Mount Holyoke College - Llamarada Yearbook (South Hadley, MA)
- Class of 1930
Page 1 of 312
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 312 of the 1930 volume:
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1 1 1 i i 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 A i ki I ki I ki I Ai_ i _ ki i i r Tiffany Co. Jewelry Silverware Stationery Superior in Quality Moderate in Price Mail Inquiries Receive Prompt Attention Fifth Avenue 37t-' Street-New York I f'TTl LLaQ?aRflDfll PUBLISHED By TDG OTIOR GLASS ffiOCPF DOkyOfifl (IO1MS0 GOGTR RRDliQCJ - fflflSSff ORClSiST TS + 1930 + . Administration Page 19 Faculty . Page 29 Community Page 51 Honors . Page 65 Seniors Page 75 Juniors . Page 163 Sophomores Page 177 Freshmen Page 189 Activities Page 201 Sports Page 229 Houses Page 243 Features . Page 263 Advertisements Page 287 TO OUR, GOOD FRI6DD lsbdgiilg G. GOUGD . ore wo These hours are {in to the windy rain, Wild and fresh and swiftly going— These glad days we shall not {now again; The husky shouts and sudden laughter blowing From lighted windows into blue night air, The sense of stone-carved walls and lifting towers, The rushing dreams in which we all hold share— These sights and sounds now intimately ours Lik,e wind rush by to sing in other hearts. The hand put out to stay their flight must fail To capture more than wispy counterparts— The strongest web to bind the wind is frail. Make magic, Llamarada, store away From this bright music some chance merry strain To stir old dreams upon a sadder day When mists have gathered on our Towers in Spain. —P. M. . flDfflIDISTRflTIOD President Woolley HcaOQffRflDfl ▼ T T Y ▼ Y YYYYYYYYYYYY The Board of Trustees Joseph A. Skinner, Ph.B., President Rev. Henry A. Stimson, D.D. Sarah P. Eastman, Litt.D. Mary Emma Woolley, A.M., LittD., L Alfred R. Kimball Charles Bulkley Hubbell, A.M. Henry B. Day « Rev. Rockwell Harmon Potter, D.D. Edward B. Reed, Ph.D. . Frank B. Towne, Auditor Mrs. Richard M. Hoe . Rev. William Horace Day, D.D. Edward N. White . Boyd Edwards, D.D. F. Charles Schwf.dtman Richard S. Childs, A.B. . George Dwight Pratt . James M. Speers Florence Purington, B.S., Litt.D. William J. Davidson Elbert A. Harvey, A.B., Treasure Henry Plimpton Kendall, A.B. Henry K. Hyde Mrs. Susan Doane Arnold, A.B. Mrs. Clara Fitch Clement . Mrs. Elizabeth Howell Wilkins, L.B Mrs. Mary Hume Maguire, Ph.D Miss Mary Rowland, A.M. . Holyoke, Mass. . New York, N.Y. . . . . Wellesley, Mass. H.D., LL.D. (ex officio) South Hadley, Mass. New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. . Boston, Mass. Hartford, Conn. New York, N. Y. Holyoke, Mass. New York, N. Y. Bridgeport, Conn. Holyoke, Mass. Vlercersburg, Penn. New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Springfield, Mass. New York, N. Y. South Hadley, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Boston, Mass. . Ware, Mass. Waban, Mass. San Diego, Calif. Warner, N. H. Cambridge, Mass. Cleveland, Ohio T wcnty-two r IrhaOPflRflDfl ▼▼TTTTTTTTT’ Administrative Officers Mary Emma Woolley, M.A., Litt.D., L.H.D., LL.D., President on Mary E. Woolley Foundation. B.A., Litt.D., Brown University; L.H.D., Amherst College; LL.D., Smith College; M.A., LL.D., Yale University. College Entrance Examination Board; Senator, United Chapters, Phi Beta Kappa; National Board of Young Women’s Christian Association; League of Nations Association (Director, Vice-Chairman of the Massachusetts Branch); American Association of University Women (President); American Friends of Greece (Honorary Committee); American School of Oriental Research in Jerusalem; Christian Education in Mission Field; Near East Relief (American Committee); Rhode Island Branch, Woman’s Board of Missions (Vice-President); Advisory Committee, Student Friend- ship Fund; American Association for Promoting Scientific Research Among Women; Corporate Member of American Board of Commission- ers for Foreign Missions; American Society for Judicial Settlement of International Disputes; Church Peace League of America (Charter Mem- ber); Hall of Fame (Board of Electors); League for Permanent Peace; National Council of Congregational Churches in the United States; New England Woman's Press Association; Rhode Island Society for Collegiate Education of Women; Salem Society for Higher Education for Women (Honorary Member); Board of Directors, World Alliance for Promoting International Friendship Throughout the Churches; Board of Governors, Woman's Christian College in Madras; Trustee: International College, Springfield, Lake Erie College, Woodrow Wilson Foundation; College Club, Boston; Cosmopolitan Club, New York City; New England Whea- ton Seminary Club; Pawtucket Chapter, D. A. R.; Pawtucket Woman’s Club; Sorosis; Springfield College Club; Women’s University Club, New York City; Tail-Waggers’ Club; Author: Historical Monographs:—Early History of the Colonial Post-Office; Development of the Love of Romantic Scenery in America; also numerous educational articles. South Hadley, Massachusetts Caroline Boardman Greene, M.A., Registrar. M.A., Mount Holyoke College; Member of the New England Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools; Member American Association of Collegiate Registrars; Member American Association of University Women; Phi Beta Kappa Society. South Hadley,Massachusetts Florence Purington, B.S., Litt.D., Dean Emeritus B.S., Litt.D., Mount Holyoke College; University of Michigan; Harvard University Summer School; National Educational Association; New England Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools; Vice-President Turnty-threr r ▼ T TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT T of the National Association of Deans; National Association of Appoint- ment Secretaries; Executive Board of the Co-operative Bureau for Women Teachers; American Association of Social Workers; American Associa- tion of University Women; The Foreign Policy Association; College Club, Boston; League of Nations Non-Partisan Association; Executive Board of Southern Woman’s Educational Alliance; Proxy Member, Board of Governors of the Woman's Christian College in Madras; Board of Trus- tees, Mount Holyoke College; Phi Beta Kappa Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Harrif.it M. Allyn, A.B., M.Sc., Ph.D., Academic Dean A. B., Mount Holyoke College, M.Sc., Ph.D., University of Chicago; Gen- eral Secretary Y. W. C. A., Mount Holyoke; Instructor of Zoology at Lake Erie; Instructor at Vassar College; Instructor at Hackett Medical College, Canton, China; Instructor at Mount Holyoke College; Dean of Hackett Medical College; Professor of Zoology, Monticello Seminary; Instructor at Vassar College; Assistant Professor, Vassar; Associate Professor, Vassar; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Psi; Zoological Research at Wood’s Hole, Mass.; Anthropological Studies at National Museum in Washington, D. C. Member, American Association for Advancement of Science; American Anthropological Association; Fellow of American Ethnological Society; Fellow of American Geographical Society; American Association of Uni- versity women. Fuller Street, New London, Connecticut Hf.len MacMurtrie Voorhf.es, M.A., Acting Dean of Residence, and Director of the Appointment Bureau and Vocational Adviser. B. A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., University of Wisconsin; Secretary to the National Secretary of the Phi Beta Kappa Society; Secretary and Treasurer of the Connecticut Valley Branch of the American Association of University Women; Eastern College Personnel Officers; Personnel Re- search Federation. Basking Ridge, New Jersey Mary Wentworth McConaughy, Ed.D., Professor and Adviser in Mental Hygiene B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., University of California; University of Southern California; Los Angeles State Normal School Extension; Stanford University; Ed.M., Ed.D., Harvard University Graduate School of Education; Instructor in High Schools and at Mills College; Interne in Psychology, Boston Psychopathic Hospital; Psychologist Mental Hy- giene Habit Clinics, Boston; Psychologist for Dr. Douglas Thom; Psychol- ogist and Research Associate, Harvard University Graduate School of Education; Member, National Education Association, National Society for Mental Hygiene. Alden Park Manor, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ella Sill Dickinson, B.A., Assistant Registrar B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Registrar, National Cathedral School, T wenty-jour 1 IrltflOQflRflDfl rTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT T T ▼T’ Washington, District of Columbia; Phi Beta Kappa Society; American Association of University Women; New England Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools. South Hadley, Massachusetts Harriet Nf.whall, M.A., Executive Secretary to the Board of Admission, and Assistant to the President B.A., Mount Holyoke College; B.S., Simmons College; M.A., Columbia University; American Association of University Women; New England Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools. 795 Sumner Avenue, Springfield, Massachusetts Egbert E. Stackpole, Comptroller 75 College Street, South Hadley, Massachusetts Olive Copeland, B.A., Secretary to the President B.A., Smith College 205 Elm Street, Northampton, Massachusetts Anna M. Hanson, B.S., Assistant Secretary to the President B.S., Simmons College 8j2 Mammoth Road, Dracut, Massachusetts Harriet A. Foster, B.S., Secretary to the Academic Dean B.S., Simmons College; Secretary to the Superintendent of Schools, Wake- field, Massachusetts. 43 Kenwood Park, Springfield, Massachusetts Doris Emily’ Hutchinson, B.S., Secretary to the Dean of Residence B.S., Simmons College; Secretary, Bureau of Vocational Guidance, Grad- uate School of Education, Harvard University. 57 Winter Street, Gardner, Massachusetts Elisabeth Bateman, B.A., Secretary in the Office of the Registrar B.A., Mount Holyoke College. Box 268, Webster, Massachusetts Harriet Johonnott Eustis, B.A., Secretary in the Office of the Registrar B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Secretary to the Dean of Sweet Briar College. 85 Church Street, Winchester, Massachusetts Florence Emma Edge, Assistant in the Office of the Registrar 11 Silver Street, South Hadley, Massachusetts Elizabeth Cyprian Sullivan, Secretary in the Office of the Board of Ad- mission 555 Sargcant Street, Holyofe, Massachusetts Mary Louise Schafe, A.B., Assistant Secretary to the Board of Admission A. B., Radcliffe College. Roslyer, Long Island, New York Jean Louise Warren, B.S., Secretary to the Director of the Appointment Bureau B. S., Simmons College. Belchertouni, Massachusetts Vera Belle Fairbanks, Secretary to the Comptroller 306 Suffolk Street, Agawam, Massachusetts Margaret Elizabeth Schloerb, Chief Cl erf, Comptroller’s Office 2i Glen Street, Holyoke, Massachusetts Myrtle Harriet Sabina Hardaker, Clerk, Comptroller’s Office 34 King Street, Holyoke, Massachusetts Twenty-five r T T T T T TT'V T'TT T TTTTTTTTTTTT T T'TT T Officers of the Alumnae Association Mrs. Andrew C. Vauclain, President, 2416 N. 54th St., Wynnefield, West Philadelphia, Penn. Miss Mary A. Clark, First Vice-President, Room 1506, 578 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. Miss Florence Read, Second Vice-President, Spelman College, Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. Robert Sinclair, Third Vice-President, 340 South 27th St., Cedar Rapids, Iowa Miss Eunice Burbank, Treasurer, 664 Longmeadow St., Springfield, Mass. • Mrs. Cyrus F. Springall, Recording Secretary, 46 Park St., Malden, Mass. Miss Mary J. Higley, Alumnae Secretary, Mount Holyoke College PRESIDENTS OF ALUMNAE CLUBS California Connecticut Mrs. Frank M. Harris—Northern . Mrs. Walter P. Bliss—Southern . Mi ss Mary A. C. Avery—Eastern .... Miss Dorothy E. Hood—Hartford .... Mrs. John Alden—New Haven .... Mrs. Harry L. Perham—Waterbury District of Columbia Mrs. Frederick E. Farrington—Washington . Illinois Mrs. Hazon Capron—Champaign-Urbana Miss Helen Monchow—Chicago .... Mrs. John Weddell—Indianapolis . Miss Clara Rosebrook—Western Mrs. William H. Craig—Baltimore I N’DIANA Maine Maryland . . 217 Hillcrest Rd., Berkeley . 655 So. Hudson Ave., Pasadena . 46 Onico St., Norwich 207 Edge wood St., Hartford . 400 Central Ave., Westville 190 Hillside Ave., Waterbury Chevy Chase School, Washington 812 West Church St., Champaign . 5728 Blackstone Ave., Chicago 3931 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis • • 119 Payson St., Portland Massachusetts Miss Doris Sylvester—Berkshire County- Miss Jane Mesick—Boston..................... Mrs. Karl F. Miller—Franklin County 6412 Pinehurst Rd., Baltimore 99 Commonwealth Ave., Pittsfield • • . 11 Tetlow St., Boston . 4 High St., Turner’s Falls Twentysix fT 1 Mrs. Davis Wright—Hampshire County Mrs. Patrick M. Lynch—Holyoke . Mrs. Edgar Beatty—Springfield Mrs. Edward H. Clark—Worcester . . 67 West St., Northampton . . 574 Appleton St., Holyoke 120 South Park Ave., Longmeadow . . 22 Rhodes St., Worcester Michigan Mrs. Cyril J. Edwards....................140 Hampton Rd., Grosse Pointe Shores Minnesota Mrs. George P. Conger . .................. 977 14th Ave., Minneapolis Missouri Mrs. Ralph C. Trevillion—St. Louis . . . 7195 Washington Ave., St. Louis Miss Mary Davis New Hampshire Franklin New Jersey Mrs. Lory Prentiss—Trenton .... New York Mrs. Irving R. Templeton—Buffalo Miss Leah Huckans—Central .... Miss A. Lois Lindsay—Eastern Miss Mary B. Knox—Genesee Valley Miss Rowena K. Keyes—New York North Carolina Mrs. Frank R. Garfield...................... Ohio Miss Dorothy Flowers—Central .... Miss Alice Crathern—Cleveland .... Pennsylvania Mrs. Howard Fish—Northwestern .... Miss Mildred D. Williams—Philadelphia Miss Marguerite Kupferberg—Pittsburgh . Rhode Island Miss Marguerite Mathews..................... Mrs. John Davis Vermont . . . . Lawrenceville . . 465 West Ferry St., Buffalo . 805 Comstock Ave., Syracuse . 7 Arnold Ave., Amsterdam . 714 Granite Bldg., Rochester 92 Gates Ave., Brooklyn . 1 Basnight Lane, Chapel I lill . 56 Auburn Ave., Columbus . 2065 Cornell Rd. . Arlington Rd., Glenwood, Erie . 1222 South 58th St., Philadelphia . 405 Braddock Ave., Pittsburgh . 114 Brown St., Providence . . . . Northfield Mrs. Richard Eppes . Virginia Washington Mrs. Francis Hulgrave—Puget Sound . Hawaii Mrs. Arthur C. Alexander.................. Foreign Clubs Miss Laura D. Ward—China................. Mrs. Jeremiah Dass—India................. Mrs. Charles B. Tenney—Japan .... . 1016 Pecan Ave., City Point . 827 32nd Ave., Seattle . . 2561 Jones St., Honolulu . Diongloh, via Foochow, Fukien . Gorakpur, U. O., U. P. . Kanto Gakuin, Yokohama T wenly-tevcn TrhaCQflRflDfl r t t t Y t ▼ r-r ▼ ▼ttttttttt' ■W —ThaCYMRflDfl = TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT T Faculty and Staff DEPARTMENT OF ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY Louise Fitz-Randolph, M.A., Emeritus Professor of Archaeology and History of Art M.A., Mount llolyokc College; University of Berlin; University of Chicago; Ameri- can Schools of Classical Studies at Athens and at Rome; Head of the Department of History and Art, Lake Erie College; Lecturer in 1 listory of Art in Western Reserve School of Design; Member of the Managing Committee of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens; Member of the Archaeological Institute of America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Caroline iMorris Galt, B.A., Professor of Archaeology and Greek, B.A., Bryn Mawr College; University of Chicago; Columbia University; American School of Classical Studies at Rome; Member of the Managing Committee of the School at Athens; Member of the Advisory Council of the Classical School of the American Academy in Rome; Annual Professor of American Classical School at Athens; Associate Member of the American Numismatic Society; American Philo- logical Association; Archaeological Institute oi America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Gertrude Stewart Hyde, B.A., Professor of History of Art B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Wellesley College; University of Chicago; Art Institute, School of American Sculpture, Chicago; College Art Association of America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Florence Winslow Foss, M.A., Professor of History of Art B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Wellesley College; University of Chicago; Art Institute, School of American Sculpture, Chicago; College Art Association ol America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Dorothy Boyd Graves, Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Smith College; Graduate Work at New York University; Member of College Art Association; Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Sigma Rho. Bellair Drive, Dobbs Ferry, New York Sarah F. Eldredoe, Instructor B.A., Lake Erie; M.A., Radcliffe; Member College Art Association. 766 N. Taylor Road, East Cleveland, Ohio DEPARTMENT OF ASTRONOMY Anne Sewell Young, Pli.D., Professor and Director of John Payson Williston Observatory B.L., M.S., Carlcton College; Ph.D., Columbia University; Goodscll Observatory, Northficld, Minnesota; University of Chicago; Professor of Mathematics, Whitman College, Walla Walla, Washington; Research Assistant, Ycrkes Observatory; Nan- tucket Maria Mitchell Association; American Association of Variable Star Observers; American Astronomical Society; Fellow of the A. A. A. S.; Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society. Winona Lake, Indiana T wenty-mne r TrhaOQffRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T T T 'T TTTTTTTTT T Alicf. Hall Farnsworth, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.S., Ph.D., University of Chicago; Yerkes Observa- tory; Elizabeth Bardwell Memorial Fellow; Fellow in Astronomy, University of Chicago; American Association of Variable Star Observers; American Astronomical Society; Fellow of the A. A. A. S.; Instructor, University of Chicago. 6 9 Highland Street, Taunton, Massachusetts Hf.lkn M. Porter. M.A., Instructor B.A., M.A., Carleton College. Great Falls, Minnesota DEPARTMENT OF BIBLICAL LITERATURE Laura Hulda Wild, B.D., Professor B.A., Smith College, B.D., Hartford Theological Seminary; Professor of Biblical History and Literature, Doane College and Lake Erie College; National Secretary of the Young Women's Christian Association; Pastor of Congregational Church, Lincoln, Nebraska; Visiting Professor at Ginling College, China; Fund for American Schools of Oriental Research; American Oriental Society; Society of Biblical Litera- ture and Exegesis; Religious Education Association; Federal Council Commission on Religious Education; Board of Directors of Clarke School for the Deaf, Northamp- ton, Massachusetts; Administrative Committee of the American Missionary Associa- tion. South Hadley, Massachusetts Mary Inda Hussey, Ph.D., Professor Ph.B., Earlham College; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; Graduate Scholar, Bryn Mawr College; Fellow in Semitic Languages, University of Pennsylvania; University of Leipzig; Instructor in Biblical History, Wellesley College; Fellow of the Baltimore Association for the Promotion of University Education of Women; Holder of the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of the Association of Collegiate Alum- nae; Assistant in the Harvard Semitic Museum; Field Secretary of the Fund for Oriental and Archaeological Biblical Research; American Oriental Society; Vorder- asiatischc Gcsellschaft; Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis; National Associa- tion of Biblical Instructors; Religious Education Association; Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom; Fellowship of Reconciliation; League of Nations Non-Partisan Association. South Hadley, Massachusetts Dorothy Butlf.r Robinson, B.D., Assistant Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; B.D., Hartford Theological Seminary; Ordained as Congregational Minister, 1925; Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis; Religious Education Association; National Association of Biblical Instruction. 233 Elm Street, Holyoke, Massachusetts Dorothy Helen Wolcott, B.D., Instructor Ph.B., Denison University; B.D., Hartford Theological Seminary; Instructor in Bible, Baptist Training School; Student Executive of the Young Women’s Christian Association, University of Missouri; Instructor in Bible and Student Executive of the Young Women’s Christian Association, Michigan State Normal College; National Association of Biblical Instructors; Fellowship of Reconciliation. Saint Paris, Ohio DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY Alma Gracey Stokey, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Oberlin College; Ph.D., University of Chicago; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Botanical Society of America; Sullivant Moss Society; Sigma Xi Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Thirty IthfKPflRflDfl Fredda Doris Reed, Ph.D., Assistant Professor B.A., Earlham College; M.S., Ph.D., University of Chicago; Botanical Society of America; Sigma Xi Society. Parser, Indiana Asa Stephen Kinney, M.S., Assistant Professor in Floriculture B.S., Boston University; M.S., Massachusetts Agricultural College; National Forestry Association. South Hadley, Massachusetts Ethel Tabf.r Eltince, Ph.D., Instructor B.A., M.A., Syracuse University; Ph.D., Shaw School of Botany, Washington Uni- versity; Botanical Society oi America; American Society of Plant Physiologists; Sigma Xi Society. 138 McKinley Avenue, Syracuse, New Yor { Ruth Beryl Baker, M.A., Instructor B.A., University of Missouri; M.A., University of Wisconsin; Sigma Xi Society. 509 South 3th Street, Columbia, Missouri Ellys Theodora Butler, B.A., Assistant and Graduate Fellow B.A., Mount Holyoke College. 186 Crescent Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY Emma Perry Carr, Ph.D., Professor B.S., University of Chicago; Ohio State University; Mount Holyoke College; Ph.D., University ol Chicago; Holder of the Mary E. Woolley Fellowship, University of Chicago; Holder of Lowenthal Fellowship, University of Chicago; Queen’s Uni- versity, Belfast, Ireland; University of Zurich; Holder of Alice Freeman Palmer Fel- lowship of the American Association of University Women; Sigma Xi Society; American Chemical Society. Coshocton, Ohio Dorothy Anna Hahn, Ph.D., Professor B.A.. Bryn Mawr College; Ph.D., Yale University; University of Leipzig; Fellow in Chemistry, Bryn Mawr College; Holder of the Anna C. Prescott Fellowship of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, Yale University; Holder of the Currier Fellowship, Yale University; Head of the Department of Chemistry at the Pennsylvania College for Women; German Chemical Society; Sigma Xi Society; American Chemical Society South Hadley, Massachusetts Louisa Stone Stevenson, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Vassar College; Ph.D., Cornell University; Holder of the Lydia Pratt Babbott Fellowship, Cornell University; Instructor in Chemistry, Vassar College; Instructor in Chemistry, Wellesley College; Head of the Department of Chemistry, Sweet Briar College; Sigma Xi Society; Phi Beta Kappa Society. 45 Princeton Street, Lowell, Massachusetts Mary Lura Sherrill, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., M.A., Randolph-Macon Women’s College; Ph.D., University of Chicago; In- structor in Chemistry, Adjunct Professor Chemistry, Acting Head of Department of Chemistry, Randolph-Macon College; Associate Professor of Chemistry, N. C. Col- lege for Women; Associate Chemist, Chemical Warfare Service; Fellow of C. R. B. Educational Foundation, University of Brussels; Recipient of Research Grant from American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Sigma Xi Society; North Carolina Academy of Science; American Chemical Society; Phi Beta Kappa Society. Sedgefield, Greensboro, North Carolina Thirty-one IrlcaOQflRflDfl Edith Rebecca Barstow, B.A., Assistant Director of the Chemistry Laboratories B.A., Mount Holyoke College. South Hadley, Massachusetts Janet Evans, Ph.D., Instructor B.A., M.A., Mount Holyoke College; Ph.D., Yale University; Sigma Xi Society; Phi Beta Kappa Society. Erie, Pennsylvania Ruth Nichols, M.A., Instructor B.A., M.A., Oberlin College. Medina, Ohio Elsie D. Grueber, B.A, Assistant B.A., Milwaukee-Downer College. joo Ninth Street, Malwaukee, Wisconsin Ruth Comroe, B.A., Graduate Assistant B.A., Goucher College; Phi Beta Kappa Society. Yo) , Pennsylvania Katherine E. Mayer, B.A., Graduate Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Phi Beta Kappa Society. 93 Briggs Avenue, Yonkers, New Yorf{ Martha E. Smith, B.A., Graduate Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College. The Citadel, Charleston, South Carolina Anne L. White, B.A., Graduate Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Phi Beta Kappa Society. J5 East Mount Airy Avenue, Mount Airy, Pennsylvania DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY Amy Hewes, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Goucher College; Ph.D., University of Chicago; University of Berlin; Fellow, University of Chicago; Fellow of the Baltimore Association for the Promotion of University Education of Women; Executive Secretary, Massachusetts Minimum Wage Commission; Executive Secretary, Committee on Women in Industry, Council of National Defense, Supervisor Industrial Service Section, Ordinance; Instructor in Economics at Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women in Industry; American Eco- nomic Association; American Sociological Society; American Association for Labor Legislation; American Statistical Association; Fellow of the Royal Economic Society; Phi Beta Kappa. South Hadley, Massachusetts Alzada Comstock, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Columbia University; Ph.D., Columbia Uni- versity; Research Fellow, Chicago School of Civics and Philanthropy; Holder of the Bard well Memorial Fellowship, Columbia University; Fellow of the John Sinion Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, Harvard University; London School of Eco- nomics, University of London; Associate in Economics, Barnard College; Economic Association; Economical History Society; American Political Science Association; Academy of Political Science; American Statistical Association; Fellow of the Royal Economic Society; Phi Beta Kappa. South Hadley, Massachusetts Ethel Barbara Dietrich, Ph.D., Associate Professor B A., assar College; M.A., Lrniversify of Wisconsin; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin; University of Chicago; Fellow, University of Wisconsin; Research Assistant, Bureau of Industrial Relations, United Typothetae of America; Special Investigator, Woman’s T hirty-two r IihflQQfIRflDfl - = ▼ T T T T T TTTTTTTT TTT T Branch Industrial Service Section, Ordinance Department; American Management Association; American Economic Association; American Sociological Society; Ameri- can Association for Labor Legislation; Fellow of the Royal Economic Society; Phi Beta Kappa. South Hadley, Massachusetts George R. Taylor, Ph.D., Lecturer Ph.B., University of Chicago; Ph.D., University of Chicago; Associate Professor of Economics at Amherst College; American Economics Association. 28 Amity Street, Amherst, Massachusetts N. Arnold Tolles, M.A., Assistant Professor Ph.B., University of Chicago; M.A., University of Chicago; Harvard University; London School of Economics and Political Science; American Economic Association; American Association for Labor Legislation; Phi Beta Kappa. South Hadley, Massachusetts Vivian Ratcliffe, M.A., Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., University of Chicago; Research Assistant, Uni- versity of Chicago; Special Investigator, U. S. Children’s Bureau. Winnctka, Illinois Marian D. Tolles, B.A., Instructor B.A., Smith College; Western Reserve University; London School of Economics and Political Science. South Hadley, Massachusetts Helen A. Bonser, B.A., Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College, Harvard University. South Hadley, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Kenneth Arnold Agee, Ed.M. B.A., College of William and Mary; Ed.M., Harvard University; Principal High School, Williamsburg, Virginia; Supervising Principal Elementary Schools, Ports- mouth, Virginia; Assistant in Education, Harvard University. South Hadley, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH Clara Frances Stevens, Ph.M., Emeritus Professor Mount Holyoke College; Ph.M., University of Michigan. South Hadley, Massachusetts Ada Laura Fonda Snell, Ph.D., Professor B.A., M.A., Mount Holyoke College; Ph.D., University of Michigan; University of Chicago; Holder of the Elizabeth Bardwell Fellowship, Yale University; Fellow in Rhetoric, University of Michigan; Modern Language Association. South Hadley, Massachusetts Margaret Ball, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University; Holder of the 1886 Fellowship, Columbia University; Assistant in English, Barnard College; Modern Language Association. South Hadley, Massachusetts T hirty-three r T IrTrflODflRflDfl ▼ T T T'T ▼ T’T T’T T ' Helen Griffith, Ph.I)., Associate Professor B.A., Bryn Mawr College; M.A., Columbia University; University of Chicago; Ph.D., University of Michigan; Instructor in Rhetoric, University of Minnesota; Assistant in English, Teachers College, Columbia University; Assistant in English, University of Chicago; Fellow of Rhetoric, University of Michigan. South Hadley, Massachusetts Leonora Branch, M.A., Associate Professor B.A., Smith College; M.A., Wellesley College; Reader and Instructor, Mount Holyoke College; Instructor, Vassar College; Lecturer in English, Summer Session, Middle- hury College; Holder of the Trustee Fellowship, Smith College; Modern Language Association. South Hadley, Massachusetts Harriet Fox Whicher, M.A., Lecturer B.A., Barnard College; M.A., Columbia University; Lecturer in English, Barnard College; Journalistic Work for the American Association for International Concilia- tion; Lecturer in English, Smith College; Lecturer in English Literature, Mount Hol- oke College; Lecturer in English, Middlebury College Summer School Session; Modern Language Association. Amherst, Massachusetts C. Maud H. Lynch, B.Litt., Assistant Professor B.A., London University; B.Litt., in Journalism, Columbia University; Instructor and Director of Publicity, Mount Holyoke College; Lecturer, Columbia School of Jour- nalism. South Hadley, Massachusetts Sydney Robertson McLean, M.A., Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Yale University; Instructor in English, Lake Erie College; Yale University; Modern Language Association. 4316 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Roberta Teale Swartz Chalmers, B.Litt.. Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Radcliffc College; B.Litt., Oxford University; Instructor in English, The Bancroft School for Girls. South Hadley, Massachusetts Gordon Keith Chalmers, B.A., Instructor B.A., Brown University; B.A., Oxford University Honor School in English; Rhodes Scholarship, Oxford University. South Hadley, Massachusetts Harold Sproul, M.A., Instructor B.A., M.A., Columbia University; Instructor in English, University of Minnesota; Instructor in English, Amherst College. Amherst, Massachusetts William S. Clark, Ph.D., Instructor B.A., Amherst College; M.A., Ph.D., Harvard University; Instructor in English, Amherst College. Amherst, Massachusetts Margaret Mary Gentz, B.A., Assistant B.A., University of Michigan. Plighland Hills, Grand Rapids, Michigan Sylvia S. Stone, B.A., Assistant in- Journalism B.A., University of Michigan. T Irirty-fottr J295 Rochester, Detroit, Michigan r ¥ '▼ T T T T'¥ ▼'▼ TTTTTTTTTTTT DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LITERATURE Jeannette Marks, M.A., Professor B.A., M.A., Wellesley College; Postgraduate Work in English Literature at the British Museum and the Bodleian Library, Oxford; Professor, English Literature, Mount Holyoke College; Boston Authors’ Club; New England Poetry Club; Poetry Society of America; Poets’ Association; Authors’ League of America; Pi Gamma Mu; Modern Humanities Research Association; Modern Language Association of Amer- ica; Society for the Study of Inebriety, England; Tail-Waggers’ Club; American Asso- ciation of University Women; American Association of University Professors. Fleur de Lys,” Westport-on-La!(c Champlain, New Yorf( Dorothy Foster, M.A., Associate Professor B.A., Bryn Mawr College; M.A., Raddiffe College; Graduate Scholar in English, Radcliffc College; Holder of the Women’s Education Association Fellowship; Re- search Student at the British Museum, London, and at the Bodleian Library, Oxford; Salem Society for the Higher Education of Women; Modern Language Association of America; American Association of University Women; American Association of University Professors. South Hadley, Massachusetts Charlotte D’Evelyn, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.L., Mills College; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; Fellow in English, Bryn Mawr Col- lege; Phi Beta Kappa; Holder of the Mary E. Garrett European Fellowship; Modern Language Association of America; Mediaeval Academy of America; Modern Human- ities Research Association; American Association of University Professors. j 12 Phelan Building, San Francisco, California Leslie Gale Burgevin, M.A., Associate Professor B.A., Harvard University; Sheldon Traveling Fellow; M.A., University of California; Fellow in English, University of California; Phi Beta Kappa; Modern Language Association of America; American Association of University Professors. South Hadley, Massachusetts Erika von Erhardt, Ph.D., Associate Professor Graduated from Realgymnasium, “Schillerschulc,” Frankfurt-on-the-Main; Post- graduate Work in the Universities of Frankturt, Heidelberg, and Cambridge, Eng- land; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg; Venia I egendi for English Philology anil Literature, University of Karlsruhe; European Fellowship, Bryn Mawr College; Modern Language Association of America; American Association of University Women. South Hadley, Massachusetts Kathleen Lynch, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Columbia University; Ph.D., University of Michigan; Phi Beta Kappa; Holder of the Bardwell Memorial Fellowship; Modern Language Association of America. Littleton, New Hampshire Julia Evelyn McDonnell, M.A., Instructor B.A. Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Wellesley College; Phi Beta Kappa; Holder of the Bardwell Memorial Fellowship. South Hadley Falls, Massachusetts Richard Dale McMullen, M.A., Instructor B.A., M.A., Harvard University. South Hadley, Massachusetts T urty-five 1 - irifacoffRflDfl r T T T T T Ff? ▼ T T T T T T'T T T? 1 Gknf.vif.ve Taggard, R.A., Instructor B.A., University of California. South Hadley, Massachusetts Constance Blake Meadnis, B.A., Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College. 2 7 Pequot Avenue, New London, Connecticut DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY Mignon Talbot, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Ohio State University; Ph.D., Yale University; Cornell University; Harvard University; American Association for the Advacement of Science; Geological Society of America; Paleontological Society; Phi Beta Kappa Society; Sigma Xi Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Dorothy Vernon Noble, M.A., Assistant Professor B.A., University of Illinois; M.A., Clark University; University of Wisconsin; Uni- versity of Wyoming. LaCrosse, Wisconsin Marie Louise Devou, M.A., Instructor B.A. and M.A., Northwestern University; Columbia University; Sigma Xi Society. 52 Sheridan Square, Evanston, Illinois Josephine Phelps Wells, B.A., Curator B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Yale University; Columbia University; Phi Beta Kappa Society. Bonnie Brae, Holliston, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF GERMAN Alice Porter Stevens, M.A., Associate Professor Emeritus B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Radcliffe College; University of Zurich; Uni- versity of Berlin; Holder of the 1886 Fellowship; Modern Language Association of America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Ellen Clarinda Hinsdale, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Western Reserve University; M.A., University of Michigan; Ph.D., University of Gottingen; University of Leipzig; University of Berlin; Holder of the Women’s Educational and Industrial Union Foreign Fellowship; Instructor in German in Joliet, Illinois, and in Ann Arbor, Michigan; Modern Language Association of America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Grace Mabel Bacon, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A. and Ph.D., University of Michigan; University of Berlin; Instructor in German in Ypsilanti, Michigan; Holder of the Cornelia M. Clapp Fellowship; Professor of German, Allegheny College; Modern Language Asso- ciation. T hirty-six South Hadley, Massachusetts ITflOQfTRflDfl ---------- ▼▼▼▼▼▼ TYTVYTYYTYTTYYT DEPARTMENT OF GREEK Mary Gilmore Williams, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus Mount Holyoke Seminary; B.A., Ph.D., University of Michigan; American School of Classical Studies, Rome; Instructor in Latin, Kirkwood Seminary, Missouri; In- structor in Latin, Lake Erie College; Elisha Jones Fellow of the University of Michi- gan; Fellow of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae Archaeological Institute of America; American Philological Association. South Hadley, Massachusetts Helen Currier Flint, A.M., Associate Professor Emeritus South Hadley, Massachusetts Caroline Morris Galt, B.A., Professor of Archaeology and Greeks B.A., Bryn Mawr College; University of Chicago; Columbia University; American School of Classical Studies at Rome; Managing Committee of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens; Associate Member of the American Numismatic Society; Annual Professor of the American School of Classical Studies in Athens; Archaeological Institute of America; American Philological Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Marion Elizabeth Blake, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Greeks B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Ph.D., Cornell University; Fellow of the American Academy at Rome; Holder of the Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship for two years; Archaeological Institute of America; American Philological Association. South Hadley, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE Nellie Neilson, Ph.D., Professor of History and Political Science on the E. Nevins Rodman Foundation B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; Holder of the Resident Fellowship in His- tory, Bryn Mawr College; Holder of the American Fellowship of the American Asso- ciation of University Women; Research Work in England; Fellow of the Royal Historical Society; Fellow of the Mediaeval Academy of America; American 1 lis- torical Association; American Political Science Association; Selden Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Ellen Deborah Ellis, Ph.D., Professor of Political Science B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; Holder of the Bryn Mawr European Fel- lowship; University of Leipzig; Fellow in Economics and Politics, Bryn Mawr; Professor of History, Constantinople College, Constantinople, Turkey; American Political Science Association; American Historical Association; American Society of International Law. South Hadley, Massachusetts Bertha Haven Putnam, Ph.D., Professor of History B.A., Bryn Mawr College; Ph.D., Columbia University; Twice holder of Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of the American Association of University Women; Research Work in England; Fellow of the Royal Economic Society; Fellow of the Royal Historical Society; Selden Society; Mediaeval Academy of America; American Historical Association; American Economic Association; Economic History Association. South Hadley, Massachusetts T hirty-seven V IiIcaCQflRflDfl 1 Viola Florence Barnes, Ph.D., Associate Professor of History B.A., M.A., University of Nebraska; Ph.D., Yale University; Fellow in American History, University of Nebraska; Holder of tbe Currier Fellowship and of the Susan Rhoda Cutter Fellowship, Yale University; Instructor in American History, Uni- versity of Nebraska; Holder of the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship of the American Association of University Women for European Study; American Historical Association. Albion, Nebraska Susan Stiller, Ph.D., Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A. and Ph.D., University of Illinois; Fellow in American History and Assistant in European History, University of Illinois; Research Work in England; Instructor in History, Lake Eric College; American Historical Association. Amherst, Massachusetts Elsie Van Dyck DeWitt, A.M., Instructor B.A., Yassar College; M.A., Radcliffe College; Holder of Fellowship for Graduate Work at Radcliffe College; Teacher of History and English, The Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania; Mediaeval Academy of America; American Historical Association. blew London, Connecticut Constance McLaughlin Green, M.A., Instructor B.A., Smith College; M.A., Mount Holyoke College. Holyoke, Massachusetts Norma Adams, B.A., Reader and Graduate Fellow B.A., Mount Holyoke College. Roslindalc, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF LATIN Helen McGaffey Searles, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus M.A., Lake Forest College; Ph.D., University of Chicago; Instructor in Greek and German, Ferry Hall; Classical Fellow, Cornell University; Fellow in Sanskrit and Comparative Philology, University of Chicago; Instructor in Latin and Greek at the Pennsylvania College for Women; Archaeological Institute of America; American Philological Association; Oriental Society of America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Cornelia Catlin Coulter, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Washington University; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; European Fellow, Fellow in Latin, Fellow in Greek, Bryn Mawr College; Teacher in St. Agnes School and in the Departments of Latin and Greek at Vassar College; American Philological Asso- ciation; Advisory Board ot Speculum 315 Adams Avenue, Ferguson, Missouri Blanche Brotherton, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., Smith College; M.A., Ph.D., University of Chicago; Travelling Fellow, Smith College; Fellow, University ot Chicago; Instructor in Elmhurst School, in Birming- ham; Assistant Professor of Latin and Greek, Wheaton College, and in Summer Sessions of the University of Chicago; American Philological Association. 59 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, New York Thirty-rig At r IrhaOOffRflDfl Blanche Beatrice Boyer, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Chicago; Fellow in Latin, University of Chicago; Instructor in Latin and Greek, St. Xavier College; Assistant Professor of Latin, Allegheny College; American Philological Association; Mediaeval Academy of America. Plymouth, Indiana Marion Louise Ayer, M.A., Instructor B.A., Wheaton College; M.A., Cornell University; Graduate Scholar, Cornell Uni- versity; Harvard College and Boston University; Cataloguer and Classifier in Harvard College Library; Instructor and Acting Librarian at Wheaton College; American Philological Association; Lambda Theta Society. 424 Massachusetts A renue, Boston, Massachusetts Margaret Elizabeth Taylor, M.A., Instructor B.A., Vassar College; M.A., Yale University; Teacher in High School, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and in Mrs. Day's School, New Haven, Connecticut; Student at the American Academy in Rome and the University of Munich; American Philological Association. Coeur d’Alene, Idaho Lidorra Holt Putney, M.A., Instructor B.A., Wellesley College; M.A., R add iff e College; Student at the American Academy in Rome; Teacher ot Latin in the Capen School, St. Margaret’s School, and the Lee School. 5 Fort Pleasant Avenue, Springfield, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS Sarah Effie Smith, B.S., Professor Emeritus B.S., Mount Holyoke College; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; University of Michigan; University of Berlin; Holder of the '86 Fellowship; American Mathematical Society; Mathematical Association of America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Eleanor Catherine Doak, Ph.B., Professor B.A., Coates College; Ph.B., University of Chicago; Cambridge University; Instruc- tor of Mathematics at Coates College and at DePauw University; Reader in Mathe- matics for the College Entrance Examination Board; American Mathematical Society; Mathematical Association of America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Emilie Norton Martin, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Ph.D., Bryn Mawr; Fellow in Mathematics at Bryn Mawr College; 1 Iolder of the Mary E. Garrett European Fellowship from Bryn Mawr, and Student of the University of Gottingen; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; American Mathematical Society; Mathematical Society of America; Chairman of the Department, 1928-1930. Montreal, North Carolina Marie Litzinger, M.A., Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., Bryn Mawr; Fellow in Mathematics at Bryn Mawr; Holder of the Senior European Fellowship from Bryn Mawr; Student at the University of Rome and at the University of Chicago; American Mathematical Society. Bedford, Pennsylvania T hirty-nine ▼▼▼▼▼▼Y T TT ▼ ▼ T Ethel L. Anderton, Ph.D., Assistant Professor B.A., Wellesley College; M.A., Ph.D., Yale University; University Fellow in Mathe- matics at Yale University; Instructor of Mathematics at Wellesley College; Assistant Professor of Mathematics at Smith College; American Mathematical Society; Mathe- matical Association of America; Sigma Xi. South Hadley, Massachusetts Ai.ine Huke, M.A., Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., University of Chicago; Fellow in Mathematics at Bryn Mawr: Holder of Scholarship at the University of Chicago; Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE AND HYGIENE Elizabeth Colden Underhill, M.D., Resident Physician Women’s Medical College, New York; Cornell University; Medical College; Clinical Assistant in the Dispensaries of the Women’s Medical College and Bellevue Hospital, New York City; Private Practice, Poughkeepsie, New York; Graduate Work, Har- vard Medical School; Sargent School of Physical Education; Fellow of the American Medical Association; American Social Hygiene Association. Strawberry Hill, Poughkeepsie, New Yorf Pattif. Johnston Groves, M.D., Assistant Physician Bachelor of Pedagogy, N. C. State College for Women, Greensboro, N. C.; Teacher in Public Schools of N. C.; Bachelor of Arts, Trinity College, Durham, N. C.; Doctor of Medicine, Women’s Medical College of Pa., in Philadelphia; Resident, Lancaster General Hospital; Resident in Pediatrics, State Hospital for Tuberculosis, South Mountain, Pa. 726 Cooper Street, Camden, New Jersey DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC William Churchill Hammond, Mus.D., Professor, Director of Music Piano, Hartford, Boston, New York; Organ, Hartford, New York; Theory, N. H. Allen; Organist of Scond Congregational Church, Holyoke; A Founder of the American Guild of Organists. 231 Cabot Street, Holyoke, Massachusetts Ruth Elizabeth Dyer, B.A., Associate Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Organ, Professor Hammond; Organ and Harmony, E. E. Truette, Boston; Piano, Alfred de Voto, New England Conservatory, Boston; Piano, Wager Swayne, Boston; Master Classes in Piano with E. Robert Schmitz, Chicago, Madison, Boulder, Colorado Springs; Winner of Scholarship, 1924; Assist- ant to E. Robert Schmitz in Master Class at Boulder, Colorado Springs; Voice, F. W. Wodell, Boston; Harmony, Raymond Robinson, Boston University; Colleague of the American Guild of Organists. Maple Road, Oxford, Massachusetts Anna Mathilde Wollman, Assistant Professor Harmony, Marion Wheeler; Voice, Julia B. Dickinson, J. J. Bishop, Springfield; Isadore Luckstone, A. Clark Jeannotte, New York; Royal Dadmun, Arne Von Erpicum Scm., Oslo, Norway; Soprano Soloist at the South Church, Springfield. 36 Eldridgc Street, Springfield, Massachusetts Clara B. Tillinchast, B.A., Assistant Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Organ, Professor Hammond, Pietro Yon, New York; Theory and Composition, Percy Goetschius, Institute of Musical Art, New York; History and Symphonic Analysis, Daniel Gregory Mason, Columbia University; Colleague oi the American Guild of Organists; Northfield Seminary. Vernon, Connecticut forty hhflOOffRflDfl - - — ▼ ▼ T T T T TTTTT TTTTTT T Martha Brown Fincke, B.L., Ed.M., Assistant Professor B.L., Smith College; Ed.M., Harvard University; Diploma and Medal, Longy School of Music; Organ, Professor Hammond and Clair Leonard; Piano, Elizabeth Quaile, Wesley Weyman and Wager Swayne; Theory, Angela Diller, Edward Ballantinc, and Nadia Boulanger; Instructor in the David Mannes Music School, West Newton Music School, The Flly School and private work. 5 Greenacre Square, Springfield, Massachusetts Ruth Emma Douglass, B.A., Assistant Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Piano, Horace Alwyne, Albert Platt, Albert Moody Tucker; Voice, Anna Wollman, A. Clark Jeannotte, Charles Kitchell, and Oscar Seagle. 358 Terrace Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio Milton Jacob Aronson, Instructor Violin, Charles Martin Loeffler, Boston. 830 Summer Avenue, Springfield, Massachusetts Hel.kn Blythe Hazen, B.A., Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Piano with Bruce Simonds, New Haven. 20 Liberty Street, Holyoke, Massachusetts Viva Faye Richardson, Instructor Graduate of New England Conservatory of Music, Soloists’ Course with Honors; Graduate Work in Piano, Felix Fox, Heinrich Gebhard, Boston and Ernest Hutche- son, New York; Northfield Seminary; Illinois Women’s College. 592 West Par!{ Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts Louise A. Dressel, Secretary South Hadley High School. 28 Carew Street, South lladlcy Falls, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY Ellen Bliss Talbot, Ph.D., Professor on the Anna C. Edwards Foundation B.A., Ohio State University; Ph.D., Cornell University; University of Chicago; University of Berlin; University of Heidelberg; Graduate Scholar, Cornell Univer- sity; Fellow, Cornell University; American Philosophical Society; American Associa- tion of University Professors; Phi Beta Kappa Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Samuel Perkins Hayes, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Amherst College; B.D., Union Theological Seminary; M.A., Columbia Uni- versity; Ph.D., Cornell University; Fellow, Clark University; Fellow, Cornell University; University of Berlin; Sorbonne, Paris; Cambridge, England; Member of the American Association of the Blind; Director of Psychological Research and Visiting Lecturer in the Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the Blind and the Perkins Institution for the Instruction of the Blind; Lecturer in Amherst College; American Psychological Association; American Association of University Professors; Sigma Xi Society; Phi Beta Kappa Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts John Martyn Warbeke, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Princeton University; Ph.D., University of Leipzig; Associate in Science, Uni- versity of Chicago; Oxford University, England; Instructor, Williams College; Pro- fessor, Amherst College; Honorary Member of New York Browning Society; President, Holyoke League of Arts and Crafts; American Philosophical Association; American Association of University Professors. South Hadley, Massachusetts Forty-one — IrTfflfflflRflDfl — rr TTTTTTTT' T' 'T TTTT TT TTTTTTTTTT T Sara M. Stinchfif.ld, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., University of Pittsburgh; M.A., University of Iowa; Ph.D., University of Wis- consin; Research Assistant Iowa Child Welfare Station; Instructor in Summer Session of Pennsylvania State College; Secretary of the American Society for the Study of Disorders of Speech; Pi Lambda Theta; Speech Consultant, Perkins Insti- tution for the Instruction of the Blind, Boston, American Psychological Association; American Association of University Professors. South Hadley, Massachusetts Herbert Moore, M.A., Assistant Professor B.A., University of Toronto; M.A., Harvard University; Assistant in Social Ethics, Harvard University; American Psychological Association. 92 Yarmouth Road, Toronto, Canada DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION Hope Wentworth Narey, Director Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Sargent School of Physical Education; Direc- tor of the Durant Gymnasium, Boston; Supervisor of Physical Training, Public Schools, Malden. Hotel Bristol, Copley Square, Boston, Massachusetts Lillian Loretta Kuester, Assistant Director, Instructor in Medical and Cor- rective Gymnastics Savage Institute of Physical Education, New York; School of Education, New York University; Instructor in Corrective and Medical Gymnastics, Bellevue Hospital Float, New York City; Medical Aid; Orthopedic and Surgical Departments, Brook- lyn City Hospital Dispensary, Brooklyn, New York; Member of the American Posture League; American Physical Education Association; National Archery Asso- ciation. 79 Bergen Street, Brooklyn, New Yorf( Kathro Kidwell, Instructor B.S., University of Nebraska; M.S., University of Wisconsin. 633 South iqth Street, Lincoln, Nebraska Mary Heghinian, Instructor B.S., M.A., Teachers College, Columbia University; Teacher of Physical Education, Central High School, Detroit, Michigan. 267 Boulevard, Jersey City, New Jersey Mildred S. Howard, Instructor B.S., Connecticut College for Women; Course at Boston School of Physical Educa- tion; Teacher of Physical Education in Ethel Walker School in Simsbury, Connecticut; National Park Seminary, Forest Glen, Maryland; University of Wisconsin; Summer School, University of Colorado. 330 Main Street, Wethersfield Connecticut Harriettf. Overton Auli., Instructor A. B., Wilson; M.A., Teachers College, Columbia University; Teacher of Physical Education, Skidmore College. 7 Westwood Road, Somerville, Massachusetts Margaret Sheppard Norris, Secretary and Pianist B. S., College of Practical Arts and Letters, Boston University. it Warwick Road, Melrose Highlands, Massachusetts Forty-two TrlraOOffRflDfl ▼ T T T ▼ T T'T T T T ’ DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS Elizabeth Rebecca Laird, Ph.D., Professor B.A., University of Toronto; Ph.D., D.Sc., Bryn Mavvr College; D.Sc., (lion.) Uni- versity of Toronto; University of Berlin; Cambridge University; University of Chicago; Fellow in Physics, and President's European Fellow, Bryn Mawr College; Holder of the Sarah Berliner Research Fellowship for Women, University of Wurz- burg; Honorary Research Fellow, Yale University; Fellow of the American Physical Society, and of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Optical Society of America. South Hadley, Massachusetts Mabel Augusta Chase, M.A., Associate Professor B.A., Oberlin College; M.A., Cornell University; University of Chicago; Imperial College for Science, London; Cambridge University; Instructor in Physics, Wellesley College; American Physical Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Rogers D. Rusk, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.Sc., Ohio Wesleyan University; M.A., Ohio State University; Ph.D., University of Chicago; Graduate Scholar, Ohio State University; Fellow in Physics, University of Chicago; Head of Science Department, Niles, Ohio; Instructor in Aerology, Signal Corps, Signal Corps Meteorologist; Professor of Physics, North Central College; American Physical Society; Sigma Xi Society; Kappa Delta Pi. McConnclsville, Ohio Mrs. Nadiashda Galli-Shohat, Ph.D., Instructor Graduate Girls’ Institute in Irkutsk and of Women's University in Petrograd, Russia; Ph.D., University of Gottingen, Germany; Professor and Head of the Department of Physics, Ural University, Ekatherinbourg, Russia; Assistant in Physics, University of Michigan; American Physical Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Dwight Allison Bloodgood, Curator and Technician Laboratory Mechanician, Physics Department, Yale University; Instructor Signal Corps Officers’ School. Morgan Road, South Hadley, Massachusetts Vera E. Sterling, B.A., Assistant B.A., Goucher College. Crisfield, Maryland Caroline V. Roberts, M.S., Instructor B.A., Smith; M.S., University of Chicago; Graduate Student and Research Assistant, University of Chicago; Substitute Teacher, Faulkner School, Chicago, Illinois. 79 Dorchester Avenue, Chicago, Illinois DEPARTMENT OF PHYSIOLOGY Abby Howe Turner, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Ph.D., RadclifTe College; Marine Biological Labora- tory, Woods Hole; Graduate Student, University of Pennsylvania; Elizabeth Bard- well Fellow, University of Chicago; Cornelia M. Clapp Fellow; Fellow of Women’s Educational Association of Boston, Harvard Medical School; Harvard School of Pub- lic Health; Instructor in Zoology, Wellesley College. Faculty House, South Hadley, Massachusetts Mary M. Clayton, Ph.D., Assistant Professor B.S., Teachers’ College, Columbia University; M.A., Ph.D., University of Rochester; National Research Council bellow, University of Rochester. Ontario, Nctv Yorl{ vorty-three r IihflCQffRffDfl ▼▼▼▼▼TTTTTT’ D. Elizabeth Williams, M.A., Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., University of Wisconsin; Assistant in Zoology, Mount Holyoke College; Instructor, Converse College, South Carolina; Graduate Assistant, University of Wisconsin; Instructor, Connecticut College; Women's Chris- tian College of Madras. Page Avenue, Leominster, Massachusetts, R. P. D. Esther C. Kimball, B.S., Graduate Assistant B.S., Simmons College. 55 Fairmont Avenue, Waltham, Massachusetts Thelma O. Stevens, B.A., Graduate Assistant B.A., Oberlin College. 231 Kenilworth Avenue, Toledo, Ohio DEPARTMENT OF ROMANCE LANGUAGES Mary Vance Young, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus Ph.D., University of Zurich; Sorbonne, Ecole des Hautes Etudes, College de France, Ecole de Chartes; Officier d’Acadcmie; Dante Society of America; Maitres Pho- netiques; National Institute of Social Sciences; Dante League of America; Modern Language Association; International Ido Federation; Association of University Pro- fessors; American Association of Teachers of Italian. South Hadley, Massachusetts Emma Riville-Pensch, Associate Professor Emeritus Studies in Switzerland, Paris, Germany, England; Officier d’Academic. 4804 Garden Street, Bridesburg, Pennsylvania Mary Gertrude Cushing, Ph.D., Professor B.S., Wellesley College; M.A., Wellesley College; Ph.D., Columbia University; Student at Paris, Madrid, Columbia University; Modern Language Association of America; Phi Beta Kappa; Association of University Professors, Chairman 1929-1930. South Hadley, Massachusetts Helen Elizabeth Patch, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; Sorbonne, Ecole des Hautes Etudes; College de France; Graduate CJiolar in Romance Languages, Fellow in Romance Languages, Bryn Mawr; Mount Holyoke Class of ’86 Fellow; Associate of Collegiate Alumnae; European Fellow; Modern Language Association of America; American Association of University Professors. 83 Grove Street, Bangor, Maine Marie-Jeanne Boucoin, Assistant Professor B.S., C.FE.E.N., C.A.P., Ecole Normale d’Angouleme; Profcssorat de Lettres, Uni- versite de Paris; Bourse d’Etudes en Anglcterre (Musee Pedagogique). As sit de Manot, Charente, France Suzanne Dedieu, Assistant Professor B.E., B.S., Limoges; Diplome d’Etudes Supericures, Poitiers; Profcssorat de Lettres, la Sorbonne; Foyer International des Etudiantes. Cherves-Chatelars, Charente, France Paul Frederic Saintonge, Assistant Professor B.A., Harvard University; M.A., Harvard University; Graduate Student, Harvard University; Graduate Scholar and Sheldon Traveling Fellow, Sorbonne, Ecole des Hautes Etudes, College de France; Instructor at University of North Carolina and at Harvard University. Ware, Massachusetts Katherine Wellington Auryansen, Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., RadclifTe Colege; Phi Beta Kappa; Fellow of Institute of International Education; Ecole Normale d’Institutrices, Melun, France. 27 Jettison Street, Newtonville, Massachusetts Forty-four IfltaQQffRflPfl- — r T T T r y ▼ T T T T ▼ ▼ T ,T'IT T TTTTTT’TTT’TTT’T T Elizabeth S. Doane, Instructor B.A., Boston University; M.A., RadclifTe College; Universite dc Paris; Smith College, School of Italian Studies; Instructor of Modern Languages, Florida State College; and at Wells College. Malden, Massachusetts Dorothy Doolittle, Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Bryn Mawr College; Graduate Scholar in Romance Languages, Bryn Mawr College; 1 Iolder of Frances Mary 1 lazen Fellow- ship; Fellow of Institute of International Education; Sorbonnc, College de France, Ecole des Hautes Etudes; Phi Beta Kappa; Assistant in French, Bryn Mawr College; Member of Modern Language Association of America. Wilbraham Road, Springfield, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH Isadei.le Caroline Couch, Professor National School of Oratory and Elocution, Philadelphia; School of Expression, Bos- ton. 182 Hughes Avenue, Bridgeport, Connecticut Mrs. Josephine E. Holmes, Assistant Professor Graduate of Boston School of Expression, and Artistic Diploma conferred for original interpretative work; Graduate of Williams School of Oratory and Ithaca Conserva- tory of Music, Ithaca, N. Y.; Boston University. 43 Woodbridgc Street, South Hadley, Massachusetts Mildred Norcross, Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; School of Expression, Boston; Harvard Graduate School of Education. 101 Standish Road, Watertown, Massachusetts DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY Cornflia Maria Clapp, Pli.D., Emeritus Professor Mount Holyoke College; Ph.B., Syracuse University; Pli.D., University of Chicago; Sc.D., Mount Holyoke College; Trustee of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Naples Zoological Station; Fellow A. A. A. S.; Society of American Zoologists; Association of American Anatomists; Phi Beta Kappa Society. Montaguc, Massach usetts Ann Haven Morgan, Ph.D., Professor on the Norman Wait Harris and Emma Gale Harris Foundation B.A., Ph.D., Cornell University; Wellesley College; Teaching Stall of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Schuyler Fellow, Cornell University; University of Chicago; Harvard University; Yale University; Assistant in Biology; Instructor in Zoology, Cornell University; Fellow A. A. A. S.; Entomological Society of America; American Society of Naturalists; American Society of Zoologists; American Associa- tion of Museums; Association of Social Hygiene; International Advisory Board of Eugenics; Philadelphia Academy of Science; Sigma Xi Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Amy Elizabeth Adams, Ph.D., Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Columbia University; Ph.D., Yale University; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; University of Chicago; Honorary Fellow, Yale University; Acting Dean of Mount Holyoke College, First Semester 1926-27; Fellow A. A. A. S.; American Association of Anatomists; American Society of Zoolo- gists; Society Experimental Biology and Medicine; Sigma Xi Society; Phi Beta Kappa Society. 186 Washington Street, East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania Foriy-fiir =— IrLflOPflRflDfl- r ▼ T'T'T TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT TTT T1 T 1 Christianna Smith, Ph.D., Associate Professor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.A., Ph.D., Cornell University; University oi Michi- gan; Assistant in Histology and Embryology, Cornell University; Schuyler Fellow, Cornell University; Teaching Staff of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Fellow A. A. A. S.; Member of StalT, Research in Histology, Biological Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor; Association of American Anatomists; American Society of Zoologists; Association to Aid Scientific Research by Women; Sigma Xi Society; Phi Kappa Phi Society; Sigma Delta Epsilon, Graduate Women’s Scientific Fraternity. wo Chestnut Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts Madeleine Parker Grant, M.A., Assistant Professor B.S., Simmons College; M.A., Radcliffe College; Research Assistant to Dr. Edward Reynolds, Boston; Assistant Bacteriologist, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston; Resident Bacteriologist, St. Luke’s Hospital, New Bedford, Mass.; Graduate Study, Harvard Medical School; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Teaching Staff of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole. 12 Florida Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts Kathryn Forney Stein, M.S., Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; M.S., University of Chicago; Graduate Scholar and Assistant, University of Chicago; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Re- search Assistant, Carnegie Institution of Washington; Cold Spring Harbor; Summer Session Harvard Medical School; Phi Beta Kappa Society; Sigma Xi Society. Annville, Pennsylvania Dorothy Richardson, B.A., Instructor B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Graduate Student Yale University; Summer Session Harvard Medical School; Assistant Cornell University; Holder of the Margaret Maltby Fellowship of the American Association of University Women; Sigma Xi Society. 50 Essex Avenue, Gloucester, Massachusetts Elizabeth Scott Kirkwood, B.A., Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Cornell University; Phi Beta Kappa Society. 42 Highland Avenue, Middletown, New Yorl{ Helen Diana O’Neil, B.S., Graduate Assistant B.S., University of Minnesota; Assistant in Zoology, University of Minnesota; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Phi Beta Kappa Society. 644 22nd Avenue, North, Minneapolis, Minnesota Cornelia Harden brook Collier, B.S., Graduate Assistant B.S., Elmira College; Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole. South Hadley, Massachusetts Margaret Caldwell Grierson, B.A., Assistant (Part time) B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Phi Beta Kappa Society. 16 Lindsley Avenue, South Orange, New jersey Katharine Fredericka Kumpe, B.A., Graduate Assistant B.A., Goucher College; Goucher Scholar Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole; Phi Beta Kappa Society. Tucker ton, New Jersey Margaret Ralston Prest, B.A., Graduate Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College. 144 Walnut Street, Jenkjntown, Pennsylvania S. Claire Sondheim, B.A., Graduate Assistant B.A., Goucher College; Phi Beta Kappa Society. Mineral Spring Road, Reading, Pennsylvania Forty-six TrlcaODffRflDfl The Library Bertha Eliza Blakely, B.L., Librarian B.A., Mount Holyoke College; New York State Library School; Librarian, New Jersey State Normal and Model Schools, Trenton; Life-Member of American Library Association; Massachusetts Library Club and Western Massachusetts Library Club; Phi Beta Kappa Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Frances Eliza Haynes, B.L., Assistant Librarian B.L., Mount Holyoke College; New York State Library School; Librarian, Levi Hey- wood Memorial Library, Gardner, Massachusetts; Life-Member of American Library Association; Massachusetts Library Club and Western Massachusetts Library Club; Phi Beta Kappa Society. South Hadley, Massachusetts Bertha Hortense Gault, B.L., Cataloguer B.L., Oberlin College; Cataloguer, Forbes Library, Northampton, Massachusetts; Life-Member of American Library Association; Massachusetts Library Club and West- ern Massachusetts Library Club. South Hadley, Massachusetts Emma Charlotte Grimes, B.A., Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Holyoke Business Institute; Western Massachusetts Library Club. South Hadley, Massachusetts Adeline R. Winchester, B.A., Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College. South Hadley, Massachusetts Marjorie Elizabeth Vivian, B.A., Assistant B.A., University of Michigan; B.S., Columbia University; American Library Associa- tion; Phi Beta Kappa Society; Phi Kappa Phi Society. Bessemer, Michigan Margaret Louise Ellsworth, B.A., Assistant B.A., Vassar College; B.S., Columbia University; Library Assistant, National City Bank of New York; American Library Association. tj Richmond Place, New Orleans, Louisiana Dorothy MacDonald, B.A., Assistant B.A., Mount Holyoke College. to Davidson Road, Worcester, Massachusetts IrhflOQflRflDfl ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼ ▼ T ▼ Y T Y T T Y T Y ▼ Y Y ■▼'H Executive Secretaries Gertrude Bruyn, B.A., Field Secretary B.A., Mount Holyoke College; New York School of Social Work; Columbia Univer- sity; Supervisor of State Charities Aid Association of Ulster County, New York; Instructor in Department of Economics and Sociology, Mount Holyoke College; Investigator in the Children’s Bureau of the United States Department of Labor; Personnel Manager of the Bosch Magneto Company. 92 School Street, Springfield, Massachusetts Florence Clement, B.A., Publication Editor, in Charge of the Stenographic Office B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Secretary, Lake Erie College; Emergency Fleet Cor- poration; Drexel Institute; Curtis Publishing Company; Alumnae Secretary, Mount Holyoke College. 27 Woodbridge Street, South Hadley, Massachusetts Marion Harrison Barbour, B.A., General Secretary of the Young Women's Christian Association B.A., Mount Holyoke College. 9 Aldinc Street, Rochester, Netv Yorl( Mary C. J. Higley, B.A., Alumnae Secretary B.A., Mount Holyoke College; Instructor in Macduffie School, Springfield, Massa- chusetts. Hudson Falls, New Yor ( Esther Eva Kf.ller, Assistant in the Office of the Field Secretary 57 Congress Avenue, Holyoke, Massachusetts Helen Margaret Gidley, Secretary in the Office of the Publication Editor Attended Mount Holyoke College, 1914-1916. 34 Dorchester Street, Springfield, Massachusetts Doris Louise Sackett, B.S., Assistant in the Office of the Alumnae Secretary 4 High Street, Avon, New Yor Christina McAuslan, Officer in Charge of the Post Office South Hadley, Massachusetts Nurses Miss Mary H. Maher, R.N. Miss Katherine Courtney, R.N. Mrs. Frances Woodward, C.N. South Hadley, Mass. . 27 Ward St., Little Falls, N. Y. 59 High St., South Hadley Falls, Mass. Forty-eight IrhflOPffRflDfl Heads of Houses Beard, Mrs. M. K. South Rockefeller Hall 608 Security Bldg., Bridgeport, Conn. Gregory, Mrs. Florence R. Faculty House Sidney, Delaware Co., N. Y. Bolton, Mrs. Anne W. 235 Newton St., Athol, Mass. Mead Hall Guppy, Mrs. Florence R. 18 Bellevue Ave., Melrose, Mass. Wilder Hall Burr, Miss Fanny Cowles Lodge Hubbard, Mrs. Maude E. 15 Vine St., Melrose, Mass. Church, Mrs. Charlotte M. fudson Hall 107 S. Plain St., Ithaca, N. Y. Crane, Mrs. Ella H. Mountain View 17 Northampton Rd., Amherst, Mass. Dresser, Mrs. Alice R. South Hadley, Mass. Hillside Dunklee, Miss Laura M. The Sycamores South Hadley, Mass. Fairbanks, Mrs. Nettie B. Byron Smith House South Hadley, Mass. Foertner, Mrs. Fred North Rockefeller Hall 40 McKeel Ave., Tarrytown, N. Y. Peterson Lodge South Hadley, Mass. Maher, Miss Mary H. Everett House 170 Elm St., Holyoke, Mass. Mowry, Mrs. Harriet M. Pearson Hall 28 Beacon St., Fitchburg, Mass. Reynolds, Mrs. Sarah G. Eastman House Danville, Pa. Staples, Miss Sarah L. Wood bridge Mendon, Mass. Wheeler, Miss Harriet M. Brigham Hall Norwell, Mass. Wheeler, Miss Jane Safjord Hall New Britain, Conn. Wilbur, Mrs. Evelyn C. Porter Hall Phillips, Maine Forty-nine MtaODflRflDfl f T T TTTTTT T'T TTTTTT TTTTTTTTT-TTT T 1 Graduate Students Adams, Norma, A.B............Roslindale Morgan Road Bonser, Helen Adra, A.B. . South Hadley 29 Woodbridgc St. Butler, Ellys Theodora, A.B. Leonia, N. J. Edwards Collier, Cornelia H., S.B. . South Hadley Edwards Comroe, R. Ruth, A.B. . . . York, Pa. Edwards DeLima, Edith, A.B...........Hyderabad, India Edwards Gentz, Margaret Mary, A.B. . Grand Rapids, Mich. Morgan Road Grierson, Margaret C., A.B. . Maplewood, N. }. Jewett Lane Gruebf.r, Elsie Dorothea, A.B. Milwaukee, Wis. Edwards Kimball, Esther C., S.B. . . Waltham Edwards Kirkwood, Elizabeth S., A.B. Middletown, N. Y. Jewett Lane Kuder, Alberta, S.B..........Meadville, Pa. 6 Wright Place Kumpf, Katherine F., A.B. . Tuckerton, N. J. Edwards Mayer, Katherine E., A.B. . . Yonkers, N. Y. Cowles Lodge O’Neil, Helen Diana, S.B. . . Minneapolis, Minn. Edwards Prest, Margaret Ralston, A.B. Jenkintown, Pa. Edwards Sheldon, Helen Augusta, A.B. West Hartford, Conn. Edwards Smith, Martha Elizabeth, A.B. Charleston, S. C. Peterson Lodge Sondheim, S. Claire, A.B. . . Reading, Pa. Edwards Sterling, Vera Elizabeth, A.B. Crisficld, Md. Edwards Stevens, Thelma Odessa, A.B. Toledo, Ohio Edwards Stone, Sylvia S., A.B........Detroit, Mich. Kellogg House White, Anne Levering, A.B. . Philadelphia, Pa. Cowles Lodge Special Students Dietrich, Liselott.Wesermunde, Germany Edwards Pashkovskaya, Catherine . . Moscow, Russia Pearsons Sindelkova, Ioa..Jicin, Czechoslovakia Edwards Ungemach, Helene Elizabeth Paris, France Mead Fifty Beatty Critchett Grimes Parr President Chairman . Vice-Chairman Secretary Treasurer . Song Leader Community Officers . Mary E. Woolley . Pi. Virginia Grimes Frederika Critchett Lois Beatty . Susan H. Eisenhart M. Dorothy Parr CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Conference Nominating Census Community Chest Curriculum Finance S. A. H. Social Service Vocational . E. Virginia Grimes E. Virginia Grimes Mary Chaffee Berta Rogers . Catherine Snell . Dorothy Fricke Sally Madison Catherine Harris . Katherine Lotz Fifty-two ITflOQffRflDfl Mayo Guernsey Wilde Dietrich Conard Farnsworth Chairman Judicial Board ........................Mary Conard MEMBERS Bonnie Bell Guernsey, ’30 Louise Wilde, ’31 Esther Ward, ’31 House Presidents '30 Ruth Jagger Rosalind Hasbrouck Elizabeth Delano Marjory Dunn Elizabeth McKee Louise Sproule Constance Harrigan Virginia Cushman Sylvia Heyl Mary M. Fitzgerald Virginia Mayo, '32 Madeline Faeth, ’33 Miss Dietrich Miss Farnsworth Assistant House Presidents ’31 Brigham North Hillside South Hillside Mead Pearsons Porter North Rockefeller South Rockefeller Safford Wilder Catherine Green Lydia Wright Louise Wilde Jane Trent Helen Swisher Frances Ostwald Dorothy Driver Virginia M. L. Grimes Gertrude Walter Janice Reed Fifty-three =rtitaa)flRflDfl — V ▼,TTTT TrrTyTTT '▼▼▼▼TTTTT T”S Second row: Slow Roots Vester Davis Harris Goddard Williams first row: Delano Vastinc Barbour Michel Babcock Sanderson Merrill The Young Women’s Christian Association CABINET AND OFFICERS, 1929-1930 President .... Vice-President Secretary .... Treasurer . Assistant Treasurer . World Fellowship Campus Service . Social Service Stud ent-lnd us trial Com mission Program Publicity Assistant Publicity Student Volunteer Extension . r . Mary Michel Virginia Babcock . Ruth Olmsted Dorothy Vastine Ruth Sanderson Esther Ward I Tanetta Vester Florence Williams Catherine Harris Katherine Smith Elizabeth Delano, Chairman Phyllis Merrill Carol Reichard Harriet Davis Dorothy Slow Frances Roots Helen Taylor Marion Stuckless . Margaret Goddard . Frances Eddy Fifty-jour TrliaOQffRflDfl r W WWW WmW W T'T ▼ T V T ▼ T T T T'T T'T 1 Second row. Saphir Bruen Richter Dietrich N:oss Crary Holmes Sintlclkova Phelps Sherman Roots Young First rote: tic Quintero Wright Pak Lee DeLima Nori Nishimura Appasamy Chen President Secretary T reasurer Cosmopolitan Club ........................Edith DeLima ..................Verna Nori ........................Nellie Lee MEMBERS Miss Harriet Allyn, Honorary Member Miss Marion Barbour, Honorary Member Vimala Appasamy, India Harriet Bruen, Korea Amy Cattley, New Zealand Chi Yi Chen, China Eleanor Crary, United States Miriam Cunningham, United States Edith DeLima, India Liselotte Dietrich, Germany Elizabeth Goddard, China Margaret Goddard, China Maude Gray, China Catherine Hamly, Canada Sara Holmes, United States Nellie Lee, China Mary Michel, India Aya Nishimura, Japan Anita Miss Dorothy Williams Faculty Member Mrs. Galli-Shohat, Faculty Member Verna Nori, United States Barbara Noss, Japan Maria Pak, Korea Catherine Pashkovska, Russia Miriam Phelps, Japan Olga de Quintero, Venezuela Irene Richter, Hungary Frances Roots, China Anna Saphir, Panama Martha Sherman, China Ula Sindelkova, Bohemia Mary Sulloway, Russia Helene Ungemach, France Tanetta Vester, Palestine Esther Ward, Syria Marjory Wright, Philippines , China Fifty-five T T TTT T ▼ T V T T ' ▼ T T ▼ ▼ T T mT T T T T T ▼ T T ▼ T”! I). Davis Mcadcr Auryanscn Heghinian H. Davis Corcoran Narcy Ernst The Athletic Association Chairman . Vice-Chairman . T reasurer . Secretary Wilma Corcoran,'30 Harriet Davis, '31 Jeanne Ernst,’31 . Dorothea Davis, ’32 Faculty Members First Semester Miss Narey, Miss Auryanscn Second Semester Miss Litzinger Gym Department Member First Semester Second Semester Miss Heghinian Miss Howard Custodian, Margaret Meader, ’32 Fifty-six UiBSnEREDR Aull Favour Flagg Street President Secretary T reasurer . Vacuity Members The Outing Club ...........................Kate Street, ’30 ......................Elizabeth Favour, ’32 ........................Ruth Erlanger, ’31 Miss Turner } Miss Aull LEADERS Esther Colton, ’31 Wilma Corcoran, '30 Harriet Davis, ’31 Frances Dorman, ’31 Ruth Erlanger, '31 Ruth Ferguson, '30 Frances Flagg, ’30 Virginia Goodrich, ’31 Evelyn Harrington, ’30 Sylvia Heyl, ’30 Phyllis Jackson, '31 Virginia Newton, ’31 Alice Purington, ’30 Mary Ryder, ’31 Helen Wilmann, '30 Fifty-seven ▼TTTTTTT T T' T T T T ▼ 'T T T ▼ ▼ T 1 Hctz Guernsey Copeland Merrill Dickie Debating Council Chairman . Secretary-Treasurer Senior Member . junior Member . Sophomore Member . Bonnie Bell Guernsey . Barbara Jean Betz Phyllis Merrill Sally Copeland Jeanette Dickie Fi 'y-rig jr IrJcflCPffRflDfl Reagan Caldwell Holmes Merrill Wheeler McElrath Forum President Secretary-T reasurer Senior Members . Sophomore Members . Freshmen Members . Faculty Adviser . Sally Holmes,’31 E. Claire Groben’ '31 Phyllis Merrill, ’30 Laura Coldwell, ’30 Agnes Reagan, ’32 I Eleanor McElrath, ’32 Elizabeth Wheeler, ’33 Doris Critchett, ’33 Miss Putnam Fifty-time ▼TTT ▼ ▼ T’T' T'TT TTTTT ▼ T 1 Critchett Snell International Relations Club Catherine Snf.ll Frf.derika Critchett Miss Ellen D. Ellis Miss Bertha Putnam Adams, Norma Aiken, Mary Louise Allers, Olga Appasamy, Vi mala Averill, Elisabeth Balmer, Elizabeth Best, Mildred Bulka, Gladys Chamberlain, Jane Clingan, Dorothy Cooke, Ruth Copeland, Sara Crary, Eleanor Critchett, Alice Critchett, Fredcrika • ••••• MEMBERS Davis, Virginia Deyber, Virginia Dickie, Jeanette Dietrich, Liselotte Esau, Leslie Fiske, Fynette Gorham, Virginia Groben, E. Claire Guernsey, Bonnie B. Harris, Josephine Holmes, Sara Jackson, Mary Johnson, Alice Kempe, Lorle Locke, Georgia -McElrath, Eleanor McHenry, Marie Merrill, Phyllis President . Secretary-T reasurer Meyers, Elinor Pates, Adaline Pelton, Eleanor Reagan, Agnes Richter, Mabelle Sibley, Josephine Slow, Dorothy Snell, Catherine Sumner, Helen Torrens, Iva Turner, Elizabeth Twadell, Emily Ungemach, Helene Vastine, Dorothy Wallace, Emily Wheeler, Elizabeth Wilson, Tabitha Sixty IrltflQQflRflDfl Glazier Miller Nichols Girl Scout Club President................................................Mary L. Miller Secretary-Treasurer...................................Phyllis H. Glazier Chairman of Program Committee...............................Mary S. King Chairman of Candy Committee.............................Lydia A. Nichols MEMBERS Olga E. Allers Geneva M. Barrows Helen M. Brown Amy L. Cattley Esther Colton Miriam W. Cook Madeline G. Faeth M. Naomi Foster Julia R. Fulton Pauline C. Gates Phyllis H. Glazier Elizabeth Henrich Alice L. Hoffman Marjorie L. Houser Mary S. King Barbara Kyle Betty Sue Lewis Mary L. Miller Helen J. Neave Lydia A. Nichols Barbara Noss M. Celia Read Esther M. Richardson Mabellc S. Richter Mary E. Sourbier Margaret S. Stallman Vera G. Tiedemann Marian W. Vandersall Gertrude F. Walter Virginia R. Wander Minnie L. Webb Dorothy C. Winans Sixty-one r TihflQQffRflDfl Silver Bay Club Appasamy, Vimala Balmer, Elizabeth Beatty, Lois Best, Mildred Brock way, Kathleen Colton, Esther Corcoran, Wilma Curry, Constance Davis, Harriet Delano, Elizabeth Dix, Jean Dorman, Frances Esty, Julia Flagg, Frances Glesmann, Esther Green, Elizabeth Hadley, Dorothy Harding, Marie Ladd, Evelyn Meatier, Margaret Michel, Mary Reichard, Carolyn Roots, Frances Sanderson, Ruth Slow, Dorothy Stuckless, Marian Sumner, Helen Ward, Esther Wilde, Louise Williams, Catherine Wirtz, Anna Sixty-two Second row: Guernsey McGee Snell Holmes Crary Reagan First row: Meyers Critchett Dietrich Ellis Coldwcll Current Events Committee Miss Ellis Student Chairman Chairman Miss Dietrich Faculty Members Mr. Chalmers • • • • Mr. Tolles Laura Coldwell Senior Representative • • • • . Phyllis Merrill Junior Representative • • • • . Frederika Critchett Sophomore Representative • • • • . Agnes Reagen Freshman Representative . • t • • . Virginia Ernst International Relations Club • • • • . Catherine Snell Debating Club . • • • • Ronnie Bell Guernsey Forum .... Sally Holmes News .... • • • • Eleanor Crary } Claire Groben News Column . • • • • . Elinor Meyers M ember s-at-Large Sixty-three Katherine McGee Jessie Guernsey r T T T T T ? ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ TT T TTTTTTTT’ T ▼ ▼ T Department Clubs ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND CLASSICAL CLUB President........................................Elizabeth Cooper Secretary-Treasurer...............................Eleanor Kellogg BIBLICAL CLUB President....................................................Ruth Searles Vice-President..........................................Elizabeth Rose Secretary-Treasurer.........................................Grace Corey BIOLOGY CLUB President...................................................Faith Stone Secretary-Treasurer...............................Tabitha Wilson I CHEMISTRY CLUB President..................................................Elinor Hagen Vice-President.....................................Anne Litzincer Secretary-Treasurer................................Mary Blackmer Sophomore Member..................................Barbara Hudson FRENCH CLUB President...........................................Marie Harding Vice-President...................................Elizabeth Jewett Secretary-Treasurer...............................Dorothy Hadley HISTORY CLUB (Unorganized) MATHEMATICS CLUB (Unorganized) Sixty-four IrlrflroflRflDfl -= TV TTT'T'T’TTTT VTTVT TTTTTTTT TTTTTT 1 Prizes THE ANNA C. EDWARDS PRIZE Bonnie Bell Guernsey, 1930 THE JESSIE GOODWIN SPAULDING LATIN SCHOLARSHIP Loretta Mary Lyons, 1930 THE JESSIE GOODWIN SPAULDING LATIN PRIZES Frances Anna Schwab, 1932 Marietta Mciklejohn Banks, 1932 Florence Bailey McKinlay, 1932 THE EDWARD WHITMAN CHAPIN SCHOLARSHIP Emily Farrington Ellis, 1929 THE SIGMA THETA CHI ALUMNAE POETRY PRIZE Helen Hotchkiss Mason, 1929 THE KATHRYN IRENE GLASCOCK MEMORIAL POETRY PRIZE John Swain, 1929, Wesleyan University THE FLORENCE PURINGTON PRIZE, ESTABLISHED BY THE SIGMA THETA CHI ALUMNAE Elizabeth Alclen Green, 1931 PLAY AND POETRY SHOP TALK PRIZES Ruth Elspeth Raymond, 1931 Phyllis Marjorie Merrill, 1930 THE KATHRYN C. McFARLAND AWARD Ruth Elspeth Raymond, 1931 Anita Elizabeth Young, 1930 THE MERRILL PRIZES Elizabeth Bennett Clark Eleanore May Price Ruth Cecilia Eisenhart Frances Anna Schwab Florence Bailey McKinlay Florence Gertrude Sessions NEW YORK TIMES INTERCOLLEGIATE CURRENT EVENTS PRIZES Laura Jane Coldwcll, 1930 Phyllis Marjorie Merrill. 1930 Katharine Kavanaugh McGee, 1930 Jessie Elizabeth Guernsey, 1931 FORUM AND COMMUNITY SCHOLARSHIPS Eleanor Crary, 1930 Sara Stratton Holmes, 1931 THE PAUL H. HUDSON PRIZE Sara Gilbert Cope, 1932 THE GENEVIEVE SCHMICH AWARD Marjorie Tuck, 1929 THE SARAH STREETER CUP Mary Elizabeth Reynolds, 1929 Wilma L. Corcoran, 1930 Sixty-six IrhflOQffRflDfl T ▼ ▼ T ▼T T TT TTTTT TTT Phi Beta Kappa MEMBERS IN FACULTY AND STAFF President Secretary Treasurer . Mary E. Woolley A. Elizabeth Adams Norma Adams Harriett M. Allyn Katherine W. Auryansen Grace M. Bacon Ruth B. Baker Margaret Ball Viola F. Barnes Marion E. Blake Bertha Blakely Blanche E. Brotherton Leslie G. Burgevin Gordon K. Chalmers William S. Clark, 2nd R. Ruth Comroe Alzada Comstock Cornelia C. Coulter M. Gertrude Cushing Elsie van D. Dewitt Ella S. Dickinson Ethel B. Dietrich Mrs. Dorothy W. Doolittle Ruth E. Dyer Janet Evans Alice H. Farnsworth Margaret Gentz Dorothy Graves Caroline B. Greene Margaret C. Grierson Samuel P. Hayes Frances E. 1laynes Amy Hewes Ellen C. Hinsdale Aline Fluke Gertrude S. Hyde Elizabeth S. Kirkwood Alberta Kuder Katherine F. Kumpf Kathleen M. Lynch Mrs. Mary W. McConaughy Mary E. Woolley Katherine W. Auryansen . Josephine P. Wells Julia E. McDonnell Katherine E. Mayer Helen O’Neil Caroline V. Roberts Mary L. Sbcrrill Ada F. Snell S. Claire Sondenheim Kathryn F. Stein Thelma Stevens Louisa S. Stevenson Mrs. Susan R. Stiller Ellen B. Talbot Mignon Talbot Newman A. Tolies Abby H. Turner Marjorie Vivian Josephine P. Wells Mrs. Harriet F. Whicher Anne White Laura H. Wild ASSOCIATE MEMBERS Florence Adams Nellie Goldthwaite Alice Stevens Helen Flint Florence Purington Clara Stevens MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1929 Edith H. Alexander Elizabeth I. Colburn Eleanor Cruse Katharine E. Dixon Rachel B. Freeman Charlotte E. Goodfellow Asenath L. Graves Margaret C. Grierson Margaret W. Hall Katherine M. Haring Mary Ellen Hayes Florence W. Haynes N. Leona Hogan Alice L. Kimmel Etsu Kitani Margaret Lockwood Catharine MacDonald Katherine E. Mayer Margaret E. Murray Abba V. Newton Helen L. Paddock Elizabeth K. Parks Abbie A. Rollins Margaret E. Schofield Marion L. Slcmons Margaret E. Stevens Margaret Stief Ruth Z. Temple Ruth H. Tenny Marjorie Tuck Mary K. Warren Anne L. White MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1930 Shirley Andrews Gertrude Addiss Mary F. Chaffee Margaret P. Coleman Mary B. Conard Virginia Cushman Elected in 1929 Audra E. Arnold Elected in 1930 E. Virginia Grimes Ruth I. Harris Marjorie Hill Loretta Lyons Phyllis M. Merrill Olive S. Niles Catherine F. Snell Elizabeth C. Snow K. Louise Sproule Mary M. Sulloway Dorothy S. Vastine Sixty-seven r hh3QDflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T T T TT TTTTTTTTTT”T T 1 Fellowships The Bardwell Memorial Fellowship Margaret Winslow Hall, Mount Holyoke, 1929. History, University of Wisconsin The Mary E. Woolley Fellowship Bernice Louise Maclean, A.B., Mount Holyoke, 1926. Zoology, Columbia University. The 1905 Fellowship Sarah Elizabeth Freeman, A.B., Mount Holyoke, 1928. Classical Archae- ology, Johns Hopkins University. The Frances M. Hazen Fellowship Charlotte Elizabeth Goodfellow, Mount Holyoke, 1929. Latin and His- tory, Bryn Mawr College. The Alumnae Association Fellowship Ruth Zabriskie Temple, Mount Holyoke, 1929. English Literature and French Literature, Yale University. The Patrick Memorial Scholarship For Social Betterment Yun-Ching Mao, Mount Holyoke, 1929. Labor Problems, China. • Mary Lyon Scholars WITH HIGHEST HONOR Major Subject Edith Highland Alexander . French WITH HIGH HONOR Elizabeth Lucy Colburn Katharine Elizabeth Dixon . Dorothy Agnes Franklin Rachel Belle Freeman . Charlotte Elizabeth Goodfellow Asenath Libby Graves . Margaret Caldwell Grierson . Margaret Winslow Hall Katherine May Haring . Mary Ellen Hayes . Florence Wallace Haynes Alice Louise Kimmel . . . Etsu Kitani .... Margaret Lockwood Major Subject History and Political Science Latin Physics Mathematics Latin English Literature Zoology History and Political Science Chemistry Psychology Physiology English Literature English Literature Latin Sixty’eight ▼ ITflCPflRflPfl Katherine Eleanor Mayer Margaret Elizabeth Murray Abba Verbeck Newton . Helen Louise Paddock . Marion Lucile Slcmons . Martha Elizabeth Smith Margaret Stief Ruth Zabriskie Temple . Ruth Hana Tenny . Doris Edith Thauburn . Anne Levering White . Major Subject Chemistry History and Literature of Religion Mathematics French Chemistry Chemistry Latin English Literature History and Political Science History and Political Science Chemistry WITH HONOR Ruth Gilbert Clouse Hester Muriel Esson Helen Gaw . Mary Malvina Kierstead Charlotte Elizabeth Kingston Catharine MacDonald . Elizabeth Kimball Parks Margaret Esther Schofield Virginia Lee Starke Margaret Emery Stevens English Literature Latin Zoology History and Political Science Romance Languages Lit in Zoology English English Literature Latin HONORS IN COURSE Eleanor Cruse Ruth Elizabeth Lucchini Abbie Adaline Rollins . Helen Augusta Sheldon . Marion Lane Smith Marjorie Tuck . Psychology . Physics . Romance Linguages . Philosophy . Art and Archaeology . German Sarah Williston Scholars Marjorie Oliver Allen Alicia Hildreth Andrews Dorothy Elizabeth Benware Mildred Margaret Best Isabel Luella Blair Ruth Cecily Blunt Susan Davis Carson Marjorie Chapman Elizabeth Jane Cook Elizabeth Cunningham Jeanne Ashton Ernst Virginia Moore Goodrich Elizabeth Alden Green Esther Clair Groben Jessie Elizabeth Guernsey Margaret Hastings Dorothy Holbrook Sara Stratton Holmes Frances Adelle I lurrey Mary Heath Jackson Eleanor Humphrey Kellogg Ruth Gretchen Kruger Mary Evelyn Ladd Rose Lillian Lipman Anna Elizabeth Litzinger Elisc Wilhelmine Midclfart Helen Elisabeth Paskus Elizabeth Barstow Rose Cecil Adelia Spence Jean Rapalje Streeter Esther Goldthwait Ward Marion Louise Whalin Sixty-nine IrlrflOQffRflDfl Guernsey Merrill Copeland Delta Sigma Rho MEMBERS IN FACULTY AND STAFF Gordon Chalmers Kathleen Lynch William S. Clark Helen Sheldon Dorothy B. Graves Newman A. Tolies STUDENT MEMBERS Catherine Dawson, TO Evelyn Ladd, ’31 Bonnie Bell Guernsey, ’30 Phyllis Merrill, ’30 Catherine Snell, ’30 Seventy ITflQQflRflDfl Sproulc Hill Ncilan Young Millar Merrill Blackstick ..............................Mildred Millar, '30 ......................Margaret P. Coleman, ’30 MEMBERS ON THE FACULTY AND STAFF Roberta Swartz Chalmers Julia McDonnell Kathleen Lynch Sydney McLean Constance Meadnis President Secretary STUDENT MEMBERS Margaret P. Coleman, '30 Fynette Fiske, '32 Elizabeth Gardiner, ’30 Marjorie Hill, '30 Constance Klugh, '30 Naomi Kitay, ’33 Phyllis Merrill, '30 Mildred Millar, '30 Kathleen Neilan, '30 Katherine Patrick, '29 Louise Sproule. '30 Anita Young, '30 Seventy-one ▼TTTTT▼ ▼▼TT TTTTTTT T1 SARAH STREETER CUP WINNER 1930 WILMA CORCORAN r IrhflOQflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T T ▼ T ▼ T V T Sigma Theta Chi Alumnae Poetry Prize SELECTIONS FROM SONGS OF A YOUNG POET” By Helen Mason, ’29 THE YOUNG POET I would enter quietly, Barefoot, in humility— Take up scarcely any room, Undistinguished in the gloom. I would sit in the last pew,— Only, when the hymns are called, Let me, let me sing with you! AT NIGHT I have laughed too long and too loudly, And talked too much today, My heart lies cold and silent And has no word to say. My heart under night’s long scrutiny Resumes its old, old fears— How strangely now my own laughter Echoes in my ears. WORD Importunate, Into my head Returns the thought Of the word you said, As when at night In a quiet house Comes the sudden scratching Of a mouse. Seventy-three IrhflODflRflDfl YESTERDAY AND TOMORROW Huddled close we croak together, Yesterday and I, Telling endlessly our beads Of grievances gone by. Then Tomorrow comes, impatient, Golden-haired and fleet, And reaches out an eager hand And pulls me to my feet. A NEW IDEA COMES TO TOWN It sweeps o’er the hills Till it reaches the town, It shrieks through the narrow streets— Races up and down. It shouts from the belfry “Is the whole town dead ?” It might just as well be, The citizens are fled. For they heard you in the hilltops, They heard you coming near, They are all in their houses Hiding in fear. They fuss at windows And close up cracks, And putter at crannies With paper and tacks. Seventy-four ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T T T ▼ T T T TT ▼ T 1 Foster Vera Smith Andrews Cope Flagg Rogers Bradbury Officers of the President......................... Vice-President................... Secretary......................... Treasurcr ....................... Sergcant-at-Arms .... Song Leader...................... Class of 1930 Frances Garrett Cope . Frances Flagg . Margaret Bradbury Shirley Andrews . . . . Harriette Vera M. Dorothy Parr EXECUTIVE BOARD Julia-Ella Foster Berta Rogers Carolyn Fischer Katherine Smith Seventy-six ▼ IrlcaOQflRflDfl ▼ TTTTT TTTTT' Honorary Members of the Class of 1930 Miss Mary Emma Woolley President South Hadley, Massachusetts Mr. Leslie Gale Burgevin Associate Professor of English Literature South Hadley, Massachusetts Miss Marie Litzinger Assistant Professor of Mathematics Bedford, Pennsylvania Seventy-seven IrhflQQffRflDfl - ■ — TTTTTT TTTTTT TTTTTTTTT Miss Emma Perry Carr Professor of Chemistry Coshocton, Ohio Miss Ann Haven Morgan Professor of Zoology South Hadley, Massachusetts Mr. Joseph A. Skinner President of the Board of Trustees Holyoke, Massachusetts Seventy-eight IihflOQflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T T T ▼ T T T T ’ Miss Isadelle C. Couch Professor of Speech Bridgeport, Connecticut Miss Nellie Neilson Professor of History and Political Science South Hadley, Massachusetts Seventy-nine f Members of the Class of 1930 Eighty Gertrude Addiss 121 South St. Jersey City, N. J. Determinedly avoiding feminine vacil- lation— exception and alibi: “I’m not changing my mind. I just haven’t made it up yet.” Major: Chemistry (Honor workj Minor: Mathematics Eunice M. Allen 8 Woodbridgc St. South Hadley, Mass. Eunice knows the joys of living in town—no ten o’clock rule, and much time to give to her music. Major: Art Minor: Music Margaret Ella Ames Elm Hill New Britain, Conn. A cheery smile, a disposition unruffled by her work or by her friends, a keen delight in everything as it comes, and a record attendance at meal time. Major: English Literature Minor: English TrhflOQflRflDfl r T T T yTTT T'T ▼▼▼▼▼▼ TTTTT T ▼ TTTT TT ▼ T 1 Ruth S. Andrew Orange Conn. Meticulous habit, irresistible vivacity, dark eyes of singular depth and mystery. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature Eloise Andrews 103 Prince St. West Newton, Mass. Lovely to look at, lovely to listen to— especially lovely to know. Major: Art Minor: English Lucetta Rathbone Andrews 92 Central Ave. Dalton, Mass. A patrician seeking to unload her inhi- bitions. Major: English Minor: Music r ITflODffRflDfl ▼ ▼ T ▼' T ▼ T T T T T 1 Shirley Andrews 28 Midland Avc. Yonkers, N. Y. Lithe freeness as she moves, shuttle quickness as the keen depth of her intel- lect becomes apparent. Major: French Minor: Mathematics Elizabeth Stevens Anthony Box 23 Touisset, Mass. The one Zoo major who does not talk shop at the table. Major: Zoology Minor: Latin Marion Helen Armbruster 46 Joseph Place Yonkers, N. Y. To ponder much and know the reason why. Major: Chemistry (Honor tvor () Minor: Physics Eighty-two Audra Elizabeth Arnold 174 Summit Ave. Summit, N. J. Although she tries to run away, distinc- tion tags her at every turn. Major: Chemistry Minor: Mathematics Leila Aronen 48 Florence St. Worcester, Mass. A calm reserve hiding an optimistic naivete. Major: French Minor: Latin Mary E. Alld 622 Madison Ave. McKeesport, Pa. A pleasant personality, an enveloping sense of humor, a clever knack for clothes —all contributing to social effectiveness. Major: luitin Minor: English Literature Eighty-three r f IihflOQffRflDfl Katherine Duvall Baden Brandywine Md. Like a gay Eighteenth Century heroine, appearing and reappearing, blithely be- lieving in her audience, keeping deeper aspects for a secret stage. Major: Art Minor: Botany Elizabeth Ray Balmer 40 Hill St. Whitinsville, Mass. Appreciating the beauty, searching for the meaning, revelling in the current of life. Major: History Minor: Music Dorothy Louise Barton 122 Roscland Ave. Waterbury, Conn. A gentlemanly scholar and good judge (of French wines!) Major: French (Honor u or ) M in or: M ath cm a tics Eighty-jour LLR E Edith Hubbell Benjamin 239 lleberton Avc. Staten Island, N. Y. Irrepressible efficiency. Major: English Literature Minor: Psychology Rhoda E. Bigelow 11) Saxtons River Road Bellows Falls, Vt. Rare good humor, lyric sweetness in song, perfect naturalness, yet perfect charm. Major: English Minor: Music Eula V. Blair 300 Park St. Hackensack, N. ). A detached, sophisticated manner of modern independence suddenly broken up into delightful parts of wisdom, wit, cleverness and social charm. Major: English Literature Minor: Art Eighty-five IrhflOQflRflDfl- ▼ ▼ T T T T T ▼ TTTTTTTTTT T’T Marcaret Silsby Bradbury Hardwick Mass. A bit of autumn in her deep, brown eyes; a bit of winter in the clarity and precision of her work; a bit of spring in her smile; and summer in her calmness. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature Kathleen M. Brockway 97 College St. South Hadley, Mass. “The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deem For that sweet odor which doth in it live.” Major: Religion Minor: Music Elizabeth Bartlett Brooks Addison Maine Betty believes in principles, and in Maine ideas. Major: Religion Minor: Mathematics Eighty-six rr TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT T”T '▼'T 1 Elizabeth Rroomhead 53 Alfred Drowne Rd. West Barrington, R. 1. She is hardly a Puritan. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature Doris E. Bullock 327 Washington St. Geneva, N. Y. How would you explain that her pranks arc childish, her short stories Chekho- vish? Major: Art Minor: English Alice Constance Burnett 210 Orange Ave. Cranford, N. J. Brown eyes, brown hair, lots of brown clothes—and Brown! Eighty-seven IrhflQQffRflDfl- ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T'TT'T’T TTTT TTTT Tl Catherine Calloway 3810 Fenchurch Road Baltimore, Md. A rational lover of life. Major: Art Minor: English Elizabeth Foxcroet Carr 7408 Yates Avc. Chicago, 111. Sincerity, loyalty, a bit o' blarney— three reasons for an unusually large circle of friends. Major: Psychology Minor: History Esther Alsop Carter The Knoll Lansdowne, Pa. She lives tempestuously, but seldom loses sight of the humor in life. Major: Latin Minor: History Eighty-eight HtaODffRflDfl— — ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T TTTTTT T T ▼ ▼ T ▼ ▼ ▼ T Marjorie E. Case 93 Hinsdale Ave. Winstcd, Conn. A calm person who enjoys both simple and sophisticated things. Major: Spanish Minor: Music Nancy Castleman 455 Mt. Vernon Ave. Rochester, N. Y. Dual personality: Uneeda Biscuit and Mrs. Astor. Major: Psychology Minor: Economics Dorothy Chadwell 793 Center St. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Her youthful enthusiasm makes life continually interesting. Major: English Literature Minor: Music T 1 IiIraOPfTRflDfl '▼ T T T rT'T TTT T ’ Mary Frances Chaffee 820 Sassafras St. Erie, Pa. Efficient in Ec, Glee Club, point- systems, and correspondence; enthusias- tic about world affairs, chaise-longues, roommates, week-ends, and other people’s amours. Major: Economics (Honor it’orf() Minor: History Evelyn Jane Chamberlain 33 East Perry St. Tiffin, Ohio Jane’s disposition is like a June day— sunny and full of smiles. Major: English Literature Minor: History Marguerite Claire Champagne 134 Nonotuck St. Holyoke, Mass. Simplicity of character, subtlety of in- tellect. Major: French Minor: Spanish rr f IrhflQQflRflDfl ▼ TTTTTTTTTT’ Eleanor Chase Baring Maine With an amazing capacity for thinking and wit and good-fellowship, Puffy rolls calmly along, accepting life as it comes. Major: Economics Minor: English Ellen Chase 1309 Deane St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Recognized by her remarkable forget- fulness and known for her unforgettable unselfishness. Major: Art Minor: English Sarah Elizabeth Chase Superior Ave. Waterbury, Conn. Her slow, mischievous smile and qual- ity of blitheness belie her immense- capacity for serious work. Major: Chemistry (Honor ivorf ) Minor: Zoology Ninety-one r IdiECQSMDE I Francelia Sheldon Chittenden 182 Park St. West Roxbury, Mass. Good nature, dependability, and a sense of humor combine to make her thor- oughly likeable. Major. Latin Minor: English Literature Ruth Christie Warwick Ave. Apponaug, R. I. Nonchalance and precision—two fea- tures of her complexity. Major: Psychology Minor: Economics Laura Jane Coldwell Alplaus N. Y. Friendliness, poise, and a sense of pro- portion which never deserts her. Major: Economics Minor: History Ninety-two ......Irhfl(PffRffDfl=------ = TTTTTTTTTTTT TT TTTTTTT-TTTTTT Margaret P. Coleman 552 Lake Drive Milwaukee, Wis. Puckish humor, exquisiteness of mind, and the quiet of unsung music. Major: English (Honor wor ) Minor: History Mary Baldwin Conard The Knoll Lansdowne, Pa. Polly travels from the sublime to the ridiculous and back again in a moment, with the considered comment, “Life is funny, isn't it?” Major: German Minor: English Literature Helen Leigh Cook 431 Huntington Avc. Buffalo, N. Y. This meekness is but an inadequate cloak for the imp beneath. Major: Romance Languages Minor: Mathematics Nincty-l ircc IrlfflQQflRflPfl— ▼ ▼ Y T T ▼ TT T Y T TT YTTTYTYT 7 Ruth E. Cooke 221 Parker Drive Mt. Lebanon, Pittsburgh, Pa. She lives smoothly; she talks easily; she suggests—white. Major: Philosophy (Honor tvo ) Minor: Religion Elizabeth Gardner Cooper 76 East Utica St. Oswego, N. Y. Applicant for the Hall of Fame: the talented child who draws stick-men with such genius, and possesses unbounded jollity and sweetness. Major: Latin Minor: Music Frances Garrett Cope R. F. D. 2 Media, Pa. With strength and serenity she leads the way, wondering why so many follow. Major: History (Honor ivor ) Minor: Economics TiTiflQQflRflDfl— -.....— r T T f f TTTV'TTTT TT-T ? ? TTYTTTYTTTTT TI Wilma L. Corcoran 45 Cleveland St. Arlington, Mass. Capable, versatile, sociable. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature Eleanor Crary 24 Grant Ave. Lynbrook, N. Y. New Lands Ahoy! An eager adven- turer on the high seas of life, piling up experiences in every port, weathering the storms triumphant. Major: English Minor: Economics Clara S. Crosier Halifax Vt. Few guess that her quiet air covers an unsuspected sense of humor. Major: Latin Minor: French Virginia Cushman 19 Fremont St. Boston, Mass. Extraordinary natural tact and inven- tion; instant sympathy with others’ moods. Major: French (Honor u or {) Minor: Spanish Betty Lou Davis Torringfortl St. Torrington, Conn. Autumn leaves reflected in the blue water of a remote mountain pool or per- haps a red apple on a willow ware plate. Major: Latin Minor: Art Catherine Humbird Dawson Box 101 Rockville, Md. Her lovely calm ways are a delusion and a snare; they cover with compelling charm a most incisive and penetrating mind. Ninety-six Major: English Minor: French ifitfrnpffRffnflf Dorothy Preble Day Kingsbury Avc. Bradford, Mass. Warm friendliness, New England cour- age and ability—a powerful combination. Major: Latin Minor: French Mary Elizabeth Deering 800 West 20th St. Wilmington, Del. Her moods are varied. Now she is the thoughtful connoisseur of books; now an elfin child. Major: History Minor: English Literature Elizabeth Stevenson Delano 35 High St. Montclair, N. J. From one extreme to another—from of- ficial dignity to raptures over soap kittens —retaining always her poise, her smile and her positive inability to see a joke until it is diagrammed and explained. Major: Zoology Minor: Economics Ninety-seven IiItflOQffRflDfl---------- T ▼ T T ▼ 'TT TTT'T TT'T TTT T TTT Bernice Denman 21 Linden Ave. Wilmette, 111. 1927— Men are all alike! 1928— Men are all alike! 1929— Ah, but this one is different! Major: English Literature Minor: English J. Elizabeth Donley 942 Park Ave. Plainfield, N. J. She goes her blithe, unhampered way, fluttering no apron strings to gather com- plexes. Major: Economics Minor: Mathematics Caroline Drisko 28 Lloyd St. Winchester, Mass. Take a bit of art, with a sprinkling of wit, add a dash of color, season with ro- mance, bake in a warm heart—and you have Cal. Major: English Minor: Art 1 TrTrnfT7fTnfTPn r ▼ t’T ttttttttttt’ Marjorie Dunn 27 Livermore Road Wellesley Hills, Mass. Capability and efficiency par excellence. Major: Mathematics Minor: Economics Janet McKenzie Dunning 739 East 23rd St. Paterson, N. J. Dunning reminds us of a sleek, brown little Boston terrier; she’s always scamper- ing somewhere or other, being completely breathless and quivering over nothing much, or setting herself seriously and worriedly to work. Major: Mathematics Minor: Economics Roxane D. Eberlein R. F. D. No. 1 Scotch Plains, N. J. She has the mind of a thinker, the soul of a dreamer, the heart of a friend. Major: German (Honor u orf{) Minor: French Ninety-nine T V ▼ Y TTTTT Y 1 Helen Elizabeth Eckley 25 Melbourne Ave. Mamaroneck, N. Y. Shy glance, smile like a boy’s, move- ment quick as light—and she’s in the heart to stay. Major: Mathematics Minor: Physics Alice Dorothy Elliott 5803 Second Boulevard Detroit, Mich. Dot’s heart is swayed by her two pas- sions—Botany and red-headed men. Major: Botany Minor: Mathematics Janet A. Ely 19 Waldo St. Holyoke, Mass. A flash—a red beret, red cheeks and a smile and Janet steams by on her way to uphold her reputation for neater and nicer bureau drawers. Major: History Minor: French r f r IrhflOOffRffDfl ▼ ▼TTTTTTT'TTT T’TT T T T ▼ ▼ T 1 Delphine Ennis Kew Gardens Ter. Kew Ciardcns, L. I., N. Y. A woman of the towns and cities— armed with a Theater Magazine and the latest New Yorker she can be blithely independent, even in South Hadley. Major: English Literature Minor: English Ruth Ferguson 113 Church St. Ware, Mass. One of Kingsley’s “Water Babies,” ma- joring in Religion—and minoring in man. Major: Religion Minor: Psychology Carolyn J. Fischer 15 Stratham Road Lexington, Mass. Dog-gone her—she has such a grand old time with everybody and everything that before we know it she gets the rest of us doing it too. Major: English Literature (Honor wor ) Minor: English One hundred one IrltflQQflRflDfl ■▼'T TT’TTTTTTTTTT’TTTTTTT S Rebekah Fisk 79 Tabor Ave. Providence, R. I. One of those effervescent people whose explosions now and then are like a cork blown out of a bottle, only serving to heighten the sparkle of the gaiety that lies within. Major: Psychology Minor: Economics Mary Maury Fitzgerald 39)3 Seminary Ave. Richmond, Va. A cherub with a knack of making friends and a love for afternoon tea and Oxford. Major: History Minor: English Literature Frances Flagg 22 School St. Andover, Mass. Striking figure in red, dashing into snowstorms, enthusing over class projects, talking with grace and sincerity. Major: Art Minor: English Literature One hundred two IrhflQQflRflDfl Hilda Foertner 40 McKeel Ave. Tarrytown, N. Y. Sensible, amiable, interested; Hilda has a way with her which solves all difficult situations. Major: English Literature Minor: Music Agnes Cope Footf. 122 Clifton St. Belmont, Mass. “I lay on my turn and tried to hum, hut nothing particular seemed to come.” Major: English (Honor worf{) Minor: History Ruth Fosdick 83 Bryant St. Buffalo, N. Y. Her one absorbing thought—to be ethically correct—shown by her numer- ous drafts of letters and her Utopian Ideas of a large family. Major: English Minor: English Literature One hundred three r TfltaCDffRflDfl V V V V V 7 I T 0 V • Julia Ella Foster 177 Harrison Ave. Westfield, N. J. She dances charmingly through life, but her step is poised and sure. Major: History (Honor woi ) Minor: Economics Irene Anne Frey 1309 Main St. Peoria, 111. Eminent Peorian with Eastern tastes . . . unfailing sympathy, patience, and consideration for everyone but herself. Major: Art Minor: Religion Dorothy Emma Fricke 370 Cenrtal Ave. Bridgeport, Conn. A little girl who goes a long way. Major: Mathematics Minor: Economics One hundred four IrTi3QPfTRflDfl Ruth Stewart Fullarton 460 Bronxville Road Yonkers, N. Y. She does the most extraordinary things in the most casual manner. Major: Zoology Minor: Religion Julia Ruth Fulton 2320 Woodland Ave. Duluth, Minn. She loves little children and music. She hates gym and forced humor; but only Air-mails and vacations give her a real thrill. Major: Religion Minor: Latin Elizabeth R. Gardner 18 Garden Place Derby, Conn. She dares to follow where her fancy leads. Major: English Minor: Z.oology One hundred five 1 IrlcflOQflRflDfl Edith Gertrude Gaston 115 Great Oak Lane Pleasantville, N. Y. She lives in a quaint world of fantasy where all day long she hoodwinks “di- nators.” Major: Art Minor: English Literature Marion Hamilton Gillim 415 St. Anne St. Owensboro, Ky. A sleek surface over an active tempera- ment—four years in the North have simply proved how Southern Marion really is. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature Esther Rhoda Glesmann 1881 Northampton St. Holyoke, Mass. She combines a quiet charm and good nature with an ardent love for everything German. Major: German Minor: Latin Helen Goodner 108 Cedar St. Cherrydale, Va. A blue-eyed imp topped with a touch of Rubens. Major: English Literature (Honor wor ) Minor: Economics Frances E. Gray 2122 Woodland Ave. Duluth, Minn. A heated discussion to which Frances listens, unruffled and acquiescent. Then —gales of laughter, occasioned by her choice comments. Major: Economics Minor: History Dorothy Elaine Grf.enbacker Middlefield, Conn. Dynamic, athletic, domestic—Dot is best described in her own power terms, not in one static sentence. Major: Physics Minor: Economics r y IrhflQDflRflDfl i Eleanor Virginia Grimes Latham Park, Oak Lane Philadelphia, Pa. Jinny combines great executive and in- tellectual achievements with a demonia- cal liking for practical jokes. Major: English (Honor wor ) Minor: English Literature Margaret Jessamine Grover 60 Ely Place East Orange, N. J. A jack of all trades with a handy wit. Major: Psychology Minor: Economics Bonnie Bell Guernsey 200 East Locust St. Independence, Kan. Judicial, The League, Debate, Chicago. The League, Debate, Chicago, Judicial. Debate, Chicago, Judicial, The League. Chicago, Judicial, The League, Debate. Major: History Minor: Economics One hundred eight r ▼ T T T’T TTTTTTT'TTTTTTTTT R. Elinor Hagen 19 Hiawatha St. Springfield, Mass. A glowing vitality that transmits itself to everything she does, and everyone she meets. Major. Chemistry Minor: Zoology Alice Victoria Hallblom North Vosseler Ave. Bound Brook, N. J. She tries to cover her gentle friendly disposition with a brisk business severity which deceives no one. Major: Economics Minor: History Amy Louise Hallett 200 Passaic St. Hackensack, N. J. She expresses moods with her fidgety feet, and sheds hairpins and good will with generous abandon. Major: English Literature Minor: Art One hundred nine irTfflroaRflDfl - = T T ▼ T T ▼ ▼■TrTTTTTTTTTT rT 1 Marie L. Harding 22 Randlett Park West Newton, Mass. The delightful variability of a brook— ecstatic waterfalls, clear, quiet pools, the deep-running waters of loyalty. Major: Romance Languages (Honor wor ) Minor: English Constance L. Harrigan 36 Read St. Fall River, Mass. An exquisite product of old Boston, perfect in every detail. Connie at the age of three ate her prunes as gracefully and charmingly as she now eats college fish. Major: English Minor: Music Evelyn Taylor Harrington 11 Ridgewood Terrace Maplewood, N. J. Both pretty is and pretty does. Major: Economics Minor: Chemistry One hundred ten ▼ ▼ T T T T TTTTT T ▼ Catherine Cameron Harris 27 Doremus Ave. Ridgewood, N. J. A creature of caprice—cutting capers one minute, and intent on “big business the next. Major: Economics Minor: History Ruth Irving Harris 13 Franklin St. Lynn, Mass. Said Cotton-tail, “Yes, I used to be a good little girl, but ah, it’s a wicked world!” Major: French Minor: Spanish Lewella Hart 22 Curtice St. Winsted, Conn. A kaleidoscope: ecstatic hour in poetry class; dashing off a skit for a friend's birthday party; washing teacups dreamily. Major: English Minor: English Literature One hundred eleven hkfflffiRBDE Rosalind Hasbrouck Spruce lind and Lockerman Ave. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. “The passion of the tide of colours in clouds and in forest flowed into her life.” Major: English Minor: Art Alice Hastings 313 Maple St. Springfield, Mass. Alice is straight in more ways than one; she has an irreproachable conscience and moves toward an unwavering goal. Major: Chemistry Minior: Zoology Marion Frederica Hause 614 West Market St. Pottsville, Pa. An emotional medley with many domi- nant notes. Major: Latin Minor: Art One hundred twelve r 1 IrhflQQaRflDfl Jeanne Wilkins Hays 5701) Elgin Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa. Peter’s Hedonistic point of view makes college a pleasant vacation. Major: Psychology Minor: Romance Languages Gertrude A. Heidenthal 47' 2 Watkins Ave. Middletown, N. Y. Gertrude’s propensity for losing things, and her musical ability keep her busy playing Beethoven’s “Rage over a Lost Penny.” Major: Mathematics Minor: Zoology Sylvia M. Heyl 6329 Greene St. Germantown, Pa. Exuberance and friendliness with an unshaken independence. Major: Art Minor: French One hundred thirteen IdrflOQflRflDfl TTTT TTTTTT’ Alice Hannah Higley 232 Main St. Hudson Falls, N. Y. A gracious hostess, behind a tabic of pewter and wedgwood, with dimples to bewitch and sympathy to charm. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature Marjorie Hill 21 Centre St. Brookline, Mass. “Moi, j’aime la lointaine Princesse!” Major: English Literature (Honor work Minor: History Madeleine Sears Hoagland 221 Belgrade Ave. Roslindale, Mass. A being betwixt girl and sprite, led by an elfin will. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature One hundred fourteen rr tt ▼▼▼▼▼▼TTTTyTTTTTTTT T Lois L. Horne 1138 Myrtle Ave. Plainville, N. J. Vivacious anti authoritative—addicted to procrastination. Major: Psychology Minor: Economics Marguerite Stockbridge Hoyle Rye N. Y. An impish kind of person, full of un- expected ideas and enthusiasms for life and laughter. Major: English Literature Minor: English Kathryn Lenore Hoyt 106 Washington St. Chicopee Falls, Mass. We wonder what is going on beneath that casual exterior. Major: History Minor: Geology One hundred fifteen TricamfTRflDfl TTTTTT TT T ir r Emily Hamilton Hucker 28 Elam Place Buffalo, N. Y. Airedale—thru and thru! Major: Mathematics Minor: Economics Dorothy Cole Hudson 183 Furman St. Schenectady, N. Y. “Sunny”—capable, lovable, musical. Major: Psychology Minor: Music Anna Frances Hull 69 Grove Avc. Madison, Conn. As shy and kind as a cool wind in sum- mer. Major: Economics Minor: Mathematics One hundred sixteen ▼ IihaOQflRflDfl T'T' Y' T TTTTTTTT T T Y Y T T Y Y Y Laura W. Hulse Auburn Ala. An acute sensitivity to balance and per- spective, whether in printing and draw- ing, or in appreciating the humor of life. Major: English Literature Minor: History Kathleen L. Hussey 37 Devens Road Swampscott, Mass. A fashioner of silver Pegasi. Major: Zoology Minor: Chemistry Ruth Irene Hutchinson 875 W. 181st St. New York City Commonly lost behind a blur of flut- tering hands, and a medley of raucous comment and laughter. Major: Latin Minor: Education IihflQQffRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T TTTVTT ▼ T T T T T 'V’VT'y Ruth W. Jackson 41 Quinby Avc. White Plains, N. Y. Filmy nightgowns, long hair, gentility . . . harbinger of the return of elegance. Major: English Literature Minor: Eeonomics Ruth Louise Jagger 218 Walnut St. Holyoke, Mass. A keen mind and a subtlety of humor quietly appreciating the best. Major: English Literature Minor: Art Mary Louise Jarden 7048 Germantown Road Mount Airy, Philadelphia, Penn. Greyness and quietness are in her, bril- liance, and jolly laughter like stars that twinkle in the falling mist. Major: English Minor: Psychology One hundred eighteen r T T T Idf3QQflRflDfl. ▼ T T r'T'TT TTTTTTT TTT Janet L. Jenks Millerton N. Y. An orderly life of well-regulated exer- cise at volleyball, intellectual exercise in the Physics Lab—even her ’phone calls are a regular occurence. Major: Physics Minor: Mathematics Ruth Douglas Jones ISO Third St. Newburgh, N. Y. “Rare compound of oddity, frolic and fun!” Major: English Minor: English Literature Katheryn Keene 1% Bellevue St. West Roxbury, Mass. Lady Pokcrface, who says and docs only what she chooses, and whose occa- sional moments of impetuousness are therefore all the more captivating. Major: Economics Minor: History One hundred nineteen r T T T r T ▼TTTT TTTT TTT-TTTT TTTTTT T T Mary Sears King 10 Linwood St. Hyde Park, Mass. Mary just can’t get along without her Scout troop, her morning run, her breaks, her sense of duty, and her friendly smile. Major: Religion Minor: History Constance Mercer Kluch 5555 Everett Avenue Chicago, 111. Mist and fire. The mist we’ll never understand, hut the fire is her loyalty. Anyone who knows her can never forget her. Major: English Minor: French Sarah Ewell Kunzig 292 East Sidney Ave. Mount Vernon, N. Y. The hard, keen depths of a diamond, glowing with warmth and color, in a per- fect setting of orchids, kid gloves, and nonchalance. Major: English Literature Minor: History One hundred twenty ▼ ▼ T 'T T 'T TTTTTTT TTTTT T 1 Judith Hylda Lapp 72 Wolcott St. Leroy, N. Y. A little girl, a big coat, a broad smile— cute little Judy. Majc-: Economics Minor: Art Marjorie Elizabeth Lincoln 128 South Palmetto Ave. Daytona Beach, Fla. There she goes on her way to do some- thing else—what a whirl life is! And Hetty's in the thick of it. Major: Psychology Minor: English Georgia Locke 284 Highland Ave. Winchester, Mass. She chuckles and chatters like the teas- in'est, happiest red squirrel; then she stands off with all the color and dignity of a tiger lily; then she bobs up as shiny as the Hallowe’en apple in a tub of cold water. Major: English Literature Minor: History One hundred twenty-one r IfTfaODfTRflDfl ▼ TTTTT TT r-TT TTTTT T Katherine Lotz 108 Lake Ave. Newton Center, Mass. Pink roses in a deep blue bowl; a row of shoes side by side on a closet shelf; a life fitted to a pattern of neatness and repose. Major: Economics Minor: Psychology Loretta M. Lyons 20 Goodrich St. Springfield, Mass. God’s innocent — unquestioning cre- dulity—a child’s faculty for making pre- cociously sophisticated remarks at the wrong time. Major: Latin (Honor u’orl{) Minor: English Literature Ruth A. McClymont 293 McKinley Ave. New Haven, Conn. Mistress of herself, though China fall. Major: English Minor: English Literature One hundred twenty-two IrltfKPflRflDfl Y ▼ Y Y Y Y TTTTT' Katherine Kavanauch McGee 265 Summit Avc. Mount Vernon, N. Y. Paradox—amazing accomplishment out of infinite leisure. Major: History (Honor ivor ) Minor: Economics Ruth Janet McGregor 94 East Ave. Norwalk, Conn. Elizabethan exuberance and natural- ness—eyes dancing with merriment one moment, darkly quiet the next. Major: Religion Minor: Music Elisabeth McKee 17 Homestead Ave. Danbury, Conn. Cool, clear, calm as an Alpine Lake. Major: Art Minor: Zoology One hundred twenty-three V itltaOPflRflDfl r ▼ T T ▼ T ▼ TTTTTTTTTTTTT’ Sally Madison 53 Prospect Park, West Brooklyn, N. Y. The quintessence of chic and the great- est manager since Tex Rickard. She does most of it with one sentence—“Now, Klugh, dolling, don't be an ass.” Her face is of consummate symmetry and her personality backs it up. Major: English Literature Minor: Art Ruth P. Marriott 98 West Passaic Ave. Rutherford, N. J. A perfect profile, just the figure for the new clothes; she could be a perfect model if she hadn’t modelled her ideals on a higher plane. Major: English Literature Minor: Art Isabel Mathews 340 S. First St. Globe, Ariz. All the world’s a stage—and Isabel with an ever ready humor and a true sense of the dramatic enlivens the show. Major: English Literature Minor: Music One hundred twenty-jour i ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T TTTTT’ Olive Lois Mathews 340 S. First St. Globe, Ariz. A most surprising little person, whose interests range from Hebrew to eccentric dancing. Major: Religion Minor: English Literature Dorothea E. May 105 Foxall St Brooklyn, N. Y. A dreamer whose idealism expresses itself in surprisingly practical results. Major: Economics Minor: Mathematics Phyllis Merrill 40 Clark St. Franklin, N. H. An energetic idealist who pours forth her energy in constant activity and a vivid prose style, her idealism in sympathy with world causes. Major: English (Honor tvorf ) Minor: History Otic hundred twenty-five 1 T T T ▼ T ▼ TTT T’ T ■ Dorothea Sill Meyers Sodus N. Y. A gusty autumn leaf always blowing in at the last moment. Major: Economics and Sociology Minor: History Elinor M. Meyers 429 Parkside Ave. BulTalo, N. Y. • • Brother Monk—brown eyes, naive en- thusiasm, and a dash of humor. Major: History Minor: Economics and Education Mary Elizabeth Michel 627 N. Kenilworth Ave. Oak Park, 111. Mary is like a symphony—a harmony of vitality and charm, with an underlying theme of idealism. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature One hundred twenty-six r 1 IrhflOQflRflDfl ▼ ▼▼▼TTTTTTT’ Mildred Millar 14 Olive Place Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y. Caustic comments on men and things. . . . Playshop overalls . . . clever bits of writing . . . descriptive gestures . . . smoke screen of cynicism for an intrin- sically soft heart. Major: English Literature (Honor tvoi ) Minor: English Louise Kilgore Miller 42 Beard Ave. Buffalo, N. Y. To ride afar—as free as the wind. Major: English Literature Minor: English Kathleen Neilan 723 Main St. Hamilton, Ohio Neilan is even nicer than the people she reads about, thinks about, writes about. Major: English Minor: English Literature One hundred twenty-seven V TtiraroffRflDfl i Olive Stafford Niles Bennington Vt. Headlines in the Bennington Aston- isher—a distinguished daughter returns to town! Major. English Literature (Honor workj Minor: French Mary Louise Packard 108 Elm St. Bennington, Vt. What happy cross-currents! What contradictions—poise and blushes, seri- ousness and smiles. Major: Art Minor: English Literature Rachel Ellen Parker 628 Capital Avc. Jefferson City, Mo. Introducing a little entertainer from Missouri, who gets what she wants with- out “being shown more than once. Give this little girlie a big hand! Major: English Literature Minor: Music One hundred twenty-eight IihflOQflRflDfl- r T y T t rTTTTTTTTTyTTTTTTTVTTTTTTTTl Ruth Day Parker 19 Olyphant Drive Morristown, N. J. Not Art for Art’s sake, but Ruth for Art’s sake—maps, designs, sketches, ad infinitum. Major: Art Minor: Religion Dorothy Parr 274 Lefferts Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. With a flashing smile, an artistic vari- ance of mood, an unfailing projection into every situation, she shares her “high old life” with the whole community. Major: English Minor: Music Helen Gertrude Patrick 23 Courter Ave. Maplewood, N. J. Fashion clothes a sympathetic nature. Major: Latin Minor: English Literature One hundred twenty-nine IrlraCPfTRflDfl ...... ▼ ▼▼▼TT'TT T T T TTTTTTT'T’TT 1 Gladys E. Pf.mber 3 Quaker St. Granville, N. Y. Storm clouds under golden locks and a disposition as charming as it is reversible. Major: Economics Minor: History Miriam Phelps 22 Gochome, Fujimicho Kojimachi-Ku Tokyo, Japan “Sphinx: you presume on your centur- Major: English (Honor worf{) Minor: English Literature Wilma Potts 15 Hudson Ave. Ridgefield Park, N. J. Her cool, clear voice and unassuming poise make her on campus a gracious friend, on the stage, a perfect lead. Major: Psychology Minor: Economics One hundred thirty IrhflQQffRflDfl-- ▼▼TTTT TTT TTTT TTT TTTT T' Mary Proctor 140 Gilbert Ave. Eau Claire, Wis. Bitter sweet, tempestuous; to love and be loved, infinite capacity! Major: Romance Languages Minor: English Literature Alice Marion Purington 248 Morris Ave. Providence, R. I. She’s engagingly shy, perpetually cheer- ful, and gets a kick out of everything. Major: Zoology Minor: Religion Nelda B. Reymann Pleasant Valley Wheeling, W. Va. She belongs to a rag-a-muffin race, not often born outside of books. Major: English Literature Minor: English One hundred thirty-one 1 TtTcflroflRflDfl TT'TTTTTTTTT T'T TV T T T T T 1 Ruth Louise Robinson 26 Center St. Concord, N. H. A perfect hostess with economic aspira- tions. Major: Economics Minor: History Berta Rogers 105 Fessenden St. Portland, Me. She docs not need to be ostentatious to hold responsible positions; she needs no raucous expletives to improve her gentle humor; she does not need to be “collegi- ate” to be universally liked. Major: French Minor: English Literature Dorothy D. Ryder 23 EdgeclifT Terrace Yonkers, N. Y. Where democratic ideals meet the soul of aristocracy. Major: Economics Minor: English One hundred thirty'two r IrhflOQffRflDfl ▼ Nola C. Sanborn 122 B St. N. E. Washington, D. C. Yellow roses—photographs—midnight calls — photographs, — specials — photo- graphs — houseparties — and still more photographs. Major: Romance Languages Minor: English Literature Ruth C. Sanford 22 Park Avc. Suffern, N. Y. A tomboy with a wide smile and a merry heart, possessing abiding loyalty, and a great love. Major: Latin Minor: Sociology Ruth Annette Searles 65 Monmouth St. Springfield, Mass. Precise and dignified, whether in mor- tar-board, hitting high “B,” or giving a fire-drill. Major: Religion Minor: Psychology One hundred thirty-three r ItTtaOQffRflDfl- Bertha Mae Shook 303 East North St. Marshall, Mo. A pleasing combination of Alice-in- Wonderland and any modern efficiency expert. Major: Economics Minor: English Literature Caroline Elizabeth Sinclair 340 Country Club Drive Cedar Rapids, Iowa Carol the imperturbable, keen-witted and artistic; is she happier laughing at Pickwick or curled up in bed? Major: History Minor: Art Dorothy Foster Smith Smith Lane, R. No. 57 Lawrence, Mass. Rare humor and courage. No task is too small, no effort for others too great. Major: Zoology Minor: Psychology One hn mi red thirty-jour IrhflOQflRflDfl ▼ TTTTTTTT ? T T Katherine Stewart Smith 76 Riverside Drive Binghamton, N. Y. “Thou Swell, thou Witty, thou Grand.” Major: Economics Minor: Art Catherine Fonda Snell 1 Highland Heights Rochester, N. Y. While Cath believes that a straight line is the shortest distance between two points, she takes a detour for an occasional pun. Major: History (Honor wor ) Minor: French Elizabeth Chandler Snow 22 Dover Road Wellesley, Mass. A neat volume entitled, “How to be Happy Though Educated.” Major: Economics (Honor woi ) Minor: Religion One hundred thirty-fur IflcaOPffRflDfl - — f ▼ TTTTTTTTTTTyTTT TTT-TTTTTTTTTT T Louise Sproule Old Short Hills Road Short Hills, N. J. She has an independent mind which sees both the clearness and subtlety of life, and a force of personality which makes her vision effective through action. Major: English (Honor wot ) Minor: History Ruth Mow at Stafford 11 Walcott Ave. Andover, Mass. Bewitchery, style, intangibility. Major: Art Minor: German Ailef.n Duncan Steedman 24 Thornby Place St. Louis, Mo. That air which at first seems so worldly wise, upon acquaintance resolves into in- genuous friendliness. Major: English Literature Minor: Latin One hundred thirty-six r V TfitaroflRflDfl ▼ T T T-W T T ▼ T T T ’ Faith Stone 53 Elmore St. Newton Center, Mass. A steady eye and a sure hand have won her success from A to Z—Archery to Zoology. Major: ' .oology (Honor worf() Minor: Chemistry Ruth Greenleae Stone 36 Forest St. Springfield, Mass. A conflict betwen impulsiveness and academic dependability. . . . Her singular- ly lovely smile lost to the camera. Major: History (Honor wot ) Minor: French CORINNE StOVEKEN Main St. Cromwell, Conn. She prepares her classes a week ahead so that she’ll have plenty of time to read the Cosmopolitan. Major: Mathematics Minor: Romance Languages One hundred thirty-seven f 1 IrlcaODflRflDfl ▼ T T T ▼' T' T T' T' r'T Kate Wakeman Street 4 Ridgcview Ave. White Plains, N. Y. Try though she may, her quiet re- serve can never succeed in hiding her friendliness, her generosity and her unsel- fishness in everything she does. Major: Physiology Minor: Chemistry Mary Markovna Sulloway 795 Third Avc. Berlin, N. H. The very range of her reading is index to a mind liberal and tireless. Major: Economics (Honor wo) ) Minor: French Avis Sweetser 37 ShalTner St. Worcester, Mass. She draws, she sews, she paints; then, tired, she skims the “funnies” and ap- peals to us naively, “Let’s go somewhere.” Major: Art Minor: English Literature One hundred thirty-eight Helen C. Talbot 79 Woodbridge St. South Hadley, Mass. If anyone knows anything about any- thing it’s Helen, who knows something about everything. Major: Economics (Honor tv orf() Minor: Mathematics Helen Hay Taylor 42 Oakland Road Maplewood, N. J. Like St. Martin she’d divide her coat with a beggar; like Falstaff she’s jolly on all occasions . . . and she has the energy of a dozen small boys. Major: Economics Minor: Zoology Estelle L. Thompson 3 Alden Place Maplewood, N. J. Time and change prevailed over her Freshman year aversion to Zoo and now no lecture in the subject escapes her. Major: Zoology Minor: Economics One inndred thirty-nine r IrTrmPffRflDfl — ▼ ▼ T T T ▼ ▼ T T T T T T ▼ ▼ T T T’T ' Mary Eliza Thompson 1324 Seneca St. Far Rockaway, L. I., N. Y. A variable star. Major: Astronomy Minor: Art Catherine Lambert Tolles 41 Chester St. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Never say anything derogatory about anyone Kaye loves . it isn't safe. We can hear her years hence saying, “My Oscar would have been all right if your Willie hadn’t led him on.” Dear little Oscar had just been chopping down the neighbor’s front porch. Major: English Literature Minor: Art Elwyna Van Ai.en 128 Front St. Mineola, N. Y. Always forgets the points of jokes, but continues to entertain with unruffled good nature in spite of derisive jibes. Major: Zoology Minor: Mathematics One hundred forty f T T T T T T TTTTTTTT TTTTTTTT T «T ▼ T t Marian Wentworth Vandersall 311 Wallace Blvtl. Ypsilanti, Mich. She never does anything alone if she can help it, hut makes her fine posters herself. Major: English Minor: History Elizabeth Jean Van Dis 369 Merriman Road Akron, Ohio She has things to tell of Austria and Switzerland and places; she has sociabili- ty too—but she doesn't cry her wares. Major: French Minor: English Literature Dorothy S. Vastine 238 Main St. Catawissa, Pa. She may be anywhere—on the downs, at the piano, gone abroad—but wherever you find her, the same good sport. Major: History (Honor workj Minor: Chemistry One hundred forty-onc f ▼TTTTTT ▼TTTTTTTTTTT T1 Harrif.ttf. Dryden Vera 413 East Beau St. Washington, Pa. Happy is always doubting the abilities she constantly demonstrates; she ambles along in a sleepy way, but arrives on time. Major: Zoology (Honor u or {) Minor: Chemistry Tanetta Vester Jerusalem Palestine Poise, the equanimity of a child, and the glamour of Jerusalem belong to her. Major: Geology Minor: Sociology Dorothy Christine Walker 92 Morgan Road Melrose Highlands, Mass. A perverse child, yet lovable and sweet. Major: Latin Minor: English Literature 9 One hundred forty-two r i T T T T T T T ' Emeline Webster Canaan N. H. A hit too demure, that modest smile. What lurks behind? Teasing laughter. Major: Economics (Honor wor ) Minor: Psychology Runhild Eugenia Wessell 1118 W. Fifth St. Plainfield, N. J. She is quiet, unselfish, and calm, but the possessor of amazingly fervent con- victions. Major: German (Honor tvoi ) Minor: French Mabel Ann West Lost Creek W. Va. Pisa proves that the last shall be first— she’s the last to work and the first to get A. Major: Philosophy Minor: English One hundred forty’three r 1 UiEsmsm ▼ VTTTT TT T T T 1 Eleanor Whiting 249 Oak St. Holyoke, Mass. “I'm so happy I could give myself I” away! Major: Economics Minor: Art Sally Elizabeth Whittam 88 Browne St. Brookline, Mass. Now cooly dignified, now gaily viva- cious, always with an enigmatic twinkle in her eye. Major: English Literature Minor: English Virginia Winifred Wilcomb 121 Summer St. Springfield, Vt. Utterly natural, utterly lovable. Major: Romance Languages Minor: Geology One hundred forty-four r HtaOQflRflDfl Alois Louise Wilmann 1.37 Vernon Ave. Mount Vernon, N. Y. She begins the day only half aroused from sleep—but at night, be it pie-beds or transferred bureau drawers, it is safe to bet that Willie’s at the bottom of it. Major: Zoology Minor: Sociology Helen Wilmann 1.37 Vernon Ave. Mount Vernon, N. Y. She comes, grinning and unperturbed, through soccer, dances, and courses with a never diminished sense of the ridiculous. Major: Economics Minor: Zoology Harriet Chisholm Wilson 39 Legare St. Charleston, S. C. She is a dreamer and an incurable ro- mantic with a perfect sense of proportion and a propensity to laugh at the ridicu- lous in life. Major: English Literature Minor: English One hundred forty-five 1 Tabitha Bonar Wilson 1300 Byron St. Wheeling, W. Va. Clapp in, Clapp out, eight hands round (of coffee cups), balance and swing, ladies’ choice. Major: Zoology Minor: Sociology Anita Elizabeth Young 66 Ramsey Place Albany, N. Y. Changeling, ghost flower, flame on the mountain top! Major: English (Honor wot ) Minor: English Literature One hundred forty-six IiIiflOOaRflDfl Former Members of the Class of 1930 Best, Miriam Anna . . . Bettys, Mary Gertrude . . Cook, Kathryn Ethel . . Cooley, Margaret Ide . . Dickson, Ruth Anne . . . Gannett, Muriel Sanders . Grose, Virginia . . Gude, Anne Josephine . . Hall, Harriet............. Hinman, Sara Alice . . . I lodgson, Jennie Crocker . Holmes, Carolyn Gleason . Humphrey, Janet Birgc . . Hurd, Mary................ Jackson, Alice Harriet . . Jordan, Luella............ Lundquist, Annette Lillian Mittendorf, Emilia Borchers Moore, Elizabeth Ellen . . Nolan, Mary Margaret . . Pascoe, Margaret Robertson Paton, Jean Madeline . . Phillips, Mary Elizabeth Pillsbury, Elizabeth Dinsmoor Roffmann, Elsie .... Rothwell, Miriam Phelps . Scott, Winifred Emily . . Sharpless, Amy Elizabeth . Shryock, Virginia Florence Sterrett, Margaret .... Stockhus, Meryle Alice . . Stout, Minnie Louise . . Thomas, Gwendolyn Lucile Thompson, Julia Rachel . Thomson, Mary Scott . . West, Katharine Louisa . . Wilcox, Louis Fancher . . 722 Brookwood Road, Hunting Ridge, Baltimore, Maryland 2 Trafalgar Street, Rochester, New York 27 Atterbury Avenue, Trenton, New Jersey 211 Seventeenth Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 40 East 169th Street, New York City, New York 1 North Market Square, I Iarrisburg, Pennsylvania 623 Seminary Street, Greencastlc, Indiana 2 Stratford Place, Newark, New Jersey Lake Road, South Windham, Maine 255 West Genesee Street, Clyde, New York Clifton Road, Atlanta, Georgia 59 West Main Street, Chillicothe, Ohio 226 North Second Street, Glean, New York 13 Scott Street, Utica, New York 25 Orchard Street, Springfield, Vermont 7802 Pansey Street, Glendale, New York 621 East Sixth Street, Jamestown, New York “Four Acres,” Oscawana, New York 828 West Allegan Street, Lansing Michigan 19 Chestnut Street, Hatfield, Massachusetts 1465 Webster Street, Palo Alto, California 122 Normal Street, Ypsilanti, Michigan 176 Thirty-first Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 112 Chestnut Street, West Newton, Massachusetts 8020 Lefferts Avenue, Kcw Gardens, Long Island, New York 35 South Parsons Avenue, Flushing, New York 144 Hancock Street, Auburndale, Massachusetts Tough kena mon, Pen nslvania 48 Harvey Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 488 Ash Street, Winnetka, Illinois 917 Ridgewood Road, Rockford, Illinois 506 Broadway, Vincennes, Indiana 507 West 142nd Street, New York, New York Box 2172, Bisbce, Arizona 76 Greenacres Avenue, Scarsdale, New York 298 Glen Street, Glens Falls, New York 21 College Street, Springfield, Massachusetts One hundred jarty-teven IrItfld)aRflDfl=-— ▼ T T T ▼ T T T ▼ T T ▼ TTTTTT T 1930 Commencement Program Saturday, June 7 11.00 A. M. Meeting of the Presidents of Alumnae Clubs . New York Room 2.00 P. M. Meeting of the Alumnae Association and Alumnae Fete....................Chapin Auditorium 5.00 P. M. Step Exercises.......................Skinner Steps 6.30 P. M. Class Suppers ... ... Wilbur Banquet Hall 8.30 P. M. Dramatic Club Play, Pygmalion, By George Bernard Shaw .... Chapin Auditorium Sunday, June 8 10.45 A. M. Baccalaureate Service..............Mary Lyon Chapel Rev. Harry Emerson Fosdick, D.D., L.L.D., of New York City 7.30 P. M. Vesper Service and Organ Recital . . . Mary Lyon Chapel President Mary E. Woolley, L.L.D. % Professor William Churchill Hammond, Mus.D. Monday, June 9 9.00 A. M. Meeting of the Presidents of Alumnae Clubs 10.30 A. M. Grove and Ivy Exercises.................... Ivy Oration by Phyllis M. Merrill 12.30 P. M. Trustee Luncheon........................... 1.00 P. M. Alumnae Luncheon.......................... 2.00 P. M. Trustee Meeting........................... 3.30 P. M. Glee Club Concert......................... 8.30 to 10.00 P. M. President Woolley's Reception to Alumnae, Seniors, and Guests . 10.30 P. M. Senior Serenade............................ Tuesday, June 10 10.30 A. M. Commencement Exercises..................... Dr. James T. Shotwell, Ph.D., L.L.D., Director of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace 1.00 P. M. President's Luncheon......................Mead Hall New York Room Campus Rockefeller Hall Wilbur P anquet Hall President's Office Mary Lyon Chapel Terrace at Hillside Campus Chapin Auditorium One hwhited forty-eight —-------------IrltHCDflRflDfl W W 7 Wi? t - Towne House Speaks Unlock my door and walk among memories Left by others as you have yours. 1 keep them all—they wait for you. You remember? I drew the sunlight through my windows Waking the dust in ribbons through the room So you cleaned and dusted me And I heard your gay voices. The cold winds whistled around me And warm breezes shook my vines In spring weather. I held within me the warmth of firelight Fickering on the walls, Intimacy and laughter, And moments of silence. I lie quiet under the stars And listen to your dreams— White, under the low moon I wait Within the shadow of the hills. R. F. One hundred forty-nine MiflCPflRflDfl. rTTTT l T y'TTT ▼▼▼TTTTTTT'TT ▼' T T T ▼ ▼ T 1 Love Among the Buttercups A Comedy with Incidental Music in the Year of Change 1900 By Phyllis Merrill and Louise Sproule Dramatis Personae Mrs. Bradley: alias, Annie La Verne, an actress out of a job . Lily Bradley: alias, Lily LaVernc, a chorus lady, and daughter to Mrs. Bradley........................................ Mrs. Mayberry: custodian of Riverview House Betty Mayberry: her daughter, who has heard of the 20th century James Hawkins: a missionary, made mostly of inhibitions Hattie Hawkins: his sister, maternally disposed Harold Vandeveer: a gay young blade from the city Patrick Kennedy: a politician with the Tammany taint Mrs. Mosely: Past master of rocking chair rhythms Molly Mosely: Child of boarding houses...................... Jim Whittaker: unable to forget a recent return from Manila Vaudeville Team—Lois Horne, Rachel Parker, Ruth Dickson, Ruth Caroline Drisko Constance Klugh Harriette Vera Lucetta Andrews Wilma Potts Ruth Cooke Louise Sproule Eleanor Chase Mary Chaffee Jeanne Hays Dorothy Parr Sanford Country People—Ellen Chase, Marie Harding, Mary King, Ruth McClymont, Frances Flagg. Guests—Elinor Hagen, Kate Street, Wilma Corcoran, Marjorie Hill, Virginia Wilcomb, Eula Blair, Catherine Harris, Constance Harrigan, Amy Hallett, Clara Crozier, Elizabeth Cooper, Marjorie Dunn, Rhoda Bigelow. One hundred fifty IrltaOPffRflDfl ’▼TTTTTTTTTTTTTT’TTT T Executive Staff Chairman of Show . Coach Stage Manager . Business Manager . E. Virginia Grimes Miss Isadelle Couch . Polly Conard . Katherine McGee HEADS OF Properties................... Scenery ..................... Lighting..................... Costumes..................... Tickets ..... Publicity .... Programs..................... Music........................ Refreshments .... Ushers....................... Prompter..................... COMMITTEES Rosalind Hasbrouck Elisabeth McKee Eleanor Crary Shirley Andrews . . . . Dorothy Vastine ...............Georgia Locke Kathleen Neilan . Dorothy Chadwell Ruth Christie and Helen Goodner Dorothy Fricke Katherine Smith One hundred fifty-one r ItltaCPflRflDff TTTTTTTTTTT’ College Life FRESHMAN YEAR Lectures, speeches, interviews, Trips through campus hard on shoes; Listening to your betters speak, Oh! the joys of Freshman week! Junior sisters, parties, teas, Learning new formalities; Lessons, libe and lab and gym, Back and forth you drag each limb; Bad enough, these classes, but All the worse when you can’t cut; And so you give especial praise To Mountain and to Founder’s days! Concerts, singing, Junior Show, Thanksgiving comes before you know; Christmas! Chapel hymns of cheer, Triumphs at home, Happy New Year! Exams are here and with them woe— That you should have to study so! A day or two of rest and then, New classes, all the harder when Spring winds turn all thoughts of books Into violet-vested brooks. Will spring vacation never come It’s here—and gone—your brain is numb. Prom, room choosing and Mayday, You simply can't go on this way: Exams again; you’ll never look Inside another solemn book. Time to go home. You’ll have to wait To see the Seniors graduate. All right, goodbye, can’t make you sore; Next year you’ll be a Sophomore. One hundred fifty-two r TTfflPffRffDfl ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼ T T T V V ' SOPHOMORE YEAR A Sophomore, you said, and here You're back again, it seems so queer— Off campus, this time, but the same Familiar faces speak your name. It's simpler now, for you know where To catch the trolley, pay more fare, And ride to movies late at night As privileged upperclassmen might: Only you can't because you’re snowed Under a specially heavy load Of work, and you say, “My mistake, That Freshman work was all a fake.” More things to do, rush here, rush there, Forgetting just what clothes you wear; Dancing in cheesecloth to your knees, And feeling like a piece of cheese, Trying hard to stand the shock Of being an angel at six o'clock; And Christmas cheer is here again; A fling at home; back on the train; Exams upon you, snow and sleet; Bleak, bare campus, cold, wet feet . . . But Spring is coming on her way, And suddenly the first of May Dawns softly. Then, to spoil her blush, The all-increasing, hectic rush; Too much to do, things go too fast, You can’t keep up; this pace cant last. Exams and packing; far away You wonder how you got to stay; But nothing matters now that soon you’re Going to be a college Junior. IthflCQffRflDfl ▼ ▼ T ▼ ▼ T T T”▼ JUNIOR YEAR Junior Year and Prom and Show— A knockout year—such fun to go Tell little sisters what to do. (Heavens! Could this have been you?) No GYM! Cheers! Three hours a week Extra for you. Oh, what a treat! But where they go is mystery, You need a hundred, have but three. Junior lunch is yours to sell And hungry dogs to feed as well. Show rehearsals, campus sing; You’re big enough for anything. Holidays come, go, are dreams— Back at college. Leisure seems To lessen weekly; must get done! You have to have a little fun. Things are whirling by too fast; You think you simply can not last. Stumbling to the Downs is new, Merely something else to do. Remember Juniors, Freshman year? Funny, they're no longer here. Your prom is coming, well, you guess It must have been a great success— It seems so far away by now. Rut Spring is here again—and howl Thoughts go flying off on wings, To think of missing Holyoke Springs— You haven't time to think of that, Exams are on you; you’ll flunk flat. Why—can this really truly mean you’re Soon to be a Holyoke Senior? One hundred fifty’four r IrlfaOPflRflDfl 'T ▼ Y ▼ T ▼ T Y Y Y Y SENIOR YEAR Sure enough, a Senior—well— You can't believe it, but it’s swell! “May I serve your” “Yes, I’ll have salt.” Through the door while others halt. Caps and gowns and chapel pace, Watching others watch your face; Tripping, more often, to the Downs, Trying to erase those frowns; Deciding questions, managing, Doing every sort of thing Besides the lessons; things you knew You’d never, never get to do. Towne House, outing cabin, grinds For Llamie, puzzling all your minds. More work, quizzes, Christmas, back, More quizzes, papers, never slack. Exams are over, just once more To take the things; but Oh! the bore Of majors spoiling this last spring Senior dance—don't miss a thing. Too bad apple blossoms just like these Don’t grow at home on apple trees; And Spring is back to wind her maze Of white moon nights and blue sky days. The last Mayday. Oh! what to do In case you should fail to get through ? Majors dawn, crisis at last, Heavens! How have others passed? But you do, too, and live to save A sprig of laurel from the grave Of Mary Lyon on the day You placed it there and went away. K. N. One hum!red fifty-five hliE£Q3RSm ▼ T T ▼ T ▼ T ▼ T T i THE CREAM OF THE CROP On top-where it belongs VIRGINIA GRIMES such popularity must be deserved DOROTHY PARR 57 Varieties CONSTANCY KLU6H IrlfflOQffRflDfl BODY by FISHER” SALLY KUNZIG The instrument OF THE IMMORTALS ANITA YOUNG I r i' i; n: Cf C: °r. } 1 h ft IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE IT IS POLLY CONARD Cold Control ELEANOR CRARY lo .W % • L • r C V - L cW) HERE DWELLS YOUTH MARGUERITE HOYLE ■ ' • “A-. $Icu axhxoL c Lc hjaj uc AUDRA ARNOLD Vt ALWAYS GOOD TAST£ LOUISE SPROULE ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T T T T 'i a WHEN IT RAINS MILDRED MILLAR Don't write — Telegraph . X BONNIE BELL GUERNSEY xj. GUARANTEED FC MARY MICHEL rr 1« 1'se In Town, Honey ! RACHEL PARKER « TIME TO RETIRE ELEANOR CHASE because: you love nice things SALLY MADISON i $ COLORFUL TONE CAROLYN FISCHER rr TTT TV TTTTTTTT T T T'T T T ■ THE FLAVOR LASTS '' A HARRIET WILSON re's a reason' PHYLLIS MERRILL 'Ask The Man Who Owns One'' KATHERINE McGEE cc be nonchalant CATHERINE SNELL r 9 MARY CHAFFEE K ...... V •• M • r The Champagne of Ginger Ales NELDA REYMANN 'Hasn't Scratched Yet DOROTHY VASTINE r T IrlfflOQffRflDfU- TTTTTTTTTTTTT T T T T T ▼ ▼ T ......JrltflQQflRflPfl- — rt T T ? TTTTTTTTT T ▼’T rT T TTTTTTTTTTTT Trh3(T)ffRflDfl T'T'T TTT TT TTTTTTTTTTTTT1 1930 Class Song Out of the crimson of dawn White wings sweeping the sky, Upward and outward and on, A splendor of strength surging by,— Beating hoofs, flash in the sun, Mane blown like the spray from the sea, Pegasus! Now he is gone, Splendid, eternal and free! In the swift upward rush of his flight Is the song of the battle he knows; Silver hoofs striking sparks from the stars In a flashing of star-dust that glows Whiter than sea-foam is white, Challenging conquest he goes. Straight to the heart of the sun He follows the trail of its fire. Pegasus! Strong in desire Upward and outward and on! White pride, white wings never tire Till the goal of the sunset be won! Words by Music by Margaret Pascoe Dorothy Parr One hundred sixty-two F T T ▼ T T T T ▼ rrlfflOQflRflDfl- — ▼ T T T ▼ T ▼ T 1T' V T T '▼ T ▼ T T T ▼ T T Sanderson Scarlcs Critchctt Rouse Ladd Holmes Wacker Ostwald Officers of the President......................... Vice-President.................... Secretary......................... T reasurer........................ Sergeant-at-Arms .... Song Leader....................... Class of 1931 . . . . Sara S. Holmes Dorothy C. Wacker Frances L. Ostwald . . . . M. Evelyn Ladd . Ruth J. Sanderson Harriet K. Dein EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Frederika Critchett Ramona M. Searls Jean Streeter Helen R. Trafton One hundred sixty-four Members of the Class of 1931 Adams, Elizabeth L. . . Adams, Mary Sherwood . Adams, Rebecca C. . . Aiken, Mary Louise . . Albrech, Constance . . Allen, Marjorie Oliver . Alliger. Virginia L. . . Altsman, Mary Elizabeth Anderson, Florence L. . Andrews, Alicia H. . . Appasamy, Vimala . . Averill, Elisabeth L. . . Averill, Isabel Coy . . . Axtcll, Priscilla R. . . . Babcock, Katherine . . Babcock, Virginia F. . . Bach, Helen C............. Bail, Elizabeth C. . . . Barrett, Mary K. . . . Barrows, Geneva M. . . Batchelder, Muriel G. Beatty, Lois Fiske . . . Bcaupain, S. Lillian . . Benware, Dorothy E. . . Best, Mildred M. . . . Betz, Barbara Jean . . Bicknell, Elizabeth A. . Blackmer, Mary L. . . Blair, Isabel L.......... Blunt, Ruth C............. Bronson, Alice F. . . . Brosseau, Helene . . . Brown, Harriet C. . . . Brown, Helen Marion . Buck, Eleanor K. . . . Burke, Evelyn S. . . . Burkey, Margaret M. . . Captain, Jean L. . . . Carpenter, Mary E. . . 32 Berkeley Place, Buffalo, N. Y. Long Lots Road, Westport, Conn. 28 Winnemay St., Natick, Mass. 121 Garfield St., Springfield, Mass. 34 Iroquois St., Rochester, N. Y. Cayuga, N. Y. Old Orchard Farm, Katonah, N. Y. Timlin Hill, Portsmouth, Ohio 32 8th Avc., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1090 Madison Avc., Albany, N. Y. Rither Den Road, Vepuy, Madras, India 89 W. Division, Fond du Lac, Wis. 20 Van Vorst St., Utica, N. Y. Dcmorest, Ga. 15 Roanoke Road, Wellesley, Mass. 4 Lyford St., Worcester, Mass. Fort McPherson, Ga. 1025 Walnut St., Newton Highlands, Mass. 3 Beaman St., Poultncy, Vt. 24 Ames Ave., Mittineague, Mass. 9 Orchard Place, Tenafly, N. J. 129 ,S. Park Ave., Longmcadow, Mass. 145 Terrace Ave., Port Chester, N. Y. 24 Second St., Newport, Vt. 722 Brookwood Road, Hunting Ridge, Baltimore Md. Boscobel, Wis. 84 Erie Ave., Newton Highlands, Mass. 15 Beacon Ave., Holyoke, Mass. 204 Orchard Ave., Lebanon, Ohio Mountain Ave., Bound Brook, N. J. 8506 169th St., Jamaica, N. Y. 57 Nahanl Ave., Winthrop, Mass. 2 Clark Road, Wellesley Hills, Mass. Box 62, Fitchburg, Mass. 411 Hartford Ave., Wethersfield, Conn. 134 N. Doughty Ave., Somerville, N. J. 48 Netherwood Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 82 Elm St., Montclair, N. J. 290 Lora Ave., Youngstown, Ohio One hundred sixty-fire ▼ T T T T T TT TT T T T ▼ T T T T ▼ W T Carr, Rosemary...................40 Mason Ave., Webster Groves, Mo. Carroll, Anna 13.................61 Ben Lomond St., Uniontown, Pa. Casey, Lucille H.................36 Ridgewood Ave., Irvington, N. J. Chapman, Marjorie...............29 Summer St., Westerly, R. I. Churchill, Frances N............96 College, South Hadley, Mass. Clarke, L. Jeanette.............78 Front S., Binghamton, N. Y. Colton, Esther..................... 222 Elm St., Montpelier, Vt. Connors, Gladys B...............328 Middle St., Portsmouth, N. H. Cook, Elizabeth Jane............126 Ashland St., Melrose Highlands, Mass. Cooper, Ruth....................2 Brenton Ave., Providence, R. I. Copeland, Sara F................6 Cornell Apt., Richmond, Ind. Corey, Grace M..................25 Slater Ave., Norwich, Conn. Cornwell, Helen Etta . . . . 922 8th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Critchett, Frederika............35 Arden Road, Watertown, Mass. Cunningham, Elizabeth V. . . . 33 Grcenvale Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Cunningham, Henrietta . . . . 914 N. 2nd Ave., Tucson, Ariz. Currier, Margaret...............22 Townsend Road, Belmont, Mass. Curry, Constance H..............122 Nelson Ave., Peekskill, N. Y. Darragh, Elizabeth G............ 255 College Ave., Beaver, Pa. Davis, Elizabeth E..................104 State St., Seneca Falls, N. Y. Davis, Harriet J................ 306 Berkeley Road, Merion, Pa. Dein, Harriet K.................Honesdale, Pa. Dclnoce, Camille S..............63 Sycamore Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Diserens, Alice E...............3 Aragon Apts., Avondale, Cincinnati, Ohio Dorman, Frances H............... 290 Upper Mountain Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Driver, Dorothy S...............Court Inn, Doylestown, Pa. Eddy, Frances...................82 Kirkstall Road, Ncwtonville, Mass. Eddy, Helen E...................23 Beech St., East Orange, N. J. Ellis, Sidonia H................41 Longmcadow St., Longmeadow, Mass. Enbcrg, Helen G.................610 Parkview Ave., Detroit, Mich. Erlanger, Ruth J................5127 Waterman Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Ernst, Jeanne A................. 282 Highland St., Worcester, Mass. Feicht, Florence L..............1115 Portland St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Fidler, Kathryn E...............135 N. 8th St., Reading, Pa. Fitts, Margaret.................79 Pembroke St., Newton, Mass. Flagg, Charlotte J..............Washington St., Holliston, Mass. Flint, Helen M.................. 374 King St., Port Chester, N. Y. Florancc, Maida L..............10316 Springfield Ave., Queens Village, N .Y. French, Eleanor H..............80 Locust Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. Frost, Anna Adelaide .... 809 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Frost, Josephine................ 809 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gaehr, Dorothy..................Aurora, N. Y. One hundred sixty-six r TrlfflODflRffDfl ▼ ▼ ▼ T ▼T’T T’T TTTTT TTT TTT Gleason, Irene J................ 278 Mountain Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Goddard, Elizabeth L. A. . . . Ill Chancellor St., Newtown, Pa. Goddard, Margaret A.............Shaohsing, Chekiang Province, China Goertz, Helen G................. 444 E. 66th St., New York City Gooch, Florence B...............69 Ross Ave., Hackensack, N. J. Goodrich, Virginia M............St. George St., Duxbury (Millbrook P. O.), Mass. Graham, Bernice.................162 Woodvalc Ave., Prince Bay, N. Y. Grant, Jeanetta.................Easthampton Road, Northampton, Mass. Green, Catherine L..............120 S. Main St., Dolgeville, N. Y Green, Elizabeth A.............. 1208 Clinton Ave., Plainfield, N. J. Grimes, Virginia M. L...........155 E. 42nd St., New York, N. Y. Groben, E. Claire...............71 Highgate Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Grucncwald, Katharine .... 605 S. 7th St., Lalayette, Ind. Guernsey, Jessie Elizabeth . . . 200 E. Locust St., Independence, Kan. Hackett, Esther L................R. F. D. No. 1, Bridgeport, Conn. Hadley, Hildegarde...............North Bangor, N. Y. Hammond, Dorothy C...............1100 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Hastings, Margaret...............54 Alden St., Springfield, Mass. Hermes, Frances E................139 Paine Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Hinton, Maybelle M............... 304 Chestnut St., Holyoke, Mass. Hocll, Ada M..................... 499 W. Bringhurst St., Germantown, Pa. Holbrook, Dorothy................116 Lennox Ave., East Orange, N. Y. Holleran, Elsie A................3 Lincoln Circle, Crestwood, N. J. Holling, Mildred E...............414 W. 43rd St., New York City Holmes, Frances E................13014 State St., Montpelier, Vt. Holmes, Sara S...................Miles City, Mont. Howell, Anna V...................East Main St., Riverhcad, N. Y. Hughes, Marjorie A...............1423 Oneida St., Utica, N. Y. Jackson, Mary H.................. 530 W. Lovell St., Kalamazoo, Mich. Jackson, Phyllis.................19 Bcttswood Road, Norwalk, Conn. Jewett, Elizabeth................71 Woodland Road, Auburndale, Mass. Johnson, Alice A.................67 Hillside Ave., Arlington, Mass. Johnson, Anne A..................Gwyncroft, North Wales, Pa. Johnson, Elizabeth B.............Shapham Court, Apt. Rl, White Plains, N. Y. Johnson, Isabelle W..............90 Coligni Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Jones, Alfreda 0.................27 West Court St., Courtland, N. Y. Jones, Margaret S................11 Clay St., LeRoy, N. Y. Jones, Martha L..................56 Bedford Road, Schenectady, N. Y. Keith, Mary E....................221 Lake St., Eau Claire, Wis. Kellogg, Eleanor H...............116 Maple St., Brooklyn, N. Y. King, Florice A..................70 Marvel Road, New Haven, Conn. Klausmann, Magdalene P. . . . 27 Park Road, Maplewood, N. J. One hundred sixty-seven IrltflOPflRflDfl ▼ T T T T T V Knapp, Annie J.................26 Davis St., Binghamton, N. Y. Koons, Louise..................Seoul, Korea, Japan Kruger, Ruth G.................Oenoke Ridge, New Canaan, Conn. Kuyper, Cornelia J.................1059 Madison Avc., Paterson, N. J. Ladd, Mary Evelyn...................20 Franklin St., Barre, Vt. Lauckhardt, Elizabeth D. . . . 10 Walworth Avc., White Plains, N. Y. Leach, Margaret Eileen .... 34 W. Main St., Orange, Mass. LeClear, Virginia...............LaVale, Cumberland, Md. Lewis, Elizabeth L.............. 610 36th Ave., N., Seattle, Wash. Lipman, Rose L..................62 Firglade Ave., Springfield, Mass. Little, Elizabeth G.............18 W. Avondale Ave., Youngstown, Ohio Litzinger, Anne E............... 242 E. John St., Bedford, Pa. Lovejoy, Olive M................31 Innis Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Ludwig, Anna L.................. 386 Fairvicw Ave., Orange, N. J. Lundahl, Ruth W.................Oak St., Thomaston, Conn. Lyle, Mina Rose................. 223 Avon Road, Narberth, Pa. Lyman, Alice C..................28 Edgewood Road, Glen Ridge, N. J. Lyman, Dorothy G................201 Main St., Easthampton, Mass. McClure, Prances L..............5 Rockledge Road, Wheeling, W. Va. McGovern, Elizabeth G. . . . 115 Dayan St., Lowville, N. Y. McKerihan, Jean.................1719 Second Ave., Altoona, Pa. McKittrick, Mary................ 2344 Pcrryville Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. McMullen, Mary.................. 859 Edison Ave., Detroit, Mich. McWain, Mary Martin .... 20 Ross St., Batavia, N. Y. Matthews, Janet M............... 326 6th St., Escanaba, Mich. Maxfield, Mary E. 2405 W. 17th St., Wilmington, Del. Meakim, Melba A.... 3912 219th St., Bayside, N. Y. Meek, Regina C.................. 2417 2nd Ave., Altoona, Pa. Mendenhall, Virginia P. ... 319 Washington St., Peckskill, N. Y. Midelfart, Elise W.............. 343 Gilbert Ave., Eau Claire, Wis, Miller, Mary L.................. 330 Central St., Auburndale, Mass. Modcsitt, Virginia.............. 454 W. Main St., Danville, Ind. Montignani, Frances W. ... 138 Archer Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Morgan, Florence A..............67 Salter PL, Maplewood, N. J. Morris, Florence................102 Taylor St., West Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Mosher, Phyllis................. 228 Second St., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Newton, Virginia G..............10 Mt. Vernon St., Barre, Vt. Nichols, Lydia A................30 Grove Ave., Westerly, R. 1. Niven, Margaret C............... 443 Park Ave., East Orange, N. J. Ostwald, Frances L..............168 Beach wSt., Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y. Page, Susan D...................128 Marlboro St., Boston, Mass. Parker, Jane E..................188 Main St., Belleville, Ontario, Can. One hundred sixty-eight Paskus, Helen E. . . Pates, Adaline S. . . Peck, Jean S........... Petterson, T. Linnea (i. Radnor, Minnie . . Randall, Lois E. . . Rasquin, Priscilla . . Read, Dorothy Agnes . Reed, Edith M. . . . Reed, Janice M. . . . Rhoads, Prudence L. . Richter, Mabelle S. Rieder, Natalie G. . . Rommel, Elizabeth Rose, Elizabeth A. . Ross, Eleanor A. . . Rouse, Sylvia B. . . Ryder, Mary Evaline . Sackett, Laura K. . . Saltman, Eva . . . Sanderson, Ruth J. . . Sanford, Peggy . . . Scheel, Susan I. . . . Scheuer, Lucille M. . Scoville, Dorothea F. . Searls, Ramona M. Sedgwick, Elizabeth A. Sherts, Barbara F. Silbon, Helen H. . . Simonson, Eleanor R. Sinclair, Shirley M. . Slow, Dorothy Jane . Smeltzer, Marjorie R. Smith, Louise H. . . Smith, Winona H. Snow, Isabella C. . . Sowle, Esther M. . . Spence, Cecil Adelia . Spinney, Rachel E. . Starr, Sarah deForest . Steele, Isabel . . . Stevens, Josephine A. . Stotz, Olga J. . . . 475 Stanley St., New Britain, Conn. R. F. D. No. 1, Washington, Pa. Hanover, Conn. Carlisle St., East Chelmsford, Mass. 109 Jackson St., Holyoke, Mass. Highland, N. Y. 20 W. 86th St., New York City, N. Y. 1520 Maple St., Golden, Colo. 3409 Duvall Ave., Baltimore, Md. 1735 Portage Ave., South Bend, Ind. 3401 James St., Syracuse, N. Y. 158 Crestwood Ave., Crestwood, N. Y. Livingston Ave., Roseland, N. ). 301 E. 47th St., Savannah, Ga. Andover, Conn. 24 Douglas Rd., Glen Ridge, N. J. 16 Fairmount St., Nashua, N. H. 27 Glen Eagle Drive, Rouchen Glen, Larchmont, N. Y. 373 White St., Springfield, Mass. 185 Brown Ave., Holyoke, Mass. 56 Hartford St., Newton Highlands, Mass. 6 Weyburn Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Rosemawr, Passaic, N. J. 235 Colfax Ave., Scranton, Pa. 2150 Plaza, Schenectady, N. Y. Oakfield, N. Y. 159 Ravine Drive, Highland Park, 111. 205 Manor Ave., Millersvillc, Pa. 124 E. Broadway, Port Jefferson, N. Y. 21 Orchard PI., New Rochelle, N. Y. 87 Ellis St., Brockton, Mass. 4361 Overland Parkway, Toledo, Ohio 1015 St. Johns Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 76 Riverside Drive, Binghamton, N. Y. Kings Highway, Darien, Conn. 1016 Centre St., Newton Center, Mass. 14 Romeyn Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. 208 Argyle Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 832 Hickory St., Springfield, Mass. South Windsor, Conn. 13 N. Boulevard, Mittineaguc, Mass. 37 Williams Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 219 Pierce St., Easton, Pa. One hundred sixty-nine r Streeter, Helen L. . . . Streeter, Jean R. . . . Stuckless, Marion L. . . Sumner, Helen . . . . Swenarton, Helen M. . . Swisher, Helen M. . . TafT, Mauri ne E. . . . Taylor, Emily R. D. . . Taylor, Helen Hay . . Taylor, Salinda B. . . . Thompson, Dorothy 1). Thompson, Ruth G. . . Thornburg, Catherine L. Tiedemann, Vera G. . . Torrens, Iva F. . . . Trafton, Helen R. . . . Trevorrow, Ruth L. . . Trout, Jane W.......... Turner, Elizabeth . . . Wacker, Dorothy . . . Wallace, Emilie M. . . Walter, Gertrude F. . . Ward, Esther G. . . . Warren, Ruthena F. . . Waterman, Margaret B. . Whalin, Marion L. . . Wilde, Louise K. . . . Willard, Luthera B. . . Wilson, Margaret R. . . Wirtz, Anna I.......... Witty, Frances E. . . . Woods, Jane E.......... Wright, Lydia . . . . IfTrflroflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T ▼ T TTT’T T T ▼ T 1 . . 841 11th St., Oakmont, Pa. . . 841 11th St., Oakmont, Pa. . . 20 Woodland Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. . . 2CH Wentworth Ave., Lowell, Mass. . . 30 Clinton Ave., Maplewood, N. J. . . 41 Sunset Rd., Waterloo, Iowa . . 638 N. Main St., Canton, 111. . . Maple Ave., Pine Bush, N. Y. . . 72 Oakland Rd., Maplewood, N. J. . . 313 Poinciana Dr., Hollywood, Birmingham, Ala. . . 1090 Walnut St., Newton Highlands, Mass. . . 168 Pineywoods Ave., Springfield, Mass. . . 654 6th Ave., Huntington, W. Va. . . Milbrook, Greenwich, Conn. . . 110 Sheriden Ave., Medford, Mass. . . 323 Minot Ave., Auburn, Me. . . 83 3rd St., Jeddo, Pa. . . 209 Van Vranken Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. . . 1015 Lathrop Ave., River Forest, 111. . . 115 Prospect St., Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y. . . 15 N. Franklin St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. . . Orlando Ave., Ardsley, N. Y. . . Dr. Mark Ward, 20 Oak Terr., Newton Highfs, Mass. . . 24 Mountford Rd., Newton Highlands, Mass. . . 192 Beacon St., Athol, Mass. . . 48 Cohasse St., Southbridge, Mass. . . 220 Pleasant St., Concord, Mass. . . 31 Lincoln Ave., Amherst, Mass. . . 242 E. Fremont Ave., New York City . . 113 88th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . . 226 Cleveland Ave., Mineola, N. Y. . . 340 Common St., Belmont, Mass. . . 63 Pennsylvania Ave., Crestwood, N. Y. ()nc hundred seventy Cargoes to Calicut Presented by the Class of 1931 by Virginia Babcock and Sara Holmes Kay . . . I Attic Sister . I Jttic Sister . Liz .... Ethel . . . Myrtle . . Bala Steamy . Dick . . . Bill .... ]im . . . Purser . . Miss Etta Krishna Mart hi Steward . . Captain . . Missionary DRAMATIS PERSONAE . . . Helen Swisher Henrietta Cunningham . . Marjorie Hughes . . . . Susan Schccl . . Marjorie Smeltzcr . . . . Helen Flint . . . Anna Ludwig . . . Ruth C. Blunt . . . Salinda Taylor . . Marguerite Wilson . . Mary Carpenter . . Elizabeth Rommel . . . Ramona Searls . . . Ruth Trcvorrow . . . Natalie Ricder . . . Eileen Leach Missionary................. Missionary.................. Custom House Officer . . Saknnthala................. Magician .................. Water Carrier.............. Elephant................... Elephant Attendant . . . Cart Pusher................ Snake Charmer . . . . Consul..................... Rajah...................... Counsellor.................. Counsellor.................. Herald..................... Palace Guard .... . . Charlotte Flagg . Prudence Rhoades . Betty Cunningham . . Dorothy Slow Elizabeth Lauckhardt . . Shirley Sinclair . . . The Authors . . Ada line Pates . Virginia Modesitt . . . Rose Lipman . Camille Delnocc Fredcrika Critchett . . Harriet Davis . . Alice Johnson . . Helen Trafton . . Eleanor Buck Tango Dancers: Katharine Babcock and Catherine Green Acrobats: Sally Starr and Harriet Davis Fan Drillers: Virginia Grimes, Marion Stuckless, Florence Morris, Dorothy Hammond, Lydia Wright, Jean McKerihan, Margaret Fitts, Muriel Batchelder Chorus: Jean Streeter, Peggy Niven, Janice Reed, Elise Midelfart, Henrietta Cunningham, Lois Randall, Maybelle Richter, Dorothy Slow Merchants, Beggars, Customers Singer: Shirley Sinclair One hundred seventy-one IrltaOQffRflDfl Executive Staff Coach . Dramatic Critic . Chairman of Show Technical Advisor Business Manager Stage Manager . Mrs. Josephine E. Holmes Miss Ada F. Snell Lucile Scheuer VlMALA ApPASAMY . Louise Wilde Dorothy Driver Properties . Costumes Scenery Lighting Dances Orchestra Leader Script Head Publicity Posters Programs . T ickets Ushers . ' . Refreshments Prompter Music . HEADS OF COMMITTEES Sylvia Rouse Catherine Thornburg Frances McClure . Virginia Goodrich . Dorothy Slow . Barbara Jean Betz . Elizabeth Johnson Ruth Trevorrow Luthera Willard . Katherine Babcock Janice Reed Anne Wirtz Phyllis Mosher Elizabeth Lewis . Barbara Sherts One hundred seventy-two r V 1 Irh30PflRflDfl Cargoes to Calicut LIZ was going to sell ELECTRIC FANS in INDIA. BALA SWAMY, an Indian lecturer, asked her at SENIOR PROM to deliver a BOX wrapped in oiled silk and red seals to the RAJAH of J1NJIRA for him. DICK, her fiancee and journalist, going with her, recalled a story. JEWELS STOLEN from this Rajah recently, and smuggled into this country by some unsuspecting person. The box must contain these jewels. THE DR. PATTIE carried several friends of theits besides. KAY, sent abroad to forget BILL, with MISS ETTA to keep her from FLIRTING with promiscuous men. ETHEL, to be a MISSIONARY, hoarding a floral decoration from her first and only man, JIM, a blind at Senior Prom. MYRTLE went along to protect her crush, Liz, as STOWAWAY. And once she took the Box, thinking it food. At CALICUT KAY was separated from Miss Etta and Ethel at the CUSTOMS and taken by the Missionaries for Ethel. In a MARKETPLACE, she would be hypnotized by a MAGICIAN, whom she told of the Box and jewels before the CONSUL rescued her from his spell. LIZ, separated from Dick, met the same MAGICIAN, who hypnotized her and made his little slave SAKUNTHALAH STEAL her box and replace it by one he had fixed from Kay’s description. MYRTLE, hiding under the Magician's table from the CUSTOMS HOUSE OFFICER, saw and grabbed the box from the girl after Liz had left. They finally all arrive at the PALACE and have a regular FAMILY REUNION. It is time for the Rajah to open the BOX. He finds a message inclosed from his friend telling of his discovery of a link between the mysticism of the cast and the MYSTICISM of the west revealed by the SYMBOL inclosed which accompanies certain rites at Mount Holyoke College. The Rajah holds forth the symbol, an ANGEL ROBE. Ohf hundred seventy-three r FTTTTTT T T ▼ T T'T T T T T ▼ TT 1 IdtflQQflRflDfl TTT T T’TTT T'T TTTTTTTTT T 1931 Class Song Through the Afric city creep we Dervishes, Our bare feet padding on the silent streets. And our white robes swishing in a whispery way, As we steal through the starry night. With a whispered password to the watch at the gate, And a hissing whistle to the stragglers, We creep through the wall to the far-off dunes, Where our goddess lies wrapped in sleep. Then—Deep the sand catches us, Plodding and falling, And—Up the wind snatches us, Frenziedly calling; Over the sand dunes and through the ravines:— With a shout we have reached her, Egypt’s great Queen! Fast round about her We worshippers whirl, Our arms waving wildly, Our robes in a swirl; Twisting and turning exultantly, Filled with her presence, Mad Dervishes we!— Loud beat the cymbals, Ablaze is the sun! With a last maddened whirl our dancing is done. And down in a heap on the sand do we fall Before our great Goddess, the ruler of all.— Wild the wind’s blowing over the sand; In whirls and huge swirls It Hashes on by, All yellow, like topaz, o’er-clouding the sky, The sands of old Egypt go whirling by; And far to the west as the blazing sun sinks, The cry of the Dervishes: All hail! The Sphinx! One hundred sci cnty-six IrTiaOQffRflDfl ▼ ▼ ▼ T ▼ T TTTTTT TTTTTT T 1 D. Davis Mayo V. Davis Ostrander Williams Cope Officers of the Class of 1932 President Vice-President Secretary T reasurer Sergeant-at-A rms Song Leader . Sarah G. Cope . Virginia M. Davis . Virginia Mayo Florence E. Williams Elisabeth Parsons L. Virginia Stone EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Dorothea N. Davis Katherine E. Lascelle Margaret L. Ostrander Catherine Stone One hundred seventy-eight IrliflOQflRflDfl Members of the Class of 1932 Adams, Eleanor R. Adams, Margaret D. Ahrens, Gertrude M. Albcc, Virginia Albrecht, Louise F. Alkire, Elizabeth . Allen, Betty J. Anderson, Nancy J. Andres, Anita L. . Angus, Annie E. . Arnold, Dorothy E. Ashe, Doris L. . 10 Tyler St., Brattleboro, Vt. . Bolton, Mass. . 109 Elm St., Montclair, N. J. . 377 Highland Ave., Wollaston, Mass. . 82 Minnesota Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. . U. S. Naval Ordnance Plant., S. Charleston, W. Va. . 1613 Noble Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. . 1805 Chestnut Ave., Barncsboro, Pa. . 114 Pleasant St., Arlington, Mass. . 'Laconic, Conn. . 174 Summit Ave., Summit, N. J. . 38 Northumberland Rd., Pittsfield, Mass. Ballard, Margaret L. Balmer, Eleanor C. Banks, Marietta M. Barbour, Katherine H. Barford, Brenda L. Barnes, Bettie C. . Batchelder, Velma G. Batchellor, Jean P. Betzig, Amy E. Beverstock, Frances L. Black, Marian E. . Bookhout, Marian B. Boomsliter, Alice C. Boyd, Marianna . Brazic, Helen M. . Brown, Martha C. Brown, Priscilla J. Bruen, Harriet S. . Bryant, Frieda M. Buck, Eleanor K. Buis, Gretchen Burdan, Minnie E. Burnham, Louise S. Butcher, Henrietta Byers, Alice W. . . 35 Highland Ave., Greenfield, Mass. . 40 Hill St., Witinsville, Mass. . 163 Adams St., Hartford, Conn. . 90 Aldine St., Rochester, N. Y. . 3 Grover St., Auburn, N. Y. . 228 Pawling Ave., Troy, N. Y. . 106 Brook St., Wollaston, Mass. . 439 Glen Echo Rd., Philadelphia, Pa. . 34 Edgewood Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. . 32 Wilder St., Keene, N. H. . Faust, N. Y. . 357 Main St., Oneonta, N. Y. . 21 Wilson Ave., Morgantown, W. Va. . Fairview Ave., Springdale, Conn. . 23 Lathrop Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. . 2 Clark Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. . 1937 James Ave. So., Minneapolis, Minn. . Bel videre, N. J. . 87 Webb St., Weymouth, Mass. . 411 Hartford Ave., Wethersfield, Conn. . 430 Hawthorn St., New Bedford, Mass. . 1318 High St., Pottstown, Pa. . Burnside, Conn., R. F. D. . 476 South St., Holyoke, Mass. . 188 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Caldwell, Doris E. Campbell, Judith . . 55 Warren PI., Montclair, N. J. . 674 Prospect Ave., Hartford, Conn. One hundred seventy -nine r IrTrflODfTRflDfl Carroll, Anna B. . Cattley, Amy L. . Chambers, Louise E. . Chappell, Lcnora P. Chen, Chi Yi. Clark, Elizabeth B. Cline, Mary K. Clingan, Dorothy E. Clogston, Emley L. Congdon, Janet W. Cope, Sarah G. Cornell, Greta A. . Corson, Marion Costales, Virginia L. Cotter, Elizabeth H. Cowell, Ruth F. . Cunningham, Miriam I. . 61 Ben Lomond St., Uniontown, Pa. . 32 Irving St., Melrose, Mass. . 19 Berkshire Rd., Newtonville, Mass. . 6 Hoffman St., Auburn, N. Y. 114 I lavva Siting I ee, Pao Shang Rd., Shanghai, China . 18 Haigh Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. . 319 N. Third Ave., Derry, Pa. . 78 Lancaster Rd., West Hartford, Conn. . 45 Shcrland Ave., New Haven, Conn. . 6 Leroy St., Potsdam, N. Y. . Media, Pa., R. F. D., No. 2 . 17 Linden Ave., Ossining, N. Y. . 80 Sherman St., Springfield, Mass. . 1955 Farmington Ave., West Hartford, Conn. . 720 Palisades Drive, Akron, O. . 302 N. Barry St., Olean, N. Y. . 514 Rockwell St., S. W., Atlanta, Ga. Davis, Dorothea N. Davis, Virginia M. Deliec, Elvira M. . Dcngler, Clara E. . Dexter, Ruth H. . Dcyber, Virginia E. Dickerman, Ruth E. Dickie, Jeanette C. Dickinson, Katherine S Dickinson, Mary E. Dix, E. Jean . Dorr, Evelyn L. . Dunham, Barbara J. Dunlop, Margaret R. Dunn, Elizabeth H. Duryea, Alice R. . . 65 Willard Ave., Bloomfield, N. J. . Mt. Harris, Colo. . 458 Van Cortlandt Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. . 1232 Howard Ave., Pottsvillc, Pa. . 149 Warrenton Ave., Hartford, Conn. . 3109 Macomb St., Washington, D. C. . 464 Chestnut St., Springfield, Mass. . 14 Paisley Terrace, Pittsfield, Mass. . 83 Talcott Ave., Rockville, Conn. . 908 Second St., Havre, Mont. . 3009 North Second St., Harrisburg, Pa. . 8 Weare St., East Rochester, N. H. . 18 Gilman St., Holyoke, Mass. . 4811 92nd St., Elmhurst, N. Y. . 87 Ashland Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. . 908 Bellevue Ave., Trenton, N. J. Edie, Jane W. Eigenbrodt, Dorothy C Ei sen hart, Ruth C. Eisenhart, Susan H. Elgar, Georgia M. Elmer, Gladys B. . Ernst, Louise Esty, Julia C. Everett, Ruth E. . Favour, Elizabeth P. . 287 Palisade Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. . 45 N. Evergreen Ave., Woodbury, N. J. . 116 Beethoven St., Binghamton, N. Y. . McClellan Heights, York, Pa. . Wytheville, Va., Box 42 . 55 Meredith St., Springfield, Mass. . 820 Beverley St., Bethlehem, Pa. . 20 Vernon St., Framingham Center, Mass. . 477 Rugby Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 34 Petersville Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. One hundred eighty r FhflOQflRffDfl ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T TTTVTTTT TTT ▼ ! Favour, Mary T. . Fellows, Barbara B. Felt, Catherine Ferry, M. Marion . Fisher, Muriel Fiske, E. Fynette . Flye, Frances L. . Foerster, Alma P. . Foskett, Geraldine Foster, Helen F. . Foster, Mary N. . 122 S. Mt. Vernon, Prescott, Ariz. 26 Middle St., Gloucester, Mass. 18 Rowe St., Melrose, Mass. 36 Afterglow Way, Montclair, N. }. Norwood Country Club, Long Branch, N. J. 111 Gibson St., Canadaigua, N. Y. 20 High St., Glen Ridge, N. J. 45 Lawler St., Holyoke, Mass. 52 Central St., Gardner, Mass. 942 Greene Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 37 Academy St., S. Manchester, Conn. Gerstenberger, Paula R Gilbert, Christine B. Gillelan, Jane Gillespie, Frances K. Gillies, Anita M. . Glazier, Phyllis H. Godfrey, Elizabeth Gould, Louise L. . Gourlcy, Norma T. Graham, Margaret D. Gramse, Erna L. . Graverson, J. Margaret Gravill, Margaret D. Gray, Maude B. . Greene, Virginia B. Greene, Winifred A. 3175 Montgomery Rd., Shaker Fits., Cleveland, O. 60 Clinton Ave., Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y. 124 Jewitt Ave., Jersey City, N. J. 1213 Center St., Wilkinsburg, Pa. Orienta Point, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 4 Egremont Rd., Brookline, Mass. 147 Fligh St., Taunton, Mass. 45 E. 39th St., Bayonne, N. J. 21 Lincoln Ave., Glens Falls, N. Y. 374 Main St., Andover, Mass. 58 Franklin St., Holyoke, Mass. 159 Lawrence St., Hartford, Conn. 34 Curtis PI., Staten Island, N. Y. 180 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. 285 Ayerigg Ave., Passaic, N. J. 54 1 lighland Ave., Ridgewood, N. Y. Hadley, Dorothy M. Hall, Ruth V. Hamilton, Clare . 1 Iamilton, Margaret E. Hamly, Catherine 11. Hanki ns, Ethel M. Harman, Florence L. Harrington, Ruth CL Hartman, Sarah R. Heller, Jane R. Heller, Laurenta CL I lenderer, Ellen . Hildreth, Lydia R. Iiincher, Josephine M. Hitchcock, S. Louise Hoard, Miriam F. 72 Dunklec St., Concord, N. H. 120 Broadway, Pleasantville, N. Y. 123 Thomas Ave., Charlotte Sta., Rochester, N. Y. Stamford, N. Y. Picton, Ontario, Canada 87 California St., Long Beach, N. Y. 1852 Roxbury Rd., Cleveland, C). 11 Ridgewood Terrace, Maplewood, N. J. 130 Glendale Ave., Findlay, O. 15 S. Raleigh Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. 70 E. Broad St., Bethlehem, Pa. Marshallton, Del. East Main St., Riverhead, L. I., N. Y. 403 Alexander St., Rochester, N. Y. 107 S. Main St., Branford, Conn. 419 Somerset Ave., Taunton, Mass. One hundred eighty-one r IiIrflQQfTRflDfl — ▼ ’T ▼ T T ▼ T ,T”T’”T,'T T T T'TT T T ▼ ▼ T Holaday, Ruth L. . Holley, Helen M. . Holway, Dorothy I. Hook, Martha R. . Hormcl, Lillian E. Hotchkiss, Dorothy G. Houghton, Ethel D. Howe, Evelyn L. . Howe, Gertrude D. Howell, M. Arlene Hunter, R. Margaret Hutson, Barbara W. Hyde, Louise H. . 5347 College Avc., No. 107, Indianapolis, Ind. 110 Manor Rd. W., New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. 143 Second Ave., Pelham, N. Y. 11 Winter Ave., Staten Island, N. Y. 58 Stratford St., West Roxbury, Mass. Union St., Thomaston, Conn. 995 Main St., Worcester, Mass. 70 Washington St., Leominster, Mass. 214 Edgewood Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. East Main St., Riverhead, N. Y. 152 East Third St., Oswego, N. Y. 4104 159th St., Flushing, L. I., N. Y. 22 Aim St., Ware, Mass. Ivins, Elizabeth H. 508 Riverside Avc., Trenton, N. J. Jackson, Helen C.. Jacobs, Florence S. Jacobs, Pamclia Jefferson, Anna P. Jenkins, Patricia . Jenks, Elizabeth T. Jennings, Lois E. . Johnson, Doris L. . Johnson, Katherine V. Johnson, Sadie G. Jordan, Viola K. . 916 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 403 Liberty St., Warren, Pa. 173 Hillside Ave., Nutley, N. J. 115 Franklin St., Framingham, Mass. Gates Mills, Ohio Appleton Rd., Worcester, Mass. 56 Washington Ave., Ccdarhurst, L. I., N. Y. 23 Montague St., Worcester, Mass. 201 N. Chestnut St., Clarksburg, W. Va. 18 Walton Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 1441 Prospect Avc., Plainfield, N. J. Kcedy, Flora B. . Keen, Isabel L. Kelly, Bernice E. . Kemp, Harriet E. Kennon, Ruth E. . Kenworthy, Ruth G. King, Gertrude N. Knapp, Alicia K. . 5 Salem St., Amherst, Mass. 159 Willoughby Avc., Brooklyn, N. Y. 457 East Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 89 Main St., Shelburne Falls, Mass. Meredith, N. II. 921 Summer Ave., Springfield, Mass. Webster St., Unionville, Conn. 101 Monterey Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Lane, Barbara H. . Lascelle, Katherine E. Laughlin, Miriam Lee, Nellie F. Levy, Jane M. Little, Mildred G. Littlewood, Norma P. Longenecker, M. Alice Loomis, Margaret 11. Lorimer, Phyllis M. Lotz, Elizabeth R. Lucey, Alice K. . Lundy, Margaret G. McAfee, Janet B. . McCarrell, Jane D. McCray, Dorothy E. McElrath, Eleanor B. . 5 Seminary St., Barre, Vt. . Wcstbury, L. I., N. Y. . 138 Saratoga Ave., Northside, Cohoes, N. Y. . 2 Wood Rd., Wanstai, Hong Kong, China . 541 Stony Ave., Shreveport, La. . 18 W. Avondale Ave., Youngstown, O. . 10 Rose Place, Utica, N. Y. . 214 Marietta St., Mount Joy, Pa. . 732 W. Michigan Ave., Jackson, Mich. . 21 Newton St., Bangor, Me. . 108 Lake Ave., Newton Center, Mass. . 57 Westfield Rd., Holyoke, Mass. . 331 High St., Williamsport, Pa. . 94 Prospect Hill, Summit, N. J. . 345 E. Wheeling St., Washington, Pa. . 223 White St., Springfield, Mass. . 321 N. Fullerton Ave., Montclair, N. J. One hundred eighty-two ▼ ▼ T ▼ T T’T'r' TTT TTTTTT T 1 McHenry, Marie I. Mclllroy, Jean E. . McKenzie, Edith M. McKinlay, Florence B. . McLaughlin, Lucile T. McMillen, Mary T. McNeil, Esther E. McNeil, Phyllis L. Mapcs, Constance M. . Martindale, Florence M. Mather, Amy L. . Matheson, Vivien S. Mathie, Juanita E. Mayo, Elizabeth C. Mayo, Virginia Meader, Margaret I. Merriman, Dorothy Merritt, Alice Mettam, Elizabeth P. . Mitchell, Mary E. . Moore, Maricn E. . Morgan, Joan C. . Moulton, Elizabeth R. . . 280 E. Kirby Ave., Detroit, Mich. . Highland Ave., Allison Park, Pa. . 116 Hathaway St., New Bedford, Mass. . 431 Riverside Drive, New York City . Forest Hills, Hyde Park, Cincinnati, O. . The Dupont, 1717 20th St., Washington, D. C. . 17 Church Hill, Westmount, P. Q., Canada . 17 Church Hill, Westmount, P. Q., Canada . 7 Edgewood Place, Larchmont, N. Y. . 619 Tracy St., Utica, N. Y. . 299 Union Ave., West Haven, Conn. . 97 Main St., Binghamton, N. Y. . 540 Parkview Ave., Barberton, O. . 1356 E. 21st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 1819 Wynnewood Rd., Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa. . 50 Magee Ave., Rochester, N. Y. . 32 Elm St., Topsham, Me. . 29 Lincoln Ave., West Barrington, R. 1. . 26 E. 35th St., Bayonne, N. J. . 5138 Newhall St., Germantown, Pa. . Garland, Pa. . 118 Mayfield Ave., Akron, O. . 65 Rowe St., Melrose, Mass. Nash, Leonora B. . Nichols, Betty R. . Nicklos, Winifred O. Nishimura, Aya . Nori, Verna L. Northrop, Harriet L. Norton, Margaret . Amherst St., South Hadley, Mass. 19 Hayes Ave., Lexington, Mass. 219 North 4th St., Pouca City, Okla. 967 Asagaya Suguinamicho, Tokyo, Japan Laguna, N. M. 76 Washington Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. 228 Mullin St., Watertown, N. Y. Oakley, Margaret R. Ohurn, Emily L. . Olmsted, Ruth B. . Ostrander, Margaret L Outland, Ruth M. . 710 W. Lovell St., Kalamazoo, Mich. . 701 Seventh Ave., Altoona, Pa. . 1100 Main St., East Hartford, Conn. . 450 Yale Ave., New Haven, Conn. . 121 Edgemont St., Media, Pa. Pak, Maria . Parmele, Mary K. Parr, Margaret Parsons, Elizabeth Partridge, Ethel M. Pattison, Amy C. . Pendergrass, Helen L. Penfold, Corinne M. Pottingcr, Mabel J. Pratt, Ruth O. Price, Eleanor M. . Pumphrey, Marcene 947 Koreachung, Sondo, Korea 111 Birr St., Rochester, N. Y. 32 High St., Methuen, Mass. 204 Lincoln St., New Britain, Conn. 361 Rutter Ave., Kingston, Pa. Simsbury, Conn. 409 Pembroke Rd., Cynwyd, Pa. 21 W. North St., Buffalo, N. Y. 172 Highgate Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 532 Fern St., West Hartford, Conn. Moylan, Pa. 109 W. Chestnut St., Mount Vernon, O. Rand, Miriam O. . Randall, Ellen M. Read, M. Celia Main St., Andover, Me. Highland, N. Y. 9 Windmill Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. One hundred eighty-three IrltaQQflRffDfl T'V'T'T' TT TTTTTTTTTTTTTTT ' Reagan, M. Agnes Reed, Elizabeth . Reese. Wilma J. . Reichard, Carolyn R. Reid, Marjorie J. . Reymann, B. Louise de Roman, Josephine Roots, Frances B. . Ross, Lillian CL . Ross, Natalie H. . Rule, Margaret E. Russell, Eunice M. Oakwood School, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 3409 Dcvvall Ave., Baltimore, Md. 352 Senator St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 74 Colgate St., Rochester, N. Y. 15 Day Ave., Suffield, Conn. Pleasant Valley, Wheeling, W. Va. 929 West End Ave., New York City 396 Main St., 1 lartford, Conn. Little Compton, R. I. 69 Orange Rd., Montclair, N. J. 37 Rownley St., Bridgeport, Conn. 32 N. Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. Sadler, Christine C. Sammis, Helen O. Sargent, Neale O. Schwab, Frances A. Schvvacke, Margaret II Searles, Virginia . Sessions, Florence CL Severson, Alice Shaw, Rosalie . . Shaw, Ruth K. Shepard, Helen E. Sherburne, Norma L. Sherman, Martha L. Siminen, Betty S. . Sinclair, Janet Sloop, Emma B. . Smith, Ann D. Smith, Marjory M. Sneed, A. Caroline Snow, Isabella CL . Speller, Jean CL . Spicer, Beatrice Y. Stallman, Margaret S. Stamm, M. Elizabeth Staub, Helen E. . Stone, Catherine . Stone, L. Virginia Slow, Mary . Surgenor, Annie M. Sutherland, Eugenia Sutton, Lucille H. Sweinberger, Tabea CL Swezey, I. Ruth . Sykes, Jean L. 30 Emory St., Jersey City, N. J. 173 Main St., Huntington, L. I., N. Y. 51 Harris Ave., Albany, N. Y. 108 Central Ave., Staten Island, N. Y. 7445 Sprague St., Philadelphia, Pa. 65 Monmouth St., Springfield, Mass. 23 Cuyler St., Palmyra, N. Y. Fort Clayton, Panama, Canal Zone 114 Avon Rd., Narberth, Pa. 266 Lookout Ave., Hackensack, N. J. 19 Valley Rd., Mountain Lakes, N. J. 1540 Pawtucket Ave., Rumford, R. I. 95 Oakwood Ave., Long Branch, N. J. 99 Glen Ave., Port Chester, N. Y. Conway, Mass. Crossnore, N. C. 535 Church Lane, Germantown, Pa. 1333 Fairmont St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 'I he Alden, Third St., Newburgh, N. Y. 1016 Center St., Newton Center, Mass. 6411 Darlington Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. 215 Midwood St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 230 Inglewood Drive, Rochester, N. Y. 275 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Woodcrest Ave., Millburn, N. J. 53 Elmore St., Newton Center, Mass. 387 W. 8th Ave., Columbus, O. 218 Morningside Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. 43 Huntington St., Hartford, Conn. Vernon Manor, Cincinnati, C). Colebrook, N. H. 86 Chapin St., Holyoke, Mass. Vineyard Rd., Huntington, L. 1., N. Y. Conifer, N. Y. Taylor, Jeannette R. Thompson, Marjorie E Touhey, Elma A. . Town, Martha CL Trask, Marjorie O. 16 Wayside Place, Montclair, N. J. 420 Cory Ave., Waukegan, 111. 426 Belmont Ave., Chicago, 111. Dennisvillc, N. J. 131 Lincoln St., Holyoke, Mass. One hundred ci h y-fonr r i ItlrflQQflRflDfl- T ▼ T T'T ▼ T T T T T ▼ Trumbull, Jean U. Tukey, Edith B. . Twaddell, Emily C. 39 Farmington Ave., Plainville, Conn. 346 Teaneck Rd., Ridgefield Park, N. J. Dorset Rd., Devon, Pa. Ure, Kathleen C. . 86 Harvard Ave., Brookline, Mass. Vack, Barbara L. . Van Nostrand, Grace E 464 Seavicw Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 82 Sea Cliff Ave., Sea Cliff, N. Y. Ward, Gertrude . Warner, Elizabeth O. Waterman, Lois E. Webb, Mary E. . Welch, Mildred A. Willett, Edna E. . Williams, Beth L. Williams, Florence E. Williams, Kathryn Williams, Margaret E. Winter, Helen E. . Wisbauer, Eleanor A. Wise, Nancy B. . Wood, Mayflower Wray, Lois W. Wright, Marjory . 11 Randolph Place, Ridgewood, N. J. Salisbury, Conn. Conn. State Hospital, Middletown, Conn. 104 Dubois St., Newburgh, N. Y. 115 Norfolk St., Springfield, Mass. 827 Webster St., Needham, Mass. 33 Highland St., Gardner, Mass. 154 West Tabor Rd., Olney, Philadelphia, Pa. 314 Oak St., Syracuse, N. Y. 56 Forest St., Springfield, Mass. 15 Reservoir St., Worcester, Mass. 8252 234th St., Bellerosc, N. Y. 344 S. Findcn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. 295 Fourth St., Midland Beach, Staten Island, N. Y. West Rush, N. Y. 711 Calle Wright, Manila, Philippines Young, Marjorie K. 248 Linwood St., New Britain, Conn. One hundred eighty-fwc r r iritaooflRflDfl ▼ ▼ Y Y Y Y TTTTT' 1 IrlrflQQflRflDfl T T ▼ ’T T T T T T T T T ▼ T T ▼ ▼ ▼ T 1 1932 Class Song Stout hearts, a stout ship, And a sign to conquer all. Like sailors old, like sailors famed We rove where best winds fall. Stout hearts and a stout ship And a lion sign o’erhead— We sail across uncharted seas Our course by youth is led. May horizons ever widen Though these markings still be bright. Lest a narrow walled-in passage Make us rockbound in the night. Sail, oh ship! with high hopes guiding, While the sunrise rays endow (lold to lion sign on white sails And to girl-head on the prow. Let the new seas smooth behind us, Cleave the newer ones before May a true heart be our Pole-Star And achievement be our shore. Sail, oh ship with firm faith guiding, Till the sunset rays endow Cold to lion sign on white sails And to girl-head on the prow. One hundred eighty-eight ▼ ▼▼TTTTT1 T TT T Morrison Allen Wilder Officers of the Class of 1933 President Secretary-T reasurer Sergeant-at-A rms Song Leader .......................Ruth E. Allen .....................Isabel Morrison .........................Janet Wilder Cecil Hodgman (first semester) Esther Richardson {secondsemester) One hundred ninety rfTtamffRflDfl 'WWWWWW T T ▼ T T 1 Members of the Class of 1933 Adey, Magdalen Elizabeth Adriance, Mary Elizabeth Agor, Edna Pearl . Alden, Frances Deyo . Allen, Ruth . Allers, Olga Eleanore . Allyn, Nancy Caroline . Anderson, Elizabeth Rothvvell Andrew, Ruth T. . Arend, Elizabeth . Arnold, Elizabeth Stearns Atwood, Mildred Alice Avery, Evelyn Elaine . . 307 Post Road, Darien, Conn. . 12 Norwood St., Winchester, Mass. . Mahopac Falls, N. Y. . 400 Central Ave., New Haven, Conn. . 59 May St., Needham, Mass. . 245 East 57th St., New York City . 43 Brock Ave., North, Montreal West, P. Q., Can. . c o Mrs. S. A. Fish, 17 Stanley PI., Yonkers, N. Y. . 163 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 15 Fair Oaks Ave., Newtonvillc, Mass. . 320 Eliot St., Milton, Mass. . Maple Ave., Norfolk, Conn. . 35 Third Ave., Port Washington, L. I., N. Y. Backman, Anna . Baird, Katherine Howard Bartlett, Ethelywn Bartholomew, Jessie Baxter, Helen Sears . Beaven, Mary-Jean Bcckert, Jean Mildred . Benedict, Phoehe . Benson, Barbara . Bishop, Dorothy Ethel Black, Dorothy Eleanor Blanning, Ellen Jane . Bosshard, Ruth Margaret Brewster, Janet Huntington Brodie, Jean Woods . Brooks, Margaret . Brown, Marjorie Hoagland Budd, Francenia Allibone Bulka, Gladys Katherine Burrows, Helen Tunis . . 124 88th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 183 E. Milwaukee Ave., Wauwatosa, Wis. . 387 Palmer Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. . 38 Chatham Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. . 90 Pitt St., Portland, Me. . 52 Birr St., Rochester, N. Y. . 27 Clarendon PI., Buffalo, N. Y. . 33 South Maple Ave., East Orange, N. J. . 58 Cottage St., Wellesley, Mass. . 270 Main St., Athol, Mass. . 2818 Scarborough Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. . 220 East Front St., Berwick, Pa. . 25 Clinton Rd., Glen Ridge, N. J. . 152 Mt. Vernon St., Middletown, Conn. . 1 East Park St., Albion, N. Y. . 34 Oldfield Rd., Fairfield, Conn. . 280 Harrison Ave., Jersey City, N. J. . 157 Pelham Rd., Germantown, Pa. . 72 Elihu St., Spring Glen, Hamden, Conn. . 935 Mississippi Ave., Davenport, la. Calwell, Mary Carey, Ann Booth Carruthers, Miriam Jcanc Chasey, Ruth Eleanor . Churchill, Ruth Emma Clapp, Anne Fanshawe Westview and Wissahickon Aves., Germantown, Pa. 157 Pawling Ave., Troy, N. Y. 18 Howard St., Holyoke, Mass. 170 North Main St., Liberty, N. Y. 96 College St., South Hadley, Mass. 20 Bellevue Ave., North Cambridge, Mass. One hundred ninety-one IihflQQflRflDfl- ▼ TTTTTTTTTTT-TTTTTTTTT S Clapp, Charlotte Lincoln Coddington, Ruth Wildcy Conant, Suzanne Viola Cook, Honor Cook, Miriam Warren . Core, Janet . Cornell, Phyllis Lyon . Coward, Elinor . Cranston, Harriet Fitch Critchctt, Alice Blake . Critchett, Doris Walton Crothers, Alice Poultney M. Cutler, Mona Jerusha . Cutter, Ruth 10 Winsor Ave., Watertown, Mass. East Side, Owasco Lake, Auburn, N. Y. 13 Grove St., Amsterdam, N. Y. 431 Huntington Ave., BulTalo, N. Y. 1H1 Lakevicw Ave., Scarsdalc, N. Y. 8 North Victoria Ave., Vcntnor, N. J. Bedford Hills, N. Y. 941 Kenyon Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 175 Clinton Ave., Kingston, N. Y. 35 Arden Rd., Watertown, Mass. 17 Hollywood Ave., Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. Paper Mill Rd., Chestnut Hill, Pa. 365 Palmer Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. 273 Harvard St., Cambridge, Mass. Dash, Edith Viora De Camp, Hilda . Decker, Jean Fairbanks de Quintero, Olga Dixon, Janet Dayton . Doolittle, Kathleen Drumm, Ethel B. . Dwincll, Eleanor 17 Columbus Ave., Holyoke, Mass. 115 Clinton PI., Utica, N. Y. 1966 University Ave., New York City 3236 85th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. 172 St. James PL, Buffalo, N. Y. 1677 Whitney Ave., Hamden, Conn. Church St., Mcrccrsburg, Pa. 34 Shaw St., Lebanon, N. H. Erickson, Rebecca Jane Ernst, Virginia Matilda Esau, Leslie . 629 Taylor Ave., Detroit, Mich. 282 I lighland St., Worcester, Mass. 45 Bryant Ave., East Milton, Mass. Faeth, Madeline Gertrude Farley, Marie Farr, Edith Ursula Felt, Elizabeth Fetter, Marjorie Jeannette Files, Josephine Talbot Frisbie, Lena Dunn Fullarton, Jean Mott . Fuller, Melicent Rawson West Cheshire, Conn. 326 Lexington St., Waltham, Mass. 300 East Mantua Ave., Wenonah, N. J. 53 St. George Ave., Stamford, Conn. 311 South College St., Carlisle, Pa. 15 Burling Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 12 Cedar St., New Britain, Conn. 460 Bronxville Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. 23 School St., Palmer, Mass. Garrett, Margaret Ogden Garrod, Ruth Frances . Gates, Pauline Catherine Geraghty, Mary Louise Gerhand, Frances Hain Gerrish, Hester Dorothe Gilbert, Louise Gillelan, Helen Adelaide . 463 Runnymede Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. . 35 Powder House Ter., West Somerville, Mass. . 215 Washington St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. . 533 Beech St., Holyoke, Mass. . 1336 A St., S. E., Washington, D. C. . Wilton, Me. . 327 North Fulton Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . 124 Jewett Ave., Jersey City, N. J. One hundred ninety-two ▼ i hltflCPffRflDfl Gorham, Virginia Gramse, Milda Lina . Gravill, Constance Emma Griffith, Margaret Haas, Mildred Alice Hall, Marie . Hamilton, Mary Kay . Hamilton, Mary Virginia Hancock, Eleanor Martin Hare, Marion Elizabeth Harris, Carolyn Stout . Harris, Frances Josephine Harvey, Amy Louise . Hawley, Ruth Estella . Hcald, Emily Keeler . Heaines, Elizabeth Broad Hegeman, Jane Wright Heilman, Mary Anderson Heitkamp, Carol I lope Henrich, Elizabeth Herb, Lucille Barbara . Hitchccok, Adelyn Lucretia Hodgman, Cecil Valentine Hoffman, Alice Linville Hoffman, Margaret Pierce Hood, Elizabeth Annabelle Hooks, Janet Montgomery Hopkins, Alyce V. Hopkins, Nan Marie . Houser, Marjorie Leola Howe, Jean Elaine Hudson, Ruth Louise . Humphrey, Jean Louise Jackson, Mary Alberta . Jarvis, Ruth Browning . Jobson, Janet Louise . Johnson, Margaret Taber Jones, Dora . Jones, Martha B. . Karr, Cora Eleanor Kempe, Lorle Kennedy, Janet Grace . Kitay, Naomi 420 Paris Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. 58 Franklin St., Holyoke, Mass. 34 Curtis PI., New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Fort Slocum, N. Y. 900 College Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. 212 Walnut St., Montclair, N. J. 39 Rose Hill Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. 107 South Fullerton Ave., Montclair, N. J. 724 Myrtle Ave., Watertown, N. Y. 80 Stuart Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 129 West Ridge St., Lansford, Pa. Basin, Wyo. 59 Interval Ave., Richford, Vt. 14 Raymond St., Framingham, Mass. St. Mary’s School, Peekskill, N. Y. 845 Edgemont Park, Grosse Pointe, Mich. 26 Adams St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 409 North McKeen St., Kittanning, Pa. 95 Watchung Ave., Chatham, N. J. 407 Central St., Auburndale, Mass. 37 Lexington Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 711 West Ave., Norwalk, Conn. 58 Elm PI., Glenbrook,, Conn. 1133 Sumner Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. 54 Butler St., Kingston, Pa. 40 Banks St., Waltham, Mass. 297 Ogden Ave., West Englewood, N. J. 120 Oak St., Binghamton, N. Y. 156 Clifton PI., Grand Rapids, Mich. 79 IJncoln St., Melrose, Mass. Lake Ariel, Pa. 142 Haddon PI., Upper Montclair, N. J. 188 Parkside Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 225 Hillside Ave., Nutley, N. J. 22 Pendleton St., New Haven, Conn. Hasson Heights, Oil City. Pa. 7 Clinton St., Plcasantville, N. Y. 97 Glenwood Ave., East Orange, N. J. 15 West Fourth St., Dunkirk, N. Y. 107 Watchung Ave., Chatham, N. J. 236 Hamilton PI., Hackensack, N. J. 25 Essex St., Concord, N. H. 376 Broadway, Paterson, N. J. One hundred ninety-three r i IiItfKPfIRflDfl Kopf, Dorothy Kyle, Barbara 1115 Martine Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 163 West Ave., Pawtucket, R. 1. Lane, Frances Cowell . Lawson, Ruth Catharine Leary, Margaret Vincent Lcich, Florence Marion Levvin, Isabel Sue Lewis, Margaret Angevine . Lockwood, Rosamond Taylor Long, Gertrude . Loud, Marjorie Alice . Lufburrow, Elisabeth Brenton Lyman, Caroline Root . Lynch, Helen Elizabeth Lyon, Mary Durand . Lyons, Helen McCartney, Doris Ruth McDonald, Gertrude Auberta MacDonald, Jean . McDonnell, Ruth Frances . McElderrey, Margaret K. . McMillan, Helen Elizabeth . Mack, Josephine . Manderson, Anabel G. . Marvin, Ruth Mathias, Eleanor Marion May, Lois Elisabeth Merriman, Elizabeth . Michel, Carolyn . Miller, Dorothy . Milliken, Lois Helene . Mills, Helen Margaret . Mills, Julia Louise Morrison, Isabel . Morse, Margaret Louise Morton, Marjorie . Munro, Ruth Frances . Munson, Floy Frederica Myers, Sarah Ellen Neave, Helen Josephine North, Luella Robinson Noss, Barbara Nutting, Margaret Freeman 305 Highway, Riverton, N. J . 10 Dellinger Ave., Batavia, N. Y. 155 Oak St., Holyoke, Mass. 2791 Dewey Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 10 Pleasant St., Hanover, N. H. 98 Liberty St., Bloomfield, N. J. 102 Spring St., Rochester, N. Y. 211 Callender St., Dorchester, Mass. 19 Smith Ave., Methuen, Mass. 441 West Front St., Plainfield, N. J. 59 Elm St., North Woburn, Mass. 237 Guy Park Ave., Amsterdam, N. Y. 41 Montrose Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 103 Highland Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. 61 Brixton Rd., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. 51 Crescent St., Waltham, Mass. 92 Crofton Rd., Waban, Mass. 24 Canal St., South Hadley Falls, Mass. 320 Dalyell Ave., Ben Avon, Pittsburgh, Pa. 5 Popham Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 231 North Sixth St., Indiana, Pa. 1010 Melrose Ave., Melrose Park, Pa. 33 Terry PI., Bridgeport, Conn. 1199 Whitney Ave., Whitneyville, Hamden, Conn. 114 West Water St., Princeton, Ind. 32 Elm St., Topsham, Me. 627 North Kenilworth Ave., Oak Park, 111. 151 Chester St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 180 Jackson St., Lawrence, Mass. 90 Morningside Dr., New York City New Hampton, Orange County, N. Y. 1345 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 49 Brookside Ave., Newtonville, Mass. Boston Post Road, Weston, Mass. 120 Flower Ave., East, Watertown, N. Y. 809 Pingree Ave., Detroit, Mich. Church St., Mcrccrsburg, Pa. 46 Highland Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. 189 Cornelia St., Plattsburg, N. Y. 239 College Ave., Lancaster, Pa. 73 Mt. Vernon St., West Roxbury, Mass. One hundred ninety-four IrltflQQflRflDfl Ohlsson, Marion . Overlook, Frances May 156 Winona Ave., Highland Park, Mich. 121 Trowbridge St., Cambridge, Mass. Palm, Gretchen Winne Parsons, Marion Ellen . Pelton, Eleanor Merrill Peppier, Rosalie . Peterson, Mary Elizabeth Phelps, Marjorie Dickinson Pillatt, Margaret Frances Piper, Mary Louise Pynchon, Elizabeth Clapp Pyrke, Marjorie Douglas Box 1199, Cristobal, Canal Zone 521 Pleasant St., Holyoke, Mass. 140 Main St., Rich lord, Vt. 37 Overlook Rd., Caldwell, N. J. 60 Bank St., Bridgeton, N. }. 644 Campbell Ave., West 1 Iaven, Conn. 229 Cowperthwaite PI., Westfield, N. j. Reservoir St., Holden, Mass. 52 Oxford St., Springfield, Mass. 29 Euclid Ave., Albany, N. Y. Ranck, Ruth Eleanor . Rankin, Audrey Jane . Rauch, Dorothy Clara . Raymond, Louise . Read, Elisabeth Tash . Reeder, Minnie Louise . Reid, Ellen Dwight Reinhardt, Matilda Louise . Reynolds, Bernette Rich, Elizabeth Richardson, Esther Mary Richey, Janet Richter, Irene Rider, Alberta Belle Riley, Geraldine Mary . Robinson, Isabel Dccring . Rudderow, Catharine Janney 1000 South Main St., Middletown, O. 133 Pomeroy Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. 401 Homestead Ave., Mt. Vernon. N. Y. 425 East Fourth St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 10 Winsor Ave., Watertown, Mass. Ancon, Canal Zone 784 Park Ave., New York City 3607 Lake Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 4 Poplar St., Milford, Mass. Wool rich, Pa. 447 Manchester St., Manchester, N. H. 9 Regent St., Worcester, Mass. 21 West Mosholn Parkway, N., Bronx, N. Y. C. 1129 Centre St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 35 Hadley St., South Hadley, Mass. 5836 North Fairhill St., Philadelphia, Pa. 8431 Germantown Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Saphir, Anna Teresa . Scales, Elisabeth Davis Schcnkcr, Lillian M. . Schierer, Dorothy A. . Schwcnscn, Adelma Marie . Scott, Elizabeth Man son Scott, Katherine Manuel Searls, Virginia Claire Seavcr, Elizabeth Wentworth Scikel, Margaret . Shepard, Helen May . Sherwood, Sara . Shoenfelt, Alice Elizabeth . . Pedro Miguel, Canal Zone . 27 Overlook St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . Pine St., South Hadley, Mass. . 40 Penhurst Park, Buffalo, N. Y. . 565 81st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 6 Ashmore Rd., Worcester, Mass. . Navy Yard, Boston, Mass. . Oakfield, N. Y. . 136 Pomeroy Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. . 38 Clark Lane, Waltham, Mass. . 416 South Main St., Mansfield, Mass. . 719 Keystone Ave., River Forest, 111. . 2726 Broad Ave., Altoona, Pa. One hundred ninety-(ice IrTfaOQffRflDfl ▼ T T T T ▼ ▼ T YTTTTYVYTVWY-y Sibley, Josephine Adcle Sickler, Mary Elisabeth Siegesmund, Eleanor M. Sincerbeaux, Geraldine Leila Singleton, Helen Estelle Smart, Margaret Leslie Smith, Katharine Woodward Smith, Ruth Chittenden Smyth, Sylvia Hawthorne . Solenberger, Mary Sourbier, Mary Emily . Steck, Susan Cover Steel, Margaret Eleanor Stein, Margaret Rose . Stevens, Marjorie Walcott . Stiles, Ruth Edna Stillman, Margaret Huske . Stockwell, Mary Leonora . Stoner, Elizabeth King Stouck, Helen Proctor . Surgcnor, Euphemia McNicol Sutherland, Hope Symonds, Olive . . 750 Whittier Blvd., Crosse Pointe, Mich. . 932 Savannah Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa. . 281 Parkdale Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. . 96 East Genesee St., Auburn, N. Y. . 3360 Perrysville Ave., N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa. . Cobble Hill Rd., Saylesville, R. I. . Old Gulph Rd., Narberth, Pa. . 205 Oakes St., Port Jefferson, N. Y. . 321 South Fifth Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . 851 South Lincoln Ave., Springfield, 111. . 209 Ross PI., Westfield, N. J. . 312 Fairmont Ave., Winchester, Va. . 14 Hilton Ave., Hempstead, N. Y. . 66 Summit Ave., Brookline, Mass. . 46 The Terrace, Rutherford, N. J. . Ferry St., South Hadley, Mass. . 304 Engle St., Tcnafiy, N. J. . 520 West 124th St., New York City . 1717 West Tioga St., Philadelphia, Pa. . 308 West Church St., Lock Haven, Pa. . 43 Huntington St., Hartford, Conn. . 84 Wallingford Ave., Athol, Mass. . 350 Hartford Ave., Wethersfield, Conn. Taggart, Mary Tanzer, Celia Josephine Tatro, Helen Dorothy . Taylor, Margaret Cole . Teegarden, Mary . Thrall, Barbara . Tomlinson, Lucile Elizabeth Towle, Evis Amy . Turner, Mary Margaret Vail, Mary Anna Van Burcn, Nancy Elizabeth Van Orsdale, Helen Jeffryes Walker, Janet Whitney Walker, Mary Thomas Walker, Ruth Christine Wander, Virginia Richard . Ward, Elsie Ness . Wardle, Rosemary Ware, Elinor Watkins, Miriam Loraine . . 19 Doncllan Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. . 30 Viviani St., South Hadley Falls, Mass. . 15 Miles St., Milbury, Mass. . 99 South Central Ave., Wollaston, Mass. . 27 Norwood Ave., Albany, N. Y. 11 Gray Birch Ter., Newtonville, Mass. . 10 Sterling PI., Hempstead, N. Y. . 341 Hamilton Ave., Glen Rock, N. J. . 1137 Phoenix Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. . East Marion, L. I., N. Y. . 3300 Lowell St., N. W., Washington, D. C. . 798 Park Ave., Albany, N. Y. . 20 Dean Rd., Brooklyn, Mass. . 927 Bland Ave., Shelbyville, Ky. . 46 Ten Eyck Ave., Albany, N. Y. . 119 Collins St., Hartford, Conn. . 1060 Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. . Grand Mere, Quebec, Can. . 133 Winthrop St., Taunton, Mass. . 240 South Main St., South Manchester, Conn. One hundred ninety-six r iricaooaRflDfl—.......- ▼ ▼ T’T T T' TTTTTTTTTTTT Tl Watts, Elizabeth Marie Webb, Mary Edith Webb, Minnie Louise . Wentworth, Helen Elizabeth Wessell, Valdis Anet . Wheeler, Elizabeth Ilale White, Elizabeth A. Whitlock, Florence Miriam Whitney, Josephine Ellen . Wilder, Janet Frances . Winans, Dorothy Goby Winsor, Catherine Witty, Ruth Winifred . Woolley, Elizabeth Louise . 424 North Village Ave., Rockville Centre, N. Y. 118 Bcllair Rd„ Ridgewood, N. J. 104 Dubois St., Newburgh. N. Y. 87 Evergreen Ave., Bloomfield, N. J. 1118 West 5th St., Plainfield, N. J. 3757 Jocelyn St., Washington, D. C. 253 Clifton St., Malden, Mass. 64 Plateau Circle, Mittineague, Mass. 203 Morris Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 75 Mansfield St., New Haven, Conn. 29 Dorcnz Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 189 Mt. Vernon St., West Newton, Mass. 226 Cleveland Ave., Mineola, N. Y. 24 Griswold St., Meriden, Conn. One Iwntlml ninety-seven W T T T T 'T T T T TTTT«rTTT«r T w ItTcaOQflRflDfl.---- ▼ ▼▼TTT TTT ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ ■ IihflQPffRflDfl Freshman Pressure Ring, ring, ring, In the chapel tower, O chimes! And I would my Chcm were finished, And my English theme betimes. All’s fine for the Phi Beta Kappa Who’s finished her whole week’s work, All’s fine for the faithful plugger— All’s wrong for the chronic shirk. And the stately seniors pass, Anil the sophs and juniors too, But O! for the end to a freshman theme And the end of a Chem review! Ring, ring, ring, In the chapel tower, O chimes! But I cannot heed your call today— Perhaps some other time. Two hundred kllilAiillllJ SBIiLKVIiLDB Frickc Chaffee Sinclair Trout Hammond Jones Leader President ITice-President Secretary Treasurer The Glee Club I)r. William Churchill Hammond • • • • . Mary Chaffee Jane Trout Margaret Jones Shirley Sinclair Adams, Margaret Andrews, Alicia Andrews, Lucctta Alkire, Elizabeth Avcrill, Isabel Axtcl, Priscilla Barrett, Mary Benjamin, Edith Bigelow, Rhoda Brockway, Kathleen Burnham, Louise Bryant, Frieda Caldwell, Doris Case, Marjorie Chadwcll, Dorothy Chaffee, Mary . Chappell, Lcnora Chase, Ellen Colton, Esther Cooper, Elizabeth Corcoran, Wilma Corey, Grace Davis, Harriet Davis, Virginia Dein, Harriet Dexter, Ruth I )onley, Elizabeth Driver, Dorothy Dunlop, Margaret Dunn, Marjory Eddy, Frances Ennis, Delphine Eisenhart, Susan Fitzgerald, Mary M. Flagg. Frances Frickc, Dorothy Greene, Virginia Grimes Virginia L. Hagen, Elinor Hammond, Dorothy Harmon, Florence I Iarrington, Evelyn MEMBERS Hastings, Alice Heller, Jane Hill, Marjorie Hinton, Maybcllc Holley, I lelen I lorne, Lois Hudson, Dorothy Jenkins, Patricia Jennings, Lois Jones, Margaret Jones, Ruth Koons, Louise Lauckhardt Eliz’b’th Laugh 1 in, Miriam Lee, Nellie Leonhard, Elizabeth Lewis, Betty Sue Lincoln, M. Eliz’b’th Longcneckcr, Alice Lundahl, Ruth McGregor, Ruth Mayo, Virginia Meakim, Melba Michel, Mary Nichols, Betty Nishimura, Aya Parr, Dorothy Parsons, Elizabeth Pratt, Ruth Rasquin, Priscilla Reichard, Carol Rhoads, Prudence Roots, Frances Rose, Elizabeth Ross, Eleanor Ross, Lillian Rule, Margaret Sanford, Ruth Schwab, Frances Searlcs, Ruth Searles, Virginia Simmen, Betty Sinclair, Shirley Smeltzer, Marjorie Smith, Winona Snell, Catherine Staub, I lelen Stone, Virginia Street, Kate Talbot, Helen Town, Martha Trevorrow. Ruth 'Prout, Jane Vester, B. Tanetta Walker, Dorothy Whiting, Eleanor Wilcomb, Virginia Witty, Frances Woods, Jane Young, Anita Tiro hundred two IrhflOQflRflDfl Parr Dcin Stone Hodgman Senior Class Junior Class Sophomore Class Freshman Class . Song Leaders ..............................Dorothy Parr ..............................Harriet Dein Virginia Stone (first semester) ( Alice Longenecker (second semester) Cecil Hodgman (first semester) Esther Richardson (secondsemester) COMPETITIVE SING February 25, 1930 Won by Test Piece for all classes: Wake Thee Now Choice Piece: Seniors: Frog Went A-Courting Juniors: Oh! Didn't It Rain Sophomores: Kerry Dance Freshmen: The Big Brown Bear Group Song: The Lost Chord .... 1930 Czecho-Slovakian Folk Song . Kentucky Folk Song Arr. by Burleigh ..................Mana Zucca ..........................Sullivan Two hundred three IrhflCDffRflDfl ▼ TTTTTTT T’T'T ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ T 1 Miss Tillinghast Mr. Hammond Miss Douglass Junior Choir Adams, Rebecca Jones, Margaret Andrews, Alicia Koons, Louise Averill, Isabel Kruger, Ruth Axtell, Priscilla Lauckhardt, Elizabeth Barrett, Mary Leach, Eileen Beatty, Lois Lewis, Elizabeth Brown, Helen Lundahl, Ruth Colton, Esther Lyman, Dorothy Corey, Grace Meakim, Melba Davis, Harriet Miller, Mary Dcin, Harriet Petterson, Linnea Dorman, Frances Rhoads, Prudence Driver, Dorothy Rose, Elizabeth Eddy, Frances Ross, Eleanor Goertz, Helen Sinclair, Shirley Grimes, Virginia M. L. Smeltzer, Marjorie Groben, E. Claire Smith, Winona Hammond, Dorothy Stuck less, Marion Hastings, Margaret Waterman, Margaret Witty, Frances SONG CONTEST November, 1929 Won by Dorothy Chadwell anti Dorothy Parr, “The Campus Song.” Two hundred four IdtflOOflRflDfl - Second row: RcccI Letch Bryant Roots First row: Smith Sloop Baxter Surgenor Orchestra Leader: Mr. Milton J. Aronsen Mr. Samuel P. Hayes Geneva Barrows Helen Baxter Mildred Best Frieda Bryant Florence Leich Dorothy Parr J MEMBERS Celia Read Frances Roots Carolyn Reichard Rosalie Shaw Emma Sloop Dorothy Smith Euphemia Surgenor CAROL CONCERT SERIES Holyoke, Second Congregational Church, December 13. Mount Holyoke College, Student Alumnae Hall, December 15. New York City, Town Hall, December 20. Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton College Chapel, December 21. Two hundred five IrlfaCPffRflDfl f ▼ TTTT ▼ T-T T T T V Y ▼ T TTTT V Y Y Y ▼ Y Y Y' Y' ▼' Y 1 Drisko Schcucr Crary Young Slow Sanford Potts Blunt Reed Dramatic Club President Vicc-President Secretary Business Manager Wilma Potts Ruth Blunt Janice Reed Ruth Sanford CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Scenery..........................................................Anita Young Properties..............................................Lucile Sciieuer Costumes.....................................................Dorothy Slow Lighting.....................................................Eleanor Crary Dramatics...............................................Caroline Drisko Publicity...............................................Nelda Reymann MEMBERS Averill, Elisabeth Blunt, Ruth Chase, Ellen Congdon, Janet Crary, Eleanor Drisko, Caroline Erlangcr, Ruth Flagg, Frances Fricke, Dorothy Grimes, E. Virginia Harding, Marie Hughes, Marjorie Holmes, Sally Jones, Ruth King, Mary Jordan, Viola Keith, Mary King, Florice Klugh, Constance Leach, Eileen MacGregor, Ruth McKee, Elizabeth McMullen, Mary Michel, Mary Neilan, Kathleen Osgood, Katherine Parker, Rachel Pcmber, Gladys Potts, Wilma Randall, Lois Reed, Janice Reymann, Nelda Ricder, Natalie Rouse, Sylvia Sanford, Ruth Schcel, Susan Schcucr, Lucile Slow, Dorothy Smeltzer, Marjorie Smith, Louise Stuckless, Marion Snell, Catherine Sproulc, Louise Young, Anita Two hundred six IrltaOQflRflDfl Plays of the Year May 11, 1929—“WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS” by James M. Barrie Couch—Mrs. Josephine E. Holmes Alicf{ Wylie . James, Alices son David, Alices son Maggie, Alices daughter John Shand . The Comtesse de la Briere Lady Sybil Tenterdcn . Charles Venables . Maids, Spectators, Members of Cow Caddeus Club Mary-Ellen I layes Nelda B. Reymann Estelle E. Aue Marjorie Tuck Ruth Blunt Susan L. Sheel Julianna Weil Lucille Sutton Two hundred seven May 15, 16, 17, 18, 1929 ENGLISH 25-26 PLAYSHOP Director—Jeannette Marks Jackson “SOUP”—By Constance Meadnis Constance Meadnis Barnes Eleanor Crary Nancy Dorothy Carpenter Ez Eileen Fitzgerald Clark . Catherine Osgood Mike . Caroline Drisko Spud Louise Sproule Minnie “DIE KEPPEL”—By Katherine Patrick Katherine Patrick Luther Eileen Fitzgerald Fritz Constance Klugh Krause Caroline Drisko Otto . . . . . . Catherine Osgood Kate . . . . . . Evelyn Burke Pastor . Camille Delnoce Kebeyun “BLACK WING”—By Bertha Gillespie Mannaamu Bertha Gillespie Wanchecntonoah Virginia Starke Medawin . . . . . . Richard McMullan Two hundred eight hh3QQ3RflDfl= r T TTTTTTTTTTTTTT T f’T T T T ▼ T November 9, 1929 lackson ENGLISH 25-26 PLAYSHOP Director—) ca nnette Ma rks “SOUP”—By Constance Meadnis Constance Meadnis Ez Eileen Fitzgerald Nancy Marguerite Hoyle Baines Richard McMullan MH{e Camille Delnoce Clarl{ Catherine Osgood Spud lean Speller Gabe “FLUKE”—By Mildred Millar Eileen Fitzgerald Leo Sally Whittam Clint I sabcl Mathews Bert Harold Sproul Ellen . Elizabeth Johnson Dave Constance Klugh Sam Lucile Schcuer Kebeyun “BLACK WING”—By Bertha Gillespie Anita Young Manaamu Mary Jarden Wancheentonoah Carolyn Fischer Medawin Richard McMullan Two hundred nine r ▼TTTTT TTT’TTTTT TTT Tl February II, 13, 1930—English Literature 13 Plays Director—Miss Kathleen Lynch “TOM THUMB THE GREAT”—By Henry Fielding Coach—Emilie Wallace Cast King Arthur Tom Thumb Lord Grizzle Ghost Merlin Bailiff Noodle Doodle Foodie Queen Dollallolla Princess Huncamunca Glumdalca . . Cleora Mustacha Natalie Ricdcr, ’31 Rachel Parker, '30 Margaret Graham, ’32 Josephine Stevens, ’31 Ruth Churchill, ’30 Virginia Mendenhall, 31 Doris Caldwell, ’32 Virginia LcClcar, ’32 I lelcn Holley, '32 Harriet Dein, ’31 Viola Jordan, ’32 Lucile Scheuer, ’31 Frances Eddy, '31 Grace Corey, '31 “POLLY HONEYCOMBE”—By George Colman the Elder Coach—Katherine Baden Cast Honeycombe .... Scribble..................... Ledger....................... Mrs. Honeycombe Polly Honeycombe Nurse........................ . Carolyn Reichard, '32 . Christine Sadler, '32 . Margaret Bradbury, '30 . Annie Angus, ’32 . Sadie Johnson, '32 . Catherine Stone, ’32 Two hundred ten “▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ T T T ▼ ▼ T ▼ T T ▼ ▼ ▼ T December 14, 1929—“BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK’’—By George S. Kauffman and Marc Connelly. Given in conjunction with the Amherst Masquers. Presented December 4, 5 at Amherst. Coach—Curtis Canfield Cast Albert Rice . G. D. Burchell Cynthia Mason . Viola Jordan Neil McRae . R. A. Brower Mrs. Cady . Louise Smith Gladys Cady Constance Klugh Homer Cady K. K. Berry Mr. Cady L. T. Mayher ferry . R. Hazelton Trainman J. M. Weldon Trainboy R. Sachs Miss Hey Wilma Potts Miss You Caroline Drisko Guide W. R. Tinker, Jr. Novelist J. F. Webb Artist . W. H. Stuek Poet M. P. Gilmore The Pantomime during Part Two “A KISS IN XANADU” The Music of the Pantomime Composed by Deems Taylor Lady oj the Bedchamber...............Rachel Parker Lord of the Bedchamber H. R. H. The Princess of Xanadu H. R. H. The Prince of Xanadu . Policeman..................... Lamplighter . Pages .................. D. Stevens Helen Swisher F. W. von Auw N. E. Richardson, Jr. D. Stevens f. Wicher, V. Glaser Two hundred eleven February 8, 1930—“LE BOURGEOIS GENTILHOMME,” by Molicrc Coach—Paul Frederic Saintonge Cast Maitre de musique . Maitre a danser .... Eleve .......................... ler Laquais..................... 2cr Laquais..................... M. ourdain .... Maitre d’armes .... Maitre de philosophic . Maitre tailleur .... Garmon tailleur .... Dorante......................... Cleonte......................... Covielle........................ Le Muphti....................... Nicole ......................... Mme. Jourdain .... Lucile.......................... Dorimene........................ Musicienne...................... ier Musician .... 2cr Musician .... . Marguerite C. Champagne . Naomi Kitay . Mary A. Jackson . F. Josephine Harris . Doris W. Critchett . Virginia Cushman . Lucille H. Sutton . Elizabeth J. Van Dis . Virginia M. Ernst . Helen C. Bach . Catherine F. Snell . Rosamond T. Lockwood . Elizabeth B. Johnson . Paul F. Saintonge . Shirley Andrews . Dorothy L. Barton . Ellen D. Reid . Sara S. Holmes . Eleanor A. Ross . Lillian G. Ross . Lena D. Frisbie Danseurs: Marie L. Harding, Dorothy Holbrook, Mary Teegarden, Eleanor A. Wisbauer. Turcs and Choeurs. T ico hundred twelve r 1 IihflOQfJRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T T ▼ ▼ T T T T ’ February 18, 1930—“THE HAUNTED HOUSE,’’ by T. Maccius Plautus Coach—Miss Blanche Brotherton Cast Grumio, a country slave Tranio, a city slave Philolaches, a young man Philematium, his sweetheart Scapha, her servant Callidamates, friend of Philolaches Del phi um, his sweetheart . Theopropides, father of Philolaches Misargyrides, a money-lender Si mo, neighbor of Theopropides . Phaniscus ) slaves of Callidamates Pinacium Sphaerio, slave of Theopropides . Two other slaves of Theopropides A flute player Isabel Robinson Ruth Sanford Elizabeth Cooper Anna Wirtz Marian Hause Francelia Chittenden Jean Brodie Mary Jackson Elizabeth Pynchon Eleanor Siegesmund Jean McKerihan Ruth Munro Isabel Blair Eva Saltman I Nancy Anderson ( Marjorie Houser | Dorothy Walker March 14, 1930—“ALL GOD’S CH1LLUN GOT WINGS,’’ by Eugene O’Neill Coach—Miss Isadclle Couch Cast Jim Harris . Mrs. Harris Hattie Ella Downey Shorty Joe . ... Mickey Mob—Whites and Negroes Wilma Potts Brenda Barford Constance Klugh Sadie Johnson Mabel Pottinger Elsie Ward Isabel Robinson Two hundred thirteen IrltaOQflRflDfl TTTTTT TTTTTTTTTTTT r T 1 THE MAY QUEEN HELEN MASON IrltflQQfTRflDfl ▼ T T TTT TTTTTTTTTTT TI May Day Pageant May 11, 1929 “THE LITTLE WANTON”—A Pageant of Pocahontas Powhatan 0 peechancanough Pocahontas Indian Priest Captain John Smith John Roljc . Governor Dale . King of England Oueen of England Lord de la Ware Lady de la Ware Solo Dancer Flute Player By Shirley Heltzen Lucilc Scheuer, ’31 Sylvia Rouse, '31 Maxine Gillespie, ’29 Martha Jane Brunson, ’29 Ruth Trcvorrow, ’31 Catherine Snell, ’30 Helen Trafton, ’31 Patricia Jenkins, ’32 The May Queen, Helen Mason, ’29 Lucille Sutton, ’32 Sara Holmes, ’31 Cynthia Quackenbush, ’29 Kathleen Hussey, '30 CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Chairman of Pageant . Business Manager Chairman of Costume Committee Chairmen of Music Committee . Chairman of Program Committee Chairman of Properties Committee Chairman of Publicity Committee Chairmen of Scenery Committee Chairman of Ticket Committee . Personnel Chairman . . . . Marjorie Tuck, 29 . Dorothy Fricke, ’30 . Ruth Butler, 29 Sarah Steckel, ’29 (Instrumental) Dorothy Franklin, ’29 (Vocal) Dorothy Chadvvell, ’30 (Pianist) . . . Mary Fitzgerald, ’30 . . . Katherine Budd, ’29 . . . Ruth Sanford, ’30 { Elisabeth McKee, ’30 I Dorothy Carpenter, ’29 Mary Chaffee, ’30 . Catherine Snell, ’30 T wo hundred fifteen r IrTrflOQffRffDfl ▼▼TTTTTTTVT1 The Story of Pageant The little Indian village was the scene of joyful celebration, for two vic- torious armies had just returned from war with the white man, and they had brought back with them many prisoners and much booty. Among the white men doomed to die was Captain John Smith, whose handsome face and charm- ing manners, coupled with a miraculous “compass,” won for him the interest and attention of the Princess Pocahontas, “the little wanton.” Smith pleaded eloquently for his life, and Pocahontas added her pleas to his, but the Chief was determined. The prisoner was bound and placed on the stone for execution. But just as the fatal blow was about to descend, the princess threw herself in its path, and the executioner withheld his stroke. The Chief was touched by this brave act, and finally granted his little daughter her wish. And so it was that Pocahontas gained the friendship and devotion of Captain Smith. At Jamestown, the homesick colonists were suffering from hunger and privation. They were weary of the endless warfare, and at last they decided to accept the friendly overtures of the little Indian princess, who, because of her friendship for Captain Smith, had offered to bring food for all the colonists. Pocahontas and her maidens came into the village bearing heavy baskets, which were most gratefully received. But in the midst of the ceremonies, a piercing war whoop announced the attack of the Indian braves, who did not understand that the maidens had entered the village of their own volition. A battle took place, with results disastrous to the Indians. When the field was finally won, and the colonists surveyed the havoc that had resulted, Pocahontas was sent back to her own people, and Captain Smith was condemned for treachery and sent to England in chains. Two hundred sixteen r t ▼ T hhflQDflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T ’T T V T' 1 After four years had passed, relations between colonists and Indians were little better. Pocahontas, however, seemed fated to bring the two together. She still remembered the friend of her youth; but now in maturity she had fallen in love with another Englishman, John Rolfe, and met him often at the edge of the forest. At first, both colonists and Indians opposed their mar- riage, but finally both sides saw that in the union lay the possibility for peace in the future. Before an impressive gathering of both peoples, the simple cere- mony was performed, and was followed by a gala celebration with gifts and feasting. Several years later, Rolfe and his Indian bride attended the May Day fes- tivities of the English Court. King James and Queen Anne were entertained by jesters and a Masque. Then the court all joined in a stately dance led by the Queen herself. Pocahontas, little princess that she was, fitted in well with this alien background; but in her heart she was homesick and longed for some token of her beloved homeland. At the Queen’s request, she donned her Indian costume, and danced for the court. But her step lacked its old youthful joy- ousness. Suddenly her old friend Captain Smith came in, and at the sight of him Pocahontas’s heart was full of pleasure, and she finished her dance with all the old grace. Rolfe and Smith and the “little wanton talked together of America and the old days. And finally, reluctantly, wistfully, Pocahontas returned to her new friends, the English courtiers. Two hundred seventeen fourth row: Brooks, Betz, Delnocc, Brewster, Waterman, Hamilton, Willard, Kuyper Third row: Cushman, Bullock, Wilson, Black, Eisenhart, Banks, Humphrey, Johnson, Sessions, Tatro, Critchclt, Vandcrsall Second row: Chase, Baden, Young, I). Arnold, Rand, McElrath, Rule, Burke, Blackmcr, Winans, Richardson, Bulka first row: Stuck less, Benjamin, Cold well, McKee, Merrill, Sproule, A. Arnold, Captain, Slow, Fosdick, Wilder Llamarada STAFF Editor-in-Chief ......................... Business Manager......................... Literary Editor.......................... Art Editor............................... Photographic Editor...................... Assistant Business Manager .... Advertising Manager...................... Junior Literary Editor................... Sophomore Literary Editor .... Freshman Literary Editor................. . Louise Sproule . Audra Arnold . Phyllis Merrill Elizabeth McKee . Laura Coldwell Jean Captain . Dorothy Slow Barbara Jean Betz Jean Louise Sykes Janet Wilder Two hundred eighteen r IiItaOQffRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T T T T ▼ T T 1 Literary Board 1930 Polly Baden, Edith Benjamin, Doris Bullock, Virginia Cushman, Ruth Fosdick, Constance Harrigan, Sally Kunzig, Kathleen Neilan, Harriet Wilson, Tabitha Wilson. 1931 Mary Blackmer, Camille Delnoce, Anne Johnson, Betty Sedgwick. 1932 Ruth Eisenhart, Ruth Holaday, Margaret Ostrander, Christine Sadler. 1933 Margaret Brooks, Gladys Bulka, Alice Critchett, Helen Tatro. Art Board 1930 Polly Baden, Catherine Calloway, Ellen Chase, Elinor Hagen, Marion Vandersall, Anita Young. 1931 Cornelia Kuyper, Luthera Willard. 1932 Marietta Banks, Lois Waterman. 1933 Jean Humphrey, M. Virginia Hamilton. Photographic Board 1930 Dorothy Hudson. 1931 Margaret Hastings, Marion Stuckless. 1932 Virginia Greene, Miriam Rand, Lois Waterman. 1933 Janet Brewster. Business Board 1932 Eleanor McElrath, Margaret Rule. 1933 Esther Richardson, Dorothy Winans. Advertising Board 1931 Evelyn Burke. 1932 Dorothy Arnold, Marion Black, Florence Sessions. 1933 Eleanor Pclton, Marie Hall. Two hundred nineteen IrhflOOflRflDfl Second row: Williams, Lyman, |cnks, Risen hart, Graham, Wise First row: Locke, Kcklcv, Drisko, Coleman, Andrews The Mount Holyoke Editors-in-chief Senior Editors . Junior Editor Sophomore Editors . Business Manager Advertising Manager Circulation Manager . Advertising Staff Circulation Staff • ••••• Literary Board • • • • • • ••••• • • • • • Business Board • • • • • • • • • Caroline Drisko I Mildred Millar Margaret Coleman I Kathleen Neilan . Alicia Andrews i Ruth Eisenhart } Elizabeth Jenks Helen Eckley Ruth Thompson . Georgia Locke Margaret Graham ' Dorothy Lyman Katherine Williams Virginia Stone I Nancy Bowman Wise Two hundred twenty T T T T T T TTTT TTTT T Third row: Lascdlc, McKinlay, Gould, Hancock, Clark, Chambers, l iske Second row: Thompson, Randall, Albrecht, Mender, Stow, Heald, l)ix, King First row: Johnson, Erlanger, May, Andrew, Crary, Colton, Lippinan, Harding, Meyers, Waterman The Mount Holyoke News Editor-in-chief . Managing Editor Junior Editor General Editors . Booh Review Editor . Current Events Editor Feature Editor . Cartoonist Foreign Correspondent EDITORIAL BOARD Associate Editors Eleanor Crary, '30 Esther Colton, ’31 . E. Claire Groben, ’31 Rose Lipman, ’31 ‘ Ruth Trevorrow, ’31 . . Marie Harding, ’30 Elinor Meyers, ’30 . Margaret Waterman, ’31 Pamelia Jacobs, ’32 . Sonia Mogenson,’31 Reporters Louise Albrecht, Louise Chambers, Elizabeth Clark, Jean Dix, Fynctte Fiske, Ruth Kenworthy, Gertrude King, Katharine Lascellc, Margaret Thompson, Florence McKinley, Margaret Meader, Christine Sadler, Mary Stow. Business Manager Advertising Manager . Advertising Assistants Circulation Manager . Circulation Assistants Business Board • • • • • . Ruth Andrew, ’30 Dorothy May, ’30 ( Lois Randall, ’31 ) Ruth Olmstead, ’32 Ruth Erlanger, ’30 Louise Gould, ’32 •j Eleanor Hancock, ’33 Emily Heald, ’33 Two hundred twenty-one rr'T ▼'V T T ▼,T TT T TT TT TT T 1 Representative Mount Holyoke Community Delegates 1929 Five College Conference . Mary Rudd I E. Virginia Grimes V. IV. C. A. Delegates 929 Junior Month Delegate......................................Mary Michel Women's Intercollegiate News Association Conference Delegates.............................................. $ Katherine E. Lascelle Louise Gould Intercollegiate Poetry Contest Mount Holyoke Representative................................Constance Klugh International Relations Scholarships for 929 Holders.................................... Eleanor Crary I Sara S. Holmes Carnegie Endowment Tour for 929 Mount Holyoke Representative....................Catherine F. Snell Model Assembly of League of Nations held at Chicago 1929 Delegates Frederika Critchett • Bonnie Bell Guernsey Phyllis M. Merrill juniors in France 1928-1929..........................1 Virginia Cushman I Dorothy L. Barton Two him (Ired twenty-two IihflQQflRflDfl T T V Model Assembly of the League of Nations MODEL CONFERENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION Mount Holyoke College, Student-Alumnae Hall April 12, 13, 1929 375 Representatives from 25 Colleges HONORARY OFFICERS Sir Herbert Ames, Honorary President of the Conned Dr. James T. Shotwcll, Honorary President of the Assembly Mr. Lcifur Magnusson, Honorary President of the International Labor Conference M. Pierre de Lanux, Technical Lx pert of the Student Conference OFFICERS AND MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL Constantine P. Ladas, M. A. C., President Eric C. Wcndclin, Brown, Vice-President John A. Clark, Amherst. Secretary-General Helen Raymond, Smith, Chairman Agenda Committee Shepley Cleaves, M. A. C., Secretary to the President Bonnie Bell Guernsey, Mount Holyoke, Chairman Organization Committee John K. Fair bank, Harvard, Chairman finance Committee John B. Whitelaw, Yale. Chairman Cooperative Agencies Committee Allan R. Devenney, Springfield Y. M. C. A. College, Chairman Credentials Committee Members of the Council: Carlton Parker, Harvard; Louise Stoffregen, Smith: Phyllis Merrill, Mount Holyoke; Martha Sidway, Smith. INSTITUTIONS REPRESENTED Amherst, American International College, Boston University, Brown, Connecticut, Dartmouth, Harvard University, Harvard Graduate School. Holy Cross College, Massachusetts Agricultural College, Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, Northeastern University, Mount Holyoke, Pembroke, Princeton, Radcliffe, Salem Normal, Smith, Springfield Y. M. C. A. College, lulls, Wellesley, Wesleyan, Wheaton, Williams, Yale. PROGRAM Ordinary Session oi the Council: Subject, “Bolivia-Paraguay Dispute. Plenary Session of the Model Assembly: Subject, “Disarmament. Session of the International Labor Organization: Subject, “Freedom of Association.” Two hundred twenty-three =hhEssmsm = TTTTTTTTT TT T TTTTTTTTTT November 8 December 4 January 15 February 19 March 4 October 22 November 22 December 12 January 10 February 14 April 26 Calendar for 1929-1930 PLAY AND POETRY SHOP TALK Emily Dickinson Memorial Meeting: Mabel Loomis Todd, Genevieve Taggard, Robert Hillyer. The Theatre in the College: Hallie Flanagan. Spanish-American Poetry: Alice Stone Blackwell. Reading of Mr. Bynner’s Play “Cake”: Witter Bynner. Readings from Miss Millay’s Poems: Edna St. Vincent Millay. THE CONCERT COURSE Russian Symphonic Choir. Margaret Matzenauer. Detroit Symphony Orchestra: Ossip Gabrilovitch, conducting. Societe des Instruments Anciens. Cleveland Symphony Orchestra: Nikolai Sokoloff, conducting. Mount Holyoke and Dartmouth Glee Club Concert. Two hundred twenty-jour IrhflQDflRflDfl College Lectures MARY TUTTLE BOURDON LECTURES October 3 October 10 October 11 December 5 French Political Institutions as Compared with American and British Institutions: Andre Seigfried. Trends in Modern French Architecture: Ralph Adams Cram. Contemporary French Painting: Alfred Vance Churchill. Gothic Style: Charles Rufus Morey. OTHER LECTURES February 11 New Explorations of the Skies: Harlow Shapley. April 3 The Epic of Everest: Captain John Noel. FORUM LECTURES October 18 November 18 December 10 January 8 February 15 February 21 March 3 A Realignment of Political Parties: Howard Y. Williams Aspects of Birth Control: Mrs. Margaret Sanger. The People’s Fight for Electrical Power: Dr. Harry W. Laidler. The Rise of Ramsay MacDonald: Hon. Rennie Smith, M.P. Building a New Social Order: Scott Nearing. Commonwealth College, an Experiment in Workers’ Educa- tion: Professor Zeuch. The Aims of Education: Alexander Meiklejohn. Two hundred twenty-five irifarofTRflDfl Social Events September 21 Young Women's Christian Association Reception. October 12 Senior-Freshman Reception. October 26 Llamarada Dance. November 23 Sophomorc-Sc ri ior Reception. December 7 Junior-Freshman Reception. February 21 Senior Dance. February 26 and President Woolley at Home to Members of the Senior Class. March 12 March 8 Senior-Faculty Reception. April 5 Community Dance. May 2 I unior Prom. MISCELLANEOUS EVENTS October 24 Hampton Institute Quartet. November 2-5 Christian Fundamentals Series: Dr. Tweedy of the Yale Di- vinity School, New Haven, Connecticut. November 7 Founder’s Day Service. Hon. Vincent P. Massey, P.C., Can- adian Minister to the United States: Taste. November 16 Junior Show. November 30 “Twelfth Night.” Ben Greet Players. December 13 Debate. Williams vs. Mount Holyoke. Resolved: That the time has come for a new alignment of political parties in the United States. February 15 Debate. Yale vs. Mount Holyoke. Resolved: That the prin- ciple of censorship should be condemned. February 22 “Cap and Bells from Williams College. “Androcles and the Lion,” by Bernard Shaw. February 26 Dramatic Recital. Three One-act Plays. “Figureheads, by Louise Saunders; “The Shepherd in the Distance,” by Hol- land Hudson, and “The Pie in the Oven,” by J. J. Bell. Two hundred twenty-six IrhflQQfTRflDfl Mount Holyoke College Preachers September 22 September 29 October 6 October 13 October 20 October 27 November 3 November 10 November 17 November 24 December 1 December 8 December 15 January 12 January 19 January 26 February 2 February 9 Bishop Janies DeWolf Perry, D.D. Providence, Rhode Island Rev. Arthur H. Bradford, D.D. Providence, Rhode Island Rev. William P. Schell, D.D. New York City Rev. Theodore G. Soares, D.D. Chicago, Illinois Rev. Jay T. Stocking, D.D. St. Louis, Missouri Rev. Wendell Prime Keeler Yonkers, New York Rev. Henry Hallam Tweedy, D.D. New Haven, Connecticut Rev. Jesse G. Nichols South Hadley, Massachusetts President J. Edgar Park Norton, Massachusetts (Wheaton College) Rev. Robert E. Speer, D.D. New York City President Irving Maurer, D.D. Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin Rev. Sidney Lovett Boston, Massachusetts Rev. Reinhold Niebuhr New York City Elliott Speer (President) East Northfield, Massachusetts Rev. Robert R. Wicks, D.D. Princeton, New Jersey Rev. D. Brewer Eddy, D.D. Boston, Massachusetts President Clarence A. Barbour, D.D. Providence, Rhode Island Dean Shailer Mathews, D.D. Chicago, Illinois 7'wo hundred twenty-seven IrltflOQflRflDfl ▼TTTTTTTTTT’ February February March March March April April April April May May May May June June 16 Rev. Harold C. Phillips Cleveland, Ohio 23 Rev. Arthur Lee Kinsolving Amherst, Massachusetts 2 Rev. Harold E. B. Speight, D.D. Hanover, New Hampshire 9 Rev. Samuel M. Lindsay Brookline, Massachusetts 16 Rev. Raymond Calkins, D.D. Cambridge, Massachusetts 6 Dean Charles R. Brown, D.D. New Haven, Connecticut 13 Rev. A. C. McGiffert, Jr. Chicago, Illinois 20 Bishop Francis J. McConnell, D.D. New York City 27 Rev. Willis H. Butler, D.D. Hartford, Connecticut 4 Rev. Rockwell Harmon Potter, D.D. Hartford, Connecticut 11 Rev. Gaius Glenn Atkins, D.D. Auburn, New York 18 Rev. Rufus M. Jones, D.D. Haverford, Pennsylvania 25 Rev. Ashley Day Leavitt, D.D. Brookline, Massachusetts 1 Rev. Joseph Fort Newton, D.D. Overbrook, Pennsylvania 8 Rev. Harry Emerson Fosdick, D.D. New York City Two hundred twenty-eight IrhflOQflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T T T TTTVTTTT TTT T All-Holyoke Honors ifi V Virginia Apgar ’29 Natalie Cox '29 Marion Emerson ’29 Eleanor Robbins '29 II Natalie Cox '29 Eleanor Adams Virginia Apgar Marianna Boyd Jean Brodie Helen Burrows Alice Byers Gretchen Buis Marjorie Case Nancy Castleman Dorothy Chadwell Frances Cope Sarah Cope Natalie Cox Mona Cutler Ruth Dammann Dorothea Davis Harriet Davis Mary Deering Ethel Drumm Janet Dunning H Helen Eckley Marion Emerson Frances Flagg Julia-Ella Foster Elizabeth Goddard Margaret Grover Eun’ce Hail Kat icrine Haring Ethel Houghton Margaret Johnson Katherine Lascelle Elizabeth Lincoln Helen Lynch Katherine Lotz Ruth Marriott Virginia Mayo Jean McElroy Elizabeth McGovern Lucile McLaughlin Phyllis McNeil Margaret Murray Barbara Noss Ruth Outland Elizabeth Perry Alice Purington D. Agnes Read Carolyn Reichard Esther Richardson Kathryn Rothwell Margaret Scikel Bettina Simmcn Mary Stow Avis Trowbridge Louise Wilde Janet Wilder Florence Williams Helen Wilmann Dorothy Winans Helen Winter Two hundred thirty r T ItTcflQDffRflDfl ▼ TTTTT T T T T T 1 1 Heads of Sports Archery Dorothy Chadwell, ’30 Baseball (indoor) Hilda Foertner, '30 Baseball (outdoor) Gertrude Addis, '30 Basketball . Julia Foster, '30 Canoeing Nelda Reymann, '30 Cricket Jean Streeter, '31 Hockey Ruth Marriot, ’30 Lacrosse Jean Captain, '31 Riding Florence Anderson, '31 Soccer Nancy Castleman '30 Tennis Garrett Cope, '30 T rack Helen Eckley, ’30 Volley Ball . Nola Sanborn, ’30 Two hundred thirty-otic rYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY TT ▼' 'T' Y YYYTYYYY1 All-Holyoke Teams for 1929-1930 1 Davis Mayo Frances Cope ’30 Sally Cope ’32 Harriet Davis ’31 Helen Eckley ’30 S. Cojk F. Cope HOCKEY Frances Flagg ’30 Margaret Johnson ’33 Ruth Marriott ’30 Scikel Oulland Johnson Virginia Mayo ’32 Jean McElroy ’32 Ruth Outland ’32 Margaret Seikel ’33 Wild McLaughlin Wilma Nancy Castleman ’30 Elizabeth Goddard ’31 Margaret Grover ’30 Lucile McLaughlin ’32 Two hundred thirty-two Purington Castleman Lot z SOCCER Katherine Lot . ’30 Elizabeth McGovern ’31 Alice Purington '30 Grover Williams Reed 1). Agnes Read ’31 Louise Wilde ’31 Florence Williams ’32 Helen Wilmann ’30 hhS£QSRSDE Adams Drumm Burroughs Winter Wilder Eleanor Adams '32 Jean Hrodie, ’33 Helen Burrows ’33 VOLLEY BALL Ethel Drumm ’33 Janet Dunning ’30 Mary Stow ’32 Janet Wilder ’33 Helen Winter ’32 Cutler Winans McNeil Lynch Noss Richardson Byers Alice Byers ’32 Mona Cutler ’33 Ethel Houghton ’32 LACROSSE Helen Lynch ’33 Phyllis McNeil ’32 Barbara Noss ’33 Esther Richardson ’33 Bettina Simmen ’32 Dorothy Winans ’33 Two hundred thirty-three IibflOQflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T ▼ T T T T BASKETBALL Sarah Cope ’32 Natalie Cox '29 Julia-Ella Foster ’30 Eunice Hail ’29 Katherine Haring ’29 Margaret Murray ’29 Foster Cope CRICKET Doris Caldwell '32 Mabel Pottinger ’32 Two hundred thirty-jour Pottinger Caldwell 1 IrIrflQQflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T T T T T TT T 1 BASEBALL Virginia Apgar '29 Marianna Boyd '32 Marjorie Case '30 Mary Deering '30 Elizabeth Perry '29 Kathryn Rothwell '29 Case Boyd TENNIS Sally Cope ’32 Marion Emerson ’29 Ruth Dammann '31 Avis Trowbridge '29 Dorothea Davis ’32 Cope Davis Two hundred thirty-five IrlifKPffRflDfl ▼ ▼▼TTTTT yr r r’T ▼▼▼▼▼▼ Ecklcy Lincoln Reichard Lascelle Natalie Cox ’29 Helen Eckley ’30 TRACK Katherine Lascelle ’32 Elizabeth Lincoln ’30 Carolyn Reichard ’32 Chadwcll Parker Huis ARCHERY Gretchen Buis '32 Score: 240 Two hundred thirty-six Dorothy Chadwcll ’30 Score. 226 TrlcaQPflRflDfl — «r ▼ T T r T TT TTTTTT TTT T ! Reid Anderson Critchctt Manager Horse Show November 2, 1929 Florence Anderson Ringmaster • ••••• . Frederika Critchett Class A Riders • feu de Barre First—Florence Anderson Second—Janet Wilder Third—Carolyn Reichard Fourth—Francenia Budd Class B Riders First—Alice Critchett Second—Margaret Nutting Third—Frances Lane Fourth—Amy Pattison Events • ••••• . Florence Anderson Egg and Spoon Race . • ••••• . Phyllis Glazier Musical Chairs . • ••••• Florence Anderson Judges Captain Sumner, M. A. C. Mr. Lewis Perkins, Holyoke Two hundred thirty-seven ma ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼TTTTTTTTT T’ T 1 Tracks Field Day May 18, 1929 Baseball Archery Won by 1930 Won by 1929 Won by 1929 Archery Cricket Won by 1932-1930 November 2, 1929 Won by 1932 Hockey Soccer 1932 vs. 1930 1933 vs. 1930 1932 vs. 1930 Won by 1932 Won by 1933 Won by 1930 Lacrosse Volleyball 1933 vs. 1932 1932 vs. 1930 Won by 1932 Won by 1932 Two hundred thirty-eight r ▼ t t t t yr'v ttttvttvt v Intercollegiate Play Day October 5, 1929 SMITH—CONNECTICUT—MOUNT HOLYOKE Events Hockey Lacrosse Soccer Cageball Volleyball Tug-of-War Two hundred thirty-nine IdtaOQflRflDfl ▼ ▼ T T TT YT TTTTTTTT1 T T 1 Student Dance Recital February 28, 1930 Directed by Marie Heghinian Pari- I 1. Ding Dong Bell • • • • • Haupt 1. Pirates • • • • • . Strickland 3. Katinka • • • • • Archangels ky 4. Raggedy Ann and Andy Hinman 5. The King's Breakfast .... Fraser-Simon 6. Minstrels • • • • • Debussy Part II 1. Negro Spirituals a. Nobody Knows the Trouble I See . arr. Guion b. Swing Low, Sweet Chariot . . arr. Fisher 2. The Sea • • • • • . . Palmgren 3. Valse Triste . • • • • • Sibelius 4. Pyrrhic • • • • • Chopin DANCERS Albrecht, L. Edie, J. Howe, G. Richter, M. Ashe, D. Elliott, I). Jackson, M. Sherman, M. Baden, K. Esty, J. Jackson, R. Shook, B. Ballard, M. Fellows, B. Jacobs, P. Singleton, H. Batchellor, J. Flagg, C. LcClear, V. Stow, M. Bookhout, M. Frickc, D. Lundy, M. Streeter, H. Burdan, M. Hankins, E. McElderry, M. Streeter, J. Caldwell, D. Harding, M. Meader, M. Sutton, L. Chase, E. Harrigan, C. Merritt, A. Thornburg, C. Cornell, G. Harrington, R. Midellart, E. Tiedeman, V. Corson, M. Hasbrouck, R. Ostwald, F. Touhey, E. Curry, C. Henderer, E. (Jutland, R. Vack, B. Davis, V. Hoagland, M. Pottinger, M. Walters, G. Duryea, A. Holley, H. Rand, M. Young, M. Holway, D. Reid, M. SINGERS Burnham, L. Trout, J. Watkins, M. Accompanist—Margaret S. Norris Two hundred forty IiliflOQffRflDfl — TT'TTT'TTTTTT ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ Competitive Gymnastic Demonstration Gymnasium March 15, 19.30 2.30 P. M. PROGRAM Grand March Marching—Fundamentals—Running . . Class of 1933; color, green Marching—Fundamentals—Running . Class of 1932; color, blue Clogs—Jockey and Reuben .... . . . . Class of 1933 Marching—Fundamentals—Running . . Class of 1931; color, yellow Clogs—Cornin’ Thro’ The Rye and Strawfoot . Class of 1933 Marching—Fundamentals—Running . Class of 1930; color, red Clogs—Dancing Clowns and Chicken Reel . . Class of 1933 Apparatus: I. Parallels . Class of 1930 Horse . Class of 1931 Travelling Rings . Class of 1932 Ropes . Class of 1933 II. Boom . Class of 1930 Flying Rings . Class of 1931 Parallels .... . Class of 1932 Box . Class of 1933 Two hundred forty-one IrliflOQflRflDfl-- '▼’T'T'T ▼ T T T”T’'T TTTTTTTTTTT' Rhythms: The King's Break]ast Katin ka Raggedy Ann and Andy Demonstration Class in Natural Dancing Silver cup, presented by Mr. Joseph A. Skinner, for floor work including free hand gymnastics, marching, and running, won by 1932. Banner, presented by the Atldetic Association, for floor work and apparatus, won by 1932. Judges Miss Emma R. Frazier, New York University, School of Education Miss Margaret Holland, Barnard College, Columbia University Miss Alfreda Mosscrop, University of Wisconsin Miss Ruth Page Sweet, The Bouve School, Boston Two hundred orty-lwo nouses TrT[fl(T)3RflPfl Brigham Brigham is a comfortable place, which people remember for flower-filled vases and thoughtful little attentions. Ruth Jaggcr Two hundred forty-four hhflQDflRflPfl ▼ T T ' r r-T T T '▼ T North Hillside We recommend for your selection Hillside North, the house of correction, Where the fat grow thin from climbing the hill, And the thin grow fat from the food on the bill (of fare). Rosalind 1 Iasbrouck Two hundred forty-fur TfTraOQflRflDfl ▼ TTTTT ▼▼ T T TTTTTTTT T T South Hillside A mediaeval castle on a hill— Modern diversions pursued at will; Candle light and formal grace— The merry home of a college race. Two hundred forty-six Elisabeth Delano IrltflQPflRflDfl «T T T T ▼ ▼ TTTTTTTT TTT T Mead Beauty and Brains combined, 'tis said Are very rare indeed; But not too rare For we declare You'll find them both in Mead! Marjory Dunn Two hundred forty-seven =- IrhflCDfflRflDfl f ▼ T T T T VW9W WmV'V T ▼ T ’-T-T T V V TT TTT Tl Pearsons Pearsons is like an old shoe—full of creaks and squeaks, but withal nice and big and comfortable. Elisabeth McKee Two hundred forty-eight IrlcflCPffRflDfl — TV ▼ TTTTTTTTTTT T TT’T'T TTTTTTTTTT Porter Porter is a cheerful ark, Rocked by a motley crew, Compendium of all the types That sail the Holyoke blue; Then Ship Ahoy! and Au Revoir! We’re off in morning light, And still awake for action In the watches of the night. Louise Sproulc Two hundred forty-nine TrhaOQffRflDfl ▼▼TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT North Rockefeller Some girls have to go to the Libe To read and concentrate, But those who live in Rocky Stay home in regal state. Why do they have so many men? The answer’s not hard at all— The men don’t come to see the girls, They come to see the hall. Constance Harrigan Two hundred fifty IrliaOQffRflDfl — ■▼TTTTr TTTTTTTTTTTT T 1 South Rockefeller This is a complex age. We all have complexes. People in South Rocky Carry towels over their arms at night; They never wear mules; They mumble strange things: “What tp do in case of a fire—” South Rocky has a fire-drill complex. This is a complex age. Virginia Cushman Two hundred fifty-one IrlfflQDffRflDfl TTTTTT TTTTTTTTTTTTT T Safford You'll know us by our cupola; Some think it looks antique— But you should come inside our doors If modern maids you seek. Two hundred fifty-two Sylvia I Ievl jritaooffRflDfl ▼ T T' T T TT T ▼ ▼ T T Wilder Wilder’s two courts side by side In peace and harmony abide. With tea and pancakes life is bliss— Don’t you wish you lived like this? Mary Maury Fitzgerald Two hundred fifty •three IfTcflroflRflDfl - — ▼TTTTT ▼ ▼ TTTTT TTT T T ▼ T T Cowles Cowles caters to cats, collies, callers and chaps; Countless critics credit Cowles with cheer. Come callers, collect, chat and cast-aside caps! Cowles-ites chatter like chanticleers. Cowles claims crooked corridors, carpets and cracks. Choose carefully what chat you chew. But come, citizens, come,—Cowles craves company Come, create a clamorous hue. Two hundred fifty’four Margaret Adams ▼ T T T'T'TT ▼▼▼▼▼▼ T T T T TT T 1 Eastman E for the emptiness felt by each heart, A the adieu as June tears us apart; S for Sophie, the cat born to fight; T for the teas and the parties at night; M for the house mother, jolly and kind; A for the antics when work’s off our mind; N for the niftiest house you will find. At Eastman! Doris Ashe Two hundred fifty-fur ----rMiBKm£sm==— TVTV V TW T-T T TT fTTTTT TTT S J udson Did you ever hear a trolley go tearing down the tracks? Did you ever know a girl slept in sweaters, flannels, socks? Do you have your Sunday breakfast served to you in bed? Do you want a little proof of these astounding things you’ve read? Come to Judson! Two hundred fifty-six Eleanor Adams hkEsnmam r? T T y TTTTT’TTTTT TTTT'TTT’ Pearson’s Annex Stay at home, Play at home, Eight o’clock, Sleepy-time gals. Florence Sessions Two hundred fifty-seven tuft — JdtflOQffRflDfl r T TTTTTTTTTTTTTTT T T TTTTTTTTTT TT Smith ville One block to Rocky, And two up to Skinner, Three blocks to Chapel, And four way up to Clapp, Miles to the hockey field; Smith ville would like to see Plans for new campus move South on the map! Mabel Pottingcr Verna Nori Ellen Hcndcrcr Two hundred lifty-cight .... TfTcaroflRflDfl f T TTTTTTTTTTTTTTT TTTTTTTT TTT TT Sycamores “What are those people running for? the green young Freshman said, “They live out at Sycamores, the wise old Soph replied. “What makes ’em run so every day?” the green young Freshman said. “They have to come from far away,” the wise old Soph replied, “For they live outside the campus gates a half a mile or more; They walk so many miles a day, their footsies all are sore. Take a look at them in Skinner where they limp from floor to Hoor; But proud they are to live there, just the same. Winifred Nicklos Two hundred fifty-nine TTTTTTTTT TTTTTTTTTTTTTT ’T” Woodbridge Group Sing a song of Woodbridge! The food is always great, Rut when we gain those extra pounds, We wish we hadn’t ate. Two hundred sixty Gertrude Ahrens Katherine Lasccllc Marianna Boyd Day Students We entered the service as raw recruits, In the innocence of first “commutes,” But oh! we’ve grown canny and trolley-wise— We look at conductors with unblinking eyes. Our life is a schedule of cars to be got, Our money is melted in S. R. R.’s pot! « Two hundred sixty-one r 1 IrTiflQOffRflDfl T T T T TTTTT Houses The information blank that came the summer before Freshman year. WInch dormitory do you prefer to lire in? Your absolute lack of knowledge regarding even the names of any of the dormitories. Your reluctant return of the blank as blank as ever. Your arrival at Porter that first September. The old brick building. The dark hall. The creaking stairs. The breath-taking climb to the fourth floor. The vast barn-like room. The hard bare chairs. The bleak bare walls. The nude mattress. The sagging beds. The day you first put up the blue curtains. Your stoical acceptance of your roommate’s taste for Maxficld Parrish. The day the room first seemed home. Giving the Sophomore houses the once-over in February. Drawing num- bers in the spring. Your indication of choice of houses. Sycamores. Bridg- man, Pearsons Annex— Your relief at getting into Mountain View. The queerly shaped suites. The beds in rows on the porches. Your orgy of decor- ating. The new blue tea set. The long cold walk to Woodbridgc for break- fast. The night the wind almost blew over your bridge-lamp. The gorgeous- ness of spring sunsets over the river. Drawing numbers again. Choosing houses again. North Rockefeller, South Rockefeller, North Hillside, South Hillside— Your ecstasy at getting into Hill. The cell-like grey room. Your frantic attempts to make it look cosy. The walls you couldn't tack posters on. The curtains that had to be just like everyone’s else. The cold hard floor. The reverberating echoes. The beautiful new bath-rooms. Living-rooms you could actually relax in. The long walk up from S. A. H. on still moon-white nights. Final room-choosing. Your house-president friend who drew number eight hundred. The fortitude with which you accepted your doom. Your cheery bay-window room in Saflord. The walls you plastered with posters and pictures. Your tie-back net curtains. The dark scuffed floor. The hide- ous bureaus. The low-pressure plumbing. The bed that sagged comfortably in the middle. The mellow peace of an old house. The dawning realization that houses don't matter so much anyway. Your wistful complacence as you watch another room-choosing. The beginning of worries for next year. The plans for an apartment in New York. The plans for an apartment in Boston. The growing fear that it will have to be a board- ing house— Ttea hundred sixty-two r V rrlfflOPffRflDfl- ▼ ▼ T T T T T T T V T T ' T ▼ T T T ▼ T 1 To the Passing of Knees The short skirt now is passing. Its dirge is being sung. We're busy letting out our hems; The pendulum has swung! What though our dear Prom dresses That once we owned in pride— What though all skimpy, scanty skirts Must now be tossed aside? What though the freedom of the knees, Our boast of yesterday, Has lost its novelty, and now Another mode holds sway? No more will the aesthetic eye Be stricken with the shock Of seeing out in open view Bowed legs or knees that knock. No longer will we tug in vain To cover up our knees; No more will fashion dictate That we let our ankles freeze. No longer need we fear the gaze Of idle passer-by; No longer need we worry lest Our skirts ride up too high. ▼ ▼ TTTTTTTTTT T T T T T T ▼ ▼ T No longer in the street car Will our limbs be rudely scanned. And dainty femininity No longer will be banned. In going in for draperies We’ll do it not by halves; We’re out to hide all honey knees And also fleshy calves. Our lady-like young heroine Now modesty will show At most a silken ankle, Or perhaps a slipper toe. We'll have to learn the etiquette Of how to hold a skirt When getting out of motor cars To keep them from the dirt. We'll have to learn that subtle grace And cultivate an air, So we can sweep into a room Like any lady fair. Then let's be ladies of high romance And raise a lady-like song To bid good-bye to the knee-length skirt And hail the skirt that is long! Two hundred sixty-fire r ▼ ▼ T T ▼ ▼ 'T T'TT'T 1 The Bells There is a myth which has some currency on the campus that a “rising bell” rings at seven o’clock every morning, though what besides the sun rises, it is hard to say. It is very unwise to give credit to this theory, however, because there is no one now living who can testify to having heard it, save one person, and since she was returning from a dance at that hour, her testimony cannot be accepted. There is, however, so far as 1 know, no reason why there should not be such a bell. A second bell rings for five minutes at seven-thirty. This is to point out to all and sundry that they have overslept the first period, and as such is very helpful because, since it would be impossible to make breakfast at that late minute, one might as well get in another hour’s sleep. Then at 8.15, varying with atmospheric conditions, the chapel bell rings. In order to distinguish these chimes from the hour, the Chapel bell rings over a space of fifteen minutes. In other words, the thing to do when you hear the bell is to dash to class. Then, if the bell continues to ring, you’ll know you’re wrong. Or, wait in your room five minutes; then, if the bell stops ringing, you'll know it’s the hour and you’re late. Very simple you see—very. After this the chimes ring rather at random throughout the day. They may annoy you at first, but you will soon become so accustomed to them that you will not hear nor pay any attention to them. Finally, at ten, curfew rings. This is the signal for all good little fresh- men to pull up the covers and glide away into dreamland, and for all others to start moving furniture for the rest of the night. Two hundred sixty-six IrltaODflRflDfl THE TAIL-WASGERS CM ! jr,' '■ : ••'N v. V ,' ,•}« v ..vV TYKE «and TUTTLE '«SSr TOPSY-TURVY ARCHIE Wx JEANNE ▼ ▼T T T T Y T ▼T TT Senior Dignity at Mount Holyoke This imposing assemblage of 1930 notables includes, reading from left to right: in the first row, Chairman Grimes, President Cope, Vice-President Flagg, Chairman Conard; in the second row, Leader Parr, Sergeant Vera, President Michel, Chairman Corcoran, and Secretary Bradbury. The above portrait study was made on the day when 1930 first made its debut in Cap and Gown. It is apparent on the faces of these prominent girls that they take their positions seriously, and do not need the aid of their iron- ribbed neck-bands to keep their heads up and their jaws firm. Two hundred sixty-eight Irh3Q0fTRflDfl Dirge (To be slowly sung or mournfully recited to the tune from “H. M. S. PINAFORE,” entitled, “For We Are His Sisters and His Cousins and His Aunts.”) We were the mon-archs of this college The rulers of this seat of knowledge. Whose loss Mount Holyoke now laments, For we were the chairmen and the presidents, The secretaries, treasurers and class ser-GEANTS! At meetings we held sway, And generally had our way. We resolutely exercised our common-sense, Oh, we were the chairmen and the presidents, The secretaries, treasurers, and class ser-GEANTS! We collected fines and dues, And sent our opinions to the News, We made sure that the smokers went under the fence, For we were the chairmen and the presidents, The secretaries, treasurers, and class ser-GEANTS! We passed both rules and pie, And watched with eagle eye For all wicked sinners with immoral intents, Since we were the chairmen and the presidents, The secretaries, treasurers, and class ser-GEANTS! We worked for Holyoke’s good, And behaved as officers should. We’re sure to go to Heaven when we all go hence, For we were the chairmen and the presidents, The secretaries, treasurers, and class ser-GEANTS, The powerful and dominant, The popular and prominent SerGEANTS! Two hundred sixty-nine ▼ T 'T T T T T T”? T ’ IrltflOQflRflDfl — W ▼ ▼ ▼ W ▼ T T ▼ T ▼ ▼ ▼ T ▼ ▼ Cold .... Funny How much of college is connected in my mind With cold. You’ll find how cold it gets up there. When we had dates—(docs that seem quaint to you As “fussing did to us?)— There wasn’t anywhere to go—no shows, nowhere to dance, Unless you went to the city, and visited One of their funny, decorous nightclubs That closed at twelve o'clock on Saturdays. Even this was against the rules, but it wasn’t An awful lot of fun. You see, the houses Closed at ten. They just wouldn't let you in After that. And so, if you got back late, You had to make a night of it—sleeping In some obscure rooming-house, taking No chance of being seen and known, or else Huddled in the car to balk the wind, with both Pretending to be asleep, and sitting very still Not to disturb the other, while the cold Crept up your legs like winter flood-tide. Of course, you could sit in parlors—parlors, mind— And distantly converse, sitting stiffly apart On straight-backed chairs. Yes, there was S. A. H. But the same atmosphere prevailed—doors open And Lights blazing, so you could only talk Drawing-room generalities—and people pussy-footing Up and down the halls, peering about in hope Of spying out vice. No, it wasn’t that We wanted to be up to anything. We were just uneasy Like children at dancing school, under critical surveillance Of rows of parents ranged along the wall— Furtive, self-conscious, and unhappy, feeling obscurely that we ought To justly their suspicion. And so we'd mostly Go out in a car somewhere, and talk and smoke and shiver. Or if a man couldn't borrow a car, not even The sorry flivvers or discarded family cars With broken windows, you’d take a steamer rug, And wrap it round like a shroud lor twins— Even in the snow, sometimes, backed against a tree To keep off some of the wind, till the cold Bit through blanket, furs and skin, and your fingers Let a butt burn down and sear them, without feeling it. Seems barbarous, doesn't it? And yet we thought We liked it. Guess we were pretty tough to stand Exposure like we did. Funny how much Of college is connected in my mind with cold. Two hundred seventy-one T IiItaOQffRflDfl The Question of Cuts Since the faculty has been so earnestly trying to ascertain the effect of cutting Friday classes, we feel it incumbent upon us to say a few words to all who think themselves cut out to be college women on just what our cut system is, or whether it not is. Everyone is interested in this—even the freshmen have been here long enough to cut a piece of cake and make themselves at home. There is an old tradition that one cuts three times. It rather reminds us of the Ancient Mariner stopping one of three. The ideal arrangement, however, is when one is given three for one, a cut in three different classes for the same lecture. Some members of the community are now making cutting remarks because three out of five students have cut a class, or even worse that they have three cuts out of five classes. We are very much cut up about this and hope the students will cut it out. Quotation Quiz WHO SAID— 1. At half after the hour— 2. Youwillfind avoilettecard in thelaBORatory. 3. And—this—evening—we—are—fortunate—to—have—with—us— 4. As the saying is— 5. Someone in this auditorium is chewing Wrigley’s Spearmint gum! 6. When I was in college— 7. Have you seen my new little dog? 8. Mr. B.—close the window—turn off the lantern—open the window— 9. The sublime, the ethereal, the very essence of the— 10. Union Carbide has gone up again. (See prize answers on Page 286.) Two hundred seventy-two IfTrflOPflRflDfl Teachers’ Appendix (It is suggested that some such information as this be added to the Freshman Bible for the edification of “baby faculty” in the practices of the profession.) 1. In general, plan your assignments on the hypothesis that yours is the only course with outside preparation. This practice, if persisted in, will give your classes standing and importance in the order of things. 2. Always take time to call the roll, ignoring any difficulties in pronunci- ation. This will impress upon the students not only that you are not easily to be discouraged, but also that you arc independent enough to be cynically dis- trustful of the honor system in the matter of “cuts.” Meanwhile, the girls may start learning the lesson for the day, and the recitation will proceed more smoothly. 3. If you do not have the gift of obscurity in phrasing, cultivate it dili- gently, as it is essential in formulating the questions for quizzes. 4. If possible, announce quizzes for the week following a vacation, since this will keep the students from the demoralizing effect of relaxation during the recess. 5. Adopt an attitude of contempt for college girls in general, for they like to be insulted. If you teach the arts or languages, the expression of this attitude may take the form of insistently generous allowance for the short- comings of student mentality and appreciative surprise at a good recitation or paper. If you are attached to one of the science departments, you will have wonderful opportunities to intimate to your students that you recognize in them the justification of the theory that all life has come from the amoeba. 6. Learn to make your instant reaction to requests for help about class- work, “It will be much better for you to think it out for yourself.” However, at the end of two or three hours of effort on the student’s part, it is permissible for you to hear the question, as the assignment is likely to have been miscopied, or, especially in laboratory sections, faulty material may be in use. Two him tired seventy-three TcifflroffRflDfl Dark Journey A girl was walking along the darkened p a t h. She walked almost hastily, yet surely, as if the rocks and stones were familiar to her feet even in the throbbing, silent blackness of the night. She was not afraid. To be suddenly plunged from the artificial lights of civilization into this primitive dark seemed not dangerous, but adventurous to her. No silver shaft of moon chose to lighten her black way. Not a star dared ap- pear through the leafage of the trees that surrounded her on all sides. Everything before and behind her was black, Black, BLACK. Nothing existed in that utter void of blackness. She was leaving civilization farther and farther behind, yet she knew instinctively that there was the place where she must pretend to be a gazelle and pick her way daintily. And there was that particularly ungainly bush. Here again a sudden turn. Oh, she knew her way. She had done this many times before, but never in quite such darkness, nor under cover of the night alone. She thought of whistling, but dared not break the velvet hush with such flippancy. Then she stumbled heavily. Surely she was off the path. She had been travelling too long not to have arrived at her destination by this time. No voice, no light in the darkness greeted her footsteps. Oh! Why had she agreed to this rendezvous? Was it worth that much to her? This long, exhausting walk in the dark over a path now grown unfamil- iar, just for the momentary enjoyment of one of life’s greatest Two hundred seventy-four pleasures? Turn back? She couldn’t face all that dark distance alone again. A shape blacker than the rest of the general black- ness loomed before her. She drew her breath in quickly. A man ? How absurd! Men were too scarce in this vicinity. Yet her nerves were shaken even after she had passed the tree, so mascu- line in shape. She trembled. If relief did not appear in five more minutes she would retrace her steps. She looked at her watch, illuminated in the darkness. She had been walking only five minutes altogether! She gazed unbelieving and suddenly, just beyond, were voices, human com- panionship, safety. Little glows of welcome lit the darkness. Quickly she placed a cigarette between trembling lips and fumbled for a match as she tumbled through the gate to the Downs. Two hundred seventy-five r TrhflCDflRflDfl:---------- ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼ T ▼ r TTTTT TTTT Tl Campused Classics THE CLEAR CALL I must down to the downs again, to the rolling downs and the sky, And all 1 ask is a Lucky Strike and a match to light her by, And a woolly robe and a soft spot, and a new College Humor Or a good pal who can talk well about the latest rumor. 1 must down to the downs again, for the call of the cigarette Is a wild call and a clear call, and won’t let you forget. And all I ask on a windy night with the dark shades lurking Is a sheltered spot, for like as not, my lighter’s not working! THE RIME OF THE ROOMCHOOSER I It is my wouldbe rommate, Jane, Who shyly stoppeth me. “By thy drooping mouth and down- cast eye Now wherefore stopp’st thou me?” II “Oh, Mary dear, ’tis hard to say And much like unto sin, Because a happy life we’d planned And one right full of din.” III She grabs me with a clawing hand: “I think it cannot be, For we would not agree at all. Oh, dear! Oh, can’t you see?” IV Jane wipes a tear from her glittering eye. Saith she: “Just good friends still, But roomies never, though to part Goes hard against my will.” V I got me out, but heard her say: “Oh, Sally, did you hear How well I laid that dreadful ghost? Where shall we room next year?” Two kundral seventy-six PSALM OF THE ANCIENT GYM SUIT One day up in the attic Midst the clothes her ma had worn; Janie found an old black garment, Full of dust and sadly torn. “What is this strange piece of clothing?” “What is this?” she cried in awe. “Can it be a family relic? Tell me not it fitted maw!” LITTLE GIRL BLUE The little toy beasts are covered with dust And the books are leaning in piles, The bed has not been made for a week, And the stockings are heaped for miles. Time was when the little toy beasts were bright Anti the candlestick held a taper, But that was the time—oh, the faraway time! Before I was asked for a paper. Two hundred seventy-seven IrltflOPffRflDfl . T'T T T ▼ TT TTTTTTTTTTT WimW T 1 A Dyer Date It was after eight one Friday night and Erhardt was Aull a-flutter, As carefully she primed her ear to hear his Carr’s Wild stutter. Now he was just a college man who knew Dietrich of courting; He'd call a Netvhall every day and take a girl out sporting. As this Young girl was Talbot sweet with clothes of striking Hewes He Chased in haste o'er Moore and dale to gladly pay his dues. The maid who let him in the door was covered with a Hayes— His Noble face, his Clement smile put her in a daze. “Oh, Kinney Kid well I said she later to all her friends below. “And what a Dresser! What a voice! I wish he was my beau.” The dear young pair walked Underhill and up to Prospect high, And gazed at distant hndMarfa Prest against the sky. The Branching Groves were midnight Greene and the sight of White moon- shine Drifting on roofs of Barnes and Holmes would Foster any line. He Couched his praise so freshly she had not De Witt to see That often he had practised on others such as she. “Were he Baker, Butler, Barbour, or Porter on a train I’d wed him if he asked me,” thought she, and her thoughts were plain. But he had a pocket of Nichols and each Hall had a phone, And the heart that his Taylored suit did Hyde was only a heart of Stone. See how he set love Bruyn, how its fate was sad and Dyer! Oh a Hanson man in a college town is dangerous as fire! Two hundred seventy-eight rrTtflmffRflDfl — ▼ ▼ T T T ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼ T 1 CLOSfcUPS CairLpu.5ec( 'Z Thfc Tki -ee. 5mcl(i 0 ET astma. rt '— ■ 4 no there's the Fresh Fnan V Ko w an't U.Sa d to-fire. dt-ills. Whevi 3 pr-mcj Comes Two hundred seventy-nine r ▼▼TT'T ▼ T ▼ ▼ T T « Clothes Two fine young men Were strolling about Mt. Holyoke Campus After Senior Dance evidently Their girls slept all day So , They strolled and observed Juniors, Sophomores, and Freshmen. They strolled from Mary Lyon to Mead And one said what Time of day is it And the other One said 1 Thought it was morning but That girl had lipstick On and a silk dress And the first one said maybe She didn’t go to bed Last night. And they strolled on some More and the other One said is it winter Or summer and The first one said 1 Thought it was winter Because I have seen Numerous maidens in ski Pants—red green and Brown and the Other one said but There is a girl with no Coat on only A blazer with a red Horse. Then they stopped in Bewilderment for Just then three Girls came by and They were all dressed Differently and Peculiarly One had no stockings On only socks Another was wrapped from Knees to ears In a coon Coat A third in A bright red leather jacket And stockings which were Wrinkled And a green Beret and a blue skirt. Two httndrcd eighty By this time these Good lads were Entirely befuddled and Could only stare at This timeless ageless Procession and just Then they went by Rocky And two damsels Burst Out of the door and Into a taxi the Fat orange legs of One bulged between Galoshes and Straining coat. Her face Was framed in elephant’s cars. The other trailed loops And tatters of scarlet Beneath her coat Tempting the spikes of her Tottering heels. The first poor lad Said Is this this year Or Next and the other One said maybe it’s Next And so they continued on To Mead and meanwhile Swarms of Chattering females Passed and moved in The distance In still more variegated Costumes. And finally they came to Mead and their Own girls appeared And speaking in Feeble Tones these poor lads Clutched their girls and Said My God Why don’t you wear Uniforms. Two hundred eighty-one 1 EPISODE The other day the telephone rang, and someone cried “Freshman!” So I went and took down the receiver, and I said In a voice modulated to please Miss Couch’s ear: “Fourth floor.” And someone at the other end muttcrd unintelligible things In a way that would have enraged Miss Couch. So I said, “Pardon?” And they did it again, and as I was getting bothered I forgot And I shouted, “What?” But someone started a phonograph, so I hung up, And the next time the telephone rang 1 shut my door and Pretended that 1 had gone to Glessie’s. GULLIBLE GERTRUDE’S LAMENT To a mind sentimental, and trusting and gentle, there is something ter- rifically tragic, in accepting the new and the radical view, in place of the old things of habit. So I came full prepared, when to college I fared, to welcome without one condition, all the folk-lore and form, all the fables forlorn, which make up a glorious tradition. I thought the tale topping, which there was no stopping, of crocheted shoes worn during chapel; and the lay of trustees, in ice-cream to their knees, of my gullible eye was the apple. I e’en swallowed with glee, the time-hon- ored story, of the monster confined in the cat-house, and I'll venture to say, that on every Play Day, I looked just escaped from a mad-house. Chocolate ice-cream, I vowed, could not come when a cloud of white smoke issued forth from the stack; and serenade kisses, for reminiscences, I required, or else felt the lack. I drank in entirely, without further parley, all tradition meant only in fun. But this mystifies me, arrogantly defies me; where in heck did those buttons come from? Two hundred eighty-two IrlfflOQflRflDfl;— rT T TTTTTTTT TTTT TTTTT ▼ TTT T T ▼ ▼ ▼ Y 1 TO UNDERCLASSMEN When I was a freshman, flip and gay I took a man to Chapin, Satur- day. But only once—the laugh was on me— The stags got the man, and I was free. 1 took him to Llamie, as sopho- more, Battling bravely on the thronged floor, But gave up the struggle, sadly again, And limped back home in the gray rain. The next year I pondered, a long while; Was even Prom worth the trial? I took a chance—revenge was mine, Man was handsome, music di- vine. Down from the balcony stared the riff-raff, My dress was lovely—it was to laugh! Then be not downcast, each dog has his day— Junior Prom's coming! Com- ing your way! nt Two hundred eighty •three rfita(PflRflDfl= TTT'TTT TTTTTTTT I ' ' assSs m SM THE 5AMI DEE PHBliUK oF-------- ilAI1.ll MAY !l0 Hji|, itQ ft Sis i Mu riflttwowuTTI 2-JeJ____ jd. —M- rc ) ii a 1 c [«J «- t niuL1' 'rv r T Wi DflER i'JT JO 'O THESI ALTERNATIVES V r ITflQQflRflDfl ■▼TTTTTTTTTT’ A SONG FOR SENIORS Where will we be this day next year? It’s more than likely we won’t be here. We may be modeling what the debutant wears, Or we may be married to millionaires; Taking dictation and filling out cards, Or pulling up weeds in our own back yards. What will we be doing a year from today? We aren’t quite certain so we’d better not say. Where will we be this day next year? We offer up prayers that we won’t be here. We may be social secretaries writing notes, Or we may be selling tickets for trains and boats; Teaching naughty brats how to write and spell, Or drawing pretty ads that will make things sell. Where will we be a year from now? We’d like to find out, but we don’t know how. Where will we be this day next year? We’ll be out in the world and far from here. Some of us keeping the wolf from the door, Some of us learning what skillets afe for; Acting in movies or selling silk hose, Or taking in laundry;—nobody knows. A year from today, where will we be? All we can do is,— WAIT AND SEE! PRIZE ANSWERS TO QUOTATION QUIZ, PAGE 272 (1) Miss Woolley (6) Nee Miss Robinson (2) Mr. Moore (7) Miss Wild (3) -Miss Marks (8) Miss Chase (4) Mr. Agee (9) Mr. Warbeke (5) Miss Morgan (10) Miss Hahn Two hundred eighty-six Index of Advertisers Anson’s.............................299 Atlantic Pacific Tea Company . 290 Bartlett Bros........................296 Beckman’s............................293 Bennett, H. W.......................298 Bosbach, Herman.....................301 Brick C )vcn . 299 Brigham’s...........................301 Buchholtz Son.....................301 Casper Ranger Construction Co. . 302 Casper Ranger Lumber Co. . . 295 Cheney 6c Hunt......................295 Chidnoff Studio . ... 291 Childs, Thomas......................294 Clark’s Flower Shop .... 294 Felice Brothers.....................299 Fitzgibbons, F. J. and J. J. . . ... 298 Fleming’s 299 Francis Hat Shoppe ... . 300 Fringelin’s Stationery Shop 298 (jarripy, A. A. . 295 Gateway Tea House...................300 General Cleaners ...................302 Glen’s Beauty Salon.................300 Glesmann, R. A. .... 299 Hadley Book Shop and Inn . 299 Hadley Falls Trust Company . 292 Harper Method Shop..................299 Hegy’s . .. 294 Heidner, J. G.......................297 Higgins, W. L.......................301 Hoffman’s...........................300 Holyoke City Market.................295 Holyoke Furniture Company . 294 Holyoke Sporting Goods Company 293 Holyoke Yellow Cab Company . . 296 Hotel Nonotuck 297 Hotel Northampton...................300 Howard-Wesson Company . 303 Ida Candy Shop......................299 Jackson’s...........................295 Johnson, C. W.......................298 La Barre’s..........................296 Leary Lingerie Shop.................295 Leonard, H. E.......................299 Lynch 6c Smith......................294 Manse, The..........................300 Mansir Printing Company . . 295 Marcil Shoppe ......................297 McAuslan Wakelin Company 296 Miller, I. ... 301 Mt. Holyoke College Laundry 298 Nadir, Charles J....................301 National Blank Book Company 293 Nusante, Frank......................297 Oakes, R. T.........................298 Office Equipment Company . . . 296 Old Meeting House...................301 Oriental Art Shop...................297 Osborne Hardware....................298 Park Company........................300 Preston 6c Bishop.................297 Red Roofs Tea Room..................299 Russell, J..........................297 Sinclair, Florist...................296 Skinner, Wm.........................289 Smith, H. T.........................298 Smith, Josephine....................300 Sport Shop..........................300 St. Germaine, A.....................295 Stone, Julia........................296 Suffolk Theatre.....................294 Terrace Inn.........................300 Victory Donut Shop..................296 White 6c Wyckoff....................292 Whiting Coal Company .... 298 Whiting 6c Cook.....................294 Whitmore, K. H......................297 Woodbine Gift Shop..................299 Woodworth's.........................298 Yoerg’s Garage......................298 William Skinner Son Established 1848 Skinner Crepes Look for the name in the selvage Mills: Holyoke, Massachusetts NEW YORK. - CHICAGO - BOSTON - PHILADELPHIA - AND - SAN FRANCISCO A merica's Largest Retailers of Fine Foods Imported and Domestic Delicacies Finest Staple Foods Choice Coffees Fine Teas Spices More Than 70 Years of Faithful Service The Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co. Chidnoff Studio 469 Fifth Avenue New York City Official Photographer for the “1930 Llamarada” All Photographs Made Personally by Irving Chidnoff 4% Interest on Savings Accounts Deposits May be Made by Mail A Safe Depository for Your Funds! Hadley Falls Trust Company Holyoke, Massachusetts Compliments of a Friend Letters written on White Wyckoff's Distinctive Stationery For sale wherever good stationery is sold Made in Holyoke, Mass., by WHITE WYCKOFF MFG. CO. Muster Makers of Distinctive Social Stationery WORDS of WISDOM Just as your National Note Hook has helped you to catch fleeting words of wisdom in the class rooms at Mt. Holyoke, so too, can other National Record Equipment help you in the business or professional world. For instance, your local stationer will be glad to show you how National Loose Leaf—Bound Books — Visible Records and Machine Bookkeeping Equipment, simplify business control. Loo { for the trade-mar NATIONAL BLANK BOOK COMPANY HOLYOKE, MASS. Beckmann’s Good Things to Eat LUNCHES SODAS - PASTRIES ICE CREAM FAVORS - CANDIES Holyoke and Northampton Massachusetts Telephone..................Holyoke 7488 lames F. Cleary |oscph E. Lucey Holyoke Sporting Goods Company Exclusive Agents for SPALDING AND KROYDON SPORTING GOODS 106 Suffolk Street Holyoke, Mass. Opposite Holyoke Savings Bank Telephone 7137 Golf clubs and balls, tennis racquets, arch- ery supplies, soccer shoes, sneakers, skiis, ice-skates, snovvshocs, flashlights. Forty Years Of Footwear Merchandising 1890 - 1930 For whatever success we have attained in the two generations just past, liberal credit must be given to loyal Mount Holyokers, not only on account of their generous patronage during student years, but also because of their continuing preference as alumnae for our merchandise and service. In rec- ognition of this contribution we desire to express, through the medium of Llamarada, our appreci- ative acknowledgment. Thomas S. Childs Incorporated 273-279 High St. Holyoke, Mass. President We carry a complete line of College Furniture Holyoke Furniture Co. •187 DWIGHT STREET Clark’s Flower Shop Holyoke, Mass. Tel. 1537-1538 HEGY’S, Inc. CLEANERS AND DYERS Cold Storage for Furs Holyoke Store: 27 Dwight Street Works: 930 Main Street HOLYOKE WHITING COOK Smart Stationery of real quality Appeals to those who enjoy the finer things in life On Side at- HADLEY BOOK SHOP Compliments of The Suffolk Theatre Holyoke, Mass. Lynch Smith JEWELERS Repairing of Fine Watches and Clocks a Specialty 5 1 Suffolk Street. Holyoke, Mass. GASPER RANGER Jackson’s LUMBER CO. 281 HIGH STREET Dealers in Lumber and Cosy Lights Building Materials Delicious Food attractively served Quick Service for Commencement General Woodworkers Guests Yard and Planing Mill: Dinner Cor. Appleton and Bond Sts. Home-made Candies Holyoke, Mass. College Ices and Sherbets Cheney Hunt, Inc. Compliments of Jewelers and Opticians 275 Maple Street Holyoke, Mass. The Holyoke City Market The Leary Lingerie Shop FINE GROCERIES Corsets, Underthings, Hosiery 225 Maple Street Holyoke, Mass. 349-355 High Street Holyoke, Mass. ST. GERMAIN Mansir Printing Co. Formerly McAusIan Wakelin Studio Quality Printing DISTINCTIVE PORTRAITURE 9 Suffolk Street Holyoke, Mass. 2S6 Maple Street Holyoke, Mass. Exclusive Millinery in both Sport and Dress Models at Telephone 1465 Mme. A. A. Garripy 125 Chestnut Street Telephone 2323 Wc extend to the Class of 1930 our heartiest congrat- ulations and best wishes for the future. $ McAuslan Wakelin Go. Maple and Dwight Streets Underwood Portable Typewriter The Office Equipment Company, Inc. 5 Suffolk Street 1 lolyoke, Mass. Dr. I). E. Bartlett Dr. E. W. Mayo Bartlett Bros. DENTISTS 380 Hijjh Street Holyoke, Mass. Holyoke Yellow Cab Phones 7300 7301 733 120 Pine Street La Barre’s VALETOR SERVICE For Men and Women Cleansing - Pressing - Repairing Dyeing 276 Appleton Street Holyoke, Mass. Telephone 4346 Julia A. Stone EXCLUSIVE MILLINERY 08 Suffolk Street - Phone 6051 - Holyoke, Mass. Sinclair, The Florist 166 OAK STREET, HOLYOKE, MASS. Greenhouses Smith’s Ferry, Mass. Members F.T.D. Victory Donut Shop 87 Suffolk Street Holyoke, Mass. The luirgest Assortment of Donuts in the City Hotel Nonotuck HOLYOKE, MASS. Delightful stopping place for Business Men and Tourists. Special attention given to Col- lege people. Roof Garden - Dancing - Cafeteria S. T. DAWSON Res. Tel. 465 Tel. Skilling’s Garage 444 Frank Musante Taxi Service - 7-Passenger Cars - Trips The Oriental Shop Importers: Real Laces, Art Linens and Oriental Rugs - We also Wash and Repair Them 241 Maple Street Holyoke, Mass. New Records! Complete assortment of Victor Records, in- cluding albums of musical masterpieces— played by world-famous symphonies. Also Large Choice of Musical Instruments Fill all your Musical Needs at HEIDNER’S 286 Maple Street Holyoke Artists’ Paint Supplies Lacquers for Decorating Fancy Waste Baskets Electrical Appliances J. RUSSELL CO. INCORPORATED Telephone 8100 Race and Dwight Sts. HOLYOKE, MASS. Kate Hardy Whitmore A.Ik, Mount Holyoke PIANOFORTE INSTRUCTION Tel. 7923-W 24 li Maple St., Holyoke EXCLUSIVE MILLINERY in both sjK rt and dressy models at Marcil Shoppe A. J. Chaloux 264 Maple Street Preston Bishop, Inc. 235-237 Maple St. Ilolyoke, Mass. Headquarters for Des (, Floor, Table luirnps and Shades and Electrical Appliances College Representative—Sylvia Rouse Display in P. O. Corridor, Sept. 19 - Oct. 15 William B. Whiting COAL COMPANY Old Company s Lehigh 458 Dwight Street, Holyoke Phone 451 Holyoke’s Hardware Specialty Store Located Opposite the City Hall Carrying a Complete Line of Hardware, Paint, Sporting Goods, Electrical Appliances, Dinner- ware, Glassware and China Osborne Hardware Go. Telephone 148 245 High Street The Roland T. Oakes Go. Bridge Lamps and Shades Bulbs and Sockets Amy Cattlcy, College Representative HOLYOKE • Com piimain oj Woodworth “Holyoke's Leading Hair Dresser DR. F. }. FITZ-GIBBON DR. J. J. FITZ-GIBBON DENTISTS 5UO-3 Hadley Falls Trust Co. Building Yoerg’s Garage Distributors of UNITED STATES TIRES Telephone 804 Holyoke, Mass. THE MOUNT HOLYOKE COL- LEGE LAUNDRY Kindly solicits your Laundry Work. We also do Pressing and Dry Cleaning on short notice. • C. W. Johnson Go. FRANK R. KNOX INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS 225 High Street Holyoke, Mass. H. W. Bennett - Florist Member of Florist Telegraph Delivery Phone 71 12-M Hadley Street, South Hadley Compliments oj Fringelin's Stationery Shop 365 High St. - Y. M. CL A. Bldg. - Holyoke, Mass. Howard F. Smith D.D.S. 37 Bardwcll Street South Hadley Falls, Mass. (1) Stationery and Magazines Hosiery, Notions, Toilet Goods and Confectionery At ANSON’S 3 College Street Compliments of Hadley Book Shop and The Book Shop Inn South Hadley Sophistication - - - in Fleming’s Smart Footwear For the College Miss SOUTH HADLEY The Woodbine Gift Shop Harper Method Shop South Hadley Center For the Best Care of Hair and Scalp Gifts, beautiful for all occasions Telephone 2206 J. Bruce Com piitncats of Compliments of Felice Bros. R. A. Glesmann Red Roofs Tea Room Ye Brick Oven in Olde Hadley ETHEL A. SMITH serves Chicken and Waffle Lunches and After- Luncheon, Tea and Dinner noon Tea. Also Dinners if ordered in advance South Hadley, Mass. Telephone 4804 Tel. Northampton 646-R Mrs. J. E. Morse Leonard’s Ida Gandy Shop Home Cooked Foods - Ice Cream Soda Ice Cream, Soda, Cigars and Tobacco Also Hardware Store - Paints, Oils, Auto Telephone Accessories Between Anson’s and A. anil P. “An Inn of Colonial Charm” Motel Northampton Invites You anti Your Friends Excellent Food 125 Charming Rooms Room Rates $2.50 upwards Large Free Parking - Garage Phone 3100 Lewis N. Wiggins, Mgr. Students Wishing A Photographs I A ji I Hoffman 1 I Studio jl 52 Center St. II Northampton Opp. Tel. Exchange ETCHINGS Prints Picture Framing The Park Optical Go. 219 Main Street Northampton Glen’s Beauty Salon m SOUTH HADLEY HOLYOKE Tel. 8206 Tel. 6720 THE MANSE 54 Prospect Street Northampton, Mass. Noted for its Good Food and Charming Surroundings TRY IT Telephone 315-W, Northampton Exchange Terrace Inn Pleasant Rooms - Best of Food Served Cor. East and New Boston Sts. Hadley, Mass. THE GATEWAY TEA HOUSE Breakfast - Luncheon - if ter noon Tea - Dinner Rooms for Transients Mrs. L. Y. Churchill 06 College Street Sport Shoppe - Exiner Individual Apparel for the Miss 20 Greene Street Northampton, Mass. Josephine Smith Importer of Dresses Springfield Massachusetts THE FRANCIS HAT SHOPPE Manufacturers and Designers of Ladies Straws, french felt and Velour Hats 190 Main Street - Tel. 3069 Northampton, Mass. I. Miller Beautiful Shoes 1342 MAIN STREET SPRINGFIELD, MASS. 2 Greene Street 2 Central Street NORTHAMPTON WELLESLEY W. L. HIGGINS Main Street, Northampton Showing a complete line of SPECTATOR SPORT SHOES The sport shoe with a solid leather heel H. Buchholz Son OSCAR BUCHHOLZ Theatrical and Fancy Dresses COSTUMERS Wigs, Beards Etc., Paints Powders, Masks, Animal I leads. Swords, Armor and Jewelry Decorations for hi alls, Weddings, Fairs, Etc. 33 Lyman Street Springfield, Mass. Infants SPRINGFIELD, MASS. APPAREL and FURS of Quality HATEVER new clothes you are planning we sug- gest that you visit this attractive store and see at leisure the new and important fashions. I Iere you will find youth, dash and newness—expressed with a “dif- ference” that you will like. Let Brigham's be your Meeting Place in Springfield Nadir’s Superior Hat Shop HATS DESIGNED TO FIT YOU 23 Dwight St. Springfield, Mass. Herman Boshach, Inc. Craftsmen in Keeping Things New 146 Brown Avenue Holyoke, Mass. AS YOU LIKE IT! OLD MEETING HOUSE GASPER RANGER CONSTRUCTION GO. Mount Holyoke’s Finest Structures are RANGERBUILT HOLYOKE. MASSACI1USETTS YOUR GARMENTS Should Always Be Fresh and Spotless General Cleansers Will keep them so at a remarkably low cost We Call at All Dormitories Daily Phone 471 or 472 Plant: 361 South Street, Holyoke PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS! ----The Llamarada Board reminds you - It was through their courtesy that this annual was made possible. Engravers and Publishers of this book Howmd«We§§on (Domip jy Engravers and 'Publishers of Jftetter College Annuals WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 b 1 n 1 1 h 1 H 1 H 1 M 1 1 M 1 H 1 1
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