEST DeALTON PARTRIDGE Assistant Professor of Education JAMES PARKER PETTEGROVE Instructor in English CHESTER MATTHIAS PITTSER Assistant Professor and Director of Physical Educa- tion for Men THOMAS CLARK POLLOCK Head of Department of English and Professor of English RUFUS D. REED Associate Professor of Chemistry JOH N J. RELLAHAN Assistant Professor of Social Studies HEBER HINDS RYAN Professor of Education and Director of Student Teaching ARTHUR M. SEYBOLD ' Director of the College High School and Associ- ate Professor of Education MARGARET A. SHERWIN Instructor in Physical Education KENNETH ORVILLE SMITH Assistant Professor of Science W. SCOTT SMITH Associate Professor of Education W. HARRY SNYDER Assistant Professor of Social Studies D. HENRYETTA SPERLE Assistant Professor of Education EDWARD RUSSELL STABLER Instructor in Mathematics JOHN C. STONE Professor Emeritus of Mathematics WALTER LAWRENCE TAYLOR Supenisor of Student-Teaching VALENTINE TONONE Instructor in French RICHARD VOLIVA Instructor in Physical Education and Assistant Coach FELIX WITTMER Assistant Professor of Social Studies MARGARET MERRISS WURTS College Physician and Instructor in Health Education Part Time Factilty Members in Special Fields DOROTHY BAHR Instructor of Latin, College High School PAUL G. CRESSEY Lecturer PAULINE F. GEFFEN Instructor in fournalism EMIL L. KAHN Instructor of Orchestra HARRIET E. KNAPP Instructor in Art. College High School FLORENCE M. KNOWLTON Instructor in Cooking and Seuing. College High School RAYMOND WILLIAM LcMIEUX Instructor in Music CARL F. MUELLER Director of Choir PETER EDWARD VOLD Instructor in Manual Arts. College High School Library Staff ZAIDEL BROWN Librarian MARGARET G. COOK Assistant Librarian ANNE BANKS CRIDLEBAUGH Head of the Loan Desk MOLLIE CHADWICK WINCHESTER Librarian, College High School 12 DR. PARTRIDGE DR. RYAN DR. INGEBRITSEN MR. SEYBOLD DR. SPERLE DR. JACKSON Library MISS BROWN MISS CRIDLEBAUGH ' i % r ' h f ' : ' iim! : • 14 COACHING DOROTHY DUKE Director of Physical Education for Women Instructor in Physical Education for Women M. WUKTS, M.D. Instructor in Health Editcatioyi 15 • T A F F CHESTER M. PITTSEE Director of Physical Educafiou for Men Instructor in Physical Education for Men JEMOME DE ROSA Fencing, Golf • 15 STAFF SECRETARIES Left to right : MRS. WARRINER MISS WARE MRS. REGER MISS BEEBE Left to right: MISS DUBOWY MR. DEWITT MISS LEVAT MRS. QUACKENBUSH MISS CAHILL BUSINESS OFFICE 17 • S. G. A. BOARD OF TRUSTEES President GEORGE HORN Vice-President ELIZABETH BISSELL Treasurer ASA STARKWEATHER Assistant Treasurer LUCIEN BOWE Secretary PATRICIA HULL S, G. A. OFFICERS UREAU OF C ' UGGESTED by Abe Chinoy, ' 38, and originally written by Doris Kreuchauff, ' 39, and John Hoag- land, ' 40, the constitution of the Bureau of Student Publications was approved by the S. G. A. Board of Trustees during the spring semester of 1939. The constitution was revised and put in its final form with the assistance of Betty Ackerman, ' 39, Beatrice Cohen, ' 40, William Gordon, ' 39, Napoleon Papale, ' 39, Edward Slingland, ' 40, Mr. Lawrence H. Conrad, adviser to the Quarterly, and Dr. Charles W. Finley, adviser to La Caiupana. Members of the first Publications Council are: Peter Mannion, Beatrice Cohen, and Mrs. Pauline F. Geffen, Montclarion; Julian Ziegler, Edward Slingland, and Mr. Conrad, Quarterly; Napoleon Papale, William Gordon, and Dr. Finley, La Caiiipaim; and Mr. Howard F. Fehr, financial adviser. John Hoagland and Beatrice Cohen were chosen Director and Treasurer respectively to serve until February, 1940. La Campaea Napoleon J. Papale Arthur Luck Joan Kopf Isabel Sperry Robert Hilton John Hoagland William E. Gordon John Petitti Alan D. Weinberg Editor Associate Associate Associate Associate Assistant Business Manager Assistant P jotograp jy Urevitz, Statistics; Elizabeth Bissell, , Art; Arnold Petersen, Features; Albe Staff: Walter Bodenschatz, Personals; Lois Wiley, Barba Sports; Joseph Fernandez, Men ' s Sports; Norma H man. Research. Staff Assistants: Gioia Merkle, Arthur Donnelly, George Bennett, Charlotte Richard, Howard Lilienthal, Charles Mastik, Jean Eisenbud. Typists: Doris Kreuchauff, Isabel Sheridan, Genevieve Rowe, Heh Jefferis, Eleanor Pellet, Marion Scraver, Lucille McHenry, Marjo Staff Adl ' isers Dr. Charles W. Finley, Lawrence H. Conrad, Howard F. Fehr Maisner, Helen Glickman, Betty Burd. il9 • PUBLICATIONS Spring, I93S Managing Editor ..... John Hoagland Business Manager ...... Shcpard Cohen Eililorial BoanI News ....... Plter Mannion Sports ....... . Joe Fernandez Features ....... . Ruth Wittek Copy ....... . Helen Maisner Make-up ...... . Eleanor Fondiler Headlines ....... Doris Kreuchauef Research ....... Barbara Urevitz Business BmnJ Advertising ...... Florence Schatzberg Circulation ...... Marjory Taylor Advisers Editorial ...... . Phil D. Collins Business ...... . Francis R. Geigle Fall, 193S Managing Editor Doris Kreuchauff Business Manager Beatrice Cohen Editorial Board News Ruth Wittek Sports Ben Fruchtman Filatures Helen Maisner Copy Florence Otto Make-up ....... Eleanor Fondiler Headlines Harriet Crown Research Barbara Uervitz Business Board Advertising Pearl Wolfson Circulation Sylvia Love Advisers Editorial Pauline F. Geffen Assistant ....... John Hoagland Francis R. Geigle EJilor-iii-Chief Betty Ackerman Literary Editor Julian Ziegler Make-up Editor John Hoagland Business Manager Edward Slingland Literary Staff: Edna Borg, Ruth Dubowy, Adelaide Greenfield. Terry Harnan, Elbert Hoppenstcdt, Isabel Meyers, Marianne Mi- letti, Muriel Millard, George Rochberg, Hannah Silverman. Tri ists George Bennett, Elc; Faculty Adviser Lawrence H. Conrad Pellet. 20 KAPPA DELTA PI Vresident JOAN KOPF first Vice-President ELIZABETH BISSELL Second Vice-President NELLIE HARRIS Corresponding Secretary FLORENCE BADER Recording Secretary MADELON GRIMM Historian FRANK SODA Treasurer JAMES DeSONNE President GERALDINE McLAUGHLIN Vice-President EDITH GREER Secretary RUTH ABOS Treasurer CLAIRE MULCARE COMMUTERS CLUB AGORA : . CHARLES MASTIK Vice-President CLAUDE WALCK Secretary WILLIAM GORDON Treasurer JOSEPH FERNANDEZ President THEODORE CARLSON Vice-President ARNOLD PETERSEN Secretary ALBERT BRINKMAN Treasurer PETER MANNION SENATE 22 LA OF MAE OLD C. BOHN 23 • 19 3 9 JAMES DeSONNE Vrciidcnt CATHEKINE SCHIFEER Vice-President STLYIA LOYE Secretary KUTH KlININEY Treasurer • 24 Depairtmeiit EeMlish MR. CONRAD MR. NICKERSON MR. HAMILTON DR. POLLOCK MR. PETTEGROVE DR. KRAUSS DR. CAYLEY MRS. HUMPHREY MISS McKINNEY MR. BOHN memt MR. LeMIEUX DR. .McEACHERX BETTY MAY ACKEKMAN Betty — of the beautiful red hair and dancing eyes. Always living and vital. Now strangely serious and solemn — now hilarious and gay. A faithful choir member with soft alto voice. A scholar who en- livened Aldornia meetings. A hard- working editor who revived the Quarterly- A dream who sparkled at formals. Friend to everyone, she captured the heart of Montclair. EVELYN ASHEM Agreeable Evy, a wiUing worker, a congenial companion, and a good student, giving her all for her lounge-mates. The inspiration of master teachers ivho devoted their efforts to have us choose and do the right has become a part of all that is Montclair. Their memory is kept alive by those who follow their paths with work ennobled by each golden aim. March on, oh Soul, ivith strength. ELEANOR MAKGAMET BARRET A quiet Uttle miss whose pleasant smile glowing from the remote cor- ner of the classroom will be sorely missed by those of us whose path she crossed. FRANCES J. BARTNICK We respect her for her quiet and unassuming reserve. We laugh with her in her frivolous moments. We ' ve enjoyed knowing such a nice person as Fran. BERNADETTE F. BECHT Although Becky hasn ' t been with us long, we ' ve come to look to her as an inexhaustible source of fun and energy. GEORGE H. BENNETT Somewhat of a mystery, Mac has shown himself to be a poetic man of depth with many interests, moods, and abilities. A leader in dramatics both as actor and direc- tor. A sober Senator. A vital follower of cultural pursuits, espe- cially classical music. 27 Photo by Weinberg JACK BEEG A little man of big stride — both literally and figuratively. A dra- matic voice, giving expression to a clear mind and a sensitive nature. REBECCA SARA BIRD A cameo of honey-blond hair and school-girl complexion announces Becky. She alone can exemplify frankness as the counterpart of wisdom. A. WALTER BODENSCHATZ Here is a joyful, buoyant spirit. Dressed in style even to the ears, this Aldornia scholar has always been the center of fun. The make- up group of Players, Senate, and the realm of music have claimed him with good reason. But wc think that the dance truly ex- presses Walt — for his flourish in presenting formals — but more for his creative interpretations! ART MITR]EL E. BOOTH A wisp of a blonde — a gay laugh — a sports fan — an exquisitely beautiful Eurvdicc. Full of fun and always alert for good humor, Edna has been a com- bination of all the desirable qual- ities in a well-rounded coed. Faith- fully singing in Choir, displaying intellectual ability at K. D. P. or Aldornia, laughing freely, and dili- gently doing her work, Edna has a certain unforgettable charm — the kind that marks her as a loyal friend, a good sport, a fine girl. BOMOTBTY M. CASE A sculptured coiffure over piquant features . . . An attentive student who whispers puns in class . . .Jolly, happy Dot. MUTH COLSTON Like her sidekick. Dot, Ruth spends much of her time with one eye on the teacher and the other roving about for fun. Despite this she has a reputation for quietness and friendliness. A curving strip of cement wan- dering lazily doivn a hill — only a u ' alk, but one xvith infinite remi- niscences. Hi! to a friend — leis- urely stroll xvith the one — mad dash to a bus — puffing uphill, Gosh, no homeiuork done — Look out, I cut his class today! MEGINA MAMIE CONKLIN Reg was always a serious and in- terested student who contributed much to our classes. Reg was al- ways gay and smiling, her blue eyes clear and alert. Reg was al- ways popular, for behind her quiet, girlish ways lay an understanding heart that won many friends. AGNES M. CONBAN With her quiet, soft manner, Ag- nes proved to be a serious student with a friendly, cheerful way — a dependable person who bore re- sponsibility in all her academic work, yet who was always ready for a jolly good time with the third floor Russ gang. HELEN K, COOPEB Whether it was refreshments at Aldornia, discussion at K. D. P., or assignments for class, Helen could be counted on to do the task to perfection. She enlivened many a moment with her refined wit, and amazed us with her profound thinking. 29 • Photo by McCloud AINTHONY GERALD COPPOLA Tony is that truly tall, dark, and handsome fellow who occasion- ally broke through his calm, smooth exterior to show us the vital person we would like to have known better. A clear thinker, a quiet student; a pleasant person who somehow seemed apart from us — Tony. MATILDA L. COPPOLA The mildest manner and the gen- tlest heart can ' t be all she displays to the world. It ' s a philosophical flair and a professional devotion which mark her as genuine. GLOMIA EVANS DA VIES Gloria — master of the correct an- swer. Gloria — ever ready wit h a pleasant smile and a bit of conver- sation. Gloria — a future teacher. ART KENNETH C. DEANE Strength — Soul — Sound. Through his music he combines these and creates with masterful artistry. IDA MAY W. DIIMiMEES Her outstanding characteristic is willingness, for she quietly assumes an) ' responsibility placed upon her and executes it faithfully. Sincer- it) ' personified. EYELYN ArCN E)i LOEENZO A serious and dependable library worker; an energetic phys. ed. minor always seen ref-ing it and plaji ing; a quiet, smiling stu- dent who dances Italian folk dances and loves it — Evy. EUTH DUBOWT A true intellectual, wise in cur- rent affairs of literature and pol- itics. Ruth — modern, poised, distinct. Sunshine gleams on iL ' hrfe stalls, and a dash of bvilliant color on the roofs. A long icalk curving up a hill of green. The sky, intensely blue, arching above: cool and crisp in the early morning — daz- zling at noonday — warmly invit- ing at snndoivn — ever a friendly welcome as tve approach Alma Mater. JEAN EISENBUD Enigma, your name is Jean. Many knew ) ' our reserve and scholarship, but few were blessed by an insight into a dynamic personality seriousl) ' vibrant to the poignancy of life. TEINA EABEE Like all good students, Trin.i moves quieth ' on her wav. But those who know her can tell that behind her calm reserve she can be friendly and jovial. BENJAMIN EEUCEITMAN Ben has managed to do a good job of college living — in athletics, social activities, scholarh ' pursuits, and newspaper writing, he has found outlets for his varied abil- 31 • Photo by Weinberg CLAEA JEAN GAUTHIER It ma) ' be puttering around the chein lab. It may be managing hockey teams. It may be playing baseball or basketball. Whatever it is, Jean docs it capably and ef- ficiently. GKACE M. GEORGE Grace always goes to class; Grace never cuts observations; Grace al- ways does her homework; Grace always talks of Rainbow Girls ; Grace is always jolly and full of fun. JOSEPH HOWARD GLOVEK, Jr. Quiet and reserved, Howie proved to be a man of strength and depth as student, athlete, and friend. In all his endeavors he was depend- able and gentlemanly. Good sports- manship, good scholarship, and good fellowship earned him the en- viable position of being respected by all. A DOEOTPIEA H. GORSKI Art and Dot are inseparable, yet this is only one of the many ac- complishments of our campus cos- mopolitan. ADELAIDE GREENFIELD This is the dark pixie who, as vice- president of Aldornia, makes the neophytes produce humor by the ream. But her deviltry is coupled with an equal degree of integrity, for she is a dependable worker and a real friend. OLIVE E. GUATELLI Her eyes are brown — a deep, deep brown. Her hair is darker than her eyes. Much she knows, but to know more is her ambition. And we all admire her for that. LUCILLE M. HANSEN Lu is a rare individual who does everything well — whether make-up for the Players, serving on commit- tees, or playing the piano. We won ' t forget our poised, mature, witty Lu for a long while. 32 Alas for the benevolence of those who can-ie before nsl Con- ceived ivithout vestige of malice, and fashioned with brave cun- ning, the venerable sundial finds perennial mournful employment. fr IREGINA M. HAMT Deep beneath the calm exterior we see the true Jean, vivacious and dynamic. She is remembered for her diverse activities in the club life at Montclair. MOBEKT MAYEM HILTON Very much a gentleman, a dig- nified executive, a social star, and a good deal of fun. This tall, sun- ny boy with the bright neckties proved his versatile abilities. DOEOTHY HINMICHS A cosmopolitan of varied opinions — wearer of dark glasses and mannish clothes — unusual Dot — a modern sophisticate. 33 • Photo by Weinherg LILLIAN C. JAUDEL All the spirit in the deep of her hazel eyes reveals Lil. Her ways are those of pleasantness, an at- tribute endearing her to all Russ Hall. ELEANOE BEATRICE JEWETT First impression — reserved, quiet, a good student, a pleasant person, a friendly smile. Lasting impression — full of good fun once you know her, an indus- trious worker in all she does, a strong and true friend, a happy outlook, a heart of pure gold. BETTY A. JOHNSON Tall and dark — efficient — com- piler of staggering notebooks — dependable committee member — Betty, who is always the first com- muter on campus. ART DOROTHY TERNE JOHNSTON She has a most attractive appear- ance and personality. She sings in the choir and delights in spreading greasepaint. She dances like a dream and is related to the night- owl. Who is she? Dot. SHIMLEY E. JOEDAN Her philosophy is that the world is your oyster so long as it is taken in its proper stride. Why hurry? says this jovial, mature miss. We will long remember her cheerful smile and ready laughter. LILLIAN KAPLAN A rare combination of naivete and sophistication . . . slender and graceful . . . with a quiet charm that has endeared her to all. • 34 A beehive of activity: ardent archers gathering arrotvs; a music martyr hurrying to college after a violin session; athletes ambling to locker rooms. In the back- ground the College High — labora- tory iL ' here teachers-to-be ivatch the masters at work; teachers come to learn; students come to teach. JUNE CECIL KIDD June goes her way quieth ' and unassumingly, and then she sur- prises all with her keen sense of fun or a superb ' cello solo. MUTH ADELAIDE KINNEY Whether ) ' ou seek a sympathetic friend, a good student, a socialite, an athlete, or a loyal worker, ) ' 0u need only meet Ruth who is a com- bination of all of these plus a sense of humor that we guarantee will amaze you. DOEIS CAEOLYN KEEUCHAUEr The usually quiet Moiitclarioii edi- tor has surprised many a person with her tall tales and contagious laughter. Her friends know her as a swell pal and the possessor of a deep sincerity. AGNES ELIZABETH LANE As we ' ve met her in her favorite haunts, the lounge and the dark- room, we ' ve found in Agnes a grand friend who is full of fun and enthusiasm, who is serious and clever, and who is rather a quiet miss — except on field trips. 35 Photo by Sarony ESTELLE LIEBOW With her expressive dark eyes and her slim, suggestive hands, Estelle has been one of our finest actresses and has brought to our stage a natural charm and the expression of a dramatic soul. But her achievements are far greater than those we see in plays, for this Eng- lish student is a versatile miss who impressed us all with her abil- ities and her depth. MOWAED CHARLES LILIENTHAL We give you Hank — possessor of a keen and penetrating understand- ing. With his logical reasoning, his sense of humor, and his intuitive judgment, he should go far as the scholar that he is. EUTH MAMIE LUSSENHOP Act I. The heroine captivates her audience with a winsome smile. Act 11. The heroine amuses her audience with her improvised hu- mor. Act in. The heroine moves her audience b) ' her deep sincerity, un- derstanding, and warm friendship. A CATHERIINE H. MATTHEWS An intelligent student with a will- ing disposition who can combine English literature with chemistry and come out on top. JANET L McCAIG Choir ' s robe-mistress and Russ ' pas- try enthusiast. Janet extends a friendly welcome and extends a sincere companionship — especially to Amyan. • 36 I look on my old sassafras When the ivinds are bloiuing And knoiv that lives, like trees, to grow Must have room for growing. Maude L. Carter KIT A D. McCLOUB The girl with the lovely eyes and the contagious laugh, she is known in the lounge as a good sport, she is known around the school as the Madonna in the Christmas play, she is admired by all who know her. H. MAEIE McGINNIS Behind those laughing Irish eyes dwells an understanding possessed only by a woman. Littlebit is dynamic, and her petiteness only accentuates her fullness of heart. ISABEL L. MEYEKS Russ ' able dorm chairman, of the gay laugh and strange nickname. One takes one ' s troubles to her, only to find them gone. Her brisk, official manner can ' t conceal her warm feminine nature. EDITH BAXTEM MILLAE Eadie — whose ready wit and cheery disposition made her a wel- comed friend. Eadie — whose shy, quiet manner was forgotten once she began to tell us of Europe and her many special interests. EDNA MITCHELL Edna — usually quiet and serious, yet often the concocter of spark- ling humor. Few know that she was the first owner of the famous Deuteronomy. 37 Photo by M. L. Carter COEINNE M. O ' NEILL A gay Irish miss who fills a silence with laughter; a classical student with a modern flair. NAPOLEON J. PAPALE A gentleman whose example in- spired us to the better things of hfe. His understanding, taste, and sympathy made him a friend re- spected by all. Intellectual sin- cerity, delightful humor, and fidel- ity in friendship were part of his unfathomed poetic soul. KATHEKINE PAVLOVICH A soft voice, a pleasant smile, and a warm personality make Kay a popular girl on campus. She was loyal to the Board of Trustees with the result that she gained the ad- miration and respect of the class. As a serious student in class and an active participator in sports she was an ideal all-around girl. ART MILDEED DORIS PEIEEEE A quiet, dependable maid, loyal and true. The possessor of a quaint charm — Millie — a friend to all. DOKOTHY M. PLANTEN Her teachers can tell you that she ' s a good student. Her classmates can tell you that she ' s friendly and gay. Her friends can tell you that she ' s the best of good pals. Everyone can tell you that she ' s our idea of a swell girl. 3S Some day, I too shall scale this height, to do the selfsame tasks %vhich I ii ' Oiild ofhenuise do; but all those tasks would be trans- formed amidst colors strong and true: of red, like country barns, and blood, and velvet, and roof of verdigris. AMYAN C. MAINFOBB The typical outdoor lass whose Saturday roller-skating jaunts and walks with her double, Janet McKaig, are legendary. Her man- ner is lively like her tastes. LOTTIE KUCKI Always ready with a friendly smile and a helping hand, Lottie has be- come known as a most pleasant language major, who has many friends to tell of her faithfvdness. VIRGINIA LEE SCHMERBEM Known for a free smile, a pleasant charm, a jolly sense of humor, Vir- ginia believes in enjoying life. Her sudden trip to Europe and her pas- sionate interest in modern novels show a carefree spirit. Respected and liked for her sound judgment and her independence of ideas, she easily lapses into profound depths of thought. L. SCHKOEDEM The choir was her first love but she soon found time to take active part in dramatics, geography club the phrontisterion. She is known for the things she has done. EVELYN BUTH SCHULEE If you need a fudge recipe or a pattern for crocheting, see Lynn. If you want a joke appreciated, see Lynn. If you want a sincere friend choose Lynn. 39 • GLORIA G. SHAIN Gloria of definite opinions, whose career in Aldornia proves her abil- ity, and whose ready laugh proves her happy sense of humor. HAINNAH GRACE SILYEKMAIN Hannah was a combination who gained our respect and approval for all she did. As a brilliant English major she rose to Aldornia and K. D. P. As a dependable worker she gave her best efforts to activ- ities and always did a fine job. IMENE C. SOPMANO A pleasing voice and dancing feet . . . laughing brown eyes and a con- tagious smile ... a spirit of wan- derlust . . . impetuous, vivacious Irene. A ISABEL E. SPEKRY Ideal of poetic purity — Soft voice and sparkling laughter — A refined manner and warm heart — Beauty of classic artistry — Exquisite sim- plicity — Lovely Isabel. JULIA V. STASULIS Jule is well-known for her beauti- ful notebooks, generosity, friendli- ness, smiling eyes, and velvety complexion. She ' ll be remembered for all of that and more. BEATMICE M. TIMINSKI In dreamy-eyed, smiling Timmie we find a sympathetic ready lis- tener, a conscientious worker, and a quiet conservative friend. Bubbling laughter crowning dili- gence; frank repartee; enthusiasm unbounded; sincere friendship — none other than our likeable Bar- bara. 40 Deceptive air of aloofness, quiet dignity that belies an active life. Scene of laughter, tears, happy hours, and hard xvork. Netv- comers not quite sure of them- selves; oldtiniers gossiping over a bridge table. Formal nights xvith girls in evening goiuns pacing the floor; quiet evenings . . . Chapin. PEAHL B. WALTER Vivacious and versatile, quiet and polished, was our heroine. Well- liked by all for her friendly smile and her wide knowledge. HELEN M. WABDLE We like Helen because of her frank- ness in class and her ability to tell funny stories outside. She surely is a tonic for sluggish spirits. Photo by JUcClotid BLANCHE WEINSTEIN A profoundly serious student and yet always a happy person. Here ' s to Blanche, a dependable worker and a real friend. GEKTMUDE WEISSMAN A bit of an enigma, serious and conscientious but irrepressibly gay. A writer of Moutclarion articles and an interesting companion. SHIMLEY 3. WILSON Shirl — frank and honest. Shirl — funloving and gay. Shirl — well-liked. Shirl — I know I t.ilk too much. A 42 ACKERMAN E. ASHER E. BARRETT F. BARTNIK B. BECHT G. BENNETT J. BERG R. BIRD A. BODENSCHATZ M. BOOTH E. BORG D. CASE BETTY MAY ACKERMAN Aldornia, 3, 4; Col- lege Choir. 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Kap- pa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Psychology Club, 2, 3, 4; Quai-terly, 3, 4 — Literary Editor, Editor-in-Chief. BERNADETTE F. BECHT State Teachers College at Jersey City, 1, 2; Creative Writing Club, 3, 4; Esotcri- con, 3; LR.C, 3, 4; A. WALTER BODENSCHATZ Aldornia, 3, 4 — President; Class Vice- President, 3 ; College Choir, 2, 3, 4 — His- torian; Lii Cctnipana 3, 4 — Personals Edi- tor; Senate, 2, 3, 4; The Players, 3, 4. RUTH COLSTON Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3. EVELYN ASHER Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Phrontis- terion, 1. 2, 3. E. CONKLIN H. COOPER M. COPPOLA K. DEANE ANTHONY GERALD COPPOLA Geography Club, LR.C, 3; Intramural Awards, 1, 2, 3 Italian Club, 1, : 4; Phrontisterion 2, 3; Psychology Club, 3, 4. GEORGE H. BENNETT Junior Choir, I, 2; Moiifclarhn, 1, 2, 3, 4; Quarterly, 3, 4; Senate, 1, 2, 3, 4; S.G.A., 1, 2— Assist- ant Treasurer; The Players, 1, 2, 3, 4 — ■President. MURIEL E. BOOTH Dance Club, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary; Mont- clariov, 1, 2; Phron- tisterion, 1. REGINA MARIE CONKLIN Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, 3, 4; LR.C, 2, 3; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3. MATILDA L. COPPOLA Limestone College, South Carolina, 1, 2; Commuters Club, 3, 4; Le Cercle Francais, 3, 4; LR.C, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 3, 4. ELEANOR M. BARRETT Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, 3, 4; LR.C, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3. JACK BERG Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 3 ; Phrontisterion, 1 , 2, 3; Senate, 2, 3, 4; S.G.A., 2; The Play- ers, 1, 2, 3, 4 — EDNA BORG Aldornia, 3, 4; Col- lege Choir, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Psychology Club, 3, 4; Quarterly, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2. AGNES M. CONRAN Classical Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Junior Choir, 1. 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 3, 4; W.A.A., 2, 3. GLORIA EVANS DAVIES MaryviUe College, Tennessee, 1 ; Creative Writing Club, 2; Ger- man Club, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 3, 4; I.R. C, 3, 4; Phrontisteri- on, 3. FRANCES J. BARTNIK College Choir, 2, 3 4; Junior Choir, 1 Phontisterion, 2, 3 Piano Ensemble, 2, 3 Women ' s Glee Club, 1, 2. REBECCA SARA BIRD Artsmen, 3, 4; Ital- ian Club, 1; Le Cer- cle Francais, 1, 2, 3; Spanish Club, 2; W. A.A., 1, 2, 4. DOROTHY M. CASE Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; German Club, 2, 3; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Phr 1, 2, 3; W.A.A., 2, 3. HELEN K. COOPER Aldornia, 3, 4; Com- muters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Le Cercle Francais, 2, 3, 4; Phrontisteri- on, 1, 2, 3. KENNETH C. DEANE State Teachers Col lege at Paterson, 1 College Choir, 3, 4 Orchestra, 2, 3, 4 Pro Musica, 3,4; Sen- 43 • 4 I. DEMMERS C. GAUTHIER , 1)1 I.OREXZO R. DUBOWV J. EISEXHlli G. GEORGE J. GLOVER D. GORSKI ' [ ' 1 AHi-;i; 1!. !■kn himax A. GREEXFIEI.IJ C). GUATELLI IDA MAY W. DEMMERS Glee Club, 1,2; Jun- ior Choir, 1, 2; MoiitclarioJi, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3; Publicity Staff, 1; W.A.A., 3. TRINA FABER Bergen County Junior College, 1 ; State Teachers College at Paterson, 2; Commut- ers Club, 3, 4; I.R.C., 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 3, 4. JOSEPH HOWARD GLOVER, JR. Agora, 4; Tribe, 2, 3, 4; Varsity and Intra- mural Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4. LUCILLE M. HANSEN Junior Choir, 1, 2; kappa Delta Pi, 4; Philosophy Club, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, I, 2, 3 Secretary- Treasurer; Pro Musi- ca, 4; The Players, 4. LILLIAN C. JAUDEL Artsmen, 3, 4; Cre- ative Writing Club 5, 4; Glee Club, 1 2, 4; LR.C, 1, 2 5, 4; Phrontisterion 2, 3; W.A.A., 1, 2 EVELYN ANN DI LORENZO Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 1; Italian Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary; Monfclarioii, 2, 3 — Assistant Copy Edi- tor; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. BENJAMIN FRUCHTMAN Commuters Club, I 2, 3; Montchiiion, 2 3, 4 — Sports Editor Phrontisterion, 1, 2 3; Tribe, 2, 3, 4 Varsity Awards, 1, 2 3, 4. DOROTHEA H. GORSKI Conimuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, I, 2; Junior Choir, 1, 2; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3. REGINA M. HART Creative Writing Club, 2; Geography Club, 2, 3, 4; LR.C, 2; Philosophy Club, 4; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3. ELEANOR B. JEWETT Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, 4; LR.C, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 4; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3. RUTH DUBOWY Artsmen, 2, 3, 4; Creative Writing Club, 3, 4; LR.C, 2, 3, 4; Moiitchrioii, I, 2 — Headlines Editor; Philosophy Club, 2, 3, 4; Quarterly, 2, 3, 4. CLARA JEAN GAUTHIER Classical Club, 1, 2 3, 4; Commuter: Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 Dance Club, 2 Philosophy Club, 2, 3 W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4— Gold M. ADELAIDE GREENFIELD Aldornia, 3, 4 — Vice- President; Kappa Del- ta Pi, 4; Psychology Club, 3, 4; Q iiirti-rly, 3, 4; The Players, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A. , 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT MAYER HILTON Aldornia, 3, 4— Sec- Class Presi- tary; College 4; The 4; d. Ch Players, I, 2, Moiifchriou, 1, 2 — News Editor; Senate 1, 2, 3, 4; S.G.A., 2 3, 4 — President. BETTY A. JOHNSON LR.C, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 4; Philoso- phy Club, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, J, 2, 3; The Players, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3. JEAN EISENBUD Aldornia, 4; Artsmen 2, 3, 4 — President Moiifclariofi, 2, 3 Philosophy Club, 3, 4 Psychology Club, 2 3, 4 — Secretary, Vice- President; La Campa- na, 3, 4— Socials Ed- GRACE M. GEORGE Commuters Club, Z, 2, 3, 4; Phrontisteri- on, 1, 2, 3. OLIVE R. GUATELLI CLissical Club, I, 2, 3, 4— President; Geo- gr.iphy Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; LR.C, 4; Phron- tisterion. 2, 3; The Players, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 4. DOROTHY HINRICHS Aldornia, 3, 4; Arts- men, 1, 2, 3 — Presi- dent; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 1; Quarli-rly, 1, 2, 3. DOROTHY A ' ERNU JOHNSTON College Choir. 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2. 3, 4; LR.C, 3, 4: Philoso- phy Club, 3. 4; Phrontisterion. 1, 2, 3; The Players, 3, 4. L. HANSEN R. HII.TOX L. JALDEI. B. JOHNSON R. HART I). HINRICHS E. JEWETT D. JOHNSTON S. JORDAN E. LIEBOW L. KAPLAN H. LILIENTHAL J. KIDD R. LUSSENHOP R. KINNEY C. MATTHEWS D. KREUCHAUFF J. McCAIG A. LANE R. McCLOUD I. MEYERS . MITCHELL N. PAPALE SHIRLEY E. JORDAN Commuters Club, 2; Contempor Club, 1 ; C: Writing Club, 3 Philosophy Club, 4; Phrontisterion DORIS CAROLYN KREUCHAUFF Dance Club, I, 2; German Club, 2, 3 ; Kappa Delta Pi, 4; Mont clarion, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Headl ines Editor, Managing Editor; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4 — Gold M. RUTH MARIE LUSSENHOP College Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, I, 2, 3 — Secretary; Phron- tisterion, 1, 2, 3; Pro Musica, 3, 4 — Vice-President. H. MARIE McGINNIS Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, 3, 4; I.R.C., 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 2, 3, 4; Phron- tisterion, I, 2, 3; W.A.A., 1, 2. LILLIAN KAPLAN Dance Club, 1; Sci- ence Club, I, 2, 3, 4. [. McGINNIS E. MILLAR C. O ' NEILL PAVLOVICH AGNES ELIZABETH LANE Classical Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Keeper of the Keys; Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 3; Sig- ma Phi Mu, 1; W.A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4. CATHERINE R. MATTHEWS Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Junior Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Phron- tisterion, 1, 2, 3. ISABEL L. MEYERS N.Y.U., 1; Artsmen, 2, 3, 4; Creative Writing Club, 3, 4; I.R.C., 3, 4; Phron- tisterion, 2, 3; Quar- terly, 3, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 2. CORINNE M. O ' NEILL Artsmen, 3 ; Classical Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; French Club, 2; Montclarion, 1, 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 3; The Players, 3. JUNE CECIL KIDD College Choir, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2; Junior Choir, 1, 2; Orchestra, I, 2, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3; Pro Musica, 1, 2, ESTELLE LIEBOW Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Montclariov, 1, 2, 3 — Assistant News Editor; Phron- tisterion, 1, 2, 3; The Players, 1, 2, 3, 4. JANET L. McCAIG College Choir, 2, 3, 4 — Robe Mistress; Geography Club, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; I.R.C., 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 2, 3; W.A. A., 1, 2, 3. EDITH BAXTER MILLAR Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3; Moiitclarioil, 1, 2, 3; Philosophy Club, 2, 3; Phrontisterion, 3; W.A.A., 1, 2. NAPOLEON J. PAPALE La Cavipana, 3, 4 — Editor; Phrontisterion, 1, 2; Psychology Club, 2, 3, 4 — President; Senate, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer. RUTH ADELAIDE KINNEY Class Treasurer, 4; Classical Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer; Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 3; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4 — Vice-President. HOWARD C. LILIENTHAL N.Y.U., 3; Aldornia, 4; Creative Writing Club, 4; La Campana, 4 — Associate Editor; Senate, 2, 4 — Treas- urer; The Players, 2. RITA D. McCLOUD Upsala College, 1 ; Dance Club, 3, 4; Glee Club, 2, 3; Kap- pa Delta Pi, 4; Sci- ence Club, 3, 4; The Players, 2, 3, 4; W. A.A., 2, 3. EDNA MITCHELL Commuters Club, 3, 4; Montclarion, 2, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 2. KATHERINE PAVLOVICH Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 3; Phrontisteri- on, I, 2; S.G.A., 3; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3. AS • M. PEIFFER D, PLANTEN A. RAINFORD L. RUCKI E. SCHULER G. SHAIN H. SILVERMAN I. SOPRANO MILDRED DORIS DOROTHY AMYAN C. LOTTIE RUCKI PEIFFER PLANTEN RAINFORD Bloomfield College, 1; Commuters Club, 1, Commuters Club, 1, Dance Club, 1; Geo- Classical Club, 2, 3, 2, 3; Geography 2; Phrontisterion, 1. graphy Club, 2, 3, 4 — Vice-President; Club, 3, 4; I.R.C., 3, 4 — Treasurer; LR.C, Dance Club, 2; Ital- 4; Phrontisterion, 3. 3, 4; Phrontisterion, ian Club, 2, 3, 4; Le 1, 2, 3; X ' .A.A., 1, Cercle Francais, 2, 3, 2, 3. 4; The Players, 3, 4; W.A.A., 2, 3, 4. VIRGINIA LEE WILHELMINA L. EVELYN RUTH GLORIA G. SHAIN SCHMERBER SCHROEDER SCHULER Aldornia, 3, 4; Dance Le Cerclc Francais, 2; College Choir, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 1; Geog- Club, 1, 2; Junior W.A.A., 1, 2. The Players, 1, 2, 3, raphy Club, 3, 4; Choir, 1; Le Cercle 4; Geography Club, 1, LR.C, 3, 4; Philoso- Francais, 1, 2, 3, 4; 2, 3— Vice-President; phy Club, 2; Phron- Philosophy Club, 2, Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; tisterion, 1, 2, 3; W. 3; W.A.A., I. Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3. A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. HANNAH GRACE IRENE C. ISABEL E. SPERRY JULIA V. STASULIS SILVERMAN SOPRANO LR.C, 1, 2, 4; La Commuters Club, 1, Aldornia, 3, 4 — Commuters Club, 1, Campaiia, 4 — Asso- 2, 3; Geography Club, Treasurer; Dance 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, ciate Editor; Philoso- 3, 4; Philosophy Club, Club, 2; Monclarioit, 1; Geography Club, phy Club, I; Phron- 3. 2, 3, 4; Phrontisteri- 4; I.R.C.. 4: Philoso- tisterion, 1, 2, 3; on, 1, 2, 3; Quarter- phy Club, 2. The Players, 2, 3, 4; ly, 3, 4; The Players, 3, 4. X ' .A.A., I, 2. BEATRICE M. BARBARA M. PEARL B. WALTER HELEN M. TIMINSKI UREVITZ CLissical Club, 1, 2, W ' ARDLE Commuters Club, 1, Contemporary Club, 3, 4; Commuters State Teachers Col- 2, 3, 4; I.R.C., 1, 2, 2; I.R.C., 2, 3, 4; La Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Ger- lege at Paterson, I ; 4; Philosophy Club, Carnpaiia, 4 — Copy man Club, 2, 3; Glee Commuters Club, 2, 1, 2; Phrontisterion, Editor; Moit clarion, Club, 1 ; Junior Choir, 4; Geography Club, 1, 2, 3; X A.A., . 1, 2, 3, 4 — Copy I. 3, 4; LR.C. 2, 3, Editor, Research Edi- 4; Phrontisterion, 3, tor; Philosophy Club, 4. 2, 3, 4; Phrontisteri- on, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A. A., 1, 2, 3. BLANCHE GERTRUDE SHIRLEY J. WEINSTEIN WEISSMAN WTLSON Classical Club, I, 2, Dance Club, 1, 2, 3, Commuters Club, 1, 3, 4; Commuters 4; The Pl.iyers, 3, 4; 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, Club, 1, 2; Psycholo- Moiitclarioii, I, 2, 3, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, gy Club, 3, 4. 4; Phrontisterion, 1, 2; S.G.A., 2; Philoso- phy Club. 1. 1, 2, 3; W.A.A., I. V. SCHMERBER V. .SCHROEDER L SPERRY J. STASULIS B. UREVITZ H. WARDLE G. WEISSMAN S. WILSON ALDORNIA WALTER BODENSCHATZ Vice-President ADELAIDE GREENFIELD Secretary ROBERT HILTON Treasurer HANNAH SILVERMAN President JEAN EISENBUD Vice-President EDITH MAHNKEN Secretary-Treasurer HELEN JONES ARTSMEN A7 CLASSICAL CLUB . -2-,s. ' A . «io-t.J2 ' GERTRUDE COOK Vice-President LOTTIE RUCKI FLORENCE DeLUCA HELEN McHUGH Vresiilent LOUISE FRIEDMAN yicc-Pirsidcvf FLORENCE OTTO Secretary-Treasurer MARIANNE MILETTI CREATIVE WRITING CLUB POETRY CLUB President GENEVIEVE ROWE Vice-President RUTH GIFFORD Secretary-Treasurer RUTH HERMAN President GEORGE BENNETT Vice-President ELSIE LANG Secretary CLAIRE HARMAN Historian RUTH WITTEK Treasurer JACK BERG PLAYERS 49 • PRO MUSICA Prnidellt SIMON SADOFF Vice-President GEORGE ROCHBERG Secretary SONIA WAGNER Treasurer PHILIP PERKINS frcsidcnt SIMON SADOFF Dusiness Manager EDWARD SLINGLAND 7; VU A J iF ia SENIOR CHOIR s ' , - S.- fi [ , . ' r A U (y • 50 SJ .x j UNIOR CHOIR President IRENE BALTO Sccrclary DOROTHY GEIST Trcasjircr DINAH FINER WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB ORCHESTRA Prcsidciii SONIA WAGNER Vicc-Prcsiticnt PHILIP PERKINS Sccrc far v-T reus liter FRANCES CHERNOFSKY Lcfl to Right: EDWARD BURCKART KATHERINE WEBSTER SONIA WAGNER EVELYN FLINT r VIOLIN QUARTET • 52 Sci DR. SMITH DR. McLACHLAN DR. REED MR. GLENN DR. HADLEY 1)K. H1L1)L15R. . |J1 . 1K. CI. Ill-OKI) DR. UANTS ' K. SIWiSLER TEANCES ALICE ANTON3ETTI Fran — bright brown eyes, impish grin, ubiquitous humor, frivolity on college weekends. She holds a per- manent niche in the hearts of those of the science department. FEOMENCE L. BADEM When it comes to all-aroundness, Flo is the girl. Whether we talk of scholarship, athletics, or personal- ity, she is sure to be mentioned among those present. MOEEIS BEEKOWITZ Paterson gives us Morris — smooth, polished, poised. He is a student — quiet and conscientious. He should go far by virtue of his pleasing per- sonality and rich mellow voice. • 54 Cold frosty ain invigorating, crisp — a campus transformed by a coat of snou ' iest ermine. Rich, green pines dripping sodden clouds of whiteness — black, naked trees stretching iipivard to a leaden sky. Endless sheets of snow, violated by meandering footprints. Scenes of quiet beauty to be found every- ivhere. ELIZABETH S. BISSELL Socialite — Bets) ' , seen at all college socials and running off a most suc- cessful S. G. A. formal. Sportswoman — Betsy, playing tennis with the skill that has won her many plaques. Scholar — Betsy, a successful sci- ence major and efficient officer of K. D. P. CATHEEINE V. BYENE Quiet, studious, and serious, Cath- erine has worked hard and been a faithful student in math. Aphes- teon recognized her achievement, and so did her admiring classmates. LOEETTA B, CAHILL Loretta — a serious-minded person who packs every minute with worthwhile activity; a gay person whose lovely smile bespeaks a friendly personality; a sincere per- son who is a steady comrade; a capable person who makes delicious chicken chowder for Math Club. 55 NORMAN CHINOY Norm ' s running has become a fa- miliar sight at M.S.T.C, for he keeps in trim for his varsity track work by sprinting to classes and chasing busses. If you would like someone to discuss higher math with, or someone who will respond to a joke with an unusual laugh and a good sense of humor, here ' s the man! ANDEEW CIAMPA Andy is remembered for the many abilities he had — a science major who was indispensable to the lan- guage department at Festival time. He is a grand fellow to know. DANIEL COHEN Ask what you will — whether it be in mathematics, science, or educa- tion — Dan is the boy with the right answers. We remember many a dull class enlivened by his humor and genuineness. E E IHYING COOPER Quietly he sat among us for years. We know and liked him for his sin- cerity, for his scholarship, for his reserved humor. Yet little we know that the quiet fellow was to become the pride of the science majors as a teacher. SHEVA L. CKYSTAL She ' s willing at all times to do a good turn for any one of her friends less gifted with brains — Oh, how she works over mysterious figures while others marvel. Here ' s to Shay, a grand girl. IBENE MABIAN DANESKI Irene ' s quiet poise completely belies her ability to accomplish much while the rest of us are still think- ing about it. Her efficient and direct manner quickly irons out every obstacle and tells of future success and happiness. JAMES A. DeSONNE This young fellow has been a fine combination. His work was of K. D. P. quality. In athletics he shone as head foilsman. In activities he was a capable leader and financier par excellence. In social events he was very popular. In Montclair he has gained our admiration for his vitality, dependability, and a warm friendliness. JOHN E. DMAKE Although John gained his greatest renown at Montclair as a student of higher mathematics, this owner of that big car was also famous as a driver at higher speeds. Thqse of us who knew him well found this quiet fellow to have a sincere interest in music of the higher realms. • 56 ■. Integration: the increment of teacher preparation. Compre- hending and mastering subject matter; philosophizing on proce- dures; study . . . notes . . . tests . . . reports . . . not without some flavoring of pranks, arguments cat naps, jokes. Becoming ac- quainted with our teachers, and fellow students — atid mainly, get- ting fully acquainted ivith our- selves. FBANKLYN HEYDECKE EDGE Some people who are naturall) ' quiet are likely to be forgotten along the way, but not so with this pleasant gentleman. For although Frank was always quite reserved, he was always present when good times were being made. BOBEKT WILLIAM ESLEB Modest, unassuming, almost shy — only after a four years ' stay at M.S.T.C. did anyone probe beneath that exterior to find a boundless generosity and sympathetic kind- ness. Bob and mathematics are synonymous. 57 • Photo by Sarony JAMES DONALD JEASflR Like most science majors, Don hi- bernates in the lab. Nevertheless, he has found time to get around and make a host of friends via that irresistible smile of his. EDNA J. FRIEDMAN A quiet, inconspicuous maid is Ed- na. Her gentleness and sincerity are always her strong weapons. Need we mention Sheva as her complement? Or does just Edna alone, perfect friend, satisfy. ' WILLIAM E. GORDON Intelligence, reserve, dependability, all rolled together make Bill. Truly this is the man to match the mountains and the sea whether we think of Agorian fellowship, K.D.P. scholarship, or social prom- inence. E E ARTHUR I. GROSSBACH This industrious scientist was al- ways found expounding theories in the locker room and proving them in the lab. Arthur was a quiet, serious student, who was marked by us as a pleasant fellow, by his close friends as a fine chap, and by Einstein as a potential competitor. SHIMLEY GIROSSMAN We ' ve zlw ys envied Shirley ' s abil- ity to concentrate, do homework, and add just the proper touch in class. It must be a natural gift, for she does it without effort. NOKMA GILLIS HALL Beauty and grace characterize Nor- ma as she charms us with her cre- ative dancing . . . refinement and poise, as she does outstanding work in activities . . . knowledge and w isdom, as she displays her scho- lastic ability . . . sweetness and loyalty as she remains an ever faith- ful friend. Norma — one who per- sonifies beauty of face and soul. MARTIN HALPEIRIN Marty has become inseparable from scenes where we knew him — smok- ing in the rec room, doing math in room 3, dancing in the gym, surveying the roadways, eating at the Diner, arguing at Agora meet- ings. As a regular college boy, Halp remained carefree, confident, and liked by his many friends. 58 The more rustic spots on the campus proved inviting places for daydreaming and leisurely walks. The majestic view of the country- side inspired many a loivly heart. With eyes on the horizon we labored through the immediate forest of study in search of onr ultimate goal. Carpe diem! NELLIE M. HAMMIS What will M.S.T.C. ' s science de- partment do without Nellie? Even Chapin Hall will miss her dogfish experiments, her discussions far into the night, and her good nature combined with miich good sense. ANN MAMIE HENDEKICKX Always full of fun and vigor, Ann was a very likeable friend and one who could be counted on for some refreshing humor. We marveled at the accomplishments of this little girl who did things in a big way. MUTH HENGEVELB Always dependable when a friend needs help, always the merriest of companions when fun is in store. For dependability — witness her work in the library. For fun-loving nature — witness the Math Club social gatherings. 59 • Photo by Burdelt EDWAHD L. HILL To be lost: a genial chap — last seen with an amplifier under his arm and a pipe in his mouth . . . mathematical scholar with reward in K.D.P. and Aphcstcon . . . fre- quents Russ Hall . . sings lusty base and is a swing fiend. . . Ed Hill — a good fellow. MAEIE BEENADETTE HORNING Magnanimous — a faithful math student with varied interests. Affectionate • — ■loyal to friends and kind to all. Rollicking — a good sport with a merry sense of fun. Independent — an individualist of depth and ability. Energetic — a vital and dependable worker. JEAN CECILE KELLEE An ardent math student . . smile, warm and sincere . . pleasant word . . . Jean. IE E HERMAN JOHN KEOEZE Herm is a smiling mathematician known for his happy outlook on college and life. His ready sense of humor enlivened our four years, both in and out of classes. But our K.D.P. friend is also known for a hot trumpet in Band and good membership in Math and Psvch Clubs. JEROME E. Jerry — expounding technical scien- tific information — greeting every- one with a friendly smile — com- plaining endlessly about commuting conditions — forming a vital part of that lively group of science majors. 60 ' Behold the Lord High Execu- tioner! A personage of noble rank and title— A dignified and potent officer, Whose functions are particu- larly vital! The Mikado, W. S. Gilbert. MAIRIAN EDITH LEACH Marian is one senior who manages to be a science major and more. In between labs we find her alto voice holding forth in the College Choir, and she does both with charm and grace. ELIZABETH LEAKE Betty is a very good student and a willing worker in activities. Betty is a happy, smiling, singing girl known for her gaiety. Betty is a deep thinker and a serious friend. But above all, Betty is a sweet and lovable girl — that ' s why everybody likes her so much. MOBEKT LICHTENSTEIN Bob of the sharp mind — Bob of the subtle humor — Bob of the science department — Bob of many interests and as many accomplishments. The droll gleam in his eye and the subtle twist of his tongue give little hint of the solid, direct nature which lies beneath. MUTH HOSE LITTELL In Dance Club and in class, this serious mathematician impressed us as one who meant business and who got what she sought for. We found in her sparkling eyes the hint of a fine sense of humor and in her warm smile the hint of a faithful and true friend. AMTHUM LUCK Symphony-like, Arthur ' s personality has been one of varied interests and authentic depth. While he is pri- marily an intellectual scientist, we have found him to be a profound man of letters and an ardent appre- ciator of all music. A delightfully sharp and clever sense of humor has enlivened his serious nature. 61 Photo by Sarony ARTHUR H. MALOVANY Arc is the ideal all-around athlete and an all-around good fellow. His steady, hard-fighting play charac- terized him as one of the Indians ' most reliable performers. His cheer- ful manner and his Agorian fellow- ship add to his popularity on campus. CLAKEINCE C. McKEEBY Throughout our four years at M. S. T. C, Keeby has contrived to be a regular fellow who had a never-fail- ing sense of humor. His serious manner is tempered with a warm friendliness that makes him a loyal Agorian who enlivened many a meeting with clever conversation and sobered many another with deep ideas. EDWARD D. MOLLOY In a quiet, easy manner Ed moved in the background at the College, occasionally giving evidence in ac- tivities of the industrious worker whose chief interest was his math. This reserved student found his re- ward in Aphestcon and K. D. P. His feats as class treasurer have now become legend on campus. t f ' IE IE EVA JACKSON POST Eva has depth, as a student and as a friend. She gained recognition for her industrious work bv membership in Aphesteon. She gained recogni- tion for her loyal comradeship by gathering about her friends who knew her to be sincere and true. HELEN L. BOBEMTSON Full of a friendly spirit, a sense of good fun, and a serious approach to her class work, Scotchie is every- thing you could wish for in a loyal pal, a real friend, an all-around girl with plenty of personality. JACOB H. KUITEM He lives and laughs and gladdens the world. Scientific undertakings and all-round good-fellowship he juggles equally well. Gay banter and joviality characterize Jake. Symbol of Moiitclair: ivelcoiue doortvay receiving bewildered Freshmen; entrance to knoivledge, wisdom; meeting place. Brief chats with new friends, quick, smokes xvith old. Threshold to the outside u ' ovld for solemn seniors. Friendly d oorivays passed too quickly as a student, long remem- bered as a graduate. Enter to learn; go forth to serve. WALLACE B. THOMSON Wally is a reserved young fellow who remained a loyal and true friend to those who knew him well. With his quiet manner he moved among us and gained our approval for being a good student and a pleasant person. MILBMEB E. WAGNEM A surprising person with twinkling eyes and a flashing smile who plays the piano and takes transcontinental trips all with the same good-natured enthusiasm. THEODOKE WALCZYK Ted was one of those faithful people who always came through when the need arose. His loyalty to the foot- ball squad was equalled only by his loyalty to his friends. With his true interest in Math was matched his true interest in good fun. HELEN E. WALTEK Tall, dignified charming — Helen has an air that all must admire. The Math Club is one of the activities which presents Helen as a scholar. Her best impression is that of a gracious sophisticate. 63 Photo by Weinberg SHELTON J. WEIL Shelton gained respect for being a fine fellow and for having many abilities. He gained his recognition in a quiet way — for being a sincere, steady performer and for being a dependable, understanding friend. ALAN DAYID WEINBERG Blond Alan surprised us all by mix- ing in with his serious, scholastic outlook an appreciative sense of hu- mor. Despite intense pursuit of his studies as told by K. D. P. and Aphesteon membership, he carried a program of activities that included Choir, Math Club, and even intra- murals. But he is undoubtedly best known for his camera studies and his ready grin. LOIS JUNE WILEY All-American Coed, 1939. Lois is one of those rare people of unfail- ing friendship, gay humor, and un- bounded vitality and spirit, who gives evidence of a warm heart, a clear mind, and a vigorous interest in all life. For her happy manner and her great sincerity she is al- ways the most popular girl. ' 4 IE E ROBERT BURROl ' GEIS WRIGHT Despite his calm, quiet, even nature, Bob managed to be an active figure on campus. At most activities, he was present to do his share — whether in class, intramural sports, or general good fun. B ' the work is known the workman. 64 F. ANTONIETTI N. CHINOY F. BADER A. CIAMPA M. BERKOWITZ D. COHEN E. BISSELL I. COOPER C. BYRNE S. CRYSTAL L. CAHILL I. DANESKI J. DeSONNE F. EDGE J. FRASER W. GORDON J. DRAKE R. ESLER E. FRIEDMAN A. GROSSBACH FRANCES ALICE ANTONIETTI German Club, 4; Ital- ian Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 1 ; Psychology Club, 5, 4; Science Club, 2 3, 4. CATHERINE V. BYRNE Aphesteon, 4 — Vice- President; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A. A., 1, 2, 3, 4. DANIEL COHEN Aphesteon, 3, 4 — Secretary - Treasurer; Motitclariofi, 1, 2, 3, 4; Science Club, 3,4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4. lAMES A. beSONNE Class Treasurer, 2; President, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4 — Treasurer; Science Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; S. G.A., 3, 4— Treasur- er; Tribe, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4. JAMES DONALD FRASER Commuters Club. 1, 2, 3, 4; Science Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — President; Tribe, 3, 4; Varsity and Intramural Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4. FLORENCE L. BADER Aphesteon, 3, 4; Dance Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4 — Corresponding Secre- tary; Psychology Club, 2, 3; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4— Treasurer. LORETTA B. CAHILL Commuters Club, 1, 2; Sigma Phi Mu, I, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4 — Gold M. IRVING COOPER Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Science Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treas- urer; Intramural Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4. JOHN E. DRAKE Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, EDNA S. FRIEDMAN Artsmen, 3, 4; Glee Club, 2, 3, 4; I.R.C., 4; Junior Choir, 2, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 3, MORRIS BERKOWITZ Intramural Awards; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3,4; Science Club, 4; Town Hall, 1, 2. NORMAN CHINOY Commuters Club, 1 ; Forum Club, 4; Sig- ma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4 — President; LR.C, 1, 2; Tribe, 2, 3, 4; Varsity and Intramu- ral Awards. SHEVA L. CRYSTAL Phrontisterion, 1 ; Sig- ma Phi Mu, 2, 3, 4 —Treasurer; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4 — Gold M. FRANKLYN HEYDECKE EDGE Golf Club, 3; Science Club, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; Var- sity Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM E. GORDON Agora, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary; Class Pres- ident, I; The Players, 2; Kappa Delta Pi, 4; La Campana, 3, 4 — Business Manager; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4. ELIZABETH S. BISSELL Class Secretary, 3 ; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4 — First Vice-Presi- dent; La Ca7npa7ia, 4 — Sports Editor; Sci- ence Club, 1, 2, 3; S.G.A., 4 — Vice- President; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4 — President. ANDREW CIAMPA Cheer Leaders, 3, 4 — Secretary - Treasurer; Italian Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer; Intra- mural Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4; Le Cercle Fran- cais, 1, 2; Philosophy Club, 2; Publicity Staff, 3. IRENE MARIAN DANESKI Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Le Cercle Francais, 1, 2, 3, 4; Montclarion, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT WILLIAM ESLER Athletics, 2; Commu- ters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Psychology Club, 3, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 2, 3, 4. ARTHUR I. GROSSBACH Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 2, 3. 65 S. GROSSMAN N. HALL M. HALPERIN E. HILL M. HORNING J. KELLER N. HARRIS A. HENDERICKX R. HEXGEVELD H. KROEZE J. LACHMAN M. LEACH SHIRLEY NORMA GILLIS MARTIN NELLIE R. GROSSMAN HALL HALPERIN HARRIS Commuters Club, 1, Class Secretary, 1 ; Agora, 2, 3, 4; Jun- Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4 2, 3, 4; French Club, Dance Club, 1, 2, 4 ior Choir, 1; Men ' s — Second Vice-Presi- 2; Sigma Phi Mu, 2, — President; Glee A.A., 1 —Intramural dent; Science Club, 1, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, Club, 1, 2, 3; Lti and Varsity Awards; 2, 3, 4— Vice-Presi- 3, 4. Compana, 4 — Arc Psychology Club, 3, dent; W.A.A., 1; Editor; S.G.A., 2 — 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, Woods Hole Marine Secretary; The Play- 2, 3, 4. Biological Laboratories ers, 2. Student, 3. ANN MARIE RUTH EDWARD HILL MARIE B. HENDERICKX HENGEVELD Aphesteon, 4; College HORNING Commuters Club, 1, W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. Choir, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Commuters Club, 1, 2, 4; Dance Club, 1, Delta Pi, 3, 4; Q:ui,- 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Phi terly, 2, 3— Business 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; W. Manager; Science 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, A.A., I, 2, 3, 4. Club, 3, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4. 2, 3, 4. JEAN CECILE HERMAN JOHN JEROME E. MARIAN EDITH KELLER KROEZE LACHMAN LEACH Commuters Club, 2, Aphesteon, 3, 4; Band, Science Club, 2, 3, College Choir, 2, 3, 3; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 1, 2, 3, 4— Librarian; 4 — Vice-President. 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4; X ' .A.A., 1, 2, Intramural Awards, 1, 3; lunior Choir, I; 4. 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Italian Club. 3; Phil- Pi, 3, 4; Orchestra, 1, osophy Club, 1; Sci- 2, 3; P s y c hology ence Club, 2, 3, 4. Club, 3. ELIZABETH LEAKE ROBERT RUTH ROSE ARTHUR LUCK Commuters Club, 1, LICHTENSTEIN LITTELL Ui Cimlhiiiii, 4 — As- 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, Moiitclarion, 2, 3 — Aphesteon, 3,4— Pres- sociate Editor; Pro 3; Glee Club, 2, 3; Features Editor, Asso- ide n t; Commuters Musica, 2; Science Science Club, 2, 3, 4; ciate Editor; Science Club, 1; Dance Club, Club, 2, 3, 4. W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. Club, 2, 3, 4. 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; V. A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. ARTHUR H. CLARENCE C. EDWARD D. EVA JACKSON MALOVANY McKEEBY MOLLOY POST Agora, 2, 3, 4: In- Agora, 2, 3, 4; Men ' s Aphesteon, 4; Class Aphesteon. 4; Com- tramural and Varsity A.A., I; Intramural Treasurer, 1, 3; Com- muters Club, 1, 2; Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4; Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4; muters Club, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club. 2, 3. 4; Science Club, 2. 3, 4; Psychology Club, 2; Geography Club, 1, Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2. Tribe, 1, 2, 3, 4. Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 2; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 2, 3, 4. 3, 4. E. LEAKE K. LICHTENSTEIN R. LITTELL A. LUCK A. MALOVANY C. McKEEBY E. MOLLOY E. POST • 66 H, ROBERTSON H. WALTER J. RUITER S. WEIL VV. THOMSON A. WEINBERG M. WAGNER L. WILEY T. WALCZYK R. WRIGHT HELEN L. ROBERTSON Asphesteon, 3, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary; W. A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. JACOB H. RUITER Intramural Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4; Junior Choir, 5; Science Club, 2, 3, 4; S.G.A., 2, 3. WALLACE B. THOMSON Publicity Staff, 1 ; Varsity and Intramu- ral Awards, I, 2, 3, MILDRED E. WAGNER College Choir, 3, 4; Dance Club, 2; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, Junior Choir, 1, Philosophy Club, Pro Musica, 3, 4. THEODORE WALCZYK Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Psychology Club, 2, 3, 4; Sig- ma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity and In- tramural Awards, 4. HELEN E. WALTER I.R.C., 1; Science Club, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2. SHELTON J. WEIL Sigma Phi Mu, I, 2, 4; Varsity and Intra- mural Awards, 1, 2, ALAN DAVID WEINBERG Aphesteon, 3, 4; Col- lege Choir, 2, 3, 4; Intramural Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Lfl Cam- pana, 3, 4 — Photogra- phy Editor; Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2, 3, 4. LOIS JUNE WILEY Band, 3, 4; Dance Club, 3; Junior Choir, 1, 2; La Cmnjiana, 3, 4 — Statistics Editor; Science Club, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary; The Players, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3. ROBERT B. WRIGHT Choral Orga 3 ; Commuters Club, 1, 2; Golf Club, 3; Intramural Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4; Science Club, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 2, 3, 4. VICTOMIA L. PAPALE of the class of 1938 was the first Montclair graduate to be granted a fellowship for advanced studies in science. She was appointed as assistant to Dr. Charles E. Hadley, associate professor of biol- ogy, to preside over the comparative anatomy groups. 67 • SCIENCE CLUB Bernard Lieber Mary Jane Ellsworth . President V ce-Presideni Lois Wiley Irving Cooper Secretary Treasurer BETTY ELBEE, ;ilso of the chiss of 193 8, was the second graduate to be granted a fel- lowship for advanced studies in science. She was appointed as assistant to Dr. Robert Mc- Lachlan, assistant professor of sciences, her special charge being the physics laboratory. • 68 APHESTEON President RUTH LITTELL Secretary ' Treasurer IRENE BALTO ALICE PUTNAM President ANNA FALCONE Vice-President CATHERINE BYRNE Secretary BETTY JEFFERIS Treasurer ALICE PUTNAM SIGMA PHI MU 69 • GEOGRAPHY CLUB Prcsitlnil SEYMOUR MANDELL Vice-PraiJetit STORER DUNLOP Secretary DOROTHY LUHRS Treasurer AMYAN RAINFORD Presidctii apii . RICHARD DUGAN B SK Vice-President M Jn E JEAN EISENBUD B KS Secretary P ELSIE LANG 11 Treasurer i JEANNE CHESLEY I PSYCHOLOGY CLUB • 70 DR. MILSTEAD MR. RELLAHAN MR. HATCH Department LaoMiiai es MRS. CRESSEY DR. FREEMAN iMISS TOXOXE MISS BAHR MISS DE ESCORIAZA MR. LABASTILLE DOKIS IL. ABAMS Doris is well-known and well-liked on campus as an all-around good sport and as president of Rohwec. She smoothly combines efficiency and dependability with a spirit of fun and a grand sense of humor. She ' ll go far and she ' ll be long remembered by those who knew her when. Our 3-rah-Bacha has led the cheering squad and teams to vocal, if not actual victories. In his small stature is found a full measure of pep, vim, and loyalty. His enthusi- asm is also found in his Choir work and tennis. Little man, what now? PAUL BAMTEL A serious student with a fine sense of humor, he will be remembered for his mature discussions of perti- nent social problems. • 72 On the stage of the campus ap- peared many and varied life dramas. We, the poor players: some primarily hnmoroiis, some tragic, some bowing in the spot- light, others ahvays in the back- ground . . . this the setting for the most dramatic experience of our lives . . . MAZIE V. BAYLOM Magnetic, dynamic Mazie of the twinkling eyes and the loveable na- ture. Sincerity as well as dancing gaiety lies in a heart big enough for two. BOBOTMY MABIAN BEDKICK A ready wit, a flashing smile, poise. A good student, an excellent dancer, a fine friend. She and Lynn form the most answering team in any class. MIBIAM B. BENJAMIN One of our outstanding Spanish devotees, this young miss was liked for her pleasant manner. We know that Benjy ' s trim figure caught many a Montclair and Mexican eye. 73 AL.Bi;]iJ7 J3. BOIUS l-or a good-natured, vivacious, friendly, good sport with an eager- ness for fun and good humor and a habit of always being happy, we think Alberta is tops. She is well- known for her loyal work in the language department, her interest- ing accounts of experiences in Ger- many, and her distinctive giggle. MARJOME BURD Laughter is the chorus of her con- versation. With it Marge reveals to her many friends a vibrant na- ture and a winning way. Her many friends at M. S. T. C, especially m Chipin Hall, will miss her spark of gaiety. EDWARD JOSEPH CARTON A sharp crack of the bat, and Ed comes through with another timely hit; a driving line plunge, and the first down is made. Dependable Ed will be sorely missed in the class- room and on the athletic field. MANITIIE DOl OTHEA ELIZABETH C.- STELINE Charm is the gift of the gods, and Dot is the gods ' gift to us. She is well-bred, well-educated, well- traveled, and well-liked by all. JOSEPH J. CODY There is a tradition that plump people are always jovial, and Joe is no exception. This welcome transfer from Albright College is a very pleasant, happy, and friendly fellow, whose gridiron ability earned him the distinction of being one of the Indians ' foremost linesmen. ADELE COHN A member of the Russ gang, Adele has been a popular, busy socialite for four years. Between times she goes to class and does homework. • 74 Formal, but 7iuderneatJo the sbo v of fancy gowns and tuxedos in transformed gym or dorms is the warm glow of Mont cl air friendliness. Good times, smooth bands and floors, decorating be- fore — and cleaning up after — have all played very important parts in strengthening the ties that bind our hearts ... HELEN M. CONOYEK A quiet miss to some, a warm per- sonality to others. What would she do without Doris, her room- mate? But then, we know theirs is a real and loyal friendship charac- teristic of two such natures. MARY T. CULLINAINE Those of us who knew Mary as an acquaintance found in her an in- dustrious worker and a good sport whose quiet manner and pleasant way made us all like her. Those of us who knew Mary as a friend found in her an unselfish and con- stant pal whose quiet manner was often shattered by a gay love of good fun. ELEANOKA L. DONATELLI She has been so quiet for four years that many people did not know she was in our midst. Yet those of us who know her will remember a serious student who was really one of the girls. AMTHIUK J. DONNELLY Art took his place among us as a very likeable chap. As an efficient social director, a capable manager, an industrious participator in extra- curricular activities, a friendly Agorian, he gained our sincere re- spect. 75 Photo by Weinberg EUGENIA ADELE DUNN Gene has always remained a loyal friend and a pleasant personality. She was always full of fun in the dorm, a serious student in class who made K. D. P., a socialite, and an active participant in extra-curricu- lar activities — all this made her pop- ular and well-liked on campus. MUTH ELEANOR EMERICK This charming redhead gained Montclair ' s admiration for being a capable, refined, and pleasant per- son. The Chapinites tell of an effi- cient chairman, K. D. P. tells of a good student, her varied activities tell of a dynamic worker, her friends tell of a sincere person who had a cheerful manner and a ready smile. RAYMOND ERNEST FALTIN ' GS Always very much of an individual- ist, Ray gained everyone ' s respect for his courageous fight to stand by his convictions. Here is a hard- fighting athlete, a clear-thinking student, a conscientious Board mem- ber, a warm personality- Here is an earnest, serious, sincere person. A PAT FERUCCI This suave-looking social studies student is known by everybody. He is well-known for his friendly smile and striding walk. He is best known as an outstanding manager of the Indian football squad. ELSYE KATHBYN FISCHEK A winning way — a pleasing smile — a personality magnetizing friends — a boundless energy to excel in Dr. Gage ' s history exams — all this and more — Elsye. THOMAS HUTCHINSON FLEMING This Senatorial gentleman could al- ways be counted on for a profound idea or a humorous remark. A warm personality, an individualist of depth, a brilliant French scholar, a source of stability for friends, an object of admiration for all. ELEANOM FONDILEM El is a dependable student in any class, and we can count on her to know all the answers. One look at her hairdo, and you can tell she knows the answer to How high is up? 76 The heart of Monfclair ' s cam- pus: Tall pines stand as sentinels to the sacred sundial. Here the college choir traditionally raises the undying hymn of praise to the vibrating echoes from Kuss and Chapin. Here dwell the fair co-eds who prove that this is trolly the heart of the campus. THELMA MAE FBANKE Sweet, clever, peppy Thelma is our little package of dynamite — whether it be in the front lines of the cheering squad or in the front row of the Choir. Everywhere she radiates gracious warmth. FRANK GAT.JEN In Frank we have found the ma- ture scholar with a pleasant flavor- ing of delightful humor. In class and out, he has been a serious gen- tleman with a profound knowledge of cultural arts and an intense de- sire to do something big in educa- tion. HELEN GLICKMAN If two brilliant black eyes peer at you from the innermost recesses of a Hudson County car, if a fascinat- ing voice answers in class and an- swers well, if you find the eyes and the voice in the Montclarion office, you can be sure it ' s Helen. n MILDHED KAY GOODMAIN Chic and svelte, tall and attractive, vivacious and talkative with spark- ilnj; blue eyes — that ' s Millie. Photo by Weiiiljer: IMENE C. Z. GHABER What lies beneath Ceasy ' s calm ex- terior? 1. Enough reserve to make her interesting. 2. A keen and subtle sense of humor. 3. A love of foreign lands and foods. MABELON EOSEVELT GMMM This serious social studies student has gained recognition for her aca- demic work by membership in K. D. P. and Rohwec. Everyone can tell you that Madelon is a depend- able and conscientious girl. The Chapinese can tell of her humor and gay pranks. The Debating Team can tell of a fine and loyal man- ager. And her numerous friends can tell you that here ' s a person who ' s bound to be a success. MANITIES SYLVIA IGEH Quietly she moves among us, kind- ly serious, friendly We who have worked with her in the Ger- man department and in the annual language festival will long remem- ber her dependability and cheer- fulness. HELEN KOSALIE JAY Tall and honey blond Teddy, blithe- ly self-confident and poised, yet with a depth of understanding and seriousness underlying all her so- phistication. A versatile person, Ted is one of the select few who hold a state official rating for ref- ereeing basketball games. BUTH PAMLIAMENT KANE Ruth is an unusual mixture of so- phistication and naivete. She loves a good hearty laugh, adores after- noon teas, enjoys poetry, and de- lights in playing the piano and dancing. Her courteous, quiet man- ner belies a variety of interests and a fun-loving disposition. A limpid, wanii day in Spring . . . green lau ' iis overlaid vith a mosaic pattern of leaf shadotvs . . . higher education being piirsjied by figures languidly reclining . . . good fellowship . . . a bit of gossip . . . a serious discussion of life ' s Problems . . . a friendly smile . . . all this, and heaven too. DOMIS EMILY KANNGIESEE A tall stateliness blended with a mellow note of music ... a manner aloof and yet familiar . . . Doris. JACOB I. KAPLAN Although he was always ready with a humorous remark and shared in good humor with a hearty chuckle, this serious-minded man impressed all of us with his deep interests and his intensive work in social studies. He was always ready to extend a friendly word or a profound thought. Larr) ' ' is the epitome of physical manhood. The football team will miss his savage thrusts into enemy territory. We will al! miss a fine fellow. All too seldom brains are blessed with glowing beauty, executive ability is tempered with warm heartedness and a sense of humor even in a choir robe this lady of perfect poise looks well groomed. We envy her future pupils. Photo by Sarony MURIEL E. LEONARD In her quiet way, this language stu- dent has been recognized for her faithful work and her friendly man- ner. Mexico has not changed that cool sophistication, that friendliness of spirit, and that love of mischief that belongs to Muriel. HILDEGARDE LOBEL Lolly is a rare combination of naivete, poise, and infectious humor. We know her as a ballast in the Choir, an excellent bridge player, and the student who spent a year in Germany to return as one of the best-liked members of the class. SYLVIA C. LOVE Five feet, three inches of studious- ness and sportsmanship, seasoned with fun and garnished with a love- ly smile- — -Syl. - H A BOEOTHY LILLIAN LUHES Dot takes everything with the light touch; yet we envy her high marks, we envy her beautifully written notebooks, we envy her ability to say just the right thing at the right time. EDITH M. MAHP«:EN Graceful, poised Edith is known to all for her good work in class and for her beautiful interpretation of folk dances. Yet she is known only by a few who penetrated her re- serve to find a heart warm and sin- cere, a soul awake to the poignancy of life. When it comes to piano playing, we know George is good, for we like to listen to him. When it comes to discussion, we know George is good, since we like to talk with him. When it comes to fellowship, we know George is good — we all like him. SEYMOUK I. MANDELL When the talk turned to social studies, we listened to Seymour, since his interests made him very active in that field — in the class- room and in extracurricular work. Always a hard and willing worker, his achievements in Rohwec, I. R. C., and Geography Club are indi- cations of the approval he has gained at Montclair. Maj ' he con- tinue to contribute as favorably in life. Orpheus and Enrydice — the classic beauty of old Greece brought to Montclair through the magic of the modern dance. A step, a turn, a movement of an arm — once more the Dance Club thrills us with a performance that sparkles ivith the enthusiasm of the performers. CHAMLES MASTIK Chief netster . . . chief Agorian . . . chief politician . . . Friendly, easy- going Charlie, who promised us all jobs in Little Ferry, is well-liked at Montclair. LILLY M. McCOEMICK Of the face with gladness over- spread and soft smiles by human kindness bred. Lil is the darling of her friends ' hearts. Many will miss her share of devotion and loy- alty, which she ' s always willing to sive. DOKIS GOMGAS McEVOY Brisk in all she does, but sweetly serious; as English as though she had been born in Staffordshire; liked and respected by all for her sense and stability. Photo Ijy Sarony geraldine claire Mclaughlin Gerry gracefully coats her scholarly achievements and abilities with a generous helping of Irish wit and good-natured disposition. She man- ages to sparkle in the classroom and outside with equal facility. FRANKLTN CLIFFOED McPEAK This fellow brought comradeship with his athletic abilities. It seemed that his golf bag, tennis racket, and gym suit were always in evidence; but we remember especially his mel- low laugh, his unique dancing, and his sporty clothes. GIOIA M. MEBKLE Merk — a lot of fun to have around and a person to trust as a friend. In the dance — a moving picture of consummate grace. MA ELOKENCE MICHELS Reserved and serious — a change of mood — a twinkle in her eye, a quick smile, spontaneous laughter. Although always inclined to be quiet, Evelyn lost no time in con- vincing us of her ability. Her out- look was mainly that of the serious hard-working student, but we rec- ognized in her a kind, thoughtful person who could be the best of friends. ' Feii veuhire here atop the tower. Its vistas are too languid for the practical, too bold for the timid. Light battles shadoiv; brisk breezes u ' hip color into pale cheeks. But, there in the distance, where Manhattan ' s peaks are lost in the hazy horizon, is the place ivhere dreams arc born. BOBOTHY MOMAN A seemingly shy and retiring air betrayed by typical French gestures and an infectious laugh. A natural- ness and sincerity vouched for by those who knew her as infallibly good company and a good sport. JOHN NICHOLAS MOKLOT Persuasiveness tips his tongue. We find in him keenness of mind, cou- pled with consummate gentleman- liness. We bow down before John. ■CLAME FMANCES MUILCAME With a serious, quiet manner, Clare has distinguished herself as a de- pendable worker, a sincere friend, and a sound student. Her pleasant way made working with her in clubs a pleasure. Her ability in studies made us admire her. Her friendliness made us all envy her close friends for their being so fortunate. STEPHEN EDWAMD MULLEB When has a man been more con- clusively rated ' tops ' than Steve? On campus, on the dance floor, on the teams, Steve is a true Trojan. LOUISE W. PENNINO A dash of spice and ga ety reveal Louise. She ' s truly a campus high- light. S3 ♦ f 1 MARIA M. PORDON Since she moves quicdv on her way Maria is hard to get to know. She did fine work in Spanish Club and in her major of social studies But s ce w know she would prefer to as she labored over her books. Photo by Weinberg ABRAHAM 5. PROMISOR With a calm, ious manner this history student took his place c Soon he convinced us among us. Soon ne . of his power and depth, keen mind spoke tortn, attentively and r ' f J , ' knowledge and at his clear, deep voice. MARGARET -JACKSON REED AloyallanguagemaiorM-g nuiet serious manner betra eu Ta s udent of deep interest and Ll rv A pleasant person, her briS smite betrayed a warm heart and a ready spirit of friendliness. HUNAANITIE: EOSE REISS r ' n lauler and amusing man- ne sh quickiy won her p ace as Tneofour most charming and viva- cious seniors. CHAKLOTTE S. BICHAEB Beauty and charm combined to give our class Charlotte, the social- ite of Russ Hall. Many are her accomplishments, whether on the Monfclarion Dance Club or the Board of Trustees. GEOEGE Ji. EOBEMTSON Although short of stature, George was long on ability and friendliness. A source of fun on Choir trips, a good student in social studies, a diligent worker in Psych Club, and a cheerful person to know, he quiet- ly went about doing his work when- ever a dependable person was needed. GEORGE AAEON EOCHBEEG In the auditorium, swinging for jitterbugs. In the Choir, contrib- uting a lusty bass. In Agora, one of the boys. In class, a thoughtful student. In Dance Club, compos- ing the score for a successful re- cital. On campus, popular, versa- tile, and an all-around ood fellow. Our Amphitheatre of stone . . . scene of Greek plays and Roman circuses? No — Foreign Language Festivals in the spring; friendly chats in icarin sunshine; cozy lunches at noon; hard studying at all hours. Happy running and jumping in the afternoon; roman- tic tableaux in cool, silvery moon- light. BOEOTHY EYELTN EG WE Dot is quiet and studious and re- spected for upholding her own ideas. Yet added to her seriousness is the spark of humor and good fellowship that marks her as one of the social studies crew. FLOEENCE SCHATZBEEG Whether living in the dorm or com- muting, Florence proved to be good fun for those around her. Pleas- antly ga) ' and quietly serious, she proved a good companion who worked loyally with a group and still kept to the path of individu- ality. CATHERINE ELIZABETH SCHIFFEE Kay — dark, pretty, happy, gay. Kay — who lives social studies. Kay — a versatile class leader. Photo by McCIoud RUTH C].A]1!K SCHPSELL Her every thought is, was, and shall be German. Doubtless her trip to Germany has added to her store of gay stories concerning student life there. Frank, unassuming, warm, and friendly — we give you Ruth. MARCELLA SCHULMAN A frank honesty and naturalness, a warm loyalty, an elusive dimple — Marty — the language department ' s center of fun and wit. LILLIAN RUTH 5CHULTER As a good friend and student we give you Lillian, who took an active interest in the social and extracur- ricular life at the college LR.C. and Moiifclarioii shared her with phi- losophy and creative writing clubs. EVELYN SHEEPMAN Lynn is always calm, always has a nickname for everyone and every- thing, is always keen-witted, is al- ways happy. ft mi VIA IE ARTHUR IN ' . SILVER Language festival upon language festival brought forth a man and his violin — Art, the good-humored, the happy-go-lucky, the friendly. FEMMAN GEOKGE Cheerful Chubby is undoubtedly one of the finest men of athletics Montclair has known — as captain of the football eleven, as coach of the C. H. S. Ponies in basketball, and as the big man of the track squad. We know he is a quiet, unassuming, likeable gentleman. We know he is a loyal and sincere friend. We know he will succeed in life. FKANK SODA Never was seen without a friendly smile. Occasional was known to forsake his serious manner and wax humorous. Often gave evidence of his true cultural interests. Usually was found running about in cos- tume working hard for the language department. Always was interested in doing something important for education. • 86 A bit of foreign cult live trans- planted to the native pines and spruce; a tradition ichose echoes are heard in distant lands. The struggle of iveary rehearsals: te- dious serving of costumes; excite- ment; memorizing of songs, steps; praying for clear weather. Then, the climax: a dazzling spectacle of color, gayety, music, beauty, life . . . ETHEL 3. SPIWDEL Ethel — dark, pretty, vivacious, and gay. Her greeting and pleasant conversation will be missed by many. MABGEBY E. TAYLOK Marge — a small bundle of hilarious fun, master of the casual remark, a good student, and all-around good sport. She ' ll be remembered as a member in good standing of the social studies crew. AUDEEY ELAINE TBIGLEB Audrey ' s sketching shows her hu- mor; her singing, a love of gaiety; her mimicry, a sense of the realistic; her dancing, a study in lightness. All of these show a love of life, laughter, and gay entertainment that have made her a swell person to know and an indispensable friend to have. CLAUDE WILLIAM WALCK Claude — the serious minded student in history, expounding philosophy. Creaky — outstanding athlete in the backfield or on the mound. Duke — the beau of the dance in tails. Pappy — one of Agora ' s circle of fel- lowship. Do you wonder that we all say Aces high ? Photo by Sarony ROMA L. WARREN Serious, dependable Roma divides her time between doing make-up, playing a keen hand at bridge, and being a clever social studies student. EDITH G. WEEBER Evvie of the flashing smile; Evvie of the superlative humor; Evvie of the twinkling eyes; gay, carefree, fun-loving Evvie. HELEN WEISS She is an enthusiast — whether it be for French, for world affairs, or for gay times. No wonder she con- tinually bubbles over with good spirits. CELIA ZIMMERMAN Dramatics and Celia are synony- mous. We thrill to her portrayal of character, profit by her coaching technique, marvel at her ability. To Celia, the play ' s the thing. ' ' IC HUMAN RITA LILLIAN Z S aSOHN Her infinite variety of accomplish- ments reveal her as a Park Avenue sophisticate with a continental air. D. ADAMS A. BORIS A. BACHA M. BURD P. BARTEL E. CARTON yi. BAYLOR D. CASTELINE D. BEDRICK J. CODY il. BENJAMIN A. COHN DORIS L. ADAMS Clio, 1, 2, 3, 4; De- bating Team, 1, 2, 3; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Rohwec, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Vice - President, President; Psychology Club. 2, 3, 4; W.A. A., 1, 2. DOROTHY M. BEDRICK Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Italian Club, 3, 4; Lc Ccrcle Fran- cais, 1, 2, 3, 4; Phil- osophy Club, 1 ; W. A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. EDWARD JOSEPH CARTON Agora, 2, 3, 4; Ath- letics, 1, 2, 3 — Presi- dent, Intramural Di- rector; Varsity A- wards, 1, 2, 3, 4; Commuters Club, i, 2, 3, 4 — President; Geography Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tribe, 2, 3, 4. HELEN M. CONOVER Geography Club, 5 ; I.R.C., 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2. H. CONOVER E. DONATELLI E. DUNN R. FALTINGS M. CULLINANE A. DONNELLY R. EMERICK P. FERRUCCI EUGENIA ADELE DUNN Clio, 2, 3, 4; Debat- ing Team, 1,2; Geog- raphy Club, 1, 2; I.R.C, 1, 2, 3; Kap- pa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Rohwec, 3, 4. ANDREW M. BACHA College Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Cheer Leaders, 1, 2, 3, 4 — President; Geography Club, 1 , 2 — Secretary; I.R.C, 1, 2; Intramural and Varsity Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tribe, 3, 4. MIRIAM R. BENJAMIN Clio, I, 2, 3, Commuters Club, 2, 3; LR.C, 1, 2, Spanish Club. 2, 3, Exchange Student Mexico. DOROTHEA E. CASTELINE Classical Club, 2, 3, 4; French Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary; Com- muters Club, 2; Kap- pa Delta Pi, 4; Phron- tisterion, 2, 3; Ex- change Student — France. MARY T. CULLINANE Clio, 2, 3, 4; Com- muters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, I, 2, 3, 4; LR.C, 1, 2; W.A.A., 1, 2, RUTH ELEANOR EMERICK Clio, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Vice-President, Presi- dent; Geography Club, 3, 4; I.R.C, 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 4; League of Wo- men Voters, 1; Psy- chology Club, 2, 3, 4. PAUL BARTEL Commuters Club, 3, 4; I.R.C, 3, - Philosophy Club, 3 ALBERTA B. BORIS Eifchange League, 4; German Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Vice-President; Philosophy Club, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 1, 2; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3; Ex- change Student — Ger- many. JOSEPH J. CODY Albright College, 1, 2; Intramural and Varsity Awards, 3, 4; Tribe, 3, 4. ELEANORA L. DONATELLI Club, Geography ; German Club, 2. ; Club, 1, I.R.C, 2, Club, 1, 2, tisterlcn, 2 RAYMOND ERNEST FALTINGS Agora, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class President, 3 ; Geography Club, 2, 3; Sigma Phi Mu, 1; Tribe, 2, 3, 4; Var- sity and Intramural Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4. MAZIE V. BAYLOR Artsmen, 3, 4; Dance Club, 3, 4; German Club, 1; W.A.A., 1, 2, 4. MARJORIE BURD Geography Club, 3, 4; LR.C, 3, 4; The Players, 1, 2, 3, 4. ADELE COHN Clio, 2, 3, 4; Junior Choir, 1, 2, 3; Kappa Delta Pi, 4; Moilt- darion, 1, 3; Roh- wec, 2, 3, 4 — Secre- tary; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3. ARTHUR J. DONNELLY Agora, 2, 3, 4; Cl.iss Vice - President, 2; College Choir, I, 2; La Campaiui, 4; The Players, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tribe, 3, 4. PAT FERRUCCI Commuters Club, 1 , 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer; I.R.C, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer; Intramural Awards. 1, 2, 3, 4; Italian Club, 1, 2, 3, 4. S9 • E. FISCHER M. GOODMAN T. FLEMING I. GRABER I. l-OXDi I.Kl- M. GRnrM T. FRANKE S. IGER F. GAT.IF.X H. JAV II. GI.KKMAX R. KAXE ELSYE KATHRYN FISCHER Clio, 3, 4; Geography Club, 3, 4; I.R.C., 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 4; Psychology Club, 2, 3, 4: W.A. 3, 4. FRANK GATJEN Passaic County Junior College, I, 2; Finance Committee, 3. MADELON ROSEVELT GRIMM Clio, 1, 2, 3, 4; De- bating Team, 2, 3 — Manager; Kappa Del- ta Pi, 3, 4 — Record- ing Secretary; Roh- wec, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Corresponding Secre- tary; Science Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; The Players, 2, 3, 4. DORIS EMILY KANNGIESER State Teachers College at Trenton, I ; Arts- men, 3, 4; I.R.C., 2, 3, 4; Orchestra, 3, 4. MURIEL E. LEONARD Geography Club, 3 ; It.allan Club, 3; Phrontisterion, 1, 2, 3; Spanish Club. 2, 3, 4— Vice-President; W.A.A., 1; Exchange Student — • Mexico. THOMAS H. FLEMING Notre Dame, 1, 2; Italian Club, 2, 3. 4 — Vice-President; Lc Cerclc Francais, 2, 3, 4; Senate, 2, 3, 4 — Vice - President; Ex- change Student — France. HELEN GLICKMAN New York University, 1, 2; Commuters Club, 3,4; Geography Club, 3, 4; LR.C, 3, 4; Phrontisterion, 3. SYLVIA IGER Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3; German Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 2, 3. JACOB J. KAPLAN State Teachers College at Newark, 1. HILDEGARDE L03EL College Choir. 2, 3, 4; German Club, 1, 2, 5, 4 — Treasurer, President; Glee Club, 1, 2; Philosophy Club, 2, 3, 4; Phron- tisterion, 1, 2; W.A. A., !, 2, 3, 4; Ex- change Student — Germany. ELEANOR FONDILER Clio, 3, 4; I.R.C. 1, 2. 3, 4; Monfclar on. I, 2, 3, 4 — Headlines Editor, Make-up Edi- tor; Philosophy Club, 3; Rohwec. 3, 4 — Treasurer; W.A. A., I, MILDRED KAY GOODMAN Clio, 1, 2, 3, 4; Con- muters Club, 1, : 3, 4; I.R.C, 1, 2, ; Rohwec, 2, 3, 4 - Secretary. HELEN ROSALIE JAY Dance Club, 1, 2 Glee Club, 1, 2 - Treasurer; L Francais, I, The Players, W.A.A., 1, ; Cerclc 3, 4; 3, 4; LAWRENCE KEYSER Bergen County Jun College, I, 2; Ago 3, 4; Tribe, 3, Varsity Awards, 3, SYLVIA C. LOVE CI.1SS Secretary, 4; Clio, 2, 3. 4; I.R.C, 1, 2, 3, 4; Moit cluri- 011. 2, 3, 4 — Circula- tion Manager; Psy- chology Club, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2. THELMA MAE FRANKE Cheer Leaders, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Vice-President; Classical Club, 2, 3. 4; Clio, 2, 3, 4; Col- lege Choir, 2, 3, 4; The Players, 2, 3, 4; W.A. A., 1, 2. IRENE C Z. GRABER Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; Junior Choir, 1, 2; Lc Cercle Francais, 1, 2, 3, 4— Vice-President; Exchange Student — France. RUTH P. KANE Passaic County Jun College, 1 : Co ters Club, 2, 3; Geog- raphy Club, 3, 4; I.R.C, 3. JOAN A. KOPF College Choir, 2, 3, 4; Clio, 3, 4; Glee Club, 2, 3 — President; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4 — President; Ln Cam- paiia, 4 — Associate Editor; Science Club, 1, 2, 3, 4. DOROTHY LILLIAN LUHRS Geography Club, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary; Glee Club, 1. 2, 3, 4; I.R. C, I, 2. 3. 4— S.-cre- tarv; Philosophy Club, 2, 3; Phrontis- terion, 3; W.A.A.. 1, 2, 3, 4— Gold M. n. KANNGIESER J. KAPLAN I.. KEVSER J. KOPF .M. r.EOXARH H. I.OBEI. S. LOVE I). I.rilRS • 90 EDITH M. MAHNKEN Artsmen, 3, -1 — Vice- President; Clio, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary; Dance Club, 1 ; Geography Club, 2, 3; German Club, 1, 3, 4; I.R.C., 1, 2, 3, 4. LILLY M. McCORMICK Clio, 2, 3, 4; Geog- raphy Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; LR.C, 1, 2; W.A. xj e. mahnken . McLaughlin T. MORI.OT S. MULLER M. PORDON M. REED C. RICHARD . JIALANOA F McPEAK . MULCARE ,. PENNING . PROVISOR R. REISS MARIA M. PORDON Clio, 2, 3, 4; Com- muters Club, 1, 2, 3; LR.C, 3, 4; Italian Club, I, 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer, Sec- retary. 1, 2. GIOIA M. MERKLE Artsmen, 3, 4; Dance Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer; Psychology Club, 3, 4; Sigma Phi Mu, 1; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. JOHN NICHOLAS MORLOT Debating Team, 2, 3, 4; Foreign Language Festival, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Co-chairman; Junior Choir, 2, 3; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Le Cercle Francais, 1, 2, 3, A — Vice-President, President; Philosophy Club, 2, 3, 4 — Vice- President, President. ABRAHAM S. PROVISOR Fordham University, GEORGE A. MALANGA North Carolina Un versity, 1 ; ,d, 3, 4; Com- muters Club, 2, 3, 4; I.R.C., 3, 4; Italian Club, 3, 4. DORIS GORGAS McEVOY Clio, 3, 4; LR.C, 2 3, 4; Leaders Club, 3; Philosophy Club, 1 : Psychology Club, 3. 4; X .A.A., I. FLORENCE MICHELS Artsmen, 3 ; Dance Club, 1, 3; LR.C, 1; V.A.A., 1, 2 , 3. CLARE FRANCES MULCARE Clio, 2, 3, 4; Com- muters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Secretary, Treasu- rer, Vice-President; Phrontisterion, 3 ; Geography Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer; I.R. C, 1, 2, 3, 4; W. A.A., 1. 2, 3, 4. MARGARET JACKSON REED Commuters Club, I, 2, 3; Le Cercle Fran- cais, 1, 2, 3, 4; The Players, 3, 4. D. McEVOY D. MORAN SEYMOUR I. MANDELL Geography Club, I, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer, Vice- lident. President; Intramurals, I, 2, 3, 4; LR.C, 1, 2, 3, A — Vice-President, Treas- urer; MoitfclarioJi, 1, 2, 3, 4; Rohwec, 1, 2, 3, 4; S.G.A., 3, 4. geraldine c McLaughlin Class Secretary, 2 ; Clio, 2, 3, 4; Com- muters Club, I, 2, 3, 4 — President, Treasu- rer; LR.C, 1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Delta Pi, 4; W.A.A., 3, 4. EVELYN MARILDA MILLER Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club, 4; LR.C, 2, 3, 4; Junior Choir, 1, 2, 3; W.A.A., 2, 4. STEPHEN EDWARD MULLER Agora, 1, 2, 3, A — Vice-President; Ath- letics, 1, 2 — Vice- President; Geography Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Rohwec, 4; Tribe, 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity A- wards, 1, 2, 3, 4. ROSE REISS Passaic County Junior College, Essex County Junior College, 1, 2; Commuters Club, 3, 4; Dance Club, 4; LR.C, 4; W.A.A., 4. CHARLES MASTIK Agora, 2, 3, 4 — Pres- ident; Intramural and Varsity Awards, 1, 2, 3, 4; La Ciimpana, 3, 4 — Sports Editor; Moutclarion, 3, 4 — Sports Editor; Roh- wec, 2, 3, 4; Tribe, 1, 2, 3, 4. FRANKLYN C. McPEAK, JR. Kanawha College, W. Va., 2; Varsity, 3. DOROTHY MORAN Chissical Club, 2, 3; Le Cercle Francais, 1, 2. 3, 4; Psychology Club, 3; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3; Exchange Stu- dent — France. LOUISE W. PENNINO First Margaret B. H:lz Scholar; Kappa Delta Pi, 3, 4; Le Cercle Francais, 1, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer; Psy- chology Club, 2; W. A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Ex- change Student — France. CHARLOTTE S. RICHARD Clio, I. 2, 3, 4; D=n-e Club, 3, 4; LR.C, 2, 3, 4; Uoiit- clar ' on, 2, 3; Psy- chology Club, 3, 4; S.G.A., 1, 2, 3. 91 GEORGE R. ROBERTSON College Choir, 2, 3, 4— Librarian; Com- muters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Junior Choir, I; Psychology Club, 2, 3, 4 — Treasurer. CATHERINE E. SCHIFFER Class Vice-President, 4; Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, 2, 3, 4— Vice- President; Glee Club, 1, 2; I.R.C., 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., I, 2, 3, 4 —Gold M. EVELYN SHEFFMAN Ccmmutcrs Club, I, 2, 3, 4; Italian Club, 3, 4; Le Cercle Fran- cais, 1, 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club, 1; W.A.A., I, 2, 3, 4. ETHEL J. SPINDEL Commuters Club, 2; Dance Club, Le Cercle Francais, 2, 3, 4; Moil clarion 2, 3, 4; I.R.C., Phrontistcrion, I, 2, ROMA L. WARREN Creative Writing Club, 2, 3, 4; I.R.C. 1; Philosophy Club, 1 2, 3, 4 — Secretary Sigma Phi Mu, 1, 2 The Players, 3, 4 W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4 G. ROBERTSON II. SCHULMAN GEORGE AARON ROCHBERG Agora, 2, 3, 4: Col- lege Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 3, 4; Intramural Awards, 1, 2; Pro Musica, 2, 3, 4 — Vice-President; Quarterly, 2, 3, 4. RUTH CLAIRE SCHNELL Foreign Exchange League, 4 — Assistant Secretary; German Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Phrontistcrion, 3 ; Spanish Club, 1; The Players, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4; Exchange Student — Germany. ARTHUR W. SILVER Band, 4; Germ: Club, 2, 3, 4; ] Cercle Francais, 1, Orchestra, 1, 3, Philosophy Club, 2. MARGERY E. TAYLOR Clio, 3, !; Dance Club, !, 2, 3, 4; Geography Club, 3, 4; I.R.C, 1, 2, 3, 4; Moiifcliirioii, 2, 3, 4 — Circulation Mana- ger; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, EDITH G. WEEBER Classicil Club, 2, 3; College Choir, 2, 3, 4; Dance Club, 1; Glee Club, 1, 2; Kappa Delta Pi, 4; Le Cercle Francais, 1, 2, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1; Exchange Student — France. G. ROCHBERG L. SCHULTER D. ROWE F. SCHATZBERG E. SHEFFMAN A. SILVER DOROTHY EVELYN ROWE Clio, 3, 4; Commuters Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; G ograpiiy Club, 3, 4; I.R.C, 1, 2, 3, 4— Secretary; W.A.A., I, 2, 3, 4. MARCELLA SCHULMAN Commuters Club, 1; Germ.in Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Italian Club, 1; Monclarioii, 4; Phil- osophy Club, 3, 4; W.A.A., 1, 2, 3, 4. FERMAN GEORGE SKELTON Catawba College, N. C, I; Agora, 2, 3, 4; Coach of High School Basketball Team, 3, 4; Commuters Club, 2, 3, 4; Tribe, 2, 3, 4; Varsity and Intramu- ral Director, 2, 3, 4. AUDREY ELAINE TRIGLER Commuters Club, 1; Dance Club, I, 2; The Players, 4; Jun- ior Choir, 1, 2, 3. HELEN WEISS Forum Club, 3, 4 — ■Vice-President; LR.C, 1, 2, 3, 4; Le Cercle Francais, 1, 2, 5, 4; Philosophy Club, 2, 3, 4; Publicity Staff, 2, 3; Town Hall, 1, 2— Secretary. FLORENCE SCHATZBERG Classical Club, 2; Dance Club, 1; I.R. C, 1, 2; Le Cercle Francais, 1, 2, 3, 4; Moiifclarioii, 2, 3 — Advertising Manager; W.A.A., 1. LILLIAN RUTH SCHULTER Commuters Club, I 2, 3, 4; Creativi Writing Club, 3 Geography Club, 3, 4 I.R.C, 1, 2, 3, 4 Moiltclar ' ioil, 1, 2, 3 — Features Editor; Phil- osophy Club, 3. FRANK SODA Cercle Francais, 2, 3, 4; Italian Club, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club, 2, 3, 4. CLAUDE WILLIAM WALCK North Carolina Uni- versity, 1; Agora, 2, 3, 4 — Vice-President; Commuters Club, 1; Tribe, 2, 3, 4 — Sec- retary; Varsity A- wards. Intramural Di- rector, 2, 3. CELIA ZIMMERMAN Commuters Club, 2; LR.C, 2, 3, Psychology Club, 4; ' The players, 3, C. SCHIFFER F. SKELTON E. SPINDEL A. TRIGLER R. WARREN H. WEISS RITA LILLIAN ZWISOHN Dance Club. 1, 5, 4; Glee Club, 1, 2, 3; I.R.C, 2, 5; Junior Choir, I, 2, 3; Lc Cetclc Francais, I, 2; Monfclarion, 1, 2. 3. R. SCHNELL F. SODA M. TAYLOR C. WALCK E. WEEBER ;. ZIMMERMAN R. ZWISOHN CLIO •X ' PL,o%: .}_(} . Prcsidcut RUTH EMERICK Vice-President MARY FRANCES WILLIAMSON Secretary BERNICE BEAN Treasurer JEAN CHAMBERLIN Manager BERNARD LIEBER DEBATING CLUB 93 • FORUM CLUB President SEYMOUR SAMET Vice-Presiileiit HELEN WEISS Secretary LORRAINE UMANSKY Treasurer RICHARD WHITNEY President JOHN MORLOT Vice-President MARION REGER Secretary AGNES SHOENBAUM Treasjirer LEONARD WARREN LE CERCLE FRANCAIS d4 GERMAN CLUB President HILDEGARDE LOBEL Vice-Prcsideni FRANCES RAZEE Secretary KLAIRE SCHMITZ Treasurer IRMA FRANK President MURIEL MILLARD Vice-President CLAIRE JOHNSON Secretary DOROTHY ROWE Treasurer EDITH STREJEVSKY INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB 95 ITALIAN CLUB - n a Preshleiif ANGELO PETULLO Vice-President ANNA FALCONE Secretary EVE DEUTSCH Trcnilrer LILLIAN MISURIF.LLO President JOHN MORLOT Vice-President ELIAS LEVINSON Secretary -Treasurer ROMA WARREN PHILOSOPHY CLUB 96 President DORIS ADAMS Vice-President FRANCES CHERNOFSKY Secretary ADELE COHN Treasurer ELEANOR FONDILER ROHWEC SPANISH CLUB Presideni ANGELO SPADORO Vicc-VresideiJt JAMES POET Secretary NLARIA PORDON Treasurer STORER DUNLOP aXhapin hall w MRS. MAXWELL MRS. HIBBS 99 • RUSS HALL .IK MRS. WOLFARTH MISS LOUCKS ! ■ ' , _!Aja! President PETEK MANNION (First Semester) JOHN HOAGLANB (Second Semester) Vice-President CLAIME HAMMAN Secretary MAEION HIGGINS Treasurer FBANCES CMEBNOFSKY Class of Nieeteee Forty Class of Nieeteee Forty Oee it;,- iJ a ' ' ' WWm-M ' ' J- iJ A.v r- :k. ' : iffitUiU Class of Nmeteem Forty T wo dc dlk J ' f p e. ' t,  r p .K QjXi t, Vresident LOWELL BENNETT Vice-President BEKTHA PFITZNEB Secretary FHA JOHNSON Treas7trer GEOKGE LUNN 103 • DANCE CLUB President EDWINA SMALLEY Vice Presii!cnf ALICE REICHL Secretary AGNES RUDIN Treasurer GRACE COE GOLD WINNERS CULLINANE McLaughlin SCHIFFER CAHILL BADER CRYSTAL KREUCHAUFF MULCARE GAUTHIER GREENFIELD LUHRS FISCHER • jl04 SENIOR LETTERMEN INTRAMURAL AWARDS 105 • Student Members RAYMOND FALTINGS ARNOLD PETERSEN Faculty Members MR. PITTSER DR. MILSTEAD DR. DAVIS Men ' s Athletic Commissioe The Men ' s Athletic Commission was formed last fall to replace the former Men ' s Athletic Association. The new commission has the power to set up rules, regulations, and policies concerning intercollegiate athletic activities at Montclair. The commission has also received the power to make all awards that concern varsity athletics. Five members, two from the faculty, two from the student body, and a non-voting chairman, compose the commission. The faculty members, who are not connected with the Physical Education Depart- ment, are Dr. Milstead and Dr. Davis. Arnold Petersen from the Junior Class, and Ray Faltings from the Senior Class are the members of the student body who have been appointed by the president of the Student Government Association to serve on the commission. To complete the commission. Athletic Director Pittser acts as non-voting chairman. The S. G. A. in creating the new commission also agreed to set aside 32 ' , of the total amount received yearly from the student activity fee to go to the Men ' s Athletic Commission to be used at its discretion with the approval of President Sprague. In its first year of existence the commission has made athletic awards, approved intercollegiate schedules, and has set up the general policies of athletics at M. S. T. C. F O O T B A L L 106 With the return of an all-letterman forward wall, Coach Chester Pittser turned to the task of building a suitable backfield to give the needed offensive drive to an Indian grid squad that gave early season promise of upholding the Montclair tradition of strong gridiron representation. Opening the season with Arnold College of Connecticut, the Indians shoved the visitors all over Spragi:e Field but did not succeed in crossing their opponents ' goal line, and the game ended in a scoreless deadlock. On the following Saturday the squad traveled to Hofstra College where they again tried in vain to score a touchdown but did manage to emerge victorious by virtue of Joe Cody ' s well placed field goal, and the game ended: Montclair 3, Hofstra 0. Finally, on the next Saturday, Mont- clair succeeded in shaking Duke Walck free to score a touchdown, and Joe Cody proved his previous field goal was no freak by duplicating his feat to send Millersville down to a 10-0 defeat. Kutztown Teachers became the first team to score on the Indians, when, on the the following week, they turned back Montclair by the decisive score of 21-0. East Stroudsburg Teachers and the Lehigh University ' s Junior Varsity were the next Montclair victims. East Stroudsburg succumbing 7-0, and Lehigh ' s representatives being the victims of a 31-0 scoring spree. New Britain Teachers of Connecticut handed Montclair its second set-back of the season on the following Saturday by handing the Indians a surprising 12-6 defeat. Then, as a climax to a week of traditional displays of school spirit, the aroused Indians battled a valiant Trenton team on a gridiron drenched with rain and emerged triumphant: Montclair 6, Trenton 0. The victory marked the third consecutive win on the grid- iron over our capital city rivals and brought the final record for the year to five victories, one tie, and two defeats. Nine seniors including Captain Ferman Skelton, Joe Cody, Ray Faltings, Art Malovany, Ted Walczyk, Duke Walck, Ed Carton, Howie Glover, and Larry Keyser will be lost to Montclair next year, but prom- ising reserve strength and the return of a nearl} all veteran forward wall give hope of another impressive grid year In 1939. 107 • BASKETBALL A WRESTLING FENCING 109 TRACK TENNIS C- Q . • 110 A N President Librarians PHILIP PERKINS BERNICE BERMAN Vice President EDITH STREJEVSKY EDITH STREJEVSKY Sccretary-Treasitrer Conductor MELVIN MICHAELS MELVIN MICHAELS H E E L E A E President ANDREW BACHA Vice-President THELMA FRANKE Secretary-Treasurer ANDREW CIAMPA Hi W M E N ' S A. A, MARY FRANCES WILLIAMSON C ' ' Vice-Presitlen ORIS FRENCH Secretary THELMA EVERY Treasurer GRACE COE T R I B E President OSEPH FERNANDEZ S,rr. .;i, CLAUDE W ' ALCK A ' cc-Prw i i ' n STEPHEN MULLER Trcasitrer RAYMOND FALTINGS • 112 VOLLEYBALL A bevy of jumping, shrieking girls in a maze of nets and balls — the gym on fall afternoons. Closer scrutiny would reveal order: a group of volleyball games in progress, with enthusiastic players of all classes engaged. Especially outstanding were the loyal senior players who never missed a game, the driving serves of Marie Kuhnen, the never-to-be-discouraged freshmen, and the closely contested and spirited class battles. Competition was so keen that the first interclass play-off ended in a three- way tie between the sopho- mores, juniors, and seniors. Again the rounds were played, the lavender-garbed sophs triumphing over the orange-suited juniors in the most exciting, heart-break- ing, and nerve-wracking game of the series. eLztu. ' L K Batter up! She can ' t hit the broad side of a barn! The pitcher ' s go- ing wild! What gibberish was heard during baseball practice on the lower field! With spring inevitably came baseball. With base- ball inevitably came Miss Duke ' s bat, Grace Coe ' s inspired catching, and Miss Sherwin ' s powdered nose. With it all came the good fun of pitching them in and hitting them out. The National and American Leagues — yes! even the World Series — had nothing on the tense excitement of the interclass games played by our Gehrigs and Hubbells. Finally came the Red and White games to close the season with a series of homers which would have made even Babe Ruth sit up and take notice! BASEBALL 113 HOCKEY Cold winds blew, breath came in gasps, and bodies got weary and tired, but nothing could keep a good hockey player down. Cold winds were fooled by ski pants and mittens, pufts and gasps settled down to civilized breaths, and bodies soon became limber with practice as the hockey season progressed. From September to December hockey sticks clashed, goals were defended, and girls on the _ , lower field had a grand , time chasing that little ' ' - ' — - - white ball. Then came the climax — the Big Sister-Little Sis- ter game. Determined sophs and seniors against the fighting frosh and juniors. Glory and honors went to the gals in the pink and purple suits as they emerg- ed victorious to end the hockey season. Pivot, bounce, pass, shoot — these were more than just words to over a hun- dred girls last basketball season. As usual, this was the most popular sport of the year, and it was a real job to accommodate all the enthusiasts who signed up on basketball days. Snappy practises and exciting games during winter afternoons drew hordes of onlookers to the upper windows of the gym. The sophomore team was an outfit to reckon with throughout the season, for its guards were tall and its forwards dead-eyed. We ' ll always remember the competition for teams. Dorms vs. Com- muters, playday at N.J.C., and best of all — the Red and White games for final championship. BASKETBALL • 114 The other night I was in Newark. Why was I in Newark? Why is anyone in Newark? There is a well-known tale to the effect that there is one Hebrew inhabitant of Scotland. The reason for his presence is simple — he cannot get out of Scotland. For a similar reason I was in Newark. I had left my car at home, in the interests of public safety, and, casting about for a means of transportation, I sauntered over to the bus terminal, and asked a bystander where I might find ■an appropriate conveyance. O traitor to the cause of suffering humanity! He indicated a nearby coach. I was somewhat ap- prehensive, for it was one of those half-pint sized affairs which we are coming to see careening madly along the avenues. Now, I had been aware of the gradual invasion of these ve- hicular lilliputians, but all my knowledge of them had been of a totally — and happily — objective kind. I had seen them on the street, had jostled with them, and, on oc- casion, had cursed them through my teeth. The thing looked harmless enough from the outside. The cheery yellow and buff color welcomed me, and the admonitory watch your step sign left me with a feeling that somewhere was a beneficent wisdom which watched over the comfort and safety of bus travelers. Grasping tightly to the guard rails, I entered the bus in rather good spirits, and selected a seat near what I figured to be the approximate center of gravity of the vehicle. No sooner had I slumped into the seat, than my bertayal became evident. The bus started with a jolt that would have shaken loose the teeth of a saw. My head was snapped abruptly back against the cutting edge of the window frame; my ears began to ring; everything started to go black. This is the end, I thought; I was wrong — it was but the beginning. The instinct for self-preservation was, as yet, still strong in me. Clutching the edges of the seat; bracing my feet against the back of the seat in front of me; gritting my teeth — I weathered this first gust, and soon became fairly well conditioned to the rigors of my environment. Alas, the arch-fiend who piloted this instrument of the modern inquisition had other, more devious means at his disposal. He treated me to the extent of his whole repertoire. His motto seemed to be, Shake well bafore bruising. I found myself now on the seat, now on the floor, now somewhere between the seat and the floor. The thirty-five minute pulverizing to which I was subjected that night uncovered a multitude of spins, and left me a sadder and wiser pilgrim. In short, I didn ' t have a fighting chance. My life expectancy dwindled to the vanishing point; when I finally did alight from this thinly disguised cement-mixer, I was a man broken in body, and drooping in spirit. As TliOMsandls Clieered One of the most useful but none the less painful things which Dame Experience taught me was the art of behaving at a formal affair. I don ' t know how I happened to get myself involved in such a calamity; the unexpected always happens. I found myself, in black and white, standing in a long line of fellow sufferers waiting for something to happen. Soon a glassy-eyed female came up to me and mut- tered some inarticulation into my ear. I absent-mindedly rephed, Two, not too far front. Then I re- alized I had said something wrong; it seems that the young lady wanted to know my name. I imparted the requested bit of information, and then spent the next ten yards shaking the clammy hands of the campus aristocracy. When this ordeal was finally over, the band started beating out the tempo. I grabbed my partner and we slid deftly into the groove. Nor did my formal education end there. During the evening I learned a number of interesting things. For example, I was greatly amused by the ball room ace who seemed to have neglected to remove his overcoat. At least it looked like an overcoat from the rear; but when he turned around it didn ' t seem to amount to much more than a vest, and one which wouldn ' t button, at that. Not wanting to reveal my ignorance by asking someone for an explanation, I concluded that it was an ordinary coat, only the man had been leaning forward when he was measured for it. And there the matter rested. Not only was my sartorial education materially improved, but likewise my ability to shuffle about on the dance floor itself. At first I conformed to all accepted conventions; but as a true artist will not be re- strained by the intangible shackles of custom I soon cut loose. Unfortunately, just when some huge an- thropoid specimen took it into his head to lunge in my direction. I, however, foresaw the imminent danger and, with the grace of a gazelle, swung my partner and myself well out of danger into the midst of a potted palm tree. The crockery heeded the beck of gravity and effected a sharp de- cline to the floor, where it was reduced to its fundamental elements. Much to my chagrin and embarrassment. At this moment the aforementioned Darwin Delight made a second lunge at me, this time with far greater success, for I found myself and the palm ingeniously intertwined with each other on the floor. I was racked with despair; then I realized the infinite possi- bilities of the whole bloody affair. Here was certainly the ele- ment of competition. Why not modify and control it into a pop- ular dance step? Thus was born Kicking the Potted Palm, a dance variation that has since been received with wide acclaim in both parlor and night club, from Maine to Honolulu. Even to- day, when I go to a formal, I still enjoy a lively fling with the tropical vegetation. HilS • Ackerman, Betty May Adams, Doris L. Antonietti, Frances Alice Asher, Evelyn Bacha, Andrew M. Bader, Florence L. Barrett, Eleanor Margaret Bartel, Paul Bartnik, Frances J. Baylor, Mazie V. Becht, Bernadette F. Bedrick, Dorothy Marian Benjamin, Miriam Bennett, George H. Berg, Jack Berkowitz, Morris Bird, Rebecca Sara Bissell, Elizabeth S. Bodenschatz, A. Walter Booth, Muriel E. Borg, Edna Boris, Alberta B. Burd, Marjorie Byrne, Catherine V. Cahill, Loretta B. Carton, Edward Joseph Case, Dorothy M. Casteline, Dorothea Elizabeth Chinoy, Norman Ciampa, Andrew Cody, Joseph J. Cohen, Daniel Cohn, Adele Conklin, Regina Marie Conover, Flelen M. Conran, Agnes M. Cooper, Helen K. Cooper, Irving Coppola, Anthony Gerald Coppola, Matilda L. Crystal, Sheva L. Cullinane, Mary P. Daneski, Irene Marian Davies, Gloria Evans Deane, Kenneth C. Demmers, Ida May W. DeSonne, James A. Di Lorenzo, Evelyn Ann Donatelli, Eleanora L. Donnelly, Arthur J. Drake, John E. Dubowy, Ruth Dunn, Eugenia Adele Edge, Franklyn Heydecke Eisenbud, Jean Emerick, Ruth Eleanor Esler, Robert William Faber, Trina Faltings, Raymond Ernest Ferrucci, Pat Fischer, Elsye Kathryn Fleming, Thomas Hutchinson Fondiler, Eleanor Franke, Tlielma Mae Eraser, James Donald Friedman, Edna S. Fruchtman, Benjamin Gatjen, Frank Gauthier, Clara Jean 139 Parmalee Avenue 29 Brook wood Drive 31 J 27th Street 402 East 37th Street 139 Fourth Street 312 Sixth Street 27 Nairn Place 152 High Street 326 Wanaque Avenue 18 Lincoln Avenue 117 Prospect Avenue 97 Van Wagenen Avenue 381 Brook Avenue 239 Mt. Prospect Avenue 7 J North Third Street 85 Clifton Terrace 36 Morse Avenue 1 1 New Street 745 South Tenth Street 412 46th Street 629 Fulton Street 90 North Clinton Street 3 1 Florence Avenue 273 Ampere Parkway 22 5 Hamilton Avenue 202 Preakness Avenue 3 1 Sherman Avenue 240 Leland Avenue 66 James Street 212 Palisade Avenue Ann Street 720 Main Street Main Street 1273 Robert Street 50 Maitland Avenue R.F.D. No. 1 273 Fifth Street 472 Twelfth Avenue R.F.D. No. 6 41 Carlton Avenue Passaic Valley Road 14 Oakridge Road 59 17th Avenue 523 Old Boonton Road 47 Giles Avenue 154 Second Street 26 Svea Avenue 170 Burlington Avenue 83 Stager Street 116 Ridgewood Avenue 166 North Maple Avenue 3 West Park Drive 5 5 Orchard Street 1 1 New York Boulevard 1 1 Wood Street 79 Lincoln Avenue 29 Bartholdi Avenue 78 Mission Street 16 Ridgewood Avenue 1 1 Seymour Street 23 8 Osborne Terrace 157 Watchung Avenue 6 Brooklawn Road 3 86 Badger Avenue 203 North 17th Street 45 8 East 39th Street 163 Carteret Street Hawthorne Maplewood Union City Paterson Passaic West New York Newark Nutley Pompton Lakes Dover New Milford Jersey City Passaic Newark Pequannock Paterson Weehawken East Orange Butler Newark Union City Elizabeth Lafayette East Orange Irvington Bloomfield Clifton Paterson Newark Plainfield Lodi J ersey City Dover Paterson Manasquan Hillside Hawthorne Millville Newark Paterson Bridgeton Jersey City Montville Verona Paterson Boonton Jersey City Newark Clifton Paterson Nutley Newark East Orange West Orange Elizabeth Sea Girt Rutherford Fairlawn Jersey City Montclair Irvington Montclair Newark Chatham Montclair Newark Bloomfield Paterson Glen Ridge E N I O R D I R E C T O R Y 116 E N I E C T George, Grace M. Glickman, Helen Glover, Joseph Howard Jr. Goodman, Mildred Kay Gordon, William E. Gorski, Dorothea H. Graber, Irene C. Z. Greenfield, Adelaide Grimm, Madelon Rosevelt Grossbach, Arthur I. Grossman, Shirley Guatelli, Olive R. Hall, Norma Gillis Halperin, Martin Hansen, Lucille M. Harris, Nellie R. Hart, Regina M. Henderickx, Ann Marie Hengeveld, Ruth Hill, Edward L. Hilton, Robert Mayer Hinrichs, Dorothy Horning, Marie Bernadette Iger, Sylvia Jaudel, Lillian C. Jay, Helen Rosalie Jewett, Eleanor Beatrice Johnson, Betty A. Johnston, Dorothy Verne Jordan, Shirley E. Kane, Ruth Parliament Kanngieser, Doris Emily Kaplan, Jacob L Kaplan, Lillian Keller, Jean Cecile Keyser, Lawrence Kidd, June Cecil Kinney, Ruth Adelaide Kopf, Joan A. Kreuchauff, Doris Carolyn Kroeze, Herman John Lachman, Jerome E. Lane, Agnes Elizabeth Leach, Marian Edith Leake, Elizabeth Leonard, Muriel E. Lichtenstein, Robert Liebow, Estelle Lilienthal, Howard Charles Littell, Ruth Rose Lobel, Hildegarde Love, Sylvia C. Luck, Arthur Luhrs, Dorothy Lillian Lussenhop, Ruth Marie Mahnken, Edith M. Malanga, George A. Malovany, Arthur H. Mandell, Seymour L Mastik, Charles Matthews, Catherine R. McCaig, Janet S. McCloud, Rita D. McCormick, Lilly M. McEvoy, Doris Gorgas McGinnis, Marie H. McKeeby, Clarence C. McLaughlin, Geraldine Claire McPeak, Franklyn Clifford Jr. 969 Main Street 318 43 rd Street 7 Grand Street 306 Peshine Avenue 8 1 Boyle Avenue 154 Plauder Ville 971 East 22nd Street 1201 St. George Avenue 74 Elm Street 869 South 15 th Street Bloomfield Avenue 3 3 New Street 319 North Fullerton Avenue 8 Williams Avenue 182 Tontine Avenue 5 1 Pennington Avenue 19 Prospect Terrace 39 Grove Street 21 Third Street 144 Prospect Street Foxcroft 99 Lenox Avenue 236 Harrison Street 110 Linden Avenue 23 3 High Street 876 Devon Street 347 West First Avenue 846 Devon Street 113 Hague Street 1 5 Dewey Avenue 1114 Riverside Avenue 43 Harding Terrace 149 Bailey Avenue 1675 Edmund Terrace Cedar Hill Avenue 30 Ash wood Terrace 14 Corning Avenue 442 North Maple Avenue 731 3 5 th Street 146 Oakwood Avenue 72 Plymouth Street 93 East 19th Street 107 Third Street 24 Knickerbocker Avenue 6 Roosevelt Street 92 Carolina Avenue 161 Neptune Avenue 23 Brookdale Avenue 1236 Clinton Avenue 744 New Jersey Avenue 340 Myrtle Avenue 26 Stanley Street 1772 Maryland Avenue 824 Paterson Turnpike 119 Lafayette Avenue 176 First Street Cedar Street 700 Pennington Street 70 Grand Street 22 Court Street 124 Beechwood Avenue 150 Walnut Street Delaware Ordnance Depot 184 Rutledge Avenue 60 Maitland Avenue 76 Church Street 46 Roosevelt Avenue 150 Paine Avenue Paterson Union City Hawthorne Newark Totowa Borough Garfield Paterson Roselle Summit Newark Pine Brook Ramsey Montclair Jersey City Lyndhurst Port Norris Passaic East Rutherford Clifton Maywood Leonia Campgaw East Orange Paterson Irvington Nutley Arlington Roselle Arlington Jersey City Totowa Borough Trenton Newark Hillside Union Wyckoff West Orange Pompton Lakes East Orange North Bergen North Haledon Newark Paterson Newark Paterson Roseland Newark Jersey City Newark Irvington Lyndhurst Irvington Dumont North Bergen North Bergen Hawthorne Newark East Hanover Elizabeth Little Ferry Paterson Bogota Bloomfield Pedricktown East Orange Paterson Franklin Jersey City Irvington 1117 • Mcrkle, Gioia M. Meyers, Isabel L. Michels, Florence Millar, Edith Baxter Miller, Evelyn Marilda Mitchell, Edna MoUoy, Edward D. Moran, Dorothy Morlot, John Nicholas Mulcare, Clare Frances MuUer, Stephen Edward O ' Neill, Corinne M. Papale, Napoleon J. Pavlovich, Katherine Peiffer, Mildred Doris Pennino, Louise W. Planten, Dorothy M. Pordon, Maria M. Post, Eva Jackson Provisor, Abraham S. Rainford, Amyan C. Reed, Margaret Jackson Reiss, Rose Richard, Charlotte S. Robertson, George R. Robertson, Helen L. Rochberg, George Aaron Rowe, Dorothy Evelyn Rucki, Lottie Ruiter, Jacob H. Schatzberg, Florence Schiffer, Catharine Elizabeth Schmerber, Virginia Lee Schnell, Ruth Claire Schroeder, Wilhelmina L. Schuler, Evelyn Ruth Schulman, Marcella Schulter, Lillian Ruth Shain, Gloria G. Sheffman, Evelyn Silver, Arthur W. Silverman, Hannah Grace Skelton, Ferman George Soprano, Irene C. Sperry, Isabel E. Spindel, Ethel J. Stasulis, Julia V. Taylor, Margery E. Thomson, Wallace B. Timinski, Beatrice M. Trigler, Audrey Elaine Urevitz, Barbara M. Wagner, Mildred E. Walck, Claude William Walczyk, Theodore Walter, Helen E. Walter, Pearl B. Wardle, Helen M. Warren, Roma L. Weeber, Edith G. Weil, Shelton J. Weinberg, Alan David Weinstein, Blanche Weiss, Helen Weissman, Gertrude Wiley, Lois June Wilson, Shirley J. Wright, Robert Burroughs Zimmerman, Celia Zwisohn, Rita Lillian 140 Overlook Avenue 304 33rd Street 8 3 Vassar Avenue 3 3 McKinley Avenue Fairview Avenue 8 50 Gibbons Court West Atlantic Avenue 221 Wayne Avenue 892 DeGraw Avenue 165 Wildwood Avenue 5 5 Charles Street 446 New York Avenue 60 Arthur Street 5 28 Union Street 727 Elmer Street 1 5 2 West Broadway 252 Dayton Avenue 1057 East 19th Street 259 Harrison Street Inman Avenue, R. F. D. No. 1 134 Cooper Avenue 75 Lincoln Street 32 5 Halsey Street 84 Buena Vista Avenue 67 Bamford Avenue 41 Bond Street 43 Oxford Place 13 Marcy Street 371 West 3rd Street 2061 Ellery Avenue 25 8 Clinton Avenue 897 East 27th Street 416 Wells Avenue Airmount Avenue 346 Main Street 328 Belmont Avenue 1 Tappan Street 446 East 26th Street 81 Romaine Avenue 624 Ridge Road 258 Dayton Avenue 1 1 1 Ruby Avenue 5 5 East Barbour Street 65 Lotus Avenue 25 9 Allwood Road 13 5 Westfield Avenue 118 Orange Avenue 302 Cleveland Avenue 3 8 Roosevelt Avenue 7(, North 9th Street 495 New York Avenue 71 North 11th Street 9 Hillcrest Road 90 Speer Avenue 148 Oakview Avenue 340 Ellery Avenue 479 Market Street 78 Elm Place 109 Mountain Avenue 231 Goldsmith Avenue 514 No. New Hampshire Ave 9 Prince Street 178 Lyons Avenue 2 52 Brook Avenue 162 Nelson Avenue 1 1 5 Rose Terrace 2 1 1 Glenwood Avenue 70 19th Avenue 619 Arnold Avenue Leonia WoodclifFc-on -Hudson Newark West Orange High Bridge West Milf ord Elizabeth Laurel Springs Paterson Newark Montclair Metuchen Union City Clifton Rahway Vineland Paterson Clifton Paterson Passaic Plainfield Upper Montclair Passaic Plainfield Hawthorne Hawthorne Passaic Glen Rock Bloomfield Clifton Fort Lee Jersey City Paterson Oakhurst Ramsay Little Falls Newark Kearny Paterson Jersey City Lyndhurst Clifton Palisade Park Haledon Oradell Clifton Elizabeth Irvington Hasbrouck Heights Lodi Newark Union City Newark Watchung Clifton Maplewood Newark Paterson Nutley Summit Newark nue Atlantic City Newark Newark Passaic Jersey City Newark East Orange Newark Point Pleasant Beach E N I E C T CLASS OF 1940 118 Gertrude Abend Ruth G. Abos Hrant Akmakjian Evelyn R. Arthur Irene Balto Natahe E. Belcher Marian G. Belet Diana Bendit James Benson Frances C. Berghorn Albert R. Brinkman Leah Broadman Mary D. Brochu Emma L. Buckle} ' Margaret Budde Thomas Budne Muriel E. Burdett Virginia H. Cairns Lydia M. Caliandro Theodore J. Carlson L. Philip Carstens Margaret Casteline Eleanor G. Chambers Frances Chernofsky Jeanne F. Chesley John V. Ciasulli Jane Clothier Beatrice R. Cohen Edith Cohen Shepard Cohen Gertrude M. Cook Katherine L. Crowell Fiarriet Crown Milan Daniel Samuel Davis Elizabeth Dean Elizabeth Deckenbach Margaret E. Demarest Wilhelmine Dettmer Richard T. Dugan Blanche Dultz H. Storer Dunlop Eleanor M. Egly Irene E. Ehrmann William Eiser Mary Jane Ellsworth Thelma O. Every Anna M. Falcone Stanley M. Feintuch Joseph E. Fernandez Paul Ferster Raymond H. Fink Elsa Adler Dorothea Allen Alice R. Ariel Virginia M. Ayers Alfred H. Barauck Bernice E. Bean Bernice Berman Elma J. Bewkes Walter Borcher Irene M. Bonjour Marjorie S. Bosler Lucien P. Bowe Joan C. Boynton Alda Breitbarth Edith Brodsky Audrey J. Brogan Thomas Flagg Lois A. Flynn Boris Forman Elfriede Fornofif Doris E. French Robert Freund Helen E. Frey Louise S. Friedman Gladys R. FrohHch Barbara F. Fuess Greta Gahs Marie Gallagher Leonard Garber Caroline A. Gelbarth Marian M. Gerds Helene M. Gerlach Henry W. German Ruth M. Gifford Elizabeth M. Gilbert Harve} ' Gluck Olive Goodwin Edith A. Greer Dina E. Gulbrandsen Alberta J. Gundaker Edna Haft Elizabeth H. Hancock Claire T. Harman Mary B. Hayes Ann D. Healy Helen K. Heller Ruth Herman James E. Hetherington Marion V. Higgins John H. Hoagland Harriet Holdman John A. Homlish C. George Horn Joseph Huemer Helen Jacobs Mildred Jacobs Edna J. Jacobus V. Claire Johnson N. Edward Johnson, Jr. Helen M. Jones Ralph E. Jones Harvey Jossen George J. Kaplow Elaine R. Katz Marion A. Knoess Paul Koch Gertrude Kornitsky Ann Kruczek Albertina F. Kubic Harry G. Ladanye Elsie B. Lang Florence B. Lange Jeanne B. Lawton Jeanne P. LeBeau John C. Lenaeus Shirley R. Lennett Elias Levinson Tova Lichtman Bernard Lieber Betty M. Lotz Marjorie Maclnnes Elizabeth S. Madden Frank Mahonchak Helen M. Maisner Peter F. Mannion Lucille W. McHenry Leo F. McMullin Muriel G. Millard Robert Montgomery Eileen J. Mueller Dina Nielsen Catherine C. Norton Jean E. Novotny Margaret H. O ' Horo Isabel K. Orr Alice Patterson Eleanor E. Pellet Philip Perkins Arnold Petersen John Petitti Genevieve Pettersen Doris L. Pettigrew Angelo C. Petullo Emil J. Piel Isabel M. Pleune Alice J. Putnam Albert O. Rachel Frances L. Razee Marion Reger Alice Reichl Muriel H. Reider Charles H. Reinke John F. Riddell Rita Robey Aileen M. Roche Genevieve C. Rowe Harold D. Roy Frank R. Royal Gilbert G. Royal Agnes H. Rudin CLASS OF 1941 Marjorie L. Brown Richard A. Brown Malcolm G. Cairns Henry W. Carlson Frances S. Carter Josephine A. Castiglia Jean F. Chamberlin Prenda C. Chiari Laurance T. Clark Robert Clementz Edna C. Cobb Grace L. Coe Dolores Coppola William A. Daly Cecile DeCarlo Florence DeLuca Eve E. Deutsch Jerry Duchin Kathryn T. Dunham Jane A. Edwards . Ruth Einerman JieiH- Winifred A. Elkcs George F. Elliot Ronald Engelhardt Elaine L. Esposito Mildred Farkash Harold Fiedler Dinah Finer Louis Fishman Dolores FitzMaurice Walter J. Fleischer Alice A. Francisco AW Simon V. Sadoff Ruth C. Sandford Charles Savelli Ernestine Schirmer Eleanore A. Schneider Marion R. Scraver Morton Seltzer Dorothy M. Seyter Margaret E. Sherman Veronica F. Skowronski Ben Slatin Edward R. Slingland Edwina B. Smalley Viola S. Smith Helen M. Soldan David Solomon Joseph J. Sort Angelo J. Spadoro Violet A. Stahr Asa L. Starkweather Elaine A. Storr Edith F. Strejevsky Mary D. Swiss Doris Sylvan Mary E. Temple Kitty Tendler Eileen M. Terwilliger Helen L. Toomey Rose M. Tronolone J. Edward Tuohy Lorraine Umansky Dorothy M. Van Duyne Gilbert E. Van Handle Marie A. Vitale Sonia R. Wagner Agnes M. Walker Irene E. Walker William Wall Lawrence Warbasse James B. Watson Irving Weiss Arthur Wellington-Opp Seymour I. Weshkoff Mary Frances Williamson Jane-Elizabeth Willson Ruth M. Wittek Pearl P. Wolfson Arthur I. Wortzel Ruth E. Young Julian Ziegler Irma L. Frank Marie T. Gaston Dorothy S. Geist Harriet N. Gerber Eugene B. Ginsberg Evelyn Goodfellow Frances M. Gordon Frances Rita Gordon Flora Grant Frank Grote Mary E. Guest Mildred Gurkin Edna Terry Harnan Kathryne L. Hart Elbert M. Hoppenstedt Patricia K. Hull ]1](9 • Betty M. Jeflferis Michael J. Joyce Ruth M. Kuntcnwcin France A. Karibjanian Ada M. Kimmelman Byron A. Kirk Edna J. Kramer Margaret J. Kuepferle Lee R. Kugel S. Marie Kuhnen Matilda Labombarda Harold V. Lewry Robert B. Lobbregt Barbara T. Loeffler Rosamond Maddox Grace Maise! Robert T. Marsh Rena M. Mathews Richard J. Mattco Florence L. McCabe James C. McGilvray Helen M. McHugh Howard L. Meier Frank J. Meninger John B. Menzies Melvin L. Michaels Marianne A. Miletti Milton Mirsky Lillian C. Misuriello Jean C. Monsees Leonard Morris June Mount Patricia K. Mullen Carolyn L. Muller Claire E. Muller William J. Mungenast Ruth Nauburis Arline C. Ncsbitt Isabelle N. Novak Helen D. Offinger Elinor Olson Florence B. Otto Nan Parsons Edward P. Passaretti Harold Peimer Eleanora F. Pengell Charlotte N. Pfcffer Joseph G. Phillips James J. Poet Carl C. Potter Gloria Press Helen H. Radtke Dorothy S. Rasmussen Vernon B. Ritchey Beatrice Roscnberc Goldie Rosenfeld Graham Ross Eleanore Salmon Seymour Samct Myrtle A. Schmidt M. Marguerite Schocli Agnes H. Schoenbaum Clarice B. Shack Margaret L. Shank Thelma Shauger Isabel M. Sheridan Sidney Sherman George W. Sickels Merton M. Sirota Florence S. Sorg Marie L. Spiess Robert F. Spillane Henrietta Spingarn Shirley Stamcr Laura E. Stanton Barbara E. Stauffer Helen Steelman George H. Steisel Dorothy M. Stephens Elinore R. Stevens W. Blair Sutphin Thelma Terjcscn Ruth Thomas M. Jean Tomai Dorothy E. Toomey William Tryanowski Dorothy S. Tucker Patricia Twomey David L. Van Dillen William E. Van Tuinen Helen V. Vogels Adele M. Waldman E. Dorothy Walkenberg Robert T. Ward John C. Warner, Jr. Leonard J. Warren Katherine Webster May E. Wecht Elizabeth Wehnckc Richard Askew Whitney Anne L Williams Berenice J. Williams Barbara C. Willis Edwin T. Wissing Edith H. Wolfe Charles R. Young Margaret E. Yurecsko CLASS OF 194: Florence E. Adler Praga C. Amicarelli Evelyn V. Andersen Eugene J. Aubert Elizabeth M. Bardagjy L. Lowell Bennett, Jr. Charles G. Benz Louise C. Bergman Evelyn Bernzweig Mary L. Bierman Annella M. Biggs Barbara C. Billings Doris H. Bird Jessie V. Boerger Richard R. Br.iddock Jane Branson Edith Branzberg Mary L. Bridges Ruth K. Buckelew Edward F. Burckart Barbara B. Burgess Jane E. Burlew Robert F. Cadmus William F. Campbell Doris B. Carey Fern A. Carstens Rose A. Casale Lawrence Chesis Thomas J- Cicchino Arthur W. Clark Ruth L. Clochessy Raymond G. Clyons Diana C. Cohen Gilbert P. Colcstock Sidney Collins Tean Connerton Donald W. Cox William Cozine Anita Crivelli Rita Daniels Anna G. Demovic Mary DT sposito Jerome DeStefano Frederick C. Deusinger Elizabeth Donnenberg Clare L Dugan Olga Duzs Mary T. Dwyer Phillip Egeth Lorraine Eisen Margaret M. Eisenlohr Lois E. Ensminger Vivian L. Erlich Gerald H. Eurman Shirley J. Fahn Gladys R. Fielding Josephine Filippone Evelyn J. Flint Virginia D. Florin Henry Fort Doris F. Freiler John T. Garncvicus Dorothy M. Gialanella John P. Gifford, Jr. Gloria E. Giordano Muriel Glynn John L Goetschius Muriel Goldberg Gloria M. Gonzalez Dorothy G. Grabow Mary Graham Samuel J. Granoff Abraham R. Greenbaum Herbert D. Grossman Hannah Halpren Henry Hausdorff Shirley Hayward Kenneth B. Henig Edith M. Hirschcoff Arthur L. Hoehl Ruth Hoppin George Hughes Ruth Hof ' Rose M. Hutson Martha Johnson Howard Katz John F. Keeler Marjorie L. Klein Eleanor M. Klepper Sevasty Koutsaftis George B. Lamberson Merrill E. Laub Helen C. Lauer Helen A. Lenhoflf Audrey M. Lenox Marion G. Leonard Ruth Levenstein Marcia M. Levitt Morgan T. Loesch James F. Lundquist George W. Lunn Robert E. Lytle John L. Macchi Anita M. Magistro Jack Malovany Bert Manhoff Robert E. Maurer Grace C. McCully Owen J. McGonnell Mary Anne McManimcn Herman L Mendelson George C. Mickelsen Jane Minnick Lillian J. Miskovsky Concetta M. Montagano Elise M. Morgan Albert D. Moscotti Martha A. Napolitana Robert K. Neumann Marie E. O ' Brien Peter J. Odo Mary E. O ' Donohuc Charles B. Packard Vivian T. Pareti Florence E. Perell Bernard Perkins Bertha L Phtzner Elizabeth A. Piontek Muriel L. Platts Claire Pfadenhauer Jane E. Riehm Evelyn Rivollier Jean Rotherham Alice W. Round Stephen Sabo Henry Sale Edith Salov Mary Sandor Frank J. Scardilli Eugene V. Schneider Dorothy O. Schroeder Irene L. Schucklc Raymond H. Schug William L. Seery Donald Seldomridge Eileen M. Sinnott Raymond Slapp Julia Smith John P. Smith Jean M. South Lillian C. Sprung Philip C. Stanger Edward J. Stolt Catherine M. Stradlc Eleanore Teresinski Helen K. Toms Esther R. Trainer Jessie R. Turk Dolly A. Twiggs William G. Van Houten Joseph A. Von Arx Lester Waldman Mary J. Walsh Gertrude V. Wegryn Philip Weil Joyce C. Went Gladis Wilde Marcus S. Wolfman Molly Yutman Alvin L. Zadoff LEANOR KARL was born with a palette in her mouth, and has been painting ever since. She has painted, studied, and mod- elled at a number of the metro- politan schools, but most of her work was done at the Art Stu- dents ' League where she studied under Howard Allen Trafton for two years. Her one-man show at the Delphic Library in 1936 con- sisted of more than forty oils, pas- tels, and water colors. At present Miss Karl is studying with Kuni- yoshi, famous Japanese painter. She submitted two canvasses to the Exhibit of American Art at the New York World ' s Fair. During a brief visit to the col- lege last fall Miss Karl sketched outstanding members of the fac- ulty, without their knowledge, as they lectured to classes, stopped to talk to students, or sat in chapel. These sketches were later made into the final caricatures that ap- pear in this book. Mr. Conrad, who is an art critic on occasion, said of the caricatures, A great percentage of them are positive in- spirations. Four are enduring works of art: (1) Pollock, (2) Krauss, (3) Fehr, (4) Sprague. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS • Charles W. Finley • Lawrence H. Conrad • G. Bruce Kamp and Phototype Engraving Company, Inc. • Harold Van Wart, Edward Rae, Fred Rudolph, and Progress Pub- lishing Company • Marcus Woro and Sarony Studios, Inc. • Eleanor M. Olsen • Eleanor B. Karl
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