Mount Holyoke College - Llamarada Yearbook (South Hadley, MA) - Class of 1951 Page 1 of 180
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• t SOUTH HADLEY, MASSACHUSETTS 1 T I Ji l.i rt ML i fit t 1 : I ' v i r I ! . i « 'V) 4 .«i pi:' (4 I f 4 i t A Ij rt i • .! dicated Miss Harriet Newhall . . . because our very first memories of Mount Holyoke are closely connected with her . . . because as Dean of Admissions she made us feel welcome from the start, and with her gracious friendliness, her energy and enthusiasm, her devotion to this college she made us want to be a part of it. . . because in the years we have spent here we have learned to respect and admire her even more . . . because of all these, it is with pride and gratitude that we dedicate to her this book, our 1951 Llamarada. Air. and Mrs. Alan V. McGee onor aries Air. and Air . Roswell G. Ham Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. SoHenberger Miss Anna Jane Harrison vi Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rox da To capture the essence of Mount Holyoke College in words and pictures is not easy. And it is still harder to select a single symbol and say, this is our college. Our years here arc composed of varied and rich experiences which have different meanings for each of us. And in the years to come it may be that our memories of college will be recalled by a shadow, a song, or a crisp leaf of ivy. Now, while the tangible expressions of our intangible feeling are still within our grasp, we want to give you an interpretation of our college . . . and so we give up our Llamie into your hands. Our hands arc all different. Some of them wear yellow rings, some green, some blue, some red—-and some of our left hands flash a diamond. But together they are a symbol of our days here at college. The hand with a gavel calls meetings together all over campus, those extra- curricular activities that make college life full and rewarding. The hand with a pencil is an academic hand, busy taking notes, writing papers, drawing diagrams— c or perhaps doodling in the margin. The hand with the ball is also the hand that dips Z a paddle, curbs a horse, or shoots an arrow. The hand with the dance program stands for our gracious living, our trips to Amherst and Yale. And last of all, the hand with the diploma holds the record of our years at Mount Holyoke and our one- way ticket to tomorrow. vt M 7 0 K $£ «■ 1 NIGHT-CLUB Come on, get athletic! Sign here A slightly misleading name for a wonder- ful night when we visited booths to gcr acquainted with campus clubs and to join the most enticing. This vigorous jamboree of fun was initiated by Unity Council— the co-ordinating organization which pro- vides for the interaction of all clubs and acts as an advisory council. Unity Council, composed of extra-curricular club presi- dents and the heads of SGA, controls the calendar and is responsible for May Day, a spring festival that gives parents and friends a chance to see Mount Holyoke “at home. I nity Council 13 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF LOUISE WHITTEMORE ’: ! JOANNE BLOOM T 1, Manaicina Editor Wb ftemore, editor; Otis: Brow field: Higgins; Clapp; Purple; Disqne; Haig; Clayton; Bloom Assignments posted on the P.O. Bulletin Board, typewriters clicking far into the night, a lone hut eager girl on the track of a campus celebrity, and the quick swish of a paper slid under your door on Friday night it’s the Mount Holyoke Seus staff at work! An information bureau to its readers- giving them news of all big events, of people in general, plus entertaining fca- ui:es it s also a chance for those behind the Sews to get acquainted with the Newspaper World over a hot typewriter and a cool soda. 14 t-Sl, C ft Oe C oA t ■-tz. o eM 6 ' ' i jv toe. •; cvt, '} 0oo yt .V. ji 'A 'o , t „ a ty w «'ey J ;' v j x ’• s,1 «; c:°' fe ,. o «4 '■a- .4 '•fc m 'o V0j • 7‘v ft Jot, e , W “ r0,„ ‘’«A. V: ''''' „ V, 'ty ,J «e FOjv ;s CA ■'« , «V « -1 5.9 S ■ $ °' • AN j % «% ?e w oA % : • r i % f e j i 'A.S V Ur r A?°o, i,- ■ V5 - 4 ''i re ft % V Or %, 7 V j Ok _ 1 V , l o _____ 0 - “-‘1, - N„, A i s., :-r s A , '■■v- zT5 eej v‘‘ S‘ fyr, V A i 'ce 0'; ’;v l- vj h • o . .'W ' 'if. h, O - A), r®p . , • - - ' S ’‘'; 1 V, .,,''' «4 U,0'«''l , rf ‘ ' W ; r J Ctoi ZA '« ,, ' V Oj -f y. e . , . h t re,. fl i On). i H •4 y „ . 'A N.H 77l v _ v .- SGA incans you, your room-mate, and the girl down the hall. Far from being a mere set of handbook regulations drawn up behind closed doors, the Student Government Association is your opportunity to participate in forming and enforcing the rules we live by here at Mount Holyoke. It s your chance to voice your opinion about what you like and what you’d like to see changed. JB is yours, too -composed of the representatives you elect to investigate and pass judgment on violations of SGA rulings. And NSA, through conferences with other colleges, exchanges our ideas for new and often very helpful ones. SGA, JB, and NSA, working together, bring students and administration together in an active and progressive consideration of campus opinions and needs. 16 of is nr co id cr in He tsy Sants Cochrane. Bloom MooneN c ueenan Ho,g; . Houiell cl-“r,n‘ ’' . Shm iHe dent Ran sotoif: Lunagr. . P«sl Hanc-j Cotnin,uec FELLOWSHIP One of the unique features of Fellowship of Faiths is that it unites into one active and stimulating group a large number of stu- dents from varying religious backgrounds. This year, they established a new constitu- tion and centered the year-round program in four main fields—faith and interfaith education, worship, and social service. Highlighting the year was their annual campus conference, “Is Religion Intellec- tually Respectable?” Although the separate faith groups— Polk; Tyson; Scotr; Dillingham, chairman 18 Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish hold many individual Sunday night discussions, all Fellowship meets together once a month to air ideas on various religious topics. Thursday evening chapels and other special services such as communion and the candlelight service keep the wor- ship group busy. They also assist with the Sunday morning services as ushers and attendants. A great deal of hard work and good will is given weekly in social service fields by members assisting with YWCA groups, Girl Scout troops, and Nursery Schools. Deputation teams go out to neighboring towns to give talks to student groups. Fellowship has also done work at Rabbit Hollow, and members are proud of the land which they were able to buy for the camp. The round peg goes here Thursday evening chape! 19 i i I f Martianoff; Bakken; Roser, manager; Rot heram DERATE With an indomitable spirit and lots of en- thusiasm Debate Club has forged its way to many honors. These girls discuss con- troversial issues with teams from other colleges, and have consistently proved themselves worthy defenders of MHC’s point of view. In open and closed sessions, the United World Federalists discuss beliefs, ideas, and vital questions concerning a limited world government. Earnestness and a strongly set purpose make this group one of the busiest and most vigorous on campus. WORLD FEDERALISTS Hamlin; Nor an, president; Manchester; 11e berger 20 d a ic Rotheram; Rutherford; Bloom, president: Martianoff The active, energetic members of the Inter- national Relations Club keep us informed on current events and in close contact with the world. Weekly discussions, important speakers, and intercollegiate conferences all offer opportunity for idea-exchange in IRC. I R C Current Events Discussion 21 LLAMARADA Vogian; Williams; Bass, editor: Schuman; Drake; Freeman; Me skin We started out last Spring with boundless enthusiasm and appalling naivete not quite sun what was meant by ‘‘off-set”or character,’’ but determined to find out. We lost our confidence 9 in the first interview, our sanity trying to work out a theme, and almost lost our eyesight ir the mazes of Futura light and Futura dark. But those nine-thirty meetings were fun, anc fortified with ice-cream cones and cigarettes we wrestled with problems and laughed our wav through plenty of blank walls. Sally and Elaine made those incomprehensible figures mean something, Margie kept the flash-bulbs flashing, Bunny went on a campus-wide search for the typical Mount Holyoke hands to sketch. Kathy tracked down the ads that kept our budget out of the red, Ducky gave us a dream of a Llamie dance, Jean never came out twice with the same number of copy-characters. Nesha, the head of us all, kept us going and faced the long dark bridge to South Mandelle after meetings! For a while there were only seven of us, but there dawned the wonderful day when we discovered that with able staff assistants, we wouldn t have to meet that deadline alone. Now that it’s all over, and none of us have cracked up yet, we agree that Llamie was an experience we’ll never forget! 22 BLACKSTICK Freeman, Howell, Z ckel The girl who writes for fun in the face of her regular papers is likely to find herself with a strip of black tape down her nose and a sign around her neck saying “ Black- stick.” As a member, she'll meet with the others to discuss stories and ideas. “Pan” is a far cry from “Pangynaskean,” but this quarterly retains the spirit of its former name by being well-rounded. Its stories, poems, and essays combine high quality with genuine readability proof that at MHC we have plenty of writing talent! sure lence ht in and way ncan r the Jgct i the long but we :kcd Harr man; Rowers; Harper, editor; Gins bur$ PAN 23 Our active Red Cross Board gives its mem- bers both excellent experience and much personal satisfaction. Through it Holy- okers mav contribute their blood, funds, and personalities (at Leeds Veteran Hos- pital) and receive courses in First Aid and Water Safety. 24 FRIENDS DF IRT This is the fiftieth anniversary of Dwight Hall, and you may be very sure that the college has been friendly with art. Visible signs of the alliance were the eighty works of art exhibited, for the eye to listen to music—old and new, painted and sculp- tured. Romig; Gins burg; Harper, chairman STUDENT FUND With a French cafe, mind reader, auction, and descent into the Inferno, Student Fund, headed by Nancy Wagner, took us to the Great White Way. Macbeth, penny- pitching, and rat-races were fun—and while we enjoyed ourselves, we paid for our radio.station. Bazaar occupation RED EHDSS W illiams, Miss Boggs, Longyear, M ss Cogswell No bine Monday here! Equipped with notebooks and knitting, we troop six days a week to our classes, where our enthusiasm is carried to brand new peaks. In Skinner, Dwight, Clapp, or Shattuck, we hear what will become, 'something I’ve never forgotten that one of my profs told me. In some- class each of us is given an entirely new idea, and here we learn that other people think and wonder about the same things we do. Along with art and music appreciation, we learn to appreciate the similarities and differences of people. f:r v s ■ v 8W ' ''•,V'V- w.V’ - .- CLASSES AND LABS We learn to have confidence in our own thinking, and in seminars we try our wings in defend- ing our viewpoints academically. In labs we have the opportunity to put our science lectures into action. We’ll never forget our mistakes or the mistakes of others. We have an indelible mental picture of the freshman in Baby Chcm whose lab instructor told her to do one part of the experiment under the hood, and who crawled up under it to do it! We’ll remember the Blue Books and those term papers, but we ll remember better our pro- fessors' classroom jokes. Wc appreciate their interest in us as individuals, their willingness to explain points which somehow missed our notebooks. And we're glad that wc have a chance to speak to our profs across a tea-cup as well as across a classroom. We like the informal atmosphere of this formal education! Department Club Heads: Mercury, Foote, Soper, Peirce, Woldenberg, Speers, Mosher, Seme now 27 k.T Mass concentration Next to classes, the Libe is the most im- portant part of our academic day. We were a little awed at its vastness at first, but soon we learned to find in the stacks that book marked 83YE-J223-P03 in the card catalogue. Now we know it well the reading room where we are sometimes dis- turbed bv squeaky sneakers, those unfor- gettable seminar rooms, the quiet stacks where we sit down at a carrel to glance at a book and forget the time entirely, the smoker where we take welcome breaks, the periodical room, the Treasure Room, and our rest-and-recreational-reading ha- ven, the Stimson Room. We know about LIBRARY Overdue-book black list Relax in the stax im- erc nn lat irJ he is- ir- ks ir le 5, b t- r rhe ground floor, too with its Book- store, Press Bureau, and vital Freshman Advisors. The Li be means term papers and stud y- ing for bluebooks; it means the nine-thirty rush at the reserve desk; it means tracking down books that haven’t seen the outside world since 1906. But the Libe has other meanings too. Here we found that reading for work can be fun, and that reading for fun is often educational. Here we met the poet who’s our favorite now, and here also we met our first super-automatic pencil sharpener! . . . and back with renewed vigor! Brunch on a burn! Four o’clock, and the Libe is deserted. 1 he special place for our after-class break is the Cl where coffee, cigarettes, and conversa- tion chase a wav those mid-afternoon blues. 0 There behind the red door with the brass knocker we relax, sing, and defeat our diets! Vassar Devils, cones with jimmies, Keyes’ Wheezes all these go into the recipe for the 'CI Special atmosphere. There arc other ingredients, too; Jam Sessions, banquets, those timely (and timeless) comments on the blackboard, Mr. Keyes at the piano, smiles across the counter and a honey-colored cocker beg- ging for a bite of hamburger! In winter there’s a blazing tire, in spring we perch on barrels on the porch. But we agree, the Cl’s tops in any weather! Mr. Keyes 30 . . a8 ® S V, S . fej .iw LECTURES After a Jay of classes, labs, and extra- curricular meetings, we still find time to go to lectures. Those Wednesday nights often turn out to be the most stimulating of all a speech on art or astronomy or architecture, a forum afterwards where we can ask questions and be sure of authorita- tive answers. Elizabeth Bowen Denis Johnston Bertrand Russe 1 W. II. Auden Wednesday night public affairs lectures are only a small part of Mount Holyoke's fine- program. There are afternoon depart- mental lectures, Florence Purington lec- turers (this year Mr. Auden and Mr. Johns- ton) who stay for longer periods of time to teach us as well as to give us interesting talks. But whether the speaker happens to be an important celebrity or one of our own professors, his lecture is sure to be in- formative and thought-provoking. KENDALL HALL Keynote of the year A new era in physical education opened at Mount Holyoke with the dedication of the new gym June 10, 1950. The pool had been “pushed!” Besides rooms and equipment for every conceivable athletic activity, the gym includes a lounge, clubroom, and kitchen for social affairs. Under Miss Howard's leadership, Kendall Hall is now we 11-coordinated in campus life. Swim- ming meets with guest teams have been added. Intercollegiate playdays arc bigger and better. With such extensive facilities, Mount Holyoke grows. A dream come true 33 Fish, Pod Iicb, l,cmkty Peters, pres t dent Joan Scafarello, Sarah Streeter Cnp winner AA Athletic Association the words mean sports, keen class competition, All- Holyokcs and fun. Dancing, swimming, canoeing, fencing, archery, and many more activities provide recreation and keep MHT’s in trim. A A Constitution sets rhe rules, the officers lead the way, and every- one benefits from AA’s full and varied program. ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Ring work-out There’s an A A club for every interest J from modern dance or riding to skating or swimming with both water ballet and life- saving. Each club with its own officers and program finds A A Board the co-ordinating center. Providing for class and interdorm tournaments as well as for individual par- ticipation in sports, AA coupled with Kendall Hall scores a year-round hit. Set point Sailing Club officers: Wellington, Fulton, Buncker, Scott 3 k • • -; r I irt Delu sio ns of grandeur? CONVOCATION Next to graduation, perhaps the most im- pressive ceremony of our college careers at Mount Holyoke is Convocation. Beginning with a procession of faculty and seniors in full regalia, its traditional ceremony is warmed by the sincere welcome of the President and climaxed by the beloved strains of the Alma Mater. A memorable first experience for entering students, Con- vocation recalls to upperclassmen a part of college that is often forgotten in our everyday living. Miss Bates, marshal 37 ,1 Dittmtr; nnmerman; J or dan, president: 11 'nuitis: RoJfe: Einhorn Freshman year is one to be remembered. Red gym suits flashing down the hockey field . . . hotrods beeping before the Seniors . . . Big Sisters helping to make the dorm “a home away from home . . . lusty cheers lor the Juniors in Show . . . new friends and past-midnight dis- cussions over peanut butter and crackers . . . spirited interest in sports and clubs . . . energy and more energy! All this made up '54's first exciting year at Holyoke. 2 Dresser; Barley, president; Coachman; Defandorf outing CLUB 111(1 Four days we ll never forget. . . our Moun- tain Days. The yearly anticipation and rumor which preceded that wonderful morning when the Chapel bells rang! The reprieve from that dreaded quiz . . . the rush ro be off. We collected sandwiches, cards, blankets and cokes, and gleefully, via bike or foot, made for the open coun- try. The smoke, the songs, the crisp leaves through which wc shullled, hot sun in a bristly field ... a pause at the Cabin for cider . . . then off again . . . Climbing mountains is only one aspect of our outdoor lives provided by Outing Club. Square dances with other colleges, canoe and ski trips, overnight trips to the Cabin, and fireside “sings” make OC one of the most beloved clubs on campus. MOUNTAIN DAY I Much on a ledge 40 Llamic dance and the new Gym made a combination hard to beat! There's always something special about the first formal of the vear and this time Kendall Hall was I J making its premiere too. Pinning on cor- sages, throwing on wraps, and walking with our dates toward the brilliantly lighted Gym, we felt a thrilling anticipa- tion a ' first-nighter ’ excitement. And it was wonderful balloons afloat, crepe paper, tuxes and swirling skirts! First the receiving line, then a quick tour around the dance floor to speak to numer- ous friends, and then music, a waltz, and best of all, room enough to dance! Maybe it was the Y-8's singing at inter- mission or cider and donuts and laughter or the flowers he sent or the atmos- phere of newness everywhere, in spite of autumn leaves falling outside. But surely, from Dixieland Jazz to Aureltt, Llamic was a success. Sr 42 i- mmm ■! ' ' ' yr’ -Xw-Z Ki-Vi C' - ■ •« ,. ■ $mt SJ, . i V ' V. •iitt.iur 0wWw '7' v'.V •vi-v-vi-v: r • HAZING DAY Hazing Day is an amazing day. Seniors stalk across campus clad in caps and gowns, Sophs shout their gleeful approval, Juniors sing encouragement to their Little Sisters. And the Freshmen are almost unrecog- nizable. Maybe they are a deck of ’52 cards, shuffled, cut, and dealt for bridge. Maybe they are green germs, squirming every fourth step. Or maybe they are hot- rods, equipped with windshield wipers, bumpers, and headlights. Hazing Day’s a strenuous day but movies afterwards heal all hurt dignity! i L 44 Mary Lyon s Grave It is on Founder’s Day, in the presence of alumnae and ceremonial traditions, that vve appreciate most fully the gift of Mary Lyon. The Sunday service, with its pro- cession of faculty and seniors, and the placing of the wreath upon Mary Lyon’s grave richly symbolize the honor and re- spect which we feel toward Mount Holy- oke College. Faculty procession FOUNDEH’S DAY 45 Wc brought the West to South Hadlev on the Eastern Coast with a bona fide Horse Opera that would make the cosmopolitan Met clear irs throat and hit high C. As well as a Duel in the Ciiilch, there were two heroes one human, one equine , a heroine (humane), a villain (in- human , and a love story (divine)! And it was all art for fun’s sake! jiJMim SHOW Buzzard's Gulch is here to stay 46 Guernsey; Lapp; Lun ren, president; Loweufiefd; Scafarel o DRAMATICS CLUB Lights, footlights, spotlights then the Limelight for everyone concerned. All this and ex- perience too is the dramatic promise extended bv DC. backstage or onstage there is a world of theatrical art to be learned from this society, as its avid members will tell. And bouquets to them all actresses, prompter, strikers, stage-managers, make-up crew, even the call bov and ushers and to the Amherst Masquers too, when they join with IX. for a production such as ‘ Six Characters in Search of An Author. IX. m productum 47 - ■ • Christmas . . . carols begun the day after Thanksgiving . . . fingers crossed for snow . . . hurried trips into Holyoke . . . knitting and more knitting. Then the lights on the campus tree go on . . . wreaths go up on doors . . . we spend tea-time stringing popcorn and cranberries for the dorm parties. Christmas-time is a wonderful time, when all Mount Holyoke comes closer together singing Noel. Roser; Berrien; Cur ?hey PleweUiHg: Mother, president; Morris; Gleason; Red in; Stick el Sing u e Noe! Miss Hou elL organist Christmas-time means Glee Club time. Through the strain of last-minute papers and bluebooks runs the rich strain of In Dulci Jubilo. Carols break out all over campus—in the Cl, on the busses, in the dorm smokers. There is the con- cert in the Chapel, and always the under- current of pre-Town Hall excitement. Christmas-time means party time. Santa Claus and his reindeer visit the dorms and load the Christmas trees with pres- ents and candy for Holyoke orphans. Finally, Christmas-time means fun time . . . early dancing at House dances, late dancing at Holly Hop, and early morning carolling in crisp cold air, followed by coffee and donuts at the Cl. t % Then a mad rush of packing, and off for home . . . with the sudden and inevitable snow falling at last. - Wylie; Ellsworth; Otis; Bell, president; Crews; Meredith ou can always tell a Junior bv her enthusiasm and spirit. Whether she's yelling ‘ Junior Lunch! across the PC) lobby . . . singing a lovely anthem in the Chapel . . . or whispering secrets at the PO bulletin board near Show-time . . . you can be sure that she's putting her every fibre into it. being a Junior is vet y important. It means accepting responsibility: living m Freshman dorms to guide Little Sisters, bidding farewell to baby courses and launching out into individual majors. It means glory: waiting for the curtain to raise on Show, promenading at Junior Prom. Hut most of all, it means learning to work together as a class, and making the numbers 52 mean something! 52 Z !l.V$i r ’ - - 'r £ ' p '' r u J' ©Adventures | hraTS?% «P iM Grace incarnate The characteristic enthusiasm of the Mod- ern Dance Club reached a new high when Kendall Hall provided them with their own up-to-date studio. This group of select girls, accomplished in the art of dancing, put great stress on individualis- tic interpretation and work hard to per- fect techniques. They gain important ex- perience in choreography by creating their own dances for Dance Club presentations. Besides the annual Christmas program, which is performed in the Chapel, and spring Symposium, Dance Club has time for entertaining other college dance groups. Sea fare! !o, president; Miss Gibson; June; Miller DANCE CLUB 54 1 ■■ Informal rehearsal ORCHESTRA Of course she may play an instrument, and play it well, too, but this alone does not make her a real musician. However, with experience in the Mount Holyoke Orches- tra, she will progress from mere music- reading to the ability to become one of an integrated group of players who abide by harmony in its every sense. Under the ex- pert direction of Mr. Holden, the Orches- tra practices one night a week on various works from the classics and gives two yearly concerts. Members become aware of the work and co-operation that make for musical success. Ilollingworth; Brown: Johnson; Horner, manager; McPherson 55 wee kce KiD Minor mishap Skating Club Prexy pirouettes Mandelle a la Mode Sophomore slump? Never heard of it! And anyone that needs proof can look at the record of the Class of '53 Soph Reception, Soph Hop, Soph Skit everything attempted was a big success. The Sophs are a singing class, too; supporting chapel services, serenading Big Sisters on Hazing Day, and carolling through the dorms in the wee sma' hours after Holly Hop. All in all, it's been a busy year - no time for a slump! Robertson; Nelson; Pendleton; Hargroves, president; Johnson; Gommi mgam gfllf '.V i:? r V ,'- 'I.' , $igv Home away from borne Dorms arc a pretty important part of our college life. They’re not only places where we sling our hooks, cat our meals, and get our usually less than eight hours sleep. Dorms mean friendships, floor-parties, tun . . . and home. While we re here, that room in Pearsons, Rocky, or North Mandelle with the scuffed animal on the bed and the picture of Bob on the desk comes to mean just that home. Dorms on campus are very much alike. They all have stairs which we dash down in jeans or trip down in heels, depending on whether we re headed for lab or gracious living and a few of them have elevators! They all have kitchens where we sleepily get our breakfast, dining- rooms where we lunch and discuss events of the day, livingrooms where we sip after-dinner coffee, smokers where we play bridge and knit. 1 hey all have HP’s and House Mothers to solve major problems, hell girls to take important phone calls, and they all have fire drills at two in the morning! 60 Quiet interlude But dorms arc different coo. Maybe yours is the softball champ, or maybe it boasts three- resident Phi Betes. Maybe it’s a singing dorm, or maybe it specializes in practical jokes. Dorms are what we MHT’s make them, because they are ours if just for a year. Project m Proin King and Queen Junior Prom is more than a dance. It’s a weekend first of all. Friday the dates ar- rive, and after that it’s a rush of coffee at the Cl, pingpong and jukebox music at Wilbur, and quick tours of the campus and Upper Lake. Saturday, after a few co-ed classes, the picnics begin, complete with sandwiches and portable radios. And yet when evening comes, no one is too tired to wax enthusiastic over dinner “out” or m the dorm. Then there’s a flurry of fluffy formats ... a dance more like a dream . . . Promenade . . . the King and Queen . . . and finally the goodnight waltz. Music jrow the Stars Promenading Bankerr; Berne; Donovan; Grant}; Reeve, president; MofJet Wc sti uggleJ three long years tor caps and gowns, and then, wearing them, we found we were neither dignified nor wise. ct we ve learned some things the shortest routes across campus, the most efficient ways to study, and how to best balance a mortar board on a shakv head. Some of us drove our own ears in the Spring, and we all drove hotrods in the Fall! We thought ir was just prestige at first, hut now, looking hack, we see that it's all four years that add up to the thrill of being SENIORS! 64 m wm $ j js85ss® «. fs m0$m May Queen and Court MAY DAY AND COMMENCEMENT One week-end in May we honor our fathers and the whole family with “Mount Holyoke at home.” Visitors see us study- ing and playing; and as a grand climax, we present our May Queen and her court. May Day brings thoughts of graduation. And sure enough, before we have time to breathe, it’s here a rush of majors, par- ties, step-singing, and suddenly a diploma clutched tight in our hands. Whether we re ready or not, we re graduated! Photo-finish Reviewer s stand Laure chain 67 BIRCHES ARE TfNTED WITH SUNSET’S LAST GLOW IN THE ROSY HUE; 1 J f STARS CROV N THE WELL-LOVED HILLS CASTING SHADOWS BLUE. MOON COMES UP SMILING, LIGHTS DEAR IVY WALLS WITH A WINTERY GLOVJ, Zj j J UNFOLDS LONG BRIGHT RIBBONS THAT MOVE ZT 3 i WITH THE NIGHT O’ER THE SNOW. FOR THESE MEMORIES OF BEAUTY, MOUNT HOLYOKE, WE SING YOU OUR SONG; WITH LIVES THAT ARE CHALLENGED BY LOVE OF THE TRUTKf YOU tfiADE STRONG. THE YEARS THAT WERE HAPPY WITH, NEWLY-FOUNI FRIENDSHIPS AND CAREFREE FUN, p'0 ; WILL LINGER FOREVER SO DEAR TO OUR HEARTS—FIFTY-ONE. J Ann C. Cummings Jn iHnttoriam Marjorie Ackerknecht Art Judith Ann Alexander History Louise Norwood Ancrum Art Gertrude W. Anderson Religion 70 Virginia Anderson Psychology Stanislava Apanaviciutb History English Composition 71 Jean Calhoun Bacon History Joan Bagley Art Joanne Audrey Bamberger Psychology 72 Kathryn Carol Baldwin 9 1 Jean Elizabeth Bankert Music Nesha E. Bass English Composition 73 Nancy Lee Bates Physiology Madeleine Joan Batten Political Science Ann Behrer Zoology Barbara Blanche Bell Economics and Sociology Doris Bloch Zoology 74 Jean Bond Physics Joanne Bloom Political Science Rosanne Borden American Culture Virginia Brasefield Religion 75 I A Mary Francenia Budd Chemistry 76 9 1 IV Nancy Lou Burton Chemistry Alberta Chenet Italian 77 i Ellen Child Chemistry and Physiology Mildred Catherine Clayton Religion i 5 78 Rosemary Clemence Economics and Sociology Gloria Evelyn Cochrane Pre-Medical 79 Virginia Anne Collins English Literature Anne Wilson Covington Psychology i 5 80 Edythe Cudlipp English Compos it ion 9 1 Cornelia Bradley Curtis Zoolog)' Nancy Daggett Zoology irginia Leigh Cutler Psychology Diane Dallye Biochemistry 81 Claribel Louise Dawe English Composition I Molly Townsend Day History i 5 82 Lynn Mars DeCesare Art Helen Cushman Disque English Li teruture i Louise Ellen Donovan Art Barbara Jane Drake Philosophy 83 I Mary Elizabeth Edmondson English Judith Eidelsberg Music Eleanor Holt Ernst Economics and Sociology i 5 84 Diana Joan Ellison Psychology 85 Joan Faith Fitzgerald History Edith Flather Astronomy Frances Folsom History Carol Patricia Foote Pby siolofy- Psychol ogy 86 87 Ann Evelyn Frear History Patricia Jean Fritts Psychology 4 88 Sally E. Fuller Psychology Mary Gay Gaines English Composition Gwendolyn Edith Gaylord Psychology 89 Molly Ann Gibbs Economics and Sociology Marion Keene Glover Chemistry Dorothy Lee Gordon English Literature i 5 90 g i Nancy Kathryn Graney Philosophy Cynthia Hagar American Culture 91 Carol Hagen Philosophy Joan Harper English Literature English Composition i 5 92 9 1 Sally Propper Hey man Philosophy Elaine Doris Higgins S panis h Patricia High History Judith Richings Hill Art 94 Priscilla Dlvitt Hinchcliffl Barbara Joan House French Henrietta Mary Howell Engl ish Com position Carrie Harmon Hubbard Biochettiistry 95 Anne Stephenson Hughes Psychology Eleanor Anne Hull French Carol Lee Ivison Mat hematics i 5 96 Charlotte Ruth Huston Economics ami Sociology Evelyn Adelaide Jasiulko Engl isb Cow posit ion Sally Johnson Biochemistry 97 V Susan Louise Johnstone Art Melicent Ann Jordan Religion Barbara Joan Kaplan French Margaret Katz Psychology Helen Louise Kendall History 98 g i Mary Elizabeth Koether International Relations Jean Kitselman Mathematics Joan Natalie Krampitz German 99 Rf.nee Lampert Psychology Eve Marie Lang Political Science Mary E. Lapp Economics and Sociology i 5 Joan Ardelle Lauritzen French Phyllis M. Leawood Economics and Sociology 100 s 1 Evelyn Jeanne Lehman Latin Dorothy Ann Lemcke Physiology and Psycholog Audrey G. Lundell Economics and Sociolog 101 Greta Lynn Lungren Speech and Drama 102 Mary Lyon Psychology Katharine Elizabeth McCurdy Economics and Sociology Jean Louise McPherson Physics Louise Power Mairs Religion L tor Rivy Mandf.i.l Political Science 103 Joan Palmer Marasco Chemistry Julia Sherman Marshall Physics 104 Joan Elizabeth Mascuch History Dorothy Maynard English Literature 105 Yi-Tsi Mei English I. teratnre 5 English Literature 106 Eleanor Janeway Mitchell Physiology Mary Avahlee Mitchell Zoology 107 Miriam Benton Moore Economics and Sociology Juli an ne Mosher History 108 Betty Eleanor Murray Psychology Barbara Nagorska Economics and Sociology Carol Joan Nearing History Nancy Norris Psychology Elizabeth Ann Oldham Psychology 110 Nancy A. Park Philosophy Judith Tiffany Parker Psychology Mali he Partovv Economics and Sociology 111 Kathryn Rolf Ferris Psyc jo og) 112 ' Gladys Ann E. Port Psychol of!)' g l Patricia Louise Pickett Philosophy Roberta Jane Possiel History 113 Joanne Purrington Psychology Ann Huntington Rademacher Physiol off Jo Ann Ri;bi:rt History i 5 114 as. n 9 1 Marilyn Joan Redin English Lenore Briggs Rice Economics and Sociology Patricia Hallock Reeve Political Science Constance Garfield Richard English L iterature 115 116 Rachel Roser History Ann Howland Sargeant Economics and Soctology Frankie Samuels English Literature 117 Lydia Jane Schleicher Zoology Marie Anne Schmidt Latin Mary Elizabeth Schoonmaker Psychology Elaine Schuman Mathematics Ernestine May Schultz 7.oo!oyy 118 HOMH 9 1 Dorothy Ann Semenow Chemistry Katherine Louise Scott Psychology 119 Anita Shafer History Margaret Smillie History i 5 120 Lydia Ann Soper American Culture Jean Austin Spence Physiology 121 Joyce Stedfast Economics and Sociology Lois M. Storke Art Joan Thurston Philosophy Jonelle Delaney Stickel English L iterature Margaret Thieme Mathematics 122 Fortunata Sydnor Trapnell Philosophy Corrine Marie Torrey History 123 Anita F. Underwood English Literature Mary-Jane Unger Economics and Sociology Emily M. Van Siclen History Shirley R. Van Blarcom Geography Pamela Nichol Vevers Speech and Drama V 1 5 124 Katharine ooian Economics and Social of!) Nancy Eyer Wagner Chemistry Mary Kelton Wallace Physiol of) 125 Sylvelin Walter English Literature Polly Powers Ward Psychol ofy Patricia Warren Zoology Jeanne Walton History Dorothy Warner Religion 126 127 Anne Weston Art Louise Whittemore English Literature i 5 128 Nancy Whittemore Religion 129 Nancy Elizabeth Woloenberg Philosophy 1 5 130 SENIBUS NOT PICTURED Frances Virginia Gaskins English Colette Janvier Roberts French Hanni Jucker Ireneh Evelyn May West Psychology FORMER MEMRERS OF THE CLASS OF 1951 Ethel M. Albertson Jane T. Beasley Joanne S. Bierer Ellen Bodner Pauline D. Boerner Helen J. Boettjer Elizabeth W. Brag don Alison L. Brewer Nancy K. Brown Elinor L. Burnett Jane H. Burr Elaine R. Buse Joan L. Cahalin Frances Cisco-Smith Ellen E. Claydon Carolyn A. Coombs Carol C. Coon Margaret C. Corlett Laura J. Cowdrick Ann C. Cummings Mary E. Day Susan ne H. Delatour Susan Derderian Dorothy Donovan Caroline A. Fisher Audrey J. Fitzgerald Janet L. Flint Sarah M. Freeman Patricia A. Fulton Anita Garcia Alice N. W. Geitner Lois H. Grauer Mary Jane Gray Jo Anne Green Evelyn D. Grundy Jane Haggart Jane S. Hamburger Eleanor C. Harkness Francesca M. von Hartz Seymour B. Headden Nancy A. Heston Joan E. Hickey Janice W. A. Holt Ann Hdesmann Faith A. Ingraham Gabrielle E. Johnston 131 19 51 Norma B. Kalmonoff Barbara L. Lourie Susan C. Neidlinger Lydia M. Mantica Marjorie Marshall Gale B. Martin Marcia Massing Barbara H. Means Dorothea G. Melosh Sally A. Mlrwin Ruth H. Nathan T. Pauline Nowak Alice C. O’Brien Lean S. O’Neill Molly H. Payne Sarah C. Payne M. Lee G. Peck Dolores L. Peters Dorothy S. Pettengill Mary A. Phraner Virginia Pope Beverly M. Putnam Jennifer A. Pyne JaniceS. Rabinovitz Joan L. Renauld Mary O. Reuling Joan C. Rutledge Nancy Seiffer Anne Shriver Barbara }. Sickel Jean H. Slayton Esther A. Smith Joyce M. Spear Grete U. Stern Nancie Stewart Arlene L. Suozzo Ann Tinder Ellen R. Turlington Barbara Yatz Ann Vickery Judith A. Wellerson Patricia A. Whitehurst Joan Z. Whittelsey Leonor E. Zuloaga Jane F. Zwillinger 132 CLASS DF 1951 Ackkrknecht, Marjorie U..... Alexander, Judith A. Anuum, Louise N. Anderson, Gertrude Anderson, Virginia Apanaviciutk, Stanislava...... Armstrong, Doris M. Atwood, Elizabeth B. Bacon, Jban C. . ......... Baolky, M. Joan . . . . . Baldwin, K thryn C. Bamberger, Joanne A.. Bankert, Jean E. .... Banton, Marion V. Bass, Nesha E. Bates, Nancy L. ..... Batten, Madeleine J. Behrer, Ann Bell, Barbara B.. Bloch, Doris Bloom,Joanne Bond, Jean........... . Borden, Rosannk .. . Bkxseiteld, Virginia Bkautio an, Nancy J. Browning, Mary J..... Bunn, Mary F................ Burroughs, Martha J...... Burton, NancY L.. 10 Lorraine St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. 143 Woodland Rd., Milton, Mass. 1411 Fair St., Camden, S. C. Church Lane Rd., RD 2, Sharpsburg, Pa. 234 Kenilworth Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. South Hadley, Mass. 3032 Wickham Ave., Bronx 67, N. Y. 176 Underwood St., Fall River, Mass. 91 Linden Sc., New Haven, Conn. 3 Barrymore Rd., Hanover, N. H. 103 W. Second Ave., Mitchell, S. D. 55-36 Page Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. 26 Westmoreland St., Westminster, Md. 79 Blackburn Rd., Summit, N. J. 101 Ivy St., Brookline, Mass. 2 Upshaw Rd., Forest Hills, N. Y. 191 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. J. 46 Chestnut Sr., Garden City, N. Y. 28 Kingston Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. N. H. Pastoric Boksum 34 (FRL' Holland 1678 Beacon St., Brookline 46, Mass. 66 Admiral Rd., Buffalo 16, N. Y. 150 Highland Ave., Winchester, Mass. Sycamore Ave., Shrewsbury, N. J. 41 South Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. Montpelier Rd., R.F.D. 2, Rockville, Md. 7103 Sherman St., Philadelphia 19, Pa. 4638 B 36 St., S. Arlington, Ya. 89 Mather St., Hamden, Conn. Calkin, Mary K .. ...... 87 State St., Framingham Center, Mass. Carlsbn, Elizabeth....................... 42 34 203 St., Bayside, N. Y. Ciienkt, Alberta J. ......... .......................... 704 Chestnut St., Latrobe, Pa. Child, Ellen M. ................. Pembroke St., RD 1, Suncook, N. H. Clayton, Mildred C............... 43 Elsmcre Ave., Delmar, N. Y. Clembncb, Rosemary ...... 77 Carrington Ave., Milford, Conn. Clowes, Bethiah R......... 45 Union St., Bristol, R. I. Cobb, Carolyn E............................... 1221 Girard St., N. W. Washington 9, D. C. Cochrane, Gloria E. 461 McDonough St., Brooklyn 33, N. Y. Colbbth, Ileen M................. 26 Claremont Drive, Maplewood, N. J. Collins, Virginia A.............. 83 Borton Ave., Akron 2, Ohio Compton, Valerie R. Byram Shore Rd.. Byram, Conn. Covington, Anne W. 6106 Three Chopt Rd., Richmond 21, Va. Cudlipp, Edythe F. .............. 114 Arlington Ave., Jamestown, N. Y. Cummings, Sarah C.........................................40Jane Rd., Newton Center 59, Mass. Curtis, Cornelia IL , . . ................ 131 Brook St., Wellesley 81, Mass. Cutler. Virginia L. ...........................27 Canterbury Lane, Westfield, N. J. Daggett Nancy 3590 Farland Rd., University Heights, Cleveland, Ohio Dallye, Diane Birch Hill Rd., Albany 4, N. Y. Dawb. Claridel L. 2850 N. Stowell Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Day. Molly T 100 Reservoir St., New Haven, Conn. DeCesark, Lynn M. 500 Walnut Sc., Roselle Park, N. J. 133 Dillingham, Ruth .................................... . 190 Hollywood Ave., Crest wood Tuckahoe 7, N. Y Dillon, Elizabeth A...................................... 44 Main St., Phoenix, N. Y. Disque, Helen C.. . 918 Strath Haven Aw., Swarchmore, Pa. Donovan, Louise E. 31 Forest Park Ave., Adams, Mass. Drake, Barbara J. 62 Sheffield Rd., Newtonvillc 60, Mass. Edmondson, Mary E. ..... 1128 S. Main St., Moultrie, Ga. Eidelsberg, Judith . , . . 400 Asbury Ave., Asbury Park, N. J. Ellison, Diana J.. . 410 Riverside Dr., New York 25, N. Y. Ernst, Eleanor H.. . 16 Shaw Rd., Wellesley Hills 82, Mass. Evans, Margaret A............................. . 97 Woodlawn Ave., Wellesley Hills 82, Mass. Evtushenko, Natalia.................................. . 472 Broad St., Hartford, Conn. Fay, Anita...... Fitzgerald, Joan F. Flather, Edith...... Folsom, Frances Foote, C. Patricia .. For bus, Elizabeth T. Ford, Elizabeth Fox, Sarah E........ Frahmb, Daomar A. C. Frear, Ann E. Freeman, Jean T..... Fritts, Patricia J. Fuller, Sally E. Fulton, Diane 1354 Midland Ave., Bronx ville 8, N. Y. 1147 Canton Ave., Milton, Mass. 45 Abbot St., Andover, Mass. 106 Oak Lane, Rochester 10, N. Y. 160 Henry Sr., Brooklyn, N. Y. Devon Rd., Hope Valley, Durham, N. C. 654 West Hill St., Wabash, Ind. 11 Warwick Rd., Brookline 46, Mass. 3562 Riedham Rd., Shaker Heights 20, Ohio Old A in well Rd., Neshanic, N. J. 424 S. 23 Ave., Hattiesburg, Miss. 58 Hundreds Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Canaan, Conn. 32 Longfellow Rd., Wellesley Hills 82, Mass. Gaines, Mary G.. Gaskins, F. Virginia.. Gaylord, Gwendolyn E. Gerst, Elsa J......... Gibbs, Molly A.......... Gilson, Hope ... Glover, Marion K. Gordon, Dorothy L. Gordon, Helene P. Granby, Nancy K. Greenwood, Ruth A. 514 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. 4160 Marquette, Fairfax Manor, Jacksonville, Fla. 85 College St., South Hadley, Mass. 8005 Blandford Rd., Norfolk 5, Va. 1881 Highland Ave., Rochester 7, N. Y. .19 Willard Ave., Worcester 2, Mass. 53 Kings Highway, W, Haddonfield, N. J. .40 Woodruff Ave., Brooklyn 26, N. Y. 109 Tyler Park, Lowell. Mass. Box 259, Mount Hope, W. Va. 3 Beech Circle, Andover, Mass. Hagar, Cynthia Hagen, Carol A. Hall, Barbara J. Harper, Joan....... Hartman, Joan E. Herr, Nancy Heym n, Sally P. Higgins, Diane ... Higgins, Elaine D... High, Patricia Hill, Judith R. Hill, Louise. . Hinchcliffe, Priscilla D. Hogbman, Nancy E. House, Barbara J. Howe, Cynthia ... Howell, Henrietta M. Hubbard, Carrie H. Pleasant St., Marshfield Hills, Mass. Ill Euston Rd., Garden City, N. Y. 59 Adams Place, Glen Ridge, N. J. Green Hill, RD 1, West Chester, Pa. 768 E. 21 St., Brooklyn 10, N. Y. 14 Memorial Ave., Saylesville, R. I. 46 E. 91 St., New York, N. Y. 36 Wallingford Ave., Athol, Mass. 27 Hilldale Rd., Dobbs Ferry, N Y. Near water Lane, Noroton, Conn. .9 Church St., Scottsville, N. Y. 724 Osage Rd., Mount Lebanon, Pittsburgh 16, Pa 645 Spadina Rd., Toronto, Ontar io, Canada 59 Knoll wood Ave., Madison, N. J. 3805 Madison Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y. 93 Alumni Ave., Providence 6, R. I. 333 S. 18th St., Philadelphia 3, Pa. Edgewater Drive, RD 1, Ashtabula, Ohio 134 Hughes, Anne S. ..................... 62 Pine St., Garden City, N. V. Hull, Eleanor A................ 360 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Huston, Charlotte R. ... . ... ........... 741 Burns Ave., Flossmoor, III. Ivison, Carol L................................. 5 Gale Rd.. Belmont, Mass. Jasiulko, Evelyn A.............................. 133 Stanley Ave., Yonkers 3, N. Y. Johnson, Elaine A............................... 794 Van Rensselaer Ave., Niagara Palls, N. Y. Johnson, Sally E....................... . . ............73 Davidson Rd., Worchester 3, Mass. Johnstone, Susan I......... ............................... .83 Grosse Pointe Blvd., Grosse Poinre Farms, Mich. Jordan, Mbllicbnt A.........................................2693 Rocklvn Rd., Shaker Heights 22, Ohio Juckkr, Hanni . ........ ................................ 66 Milton Rd., Rye, N. Y. Kaplan, Barbara J.................... ......................8 Shore Drive, Larchmonc Manor, N. Y. Katz, Margaret ------- 140-30 Ash Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Kendall, Helen L............... Moose Hill Farm, Sharon, Mass. Kjtselman, Jean M. ... Riverside Ave., Muncie, Ind. Kokther, Mary E. ....... 232 Springdale Ave., East Orange, N. J. Krampitz, Joan N... ........... 33 Westford Circle, Springfield 9, Mass. Lam pert, Renee.............................................23 Gould St.. New Bedford, Mass. Lang, Eve M....... 20 rue Charles Baudelaire, Paris 12, France Lapp, Mary E..................... .............. 443 Eggcrt Rd., Buffalo 13, N. Y. Lauritzbn, Joan A. 13 Fenwick St., Hartford, Conn. Leawood, Phyllis M. 84 Norfolk Ave., Swampscott, Mass. Lehm an, Evelyn J....................... 402 Linda Vista, Ann Arlx r, Mich. Lkmckb, Dorothy A............................ 10 Edgewood Rd., Chatham, N. J. Little, Joanne. ...................................... 10 Birch Terrace, Westfield, Mass. Lundkll, Audrey G. ...................................... .171 Roxbury Rd., Garden City, N. Y. Lundoren, Nancy H...........................................RD 2, Rehoboch, Mass. Lungrkn, Greta L................................ . ... 213 LcGrande Blvd., Aurora, III. Lyon, Mary................. .............. 118 Madison Ave., Holyoke, Mass. McBride, Patricia I.............. ........... .26 Claremont Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. McCurdy. Katharine E....... . 79 Lawn Ave., Middletown, Conn. McPherson, Jean L.. .......... 19 Cleveland St., Kensington, Md. Mairs, Louise P........................... 1304 Summit Ave., St. Paul 3, Minn. Mandkll, Rivy.............. . 8 Goldberg Ave., Norwich, Conn. Marasco, Joan P. Lawrence Farms, S. Chappaqua, N. Y. Marshall, Julia S. .............. 81 Merriweather Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. Mascuch, Joan E___ Normandie Heights, Morristown, N. J. Matthews, Jeanne I. ......... 11 Ely Place. East Orange, N. J. Mauger, Virginia. .... ............. 6903 Henley St., Philadelphia 19, Pa. Maynard, Dorothy________ 77 Meriam St., Lexington, Mass. Mea, Eleanor M............. ................................Hayden Rowe St., Hopkinton, Mass. Mbi, Yi-Tsi........., . 17 Powder House Terrace, West Somerville 44, Mass. Mercury, Edna M. 6 Calvin Rd., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Mbskin, Margery R.................................. 91 Stratford Rd., Rockville Centre, N. Y, Middendorf, Sarah B. . . . 300 Hammond St., Chestnut Hill, Mass. Miller, Carol A.................. Box 8, Deansboro, N. Y. Mitchell, Eleanor J............... . Cushman Rd., Rosemont, Pa. Mitchell, Mary A................................... 636 Efird St., Winston-Salem 4, N. C. Moffett, Susan G. ................................... 804 Charles St., Scotia 2, N. Y. Moore, Miriam B.............................. 121 E. Hamilton Ave., Englewood, N. J. Morrison, Mary L................................... H Clinton Ave., Holyoke, Mass. Morton, Janet E............ .............. ........... 16 Lawrence Ave., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Mosher, (uliannk ............. Box 8, Three Bay Farms, Nassau, Bahamas Murphky, Mary-Janb. . . -.............. 7031 Lincoln Drive, Philadelphia 19, Pa. Murray, Betty E.................. I Hampton Court, Port Washington. N. Y. ns Naoorska, Barbara 92 North Court, Roslyn Heights, N. Y. Nearing, Carol Joan 3457 Manor Hill Drive, Cincinnati 20, Ohio Norris, Nancy ..... Trefllvn Farm, Village Rd., New Vernon, N. J. Novotny, Phyllis A. ................ .............. 44 Taunton Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Oblschlagbr, Jacqueline .. 3676 Rockport Ave., Cleveland 11, Ohio Oldham, Elizabeth A.. Box 105, Dudley, Mass. Pannier, Ruth E. .......... 692 Stony Hill Rd., Wilbraham, Mass. Park, Nancy A. Fairhelds Falls, Chuch, Va. Parke, Marjorie E......... .................... .............Jones Park, Riverside, Conn. Parker, Judith T. . ... . . . 63 Beveridge Rd., Mahwah, N. J. Partow, Malihb................................. c o Mr. Mehdi Partow, Bank Rahni Iran, Tehran, Iran Peirce, Elizabeth M. 5 Inverness Rd., Wellesley Hills 82, Mass. Perkins, MaryJ............... 7 Mavhew St., Bristol, N. H. Perris, Kathryn R. . ................................200 E. 66 St., New York 21, N. Y. Peters, M. Elizabeth ............. Forest Manor, 1309 Maryland Dr., Anderson, Ind Pickett, Patricia L. 199 Quinnipiac Ave., North Haven, Conn. Port, Gladys A. E.. . . . . 385 Grand St., Newburgh, N. Y. Possiel, Roberta J. ... ........ .......... ...... , 2 Star Route, Doylestown. Pa. Purrington, Joanne .. 23 Winn St., Wake lie Id, Mass. Raahe, Virginia L. Radbmacher, Ann H. Rebkrt, JoAnn R E DENO A UG h , C ATII E RINK Redin, M.Joan Reeve, Patricia H. Rue, Lenore B. Richard, Constance G. Rising, Virginia Roberts, Colette J.. Roc.in, Barbara E.. Roskr, Rachei____ Rothkram, Barbara A. 121 East St., Morenci, Mich. 449 Ridge Rd., Hamden 14, Conn. Pickle Brook Rd., Bernardsville, N.J. 217 N. 49 St., Omaha, Neb. 26 Caleb St., Portland, Maine Box 142, Aquebogue, N. Y. 301 Cliff Ave., Pelham 65, N. Y. 530 Amherst Rd., South Hadley, Mass 53 Hundreds Circle. Wellesley Hills, Mass. 416 Blake St., New Haven, Conn. 9 Sheridan Ave., West Orange, N. J. ind w ood, Glastonbury, Conn. 1415 Coursin St., McKeesport, Pa. Samuels, Frankie Sargeant, Ann H. Scafarello, Joan Schleicher, Lydia J. Sciimidt, Marie A. ScHOONMAKER, BETSY Schultz, Ernestine M. Sc hum an, Elaine Scott, Katherine L. Sum know, Dorothy A. Seward, Elizabeth S. Shafer, Anita Sherman, Margaret E. Smillie, Marie M. Smith, Carol Smith, Phyllis R. ... Soper, Lydia A. Speers, Marion Spence, Jean A. Stedf $t, Joyce Stickel, Jonelle D. Storke, Lois M. . . . 51 Manning Blvd., Albany 3, N. Y. 41 Hubbard St., Montpelier, Vt. 60 Arnoldale Rd., West Hartford 7, Conn. 133-33 Sanford Ave., Flushing, N. Y. 762 Madison Ave., Albany, N. Y. 266 Nelson Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 613 N. Webster Ave., Scranton, Pa. 120 E. Grand St., Mount Vernon, N. Y. 737 S. Latch’s Lane, Merion, Pa. 6 Forbes Cottages, Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh 17, Pa. 96-11 68 Ave., Forest Hills, N. Y. 54 L. 55 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 32 Manning Rd., Waltham 54, Mass. 121 Old Brook Rd., Springfield, Mass. 85 Plymouth Ave., Milton, Mass. 6290 Main St., Long Hill, Bridgeport, Conn. 48 High Farms Rd., West Hartford 7, Conn. 110 E. 64 St., New York 21, N. Y. 197 Webster Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 43 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. 64 W aldo St., Holyoke, Mass. .1608 Ripon Place Park, Fairfax, Alexandria, Va. 136 Thikme, Margaret L. Thurston, Joan E. Tokrey, Cor rink M Trapnbll, F. Sydnor True, Lavinia M. 3710 E. John St., Seattle 4, Wash. Spruce St., Rockport, Maine N. Masonic Ave., Wallingford, Ginn. 6439 Roselawn Rd., Richmond 21. Ya. 2915 Courtland Blvd.. Shaker Heights 22, Ohio Underwood, Anita F. Unger, Mary-Janf. 17 Devon Rd., Leominster, Mass. 205 Nelson Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Van Bear com, Shirley R. V vn Sicken, Emily M. EVERS, Pamela N Yogi an, Katharine I. 20 Smelter Hill, Great Falls, Mont 264 Park Lane, Douglaston, N. Y Race Hill Rd., Madison, Conn. 47 Commonwealth Ave.. Springfield, Mass. Wagner, Nancy E. W ALLNCK, M ARY K. Walter, Sylvblin Walton, Jeanne M. Ward, Polly P. Warner, Dorothy. Warren, Patricia M. Watt, Rutii J. Weld. Judith V.,. Weller, Marilyn West. Evelyn M., . . Weston, Anne T WhITBIIILL, J ANH C. Whittf.more, Louise Whittf.more, Nancy Williams, Katherine L Willi ms, Patricia Willi ams. Virgini v I').. WlLMER, BARRAU V H Woldenberg, Nanay E. W right, Helen E. C. Fcncrton Rd., Paoli, Pa. 64 Imlay St., Hartford 5, Conn. 12 Gray Gardens, Cambridge 38, Mass. 95 Andover Rd., Rockville Centre, N. Y. 1319 Beard St., Flint 3, Mich. 1890 Dir mas Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 301 Otis St., West Newton, Mass. 135 Lin wood Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 100 Elbridge Rd., New Britain, Conn. 20855 Kinsman Rd., Cleveland 22, Ohio 162 Shore Rd., Old Greenwich, Conn. 8 Hampton St., Cranford, N. J. 44 Mamaroneck Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. . . . 318 Grove St., Montclair, N. J. 442 Madison Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. 4 Stanton Ave., South Hadley, Mass. 524 Pleasant St., South Wevmouth, Mass. 34 Muir Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. 23 Alida St., Yonkers 4, N. Y. Young, Saraii E 516 College Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Zickbl, Claire E.. . ... 137 BOARD OF TRUSTEES TERM EXPIRES Roswell Gray Ham, Ph. D., LL.D. (ex officio' 1951 Samuel Burdett Hemingway, Ph D. 1951 William Appleton Lawrence, L.H.D., S.T.D., D.D. 1952 Louise Hoyt Gregory, Ph D. 1953 SamuelS. Hall, Jr., A.B. 1954 Rosamond Cross, A.M. 1955 Maynard T. Hazen, LL.B. 1955 L. Sumner Pruyne, A.B. 1957 Florence Gorse Smith, A.B. 1958 Franklin T. Bigelow, A.B. 1958 Russell L. Davenport, B.S., LL.B., LL.D. 1958 Robert Nelson Fuller, A.B. 1959 Frederick M. Eliot, D.D., LL.D., President 1959 Kirke A. Neal, Ph.B. 1959 Stuart A. Russell 1960 Howard Fletcher Burns, A.B., LL.B. 1960 Winthrop Hiram Smith, A.B. 1960 Robert George Wiese, A.M. South Hadley, Mass. New Haven, Conn. Springfield, Mass. New York, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Bryn Mawr, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Boston, Mass. Needham, Mass. Andover, Mass. South Hadley, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Holyoke, Mass. Cleveland, Ohio New York, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Chosen by the Alumnae 1951 Margaret Lewis Atwood, A.B., Vice President 1952 Helen Vincent McLean, M.D. 1953 Christine Everts Greene, A.B. 1954 Janet Brewster Murrow, A.B. 1955 Helen Graves Fisk, A.B. Scarsdalc, N. Y. Chicago, 111. Winchester, Mass. New York, N. Y. Pasadena, Calif. Honorary Member 138 F. Charles Schwbdtman New York, N. Y. OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION Roswell Gray Ham, Ph.D., LL.D. President Meribeth Elliott Cameron, Pii.D. Academic Dean Susan Aylbttb Clay, M.A. in Ed. Assistant Academic Dean Catherine Palmer Robinson, A.M. Dean of Residence Genevieve Frances Pratt, A.B. Registrar Harriet Newhall, A.M. Director of Admissions Charlotte Anne Tinker, A.B. Assistant Director of Admissions Pattih Johnston Groves, A.B., M.D. Resident Physician Helen MacMurtrie Voorhees, A.M. Dt rector of the Appointment Bn re an; Vocational Adviser OFFICERS OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Boardman Bump, M.B.A. Treasurer and Comptroller Gertrude Van Vleck Bruyn, A.B Director of Development Program Florence Clement, A.B. Publication Editor Elizabeth Alden Green, A.M. Director of the News Bureau Otto Cornelius Kohler, S.B. Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds Andrew V itali Steward Alice McCool Supervisor of Residence Halls Porcus Smith, B.S. Mildred Susan Withington Dietician Manager of the Bookstore 139 Mildred Susan Wjthington FACULTY ART Dorothy McIntosh Cogswell, B.F.A., M.F.A., Associate Professor; Marian Haves, A.B., M.A., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Henry Rox, Associate Professor; Grace Jean Sutherland Boggs, A.B., A M., Assistant Professor. ASTRONOMY Alice Hall Farnsworth. A.B., Ph.D., Professor; Winifred Jean Sawtell, B.E., Instructor. CHEMISTRY Anna Jane Harrison, A.B., B.S., A.M., Ph.D., Professor; Lucy Weston Pickett, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor; Mary Lura Sherrill, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., D.Sc., Professor; Edith Rebecca Barstow, A.B., Assistant Director of L boratone s, Assistant Professor; George Elisha Hall, B.S., Ph.D., Assistant Professor; Eunice Martha Moore, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor; Esther Mary Cofhn, B.S., M.A.. Instructor; Frances Wilmoth Collins, A.B., Ph.D., Instructor. CLASSICAL LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES Cornelia Catlin Coulter, A.B., Ph.D., Professor; Blanche Brotherton Cox, A.B., A M., Ph.D., Professor; Elizabeth WyckofF, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Professor. ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY Alzada Comstock. A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Professor; Everett Day Hawkins, A.B., M.A., Ph.D., Professor; John Lobb, A.B., Ph.D., Professor; Ann Hewes, A.B., Ph.D., Professor Emeritus;Jay Henry Korson, B.S., M.A., Ph.D., Visiting Professor; Marion Hamilton Gillim, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Virginia Galbraith Taucher, A.B., Assistant Professor; Margaret Scoon Wilson, A.B., M.A., Assistant Professor; Ann Straus Gertler, A.B , Instructor; Edward Green, B.A., M.A., Instructor; John Francis Manfredi, B.S., M.A., Visiting Instructor. ENGLISH Leslie Gale Burges in, A.B., A M., Ph.D., Professor; Charlotte D Evelyn, L B., Ph.D., Professor; Roswell Gray Ham, B.L., Ph D., L.L.D., Lecrurer Kathleen Martha Lynch, A.B., AM., Ph D., Professor; Alan YanKcuren McGee, A IV, Ph.D., Professor; Sydney Robertson McLean, A. IV, A M., Ph.D., Professor; Anna Jean Mill, M.A., Ph.D., Professor; Wystan Hugh Auden, Florence Purtngton Visiting Lecturer; William Denis Johnston, M.A., LL.M., Florence Purtngton Visiting Lecrurer; Joseph McGrath James Bottkol, A.B., A.M., Ph D., Associate Professor; Leonora Branch, A.B., A.M., Associare Professor; Constance Marianne Brock, B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Joyce Mary Horner, B.A., A.M., Associate Professor: Lawrence Bergmann Wallis, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor. Elizabeth Alden Green, A.B., A.M., Assistant Professor; Director of News Bureau; Constance Meadnis Saintonge, A. B., A.M., Assistant Professor; Gordon Harold Argo, B.A., M.A., Technical Director of Laboratory Theatre; Leone Albinson Barron, B.A., M.A., Instructor; Warren Todd Furniss, A.B., A.M., Instructor; Marion Jessie Mainwaring, B. S., M.A., Instructor; Adeline Pates Potter, A.B., A.M., Instructor; Jane Davidson Reid, B.A., M.A., Instructor, Jean Sudrann, A.B., A M., Ph.D., Instructor; Louise Wotherspoon Wallis, Director of Liboratory Theatre; Beatrice Weeks Woodward, A.B., A M., Instructor. FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Ruth Josephine Dean. A.B., M.A., I). Phil., Professor; Helen Elizabeth Patch, A.B., Ph.D., Professor; Paul Frederic Saintonge, A.B., M.A., Ph.D., Professor; Leonie Yillard, Dr. es Lcttres, Litt. D., Visiting Lecturer; Alice Critchett Stevens, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Marie-Jeannc Bourgoin, Professorat de Lettres, Assistant Professor; Edith Sebestyen Rostas, Certificat d Etudes, M.S., Lecturer; Elizabeth Lamprey Towle, A.B., A.M., Ph D., Assistant Professor; Gaspard Etienne Weiss, Lie. es Theo, Assistant Professor; Gordon Harold Argo, Instructor; Genevieve Stahl. Lie. es L., A M., Instructor. 140 FACULTY GEOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY John Coles Half, B.S., AM., PhD., Associate Professor; Minnie Ethel Lemaire, A.B , AM., Ph.D., is sociate Pro- fessor: David Hawley. B.S., M.S.f Instructor; Rushdi Said, M.Sc., Ph.D., Instructor; Barbara Conant Stiles, B.S. bid., B.A., M.A., hi t rue tor. GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Erika Marie Meyer, B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Professor; Frederic Carl Sell, Ph.D., Professor: Edith Amelie Runge, A.B., Ph D., Assistant Professor: Joachim Maass, Lecturer. HISTORY lola Florence Barnes, A.B., A.M., LL.D., Ph D., Professor: Merihcth Elliott Cameron, B.A., M.A , Ph.D , Professor: Frederick Henry Cramer, Ph.D., Professor; Edward Dwight Salmon, B.S , M A , Ph.D., Visiting Professor; Norma Adams, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Peter Robert iereck, B S., M.A., Ph.D., Associate Professor Wilma Jennings Pugh, A.B., A.M., Ph.D,, Assistant Professor: Robert Hugo Bass, B.A., M.A., Instructor HYGIENE AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION Ruth Eldred Fairbank, A.B., A.M., M.D., Professor; Pattie Johnston Groves, B P., B.A , M.D., Professor; Sandra Gulben, B.S., M.D., Assistant Professor: Mildred Standish Howard. B.S., A M., Professor: Lillian Loretta Kuester. Associate Professor; Ruth Louise Elvedt, B.S., M.S., Assistant Professor; Harriet Perry Close, B.S., Instructor; Janet Louise Gibson, B.S., P.E., Instructor; Wilma Sears McDaniel, B.S., Instructor; Wilhelmina Desda McFee, B.S. in P.E., Instructor. ITALIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Valentine Giamatti, A.B., Ph.D., Litt. D., Professor MATHEMATICS Marie Litzinger. A.B., A.M., Ph D., Professor; Atherton Hall Sprague, A.B., Ph.D . Visiting Professor; Fred Ludwig Kiokemeister, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Robert Hermann Brcusch, Ph.D , I ' siting Associate Professor; Grace Elizabeth Bates, B.S., Sc.M., Ph.D., Assistant Professor. MUSIC Ruth Emma Douglass, A.B., Professor; Charles Denoe Leedy, Professor; David Justin Holden, S B., Associate Pro- fessor; Harrison Potter, Associate Professor; Milton Jacob Aronson. Assistant Professor; Anna Marhilde Wollman. Assistant Professor: Margaret Lowre Hanford. B.A., Instructor: Doroth Howell, A.A.G.O., Instructor; Naomi Bevard Orth, Instructor. PHILOSOPHY Roger Wellington Holmes, A.B . Ed.M., A M , Ph.D., Professor; George Vernon Tovey, A.B., Ph D.. Assistant Professor; Grace Eleanor Pcrkinson. A.B., Instructor. PHYSICS Mildred Allen. A.B., A M., Ph.D., Professor; Rogers D Rusk, Sc.B , A.M.. Ph.D., Professor: Edward Philbrook Clancy, B.S., A M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Elizabeth Beale Clancy, A.B., AM., Instructor; Ann Bliss Ward, A.B., Instructor. 141 FACULTY PHYSIOLOGY Charlotte Haywood, A.B., A.M., Ph D., Professor; Jy tte Marie Muus, Ma . Scient., Professor; Jeanne Marie Claire Dorais, B.S., M.S., Instructor; Barbara Ruth Landau, B.S., M.S., Instructor. PLANT SCIENCE Fredde Doris Reed, A.B., S.M., Ph.D., Professor; Ethel Taber Elringe, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Eva Blanche Van Schaack, A.B., Ph.D., Assistant Projector. POLITICAL SCIENCE Victoria Schuck, A.B., M.A., Ph.D., Professor; Earl Latham, A.B., Ph.D., Visiting Professor; Ruth Catherine Lawson, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Donald Grant Morgan, A.B., A.M., Ed. M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Lawrence Curtis Wan I ass, B.S., Ph.D., Instructor. PSYCHOLOGY AND EDUCATION Thomas Whelan Reese, A.B., A M., Ph.D., Professor; Frederic Carl Sell, Professor; Richard Talbot Sollenberger, B.S., M.S., Ph D., Professor, Stuart M. Stoke, A.B., Ed.M., Ed.D., Professor; Clifford Richardson Bragdon, A.B., A.M., Ed.M., Vnittng Lecturer; Helen Evangeline Rees, Visiting Associate Professor; Horace Harlan Corbin, A.B., A M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Margaret McFarland, A.B , A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Mary Cheney Stephenson, A.B., M.Ed., Associate Professor;John Yolkmann, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Rosalind Falk Dymond, A.B., M.A., Ph.D., Assistant Professor. CHILDREN'S SCHOOL Margaret McFarland, A.B., A M., Ph.D., Director of the Children's School; Jean Young Crawford, B. Sc., M.S.S., Head Teacher in the Children's School; Barbara Banks, A.B., Teacher in the Children r School. RELIGION David Ernest Adams, A.B., B.D., D.D., Professor; John Paul Williams, A.B., B.D., Ph.D., Professor; Ronald John Tamblyn, A.B., H D., Associate Professor. RUSSIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Peter OuroussofF, Baccalaureat, Assistant Professor. SPANISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Ruth Sedgwick, A.B., M.A., Ph.D., Professor; Concha de Albornoz, Catedratico de lengua y literatura espanola de segun da ensenanza, Asststanr Professor; Luis Ccrnuda, Licenciado en Derecho, Assistant Professor. SPEECH Alice W. Mills, B.S., M.A., Associate Professor; Nadine Shepardson, B.S., A.M., Associate Professor; Clarice Tat man, A.B., A.M., Assistant Professor; Inez Elizabeth Hegarty, A.B., A.M., Instructor. Z(X)LOG Y Amy Elizabeth Adams, A.B., A M., Ph.D., Professor; Christiana Smith, A.B., A M., Ph D., Professor; Kathryn Forney Stein, A.B., M.S., Ph.D., Professor; Elizabeth Margaret Boyd, B.Sc., A M., Ph.D., Associate Professor; Janet W illiamson Kingsbury, A.B., A.M., Assistant Professor; Isabelle Baird Sprague, A.B., A.M., Assistant Professor. 142 PHI BETA KAPPA SOCIETY The Theta Chapter of Massachusetts of the Pht Beta Kappa Society ACTIVE MEMBERS 1950-1951 A. Elizabeth Adams Valentine Giamatti Harrier Newhall David E. Adams Elizabeth Green Helen Patch Norma Adams PattieJ. Groves Lucy W. Pickett Mildred Allen George E. Hall Wilma J. Pugh Viola F. Barnes Roswell G. Ham Edith A. Runge Grace E. Bates Everett Hawkins Victoria Sch uck Boardman Bump Marion Haves J Mary L. Sherrill Leslie G. Burgevin Charlotte Haywood Christianna Smith Meribcth E. Cameron Inez E. Hegarty Kathryn Stein Edward P. Clancy Mildred S. Howard Alice C. Stevens Mrs.) Alzada Comstock Fred L. Kiokemeister Jean Sudrann Cornelia C. Coulter Ruth Lawson George V. Tovey Blanche Brothercon Cox (Mrs.) John Lobb Elizabeth Towle Ruth J. Dean Kathleen M. Lynch John Volkmann Charlotte D’Evelyn Erika Mever Ann B. Ward Ruth E. Fairbank Donald G. Morgan Alison R. Willard Mrs. D. S.) Alice H. Farnsworth Mrs. Edward B. Morri s Donald S. Willard Mary Custis Foster ✓ Beatrice W. Woodward Mrs.) EMERITUS MEMBERS 1950-1951 Grace M. Bacon Caroline B. Greene Louisa S. Stevenson Bertha E. Blakely Amy Hcwes Alma G. Stokev J Emma P. Carr Gertrude S. Hyde Ellen Talbot Ella S. Dickinson Ada L. F. Snell Jessie M. Tatlock Florence W. Foss Alice P. Stevens Abby H. Turner ELECTED 1950 Joan E. Hartman Henrietta M. Howell Anita Shafer Jean L. McPherson 143 LLAMARADA STAFF Nesiia E. Bass Elaine Schuman Barbara J. Drake Virginia D. Williams Jean T. Freeman Katharine I. Vogian Margery R. Meskin Editor-in-Chuf Business Manager Assistant Business Manager An Editor Literary Editor . Advertising Editor Photography Editor BUSINESS HOARD Anne F. Rutherford, Bonnie J. Tritschler, Anne Schleicher, Carol A. Miller. LITERARY HOARD Beryl Berger, Eleanor Bourne, Ilcen Colhcth, Laurel Glazcr, Jewel Humphrey, Barbara S. Purple, Frankie Samuels, Betty Softy, Carolyn Stormer. ADVERTISING BOARD Doris Bonneville, Ellen Conway, Alice Czech, Ruth Daniels, Judy Eidelsberg, Sally Hey- man, Barbara Hoiles, Barbara Jules, Kathy Kline, Helen Klocckncr, Jean Langscaff, Judy Maxson, Dorothy Montgomery, Nancy Norris, Sylvia Smith. PHOTOGRAPHY HOAHO Kathryn C. Baldwin, Elizabeth Carlsen, Carol A. Conn, Edith Flather, Patricia J. Fritts, Barbara J. Henderson, Judith G. Mills. I he Llamarada Stall wishes to thank all those who have worked on the 1951 Llamarada. 144 GEORGE B. H. MACOMBER COMPANY BUILDERS Contract launderers to Mount Holyoke Faculty and Students THE HIGHLAND LAUNDRY COMPANY 504-506 Pleasant Street Hoi.yoke, Massachusetts CLASS of 1951 PLAN AHEAD! insurance mustie iouff it 7 S' 7 • - Jjeyore you need it Jyiaf' Insurance apart ofy 0117 I fans Richard C. Knight IN COLLABORATION WITH YOUR HEALTH DEPARTMENT WE HAVE DEVELOPED YOUR MEDICAL EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENT PLAN 112 WATER ST. BOSTON 9. MASS. Associated with HIGH AM, NEILSON,WHITRIDGE REID, INC Boston Philadelphia Nashville Los Angeles 146 • • • , .. r . . • : , in design era tsma ns hip and quality RINGS J PJ N S | MEDALS CHARMS CUPS PLAQUES TROPHIES i OFFICIAL JEWELER MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE RING mew YORK • 73 TREMONT STREET, BOSTON 8, MASS. ♦ providence 147 ♦ Good Luck Llamarada COMPLIMENTS OF 1951 A DRAMATIC CLUB $ FRIEND ♦ HEAT—LIGHT-POWER . . CONSTANTLY SERVING THE COM- MI NITY WITH RATES AMONG THE VERY WHEN YOUR DATE ASKS YOU WHERE TO GO SAY: LOWEST IN THE COUNTRY WITH THE BEST STANDARDS OP SERVICE IN THE JOHNNY GREEN'S INDUSTRY 3 Miles from Amherst 4 Miles from Hamp. on Route 9. MUNICIPAL GAS ELECTRIC DEPARTMENT Dinners . . . Banquets . . . Cocktail . . . Parries HOLYOKE, MASS. Dancing Nightly Orchestra Friday and Saturday ‘ THE PROPERTY 01 THE PEOPLE OP HOLYOKE FOR RESERVATIONS CALL AMHERST 657 148 One of those CRUISES . . . would not disclose to any traveler better food or beverages — nor a more pleasant atmosphere — than you’ll find at The Roger Smith. Dine on cruise fare — at landlubber prices! PARTY FACILITIES HOTEL Your headquarters for out-of-town guests 69 Suffolk Street Holyoke 2 1 4 1 4 from 52 to 51 A P Helps You Eat DID YOU READ IT? Better... READ WHAT?” Spend Less! THE VALLEY CAMPUS' COLUMN IN THE If you like good foods and good food values, too then A P is the place for you! Each and HOLYOKE TRANSCRIPT-TELEGRAM every day of rhe week your friendly A P Super Market offers grand tasring foods at budget- pleasing prices. Hut don't lake our word for it. Oil SURE, EVERYBODY DOES. Ask any of our regular customers! You’ll dis- cover that when A P is your food headquarters, you get real values on all your food purchases . . . each and every day you shop. Come in today! ENJOY A MEAL IN REAL ITALIAN STYLE FINE SHOES AND ACCESSORIES FOR DISCRIMINATING PEOPLE ♦ MELS THOMAS S. CHILDS. INC ♦ • 490 Pleasant Street 275 HIGH STREET 280 BRIDGE STREET HOLYOKE, MASS. HOLYOKE SPRINGFIELD 150 Holyoke s GREAT (since 1885) Corner Dwight and Maple Streets DEPARTMENT STORE MONTGOMERY'S Growers of ROSES of Quality HADLEY, MASSACHUSETTS Compliments of ROWE'S GARAGE 37 East Pleasant Street Amherst, Mass. PRESTON BISHOP, INC The Electric Shop ★ 233-237 Maple Street Holyoke, Mass. QUESTION’ Where does THE BUD Stand today? ANSWER THE BUD Stands at the foot of the City Hall Tower in Holyoke. For YOUR Convenience You need a checking account, a personal checking account, with no minimum balance Drop In — Ask for a “CONVENIENCE CHECKING ACCOUNT” at the HOLYOKE NATIONAL BANK High and Dwight Sts. Phone 4516 Your account I SSL' Kill) up to $10,000 by the Federal Deposit his ranee Corp. 151 GOOD LUCK '51 THE CLASS OF 1954 BEST WISHES TO OUR BIG SISTERS THE CLASS OF 1953 153 i XI COMPLIMENTS OF THE CLASS OF 1951 154 ‘ For your convenience, opposite the City Hall.” J. J. NEWBERRY CO. 239 High Street Holyoke, Mass. TAILORED CLOTHES Jackets Dresses Suits Coats E. O CONNOR CO. established 1888 287 High Street Holyoke, Mass. Compliments of ALLERY'S PACKAGE STORE 314 Newton Street South Hadley Falls NEVIN CLEANING SERVICE 12 Hampshire Street So. Hadley Tel. Holyoke 24329 Compliments of K M CO. South Hadley Falls Bern at Yarns THE OLD MEETING HOUSE Next to village P. O. Compliments of Compliments of the COLLEGE BEAUTY STUDIO BEAUTIFUL CLOTHES Northampton, Mass. Palm Beach, Florida GOOD LUCK '51 THE MOUNT HOLYOKE NEWS TODDS for TOWN AND COUNTRY South Hadley Northampton Falmouth 155 EXCELLENT FOOD COMFORTABLE ROOMS POPULAR PRICES TOSCANI'S RESTAURANT PIZZA AND SPAGHETTI 295 Appleton Street Holyoke, Mass. TELL YOUR DATE SARRIS'S RESTAURANT 32 Main Street Amherst, Mass. Compliments of PHOENIX FRUIT LUNCHEONETTE 602 Dwight Street Holyoke, Mass. Northampton, Mass. COMPLIMENTS 01 A FRIEND Compliments of KELLEYS LOBSTER HOUSE “Known for miles and miles around Cor. Race Sc Appleton Sts. Holyoke Tel. 7281 SHUMWAY'S DAIRY BAR Amherst PAY-AS-YOU-GO CHECKING ACCOUNTS IDEAL FOR STUDENTS USE No minimum balance required. Deposits may be made by mail. Service by our local students For Distinctive Apparel Dresses Sportswear SIMON SALTMAN 252 Maple Street Opposite Hotel THE PARK NATIONAL BANK OF HOLYOKE High Street at Appleton Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Federal Reserve System COMPLIMENTS 01 A FRIEND FOR OVER 50 YEARS THE BANK OF PERSONAL SERVICE 156 BEST WISHES FROM THE COLLEGE BOOKSTORE GRANDIS” Gran Jon ico’s Restaurant Amherst, Mass. THOMAS F. WALSH Good Things to Wear Amherst, Mass. Compliments of LINDAS Green Street Northampton COLLEGE INN CHENEY AND HUNT, INC. Jewelers and Opticians 281 High Street Holyoke, Mass. QUONSET CLUB, INC. the best in food Jam Session Wed. Night Orchestra Every Night J. G. HEIDNER SON, INC. Dealers in Pianos, Radios, Records, Sheet Music, Musical Instruments. Repairs 290 Maple Street Holyoke, Mass. Convenient branch of the world's largest specialty store. Fashion Leaders of New England Howard Keyes LEO J. SIMARD jeweler and Silversmith HOLYOKE, MASSACHUSETTS Compliments of SHARPE APPLIANCE CO., INC. 592 Dwight Street Holyoke GENES SERVICE STATION AND HARDWARE STORE 11 Woodbridge Street South Hadluy 157 “Chartered Bus Service” MUSANTI'S Any Time “for the loveliest flowers” Anywhere in Massachusetts Any Size Group Accommodated A M H erst M ass ach usetts Telephone 9801 PICK'S CLEANERS HOLYOKE STREET RAILWAY CO. Fine Cleaning and Alterations Holyoke Massachusetts 19 College Street So. Hadley Compliments of THE HADLEY BOOK SHOP and THE BOOK SHOP INN GLESMANNS Almost 50 Years Compliments of THE HAMPDEN BRIDAL SHOP 208 High Street (second floor) Holyoke, Mass. The Druggists At SOUTH HADLEY GAGNE'S Bus Depot All Lines O'CONNOR DRUG STORE Western Massachusetts’ Most Modern Service Station 443 High Street Holyoke, Mass. Phone 23426 Hadley and Ferry Sts. South Hadley CAREY THE FLORIST Route 47 Tel. 9656 Tel. 4988 300 Newton Street South Hadley Compliments of CARTER S SHOE STORE BEST WISHES 278 High Street Holyoke, Springfield From COMPLIMENTS OF PAN a FRIEND oo • ■'I COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND TWO FRIENDS EXTEND BEST WISHES COMPLIMENTS OF LINCOLN STUDIO 142 Pleasant Street Malden, Massachusetts Portrait Photographers COMPLETE PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICE TO THE 1951 LLAMARADA i k • kilt 0M« MkUMl'M M IlMtlPkl 160
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