Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA)

 - Class of 1920

Page 1 of 298

 

Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 298 of the 1920 volume:

(HiuBB look 1920 ,-€K5;V BAKER. JONES H AUSAU E R. 1 NC. I ' 3 U FFALO ,Cj aA 2 _ 1920 Nnn Nobta nhtm Publtsl)fli be % (ElaaB nf 192D 7% c2- OC Cyty-tZ. ' iL Down what strange winding paths we came to meet The treasure days of work and play together. Which fleeting like a wondrous dream too sweet, Are blown before Timers stormy weather. And always we have listened for your voice, Which ever bade us do the true and just; We strove to meet your challenge — aiid rejoice That you have made us rise, by your glad trust. And now again, that time must bid us part To brave alone our many hopes and fears. We leave our dearest dreams within your heart. To stay that faith in us, through endless years. Dorothy Emerine Criswell ar vaath Reluctant we linger a moment Ere we pass from the old to the new. Eager we came from our girlhood Bringing our lives to you. Here, through four years, we have builded Our splendid castles in Spain, With the sunrise gold on their towers — And we know it has not been vain. Marguerite Livingston Sablr of Qlnnt ntH President Emeritus L. Clark Seelye Frontispiece Dedication to Mary B. McElwain 5 Foreword ..... 6 Campus Views 7 In Memoriam 10 Board of Trustees 11 President Neilson 12 Administr. tive Officers 13 Class Deans 14 Faculty of Instruction 15 The Class 23 Former Members . 98 Under Classes 101 Organizaticns 109 Publications 122 Clubs and Societies 129 Musical Organizations 159 Dramatics 165 Athletics 173 Freshman Year 195 Sophomore Year 199 Junior Year 203 Senior Year 213 ' erse . . . . 227 Jokes and Cartoons 237 Calendar 244 Acknowledgments . 246 Class Book Board . 247 Advertisements 249 In memonam 3)nhn M, ( vtnw iJJarrlj 12. 1330 — A ril 28, 1913 (EIiarkB 5J. (Elark April 4. 1853 — aiulu 18. 1013 (3ctaher 20. 1852— iprmbrr 3, 1319 (El arlpH . iEmertrk Noombrr 17, IBBf — Marrli 22. 1323 10 Ebt Soarb nf Srust ea William Allan Xeilson, Ph.D., LL.D. President John- B. Clark, Ph.D., LL.D. . Arthur L. Gillett, D.D. .... Charles H. Allen, LL.D. .... Saml ' el W. McCall, LL.D. H. Clifford Gallagher .... Thomas William Lamont, A.B. Ruth Bowles Baldwin, A.B. Rt. Rev. Thomas F. Davies, D.D. George Bliss McCallum, A.B. La.rguerite Milton Wells, B.L. Ellen Tucker Emerson, A.AL Helen French Greene, A.AL Northampton New York City Hartford, Conn. Lowell Winchester Boston New York City New York City Springfield Northampton Minneapolis, Minn. Concord Boston 11 President, William Allan Neilson 12 I A mtntBlrattw (Bffkns Ada L. Comstock, A.M., Litt.D. Dean Mary Eastman, A.B. Registrar Josephine A. Clark, A. B. Librarian Florence Gilman College Physician George B. McCallum, A. B. Acting Treasurer 13 (UluBB i ana Mary B. McElwain, Ph.D. Dean of the Class of ig20 Mary Merrow Cook, B.S. Dean of the Class of IQ2I I Susan Rose Benedict, Ph.D. Dean of the Class of ig22 14 Amy L. Barbour, Ph.D. Dean of the Class of ig2j JffarulttJ nf Juatrurttou Eleanor P. Gushing, A.M. Professor of Ma hematics Mary A. Jordan, L.H.D. Projessor oj English Harry N. Gardiner, A.M. Professor of Philosophy DwiGHT W. Tryon, N.A. Professor of Jrl J. Everett Brady, Ph.D. Projessor oj Latin Harris H. Wilder, Ph.D. Professor of Zoology Irving F. Wood, Ph.D., D.D. Professor of Biblical Literature Absent for the second semester William F. Ganong, Ph.D. Professor of Botany IS Frank A. Waterman, Ph.D. Professor of Physics Ernst H. Mensel, Ph.D. Projessor oj German fCHARLES I ' . EmERICK, Ph.D. Professor of Economics Henry D. Sleeper, E.A.G.O. Professor of Music Julia H. Caverno, A.M. Professor of Greek Elrabeth D. Hanscom, Ph.D. Professor of English Anna A. Cutler, Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy Alfred V. Churchill, A.M. John S. Bassett, Ph.D., LLD. Robert E. S. Olmsted, A.B. Pr,J rrnr nf Iri Professor of Hislorv Professor of Focal Music Professor of Art Absent for the second semester Professor of History 16 fDeceased Harriet W. Bigelow, Ph.D. Professor of Astronomy Caroline B. Bourland, Ph.D. Projesso ■ of Spanish LBERT SCHINZ, Ph.D. Professor of French Herbert V. Abbott, A.B. Professor of English Everett Kimball. Ph.D. Professor of History C RL F. A. Lange, Ph.D. Professor of German Louise Delpit Professor of French Absent for the second semester William J. Miller, Ph.D. Professor of Geclogx 17 David C. Rogers, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology Sidney B. Fay, Ph.D. Professor of History Sidney N. Deane, Ph.D. Professor of Greek Harriet R. Cobb, A.M. Professor of Mathematics Annie H. Abel, Ph.D. Projessor of History Joel E. Goldthwait, B.S., I.D. F.A.C.S. Professor of Hygiene RirH RD A. Rice, A.M. Professor of Eng ' ish Florence A. Gragg, Ph.D. Piofessor of Latin John C. Hildt, Ph.D. Professor oj History 18 Rebecca W. Holmes Professor of Music F. Stuart Chapin, Ph.D. Projessor oj Economics and Sociol- ogy Absent for the first semester Robert S. Smith, A.M., B.D. Professor oj Biblical Literature 19 Ruth G. Wood, Ph.D. Amy L. Barbour, Ph.D. Mary B. McElwain, Ph.D. fREGIS MiCHAUD William D. Gray, Ph.D. Laura Adella Bliss, A.M., A. CM. Ellen Parmelee Cook, A.M. Julia Warner Snow, Ph.D. Emma Bates, B.M. . Elizabeth Spaulding Mason, A.B. tLouisA Sewall Cheever, A.M Mary Breese Fuller, A.M. Frances Grace Smith, Ph.D. Josef Wiehr, Ph.D. Margaret Bradshaw, Ph.D. Aida Agnes Heine, A.M. Suzan Rose Benedict, Ph.D. Mary Louise Foster, Ph.D. Inez Whipple Wilder, A.M. Arthur Ware Locke, A.M. Mary Murray Hopkins, Ph.D Wilson Townsend Moog, Mus.B., F.A.G. Harvey Gates Townsend, Ph.D. Mary Della Lewis, A.M. Roy Dickinson Welch, A.B. Esther Lowenthal, Ph.D. Osmond T. Robert, B. es L. Margaret Rooke Arthur Taber Jones, Ph.D. Howard Madison Parshley, Sc.D. Jessie Yereance Cann, Ph.D. Beulah Strong F. Warren Wright, Ph.D. Edna Aston Shearer, Ph.D. Paul Robert Lieder, Ph.D. Robert Withington, Ph.D. Howard Rollin Patch, Ph.D. Anna Elizabeth Miller, A.M. IMary Lilias Richardson, A.M. Herbert DeWitt Carrington, Ph.D Laura Sophronia Clark, A.M. Savilla Alice Elkus, Ph.D. Helen Isabelle Williams Helen Maxwell King, A.M. . Sarah Hook Hamilton Susan Miller Rambo, A.M. Mary Merrow Cook, B.S. Helen Ashhurst Choate, A.M. Myra Melissa Sampson, A.M. . Blanche Goode Elizabeth Richards, A.B. Laura Hatch, Ph.D. Chase Going Woodhouse, A.M. George Senseney Samuel A. Eliot, Jr., A.B. Katharine Shepherd Woodward, A.B. Esther Ellen Dale . Professor of Mathematics Professor of Greek Professor of Latin Professor of French Professor of History Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of Botany Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of EngHsh Associate Professor of Histor ' Associate Professor of Botany Associate Professor of German Associate Professor of Enghsh . ssociate Professor of Geolog ' Associate Professor of Mathematics and Dean of the Class of 1922 Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of Zoology Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Astronomy Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Education Associate Professor of English Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Economics and Sociolog} ' Associate Professor of French Associate Professor of Italian Associate Professor Physics Associate Professor of Zoology Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of Art Associate Professor of Latin Associate Professor of Education Associate Professor of English Associate Professor of English Associate Professor of English Assistant Professor of German Assistant Professor of Latin Assistant Professor of German Assistant Professor of Chemistry Assistant Professor of Philosophy Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Mathematics Assistant Professor of French and Dean of the Class of 1921 Assistant Professor of Botany Assistant Professor of Zooloey Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Assistant Professor of Geology Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology .Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of English Assistant Professor of English Assistant Professor of Music Absent for the second semester fAbsent for the year 20 Rose Frances Egan, A.M. Grace Hazard Conklinc, B.L. Clarence Kennedy, A.M. Frederick Charles Diet?, Ph.D. Roy Richard Denslow, B.S., A.M. Elizabeth M. VVhitmore, A.M. Clara Willoughby Davidson, A.M. Anna Willard Hosford Edward James Woodhouse, LL.B. Ruth Lansing, Ph.D. Elizabeth Valentine Louden, A.B. Theodore H. Post Alice Gleason Julius Drachsler, A.M. . Emily Ledyard Shields, Ph.D. Eleanor Shipley Duckett, Ph.D. Elizabeth Andros Foster, A.M. Helen Weeks Landon, A.B. Elizabeth Avery, Ph. D. Elizabeth Faith Genung, B.S., M.S. A. Louise Webster Rosseter Florence Farnham Olmsted Mary Ella Williams Hannah Louisa Billings, A.B. Anna Adele Chenot, A.M. Margaret Lewis Bailey, Ph.D. Lucy Lord Barrangon, A.M. . Abbie Mabel O ' Keefe. M.D. . fADOLF Ludwig Taylor Starck, Ph.D. Martha Warren Beckwith, Ph.D. Esther Blaisdell, A.B. Katharine Frazier, A.B. Cornelia Ainsworth Montgomery, A.M., B.D fEMMETT Reid Dunn, A.M. tGRETCHEN Todd, A.B. Gladys Amelia Anslow, A.M. . Cornelia A. Yale, LL.D. Amanda Lee Norris Alice Maud Barbour, Ph.D. . Evelyn Gough, A. M. Norah E. Dowell, Ph. D. Susan Raymond A.B. Louise E. W. Adams, A.M. Caroline A. Hosford, A.B. Marguerite Rivaud, Certificat D ' Aptitude IElizabeth Verrier, Certificat des Lettres Ivan T. Gorokhoff . Eline von Borries, A.B. . Helen Macbain Dauncey Roger Huntington Sessions, A.B., Mus.B Eunice Elizabeth Chace, A.B. Helen Joy Sleeper, A.M. Louise Smith, A.M. . Ruth S. Finch, A.M. Florence Didiez David, A.M. . Jeanne Vaillant, Agreg. L C. Pauline Burt, A.M. . Constance Kilham Greene Assistant Professor of English Assistant Professor of English Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of History Assistant Professor of Chemistry Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature Assistant Professor of Spoken English Assistant Professor of Government Assistant Professor of Spanish Assistant Professor of Spoken English Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology Assistant Professor of Latin Assistant Professor of Latin Assistant Professor of Spanish ■Assistant Professor of Spoken English Assistant Professor of English and Spoken English Assistant Professor of Botany Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Music Instructor in Music Instructor in Physics Instructor in French Instructor in German and English Instructor in the History of Art Instructor in Hygiene Instructor in German Instructor in English Instructor in Spoken English Instructor in Music Instructor in Biblical Literature Instructor in Zoology Instructor in Spanish Instructor in Physics Instructor in Spoken English Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in English Instructor on Philosophy and Psychology Instructor in Geology Instructor in Astronomy Instructor in Latin Instructor in Zoology Instructor in French Instructor in French Instructor in Choral Music Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Music Instructor in Zoology Instructor in Music Instructor in Zoology Instructor in Chemistry Instructor in French Instructor in French Instructor in Chemistry Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education fAbsent for the year 21 Elizabeth Frances Rogers, Ph.D. . Ruth Wedgewood Docgett, A.B. Carl Fremont Brand, A.M. Ida Sitler, M.S. ...... Catharine Elizabeth Koch, A.M., M.L.D. Eleanor Ferguson Rambo, Ph.D. Louise Bourgoin, Licenciee es Lettres Germaine Lucie Pierron, Licenciee es Lettres Madeleine Barthelemy, Certificat D ' Aptitude Caroline Elizabeth Jesse, A. L K. Frances Scott, Ph.B., M.D. Annette M. McIntire, ALD. . Edith Hamilton, A.M. Enriqueta Martin Y Ortiz De La Tabla, Licenciada Ella Lauchner Smith, A.M. Ethel M. Staley, A.B. Genevieve Cooney, B.S. . Mildred Burnette Porter, A ' era Marie Gushee. A.B. Louise Williams, A.B., LS. Frank Edward Dow Eva Gove Seeley, A.B. Sara Bache-VViig, A.B., M.S. Agnes Mathilde Zurbrick, B.Ped.U. Florence Pemberton Allen Dorothy Louise Merchant, A.B. Margaret Lucinda Mensel, A.B. Anna Polowetzki Helen Bruce Story, A.M. Priscilla E. Wood, A.B. Thelma Ruth Pljtnam, B.S. Edith Priscilla Butler, A.B. Lucy Agnes McHale, A.B. Raffaelo Piccolli, University of Pi5a William James Short Alexander Graham Bell, Ph.D., M.D., LL.D. N Letras Instructor in History Instructor in Economics and Sociology Instructor in History nstructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Instructor in Botany Instructor in Greek and Latin Instructor in French Instructor in French Instructor in French Instructor in French Instructor in Hygiene Instructor in Hygiene Instructor in English Instructor in Spanish Instructor in Economics and Sociolog ' Instructor in French Instructor in Spoken English Instructor in Physics Instructor in Astronomy Instructor in Zoology Assistant in Music Assistant in Chemistry Assistant in Botany Assistant in Hygiene Assistant in Astronomy Assistant in Geology Reader in History Reader in Art Reader in History Dem onstrator in Chemistry Demonstrator in Chemistry Curator in Zoology Reader in Philosophy and Psychology Visiting Professor Lecturer in Alusic Lecturer in Spoken English 22 Sophie Reiter Acheson 719 Amberson Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Marjorie S. Adler 2625 Highland Avenue Birmingham, Alabama Mary Acuff Ambler Pennsvlvania Elizabeth Akin 185 East State Street Columbus, Ohio Christine Elaine Adams 269 North Warren Avenue Brockton, Massachusetts Caroline Kittrege Allen Perkins Institution Watertown, Massachusetts 24 Viola Avis Aloe 36 Kingsbury Place St. Louis, Missouri Margaret Andrus Negauncc Michigan Sara Francis Anderson 69 Laurence Street Fitchburg, Massachusetts Rosalind Leonore Apple 2106 West Tioga Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ruth Marvin Andrew 1408 Michigan Avenue La Porte, Indiana Jean Mason Archibold 193 Main Street Cohoes, New York 25 LiLLiAs Armour 962 Linda ' ista Avenue Pasadena, California Barbara Woodward Arnold 140 Ascension Street Passaic, New Jersey Mary Martha Armstrong 300 Lexington Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Irene Mildred Aronson 17 Stearns Road Brookline, Massachusetts RozALiA J. Armstrong Prospect Avenue Ingram, Penns ' lvania Catharine Ashe North Adams Massachusetts 26 KATHARINIi IdAI.IA AsHKR 074 Orantrc Street cw Haven, Connecticut Muriel Nichols Backus Thompson Connecticut Louise Atvvater 454 Colorado Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut ft i D k Sarah Louise Bailey Glenwood New Jersey L iv f l 1 Helen Ames Ayer Great Hill Quinc)-, Massachusetts Barbara Frances Ballou 19 Putnam Street West Newton, Massachusetts 27 Ruth Bardwell 20 Carew Street South Hadlev Falls, Massachusetts Ruby May Barry 282 Seymour Avenue Newark, New Jersey Alice Clarice Barnhart 607 Freeman Avenue Kansas City, Kansas Bertha Bassevitch 3 Seyms Street Hartford, Connecticut Helen Louise Barry 5 Fountain Street Haverhill, Massachusetts Elizabeth Morris Bassick 1001 Fairfield Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut 28 Lois Kkith Bateman 16,1 Highland Avenue Somcrville, Massachusetts Alice Mary Beach Marietta Ohio Elizabeth Carolyn Bates 76 South 14th Street Richmond. Indiana Katharine Beard 319 Barnum Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Sarah Josephine Battle 1050 Chilco Street ' ancouver, B. C, Canada Rosalind Bement 51 Henshaw A enue Northampton, Massachusetts 29 ] HiDi.EN Gladys Benjamin 73 Summer Street Claremont, New Hampshire Harriet Morgan Bevin 135 Union Avenue Jamaica, New ork Marion Banks Benjamin Georgetown Connecticut 3 Cecily Elise Blackford 713 West Main Street Lewistown, Montana Mary Adelia Bennett 517 Westview Avenue Gcrmantown, Penns lvania Nina Geraldine Bogart 541 Third Avenue Troy, New York 30 Carolyx Anna Boudo 26 (.rnon Street Northampton, Massachusetts HoRTEXSE BoYCE Hotel Canterbury Boston, Massachusetts Florence Edna Bowman 52 Pleasant Street oburn, Massachusetts Mary Teresa Boyle North Brookfield Massachusetts Grace Shepperson Bowman S454 Albemarle Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Annie Else Breuer 33 Allen Street Buffalo, New York 31 Evelyn Preston Bridger 9S Echo Avenue New Rochelle, New York Dorothy Brooks 407 Boyd Street Norman, Oklahoma Margaret Broad 1417 South Adams Street Fort Worth, Texas Harriet Broughton Dayton Washington Helen Mathilde Broderick Circle Avenue Nashua, New Hampshire Dorothy Houston Brown 456 Lafayette Place Milwaukee, isconsin 32 Elizabeth Brown Mcixselle Street Easton, Pennsylvania 3 Marion Charlotte Brumberg 703 Lafa -ette Avenue Buffalo, New York Katherine Louise Brown 56 Beaver Street Sewickley, Pennsylvania Katharine Adaline Bryan Rochelle Heights New Rochelle, New York Leah Fanny Brown Hotel Browning Grand Rapids, Michigan Mary Wilkinson Buckner 503 King George Avenue Roanoke, Virginia 33 Elizabeth Dean Burke 345 North Main Street Brewer, Maine Martha Evaline Burxham Mechanicsburg Ohio Catherine Louise Burker 25 Chapman Street Orange, New Jersey Muriel Louise Byard 29 Elm Street Ellsworth, Maine Agnes Burnha ' I South Essex Massachusetts Jane Carter Caldwell 167 Algoma Street Oshkosh, Wisconsin 34 Ki.LEN Elizabeth Callahan lladlcy Massacluisetts Helen Carvalho 400 West Eighth Street Plainticld, Xew Jersey M. Gertrude Carder The Princeton Hotel Boston, Massachusetts Helen Landon Cass 152 Elm Street Albnn -, Xew ' ' ork IJoLORES Bennett Carolan Le Roy New ' ork Mary Frances Cathcart 55 Hasell Street Charleston, South Carolina 35 r Mary Louise Chandler 200 Cooper Street Peoria, Illinois Minnie-Brown Clare 3794 University Avenue San Diego, California Francis Chick 2010 Main Street Titusville, Pennsylvania Dorothy M. Clark 45 Owasco Street Auburn, New York Mildred Kemp Chittim 89 Northampton Street Easthampton, Alassachusetts Helen Clark lis Green Street Lynn, Massachusetts 36 Mariox Elizabeth Clark Lisbon Xcw Hampshire Charlotte Cohen 23 Pawtucicet Street Hartford, Connecticut Frieda Henrietta Claussen 469 Laurel Avenue St. Paul, Minnesota Edith Cohen 85 William Street Fall River, Massachusetts Beatrice Elisabeth Cobb 193 Front Street Binghamton, Xew York Helen Janet Cole 7 Paradise Road Greeley, Iowa 37 Elizabeth Coleman 1318 Linden Street Scranton, Penns) lvania D Edith Charlotte Coombe 1568 East 108th Street Cleveland, Ohio Ruth Alexixa Colsten 590 Chenango Street Binghamton, New York Mary Cooper Norfolk Connecticut Harriet George Cook 807 iMiddle Avenue Elyria, Ohio Ann Elizabeth Corlett 3618 Euclid Avenue Cleveland, Ohio 38 Katherixe Livingston Cornvvell 149 Broadway New York, New York 1) Mildred Martha Co er Goshen Indiana Mary Courtenay 1 5 Prospect Avenue Milwaukee, ' isconsin Allace Miriam Cowen 2109 East Second Street Duluth, Minnesota Miriam Louise Courtne;y 98 West Springfield Street Boston, Massachusetts 5). Louise Barringer Cramer 7 East Eighth Street Atlanta, Georgia 39 Anna Caroline Crane 512 West Wabash Avenue Crawfordsville, Indiana Louise Dorothy Crowley 9 Greenleaf Circle Lynn, Massachusetts Caroline Blake Creed 100 Manning Street Nccdham, Massachusetts Geneva Croxford 109 North Main Street Brewer, Maine Dorothy E.merine Criswell 1826 Mt. Union Street Cleveland, Ohio Jeannette Croxford 109 North Main Street Brewer, Maine 40 Ruth Elizabeth Cushman 16 Cortland Street Norwich, New York Mary H. Dangler 212 South Fifth Street Goshen, Indiana Lois Cutter 694 Mammoth Road Dracut, Massachusetts Virginia Bernice Davidson 405 Thirteenth Street, East Salt Lake City, Utah Dorothy Damon Marshfield Hills Massachusetts Virginia Grace Davis 216 Parkwood Boulevard Schenectady, New York 41 Elizabeth Hunt Day 708 Wellman Street IMassillon, Ohio Emma Louise De Garis 211 South Maple Avenue- Hannibal, Missouri Marjorie Georgia Day 49 Main Street Hatfield, Massachusetts Harriet Louise De Huff Huntington Pennsylvania AllLDRED W ' hITNEY DaY 179 Pleasant Street Worcester, Massachusetts ;p Miriam Delano Huntington Long Island :1 42 Katiiarixk Harper Dickson 21 North Main Street Ipswich, Alassachusetts LuciLE May Donmoyer 401 North Eighth Street Lebanon, Pennsylvania AIarion Dight 2109 East Superior Street Duiutii, Minnesota Laura Robinson Donnell 317 West 107th Street New York, New York Nyok-Zoe Doxg 527 est W oochang Road Shanghai, China Margaret Farrell Doran 210 Hoyt Street Buffalo, New York 43 Eleanor Osborne Doremus 3 Beckman Road Summit, New Jersey Agnes Gertrude Dowd 73 Westland Avenue Boston, Massachusetts Sarah Achsah Dorsey 207 Hawthorn Road Roland Park, Maryland Ruth Isobel Dowell Providence Rhode Island Dorothy Laurence Douglass North Haven Connecticut Hildegarde Cray Driscoll 714 Dwight Street Holyoke, Massachusetts 44 Dorothy Dunham 16 Elm Street Ware, Massachusetts Catherine Mathilde Edwards 5601 Woodlawn Avenue Chicago, Illinois Winifred Earl 99 Main Street Binghamton, New York 2 Anne Holton Everett The Orchards Bennington, ' ermont Charlotte Eaton 194 Pond Street Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Marie Josephine Farren 1807 Spring Garden Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 45 Elinor Fears Wolf Hill Gloucester, Massachusetts Ethel Marion Feltmax 401 North Armstrong Avenue Peoria, Illinois Doris Fellows 278 Myrtle Street Manchester, New Hampshire Helen Ward Field 146 Massachusetts Avenue Boston, Massachusetts Miriam Eunice Felt Miller Park Franklin, Pennsylvania Alice Carol Finger 177 34th Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 46 Gertrude Fitzgerald 627 Harrison Street Flint, Michigan Frances Battchelder Flint 401 Mason Street Brooklyn, Xew York Margaret Virginia P ' itzgibbon Montpelier Manor Laurel, Maryland Katherine Harrison Flower 3008 Thirteenth Street X. W. ashington, D. C. Louise Dorothy Flanagan 8 Meadow Lane New Rochelle, New York Valeria Dean Foot Highland Road Rye, Xew York 47 Rose Frances Foreman 5129 Drexel Boulevard Chicago, Illinois Helen Marie Frank 8 Fiske Avenue Winfield, Long Island Henrietta Fort 1702 Nineteenth Street Washington, D. C. Alice Frankforter 1650 Hobart Street Washington, D. C. Pauline Fox 370 Bryant Street Buffalo, Xew York Barbara Macdonald Frantz Battle Road Princeton, Xew Jersey 48 Katherine Hanley Franz 266 Maple Street Holvoke, Massachusetts Harriet Emma Fuce Bay ' iew Gloucester, Maine Ruth Sophie Freeman Honesdale Pennsylvania Gertrude Fuller 8 North Park Street Rockville, Connecticut Ruth Freimuth 1306 East Second Street Duluth, Minnesota . 1 r Madeleine Fuller m IV 2 King ' s Beach Road K. ' - ' - l Lynn, Massachusetts l 49 Dorothy Gale 30 Brown Street Pawtucket, Rhode Island Margaret Lucy Gardner 4131 North Meridian Street Indianapolis, Indiana Alice Florence Gardner River Road Beloit, Wisconsin Dorothy Jane Gates Crossett Arkansas EsTELLE Allison Gardner 930 Riverside Drive New York, New York Frances Carroll Gee Whitehall Michigan 50 Cornelia Dorcas Gill 1425 Northampton Street Ilolyoke, Massachusetts Sophy Goldberg 120 Windsor Avenue Hartford, Connecticut Helen an Riper Gill Alamaroneck New York Dorothy Gorton 3700 Charlotte Street Kansas City, Missouri Haxn-ah Tyrol Goldberg 47 Clark Street Hartford, Connecticut Esther Gould Riverside Illinois 51 Katherine Montague Graham 645 Summit Street Winston-Salem, North Carolina Belle Gruskin 508 North Jefferson Street Kittanning, Pennsylvania Agnes Campbell Grant Andover Massachusetts D Margaret Benjamin Gutman 142 West 87th Street New York, New York y Helen Graves 230 North Street Buffalo, New York Mildred Louise Hackett 38 Lynwood Place New Haven, Connecticut 52 Helen Hadley 147 Forest Street Bellingham, W ' ashington 2) Emily Marind Hamill 71 Lancaster Av enue Buffalo, New York Elizabeth Louise Haerle 1449 Pennsylvania Street North Indianapolis, Indiana Marion Livingston Hancock East Hardwick Vermont Helen Hallock 2060 Cornell Road Cleveland, Ohio Ruth Harden Hamburg New Jersey 53 Helen Yorke Hardinge 912 Buenna Park Terrace Chicago, Illinois Jane Hastings St. Marys Penns lvania Katharine Hartwell 962 Osceola Avenue St. Paul, Minnesota Jane Lois Hastings Cheshire Massachusetts Ellen Panet Hastings Hasbrouck Heights New Jersey Marjorie Quay Hause Bellevue Park Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 54 Ruth Mildred Havey 43 Mendum Street, Roslindele Boston, Massachusetts Florence Dorothy Helman 1222 Korth Third Street Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Miriam Helen Hawkins 910 Delaware Avenue Wilmington, Delaware Allena May Hendry 23 Franklin Street Claremont, New Hampshire iij Virginia Kuhn Heinlein Bridgeport Ohio Martha Hersey 1S9 Forest Street Melrose, Massachusetts 55 Marian Synyer Hill 312 North Euclid Avenue Oak Park, Illinois Margaret Hirsh 1213 Stratford Avenue Melrose Park, Pennsylvania Grace Hiller 1517 Spruce Street Philadelphia, Pennsj ' lvania LiLLiE Hester Hollingshead 1509 Jefferson Street Boise, Idaho Helen Blake Hine 43 Fernwood Road Summit, New Jersey Jeanette Rule Holloway 223 Upper Mountain Avenue Montclair, New Jersey 56 Virginia Henry Holt 324 East Main Street Staunton, Virginia Isabella Jane Hosack Carnegie Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Anna Hooker 38 Academy Street Arlington, Massachusetts D Mary Wallace Howgate 111 Elmer Avenue Schenectady, Xew York Isabel Allene Hoopingarner 515 West Marion Street Elkhart, Indiana Helen Underwood Hoyt 195 South Prospect Street Burlington, Vermont 57 Ruth Hubbard 2244 Meridian Street Indianapolis, Indiana Elizabeth Caroline Humphrey Pittsfield Massachusetts Ruth Christine Hubbard 801 South Lincoln Street Spokane, Washington Katherine Hunt 10 Easterly Avenue Auburn, New York Ina Harriet Hughes 461 Shoshone Place Spokane, Washington 3 SiLOMA E. Hunt Windover Farm Hamburg, New York 58 Charis TiTHiLL Hutchinson 25y Sanford Avenue Flushing. New York Mildred Mae Johnson 142 Alanhattan Avenue New York, New York Helen Jack East Milton Massachusetts Constance La ' anda Jones 715 Miami Avenue LaFayette, Indiana A. Allen Johnson 8 East Thirtieth Street New York, New York Carmen Sylva Kahn 901 West Broadway Sedalia, Missouri 59 Rosalie M. Kahn 626 East Rich Street Columbus, Ohio Elizabeth Peabody Kambour Charlemont Massachusetts Emily Amanda Kalbach 1256 Perkiomen Avenue Reading, Pennsylvania Rachael Brodell Keeney Somersville Connecticut Margaret Mary Kaliher Lenox Massachusetts Nora Stark Kelley Greenup Kentucky 60 Bri.va Hirshfield Kessel 695 Auburn Avenue Buffalo, Xew York Ruth Kirkpatrick 452 Sixteenth Street Bellingham, ashington Katharixe Kimball 15 Deering Street Portland, Maine Emily Lormore Knight 59 Ca -uga Street Seneca Falls, Xew York Fraxcisca Kixg oodstock ermont Helex Kxight The Canterbury, 14 Charlesgate, West Boston, Massachusetts 61 Isabel Brandon Kron Kittanning Pcnnsvlvania Ruth Cecelia Lagasse 6 Brown Street Worcester, Massachusetts Marion Oller Kron 303 Glen Road, Welstor Groves St. Louis, Missouri Mary Eaton Lambert 2279 Elm Street Manchester, Xew Hampshire Eleanor Muriel Krusen 19 South Maple Avenue East Orange, Xew Jersey Margaret Barclay Lane Winter Haven Florida 62 Neva Hope Lange 1344 Locust Street Dubuque, Iowa Harriet Pratt Lattix Corning New York Ruth Langmuir South Broadway Hastings-on-Hudson, New York Olive Ellen Lawrence North Branch New Jersey LuciLE May Larson 34 Mull Avenue Akron, Ohio Jeanette Lawson 15 Oak Terrace Newton Highlands, Massachusetts 63 Marjory Price Lee 667 Highland Avenue Newark, New Jersey Laura Clotaire Ley 236 East Walnut Street Titusville, Pennsylvania Marion Leonard 390 Commonwealth Avenue Boston, Massachusetts Elizabeth Bates Liffler Riverbank Court Cambridge, Massachusetts Edith Mathilde Levy 19 West 90th Street New York, New York Mary Lincoln 1911 East 97th Street Cleveland, Ohio 64 Marguerite Burtner Livingston (t3 Columbus Avenue Frccport, Long Island Marjorie Bowex Lord 46 College Street Hanover, New Hampshire Katherine Meany Logan .i8 05 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Florence Sarah Lovenheim 122 First Avenue Gloversville, New York Dorice Marie Lord 215 Haverhill Street Lawrence, Massachusetts Marion Anna Llndagen 94 Graham Street Leominster, Massachusetts 65 Jdella Lyman 2902 Euclid Place Los Angeles, California Jessie Penelope McCabe 1929 Knox Avenue South Minneapolis, Minnesota Mabel Swett Lyman 2902 Euclid Place Los Angeles, California Ruby Isabelle McCallum 12S2 West 105th Street Cleveland, Ohio i I Carol Royce MacBurney 97 Gifford Avenue Jersey City, New Jersey J) Elizabeth McCausland 1403 Vassar Avenue Wichita, Kansas 66 Alice Stevens McClary Windsor Vermont Beth MacDuffie 182 Central Street Springfield, Massachusetts Agnes Elizabeth AIcCoach 1218 Sixth Avenue Huntington, West Virginia Marjorie Middleton McKay 206 Rutgers Street Rochester, New York Mary Frances McConnaughy 1108 Portland Street Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Marguerite Miller McKee 275 West 140th Street New York, New York 67 Vera Ruth MacKen 62 Westerbelt Avenue New Brighton, New York Marie Josephine McMillan 885 Park Avenue New York City Heather Elise McKinnell 139 West Eighth Street Bayonne, New Jersey Gertrude Gerry Mann 189 Marrett Street Westbrook, Maine Helen deGraff McMillan 257 VVarburton Avenue ' onkers, New York Margaret Manning 26 Beacon Hill Avenue Lynn, Massachusetts 68 Mary Louise Marlev 4 Logan Street Lawrence, Massachusetts Cordelia Beatrice Merriam 121 River Street North Adams, Massachusetts Margaret Marsh 400 West 153rd Street Xew York Citv Grace Converse Merrill Manchester-by-the-Sea Massachusetts Jl ' dith Matlack Hotel Buckminster Boston, Massachusetts Kathryn Lois Moore 11129 Euclid Avenue Cleveland, Ohio 69 Helen Elizabeth Moriarty 177 AUyn Street Holvoke, Massachusetts Madeline Murphey 2418 Second Avenue Spokane, Washington Mary Rosalie Morris 6716 Thomas Boulevard Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Eleanor Murphy 345 Bluehills Parkway Mattapan, Massachusetts Norma Hulda Mueller 232 South Main Street Salt Lake Citv, Utah Marian Hiller Myers 311 South Sixth Street Camden, New Jersey 70 Glenna Marjorie Newhall 1017 Butternut Street S ' racuse, New York Florence Margaret O ' Connor 10 Broad Street VVaterford, New York Virginia Warner Noel 406 Lindon Avenue Oak Park, Illinois Margaret Long O ' Keefe 21 Montague Street Turners Falls, Massachusetts Marguerite Isabel Noyes 519 Third Avenue North Troy, New York HiLDEGARDE JoSEPHINE OlSON 102 Prospect Street Athol, Massachusetts 71 Ui.A Annie Orr ershire ' crmont Isabel Neale Painter 525 North McKean Street Kittanning, Penns ' lvania Helen Mary Osborne 548 Summer Avenue Newark, New Jersey Charlotte Isabel Parker 1883 Elm Street Manchester, New Hampshire Dorothy Louise Overton 529 Lincoln Street New Britain, Connecticut Frances Harriet Sargent Parker 560 Lincoln Avenue Portsmouth, New Hampshire 11 Thelma Alice Parkinson 702 Wood Street incland, New Jersey F ' rances Maude Ensor Patten 283 ' illage Avenue Rockville Center, Long Island Dorothy Partridge 5188 Cabanne Avenue St. Louis, Missouri Catharine Patton 261 Franklin Street Xewton, Massachusetts ' i IAN Partridge 5188 Cabanne Avenue St. Louis, Mis.souri J Mary Peck 62 Maple Street Hornell, New York 73 I ' YoRENCE Wilson Penfold 5456 Kenmore Avenue Chicago, Illinois Elizabeth Ingham Perkins 64 Massasoit Street Northampton, Massachusetts Margaret Penny 54 Hodge Avenue Buffalo, New York Eliza Brundige Perry Fairfield Connecticut Margaret Hill Peoples 39 Auburn Street Brookline, Massachusetts Helen Lucille Perry 74 Valley Road Montclair, New Jersey 74 Hei.kn Pierce New Albany Indiana Vera Prentice 200 VVest 86th Street New York, New York Ruth E. Piotti 98 Melville Avenue Dorchester, Massachusetts Elizabeth Hoyt Prescott 3097 Fairmount Boulevard Cleveland, Ohio Elizabeth M. Powers Evanston Illinois Antoinette Price 5125 Pulashi Avenue Germantown, Pennsylvania 75 I ' .STHER PuRRINGTON Ha ' denvi!le Massachusetts J) Alice Marjorie Rathbun 119 West Street Mansfield, Massachusetts Janet Putnam 315 Washington Boulevard I ' rbana, Illinois Jessica Raymond 956 Beaver Street Sewickley, Pennsylvania I! Mary Clarissa Radel 202 Washington Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Margaret Noyes Reah 66 Phillips Avenue Beach BlufF, Massachusetts I !■ 76 Helen IVIarjorie Reece 26 Abbott Street Greenfield, Massachusetts 1| Carol Margaret Rice 82 Palmer Avenue, West Detroit, Michigan '  Constance Tyler Reed 35 Riverview Road Brighton, Massachusetts J) Elizabeth Rice 38 Kensington Avenue Northampton, Massachusetts Marion Adams Reynolds 13 Everett Avenue Winchester, Massachusetts Stella Rice Friendship New York 77 Dorothy Richards Glens Falls New York J Vivian Laura Richtmyer 305 Eighth Avenue Brooklyn, New York Helen Porter Richards 19 Prospect Avenue Wollaston, Massachusetts Helen Katherine Rights 127 Third Avenue, East Roselle, New Jersey Helen B. Richardson 1601 Nebraska Street Sioux City, Iowa Louise Ritsher 718 Church Street Bcloit, Wisconsin 78 Jessie King Roberson 97 West Eighth Street Bayonne, New Jersey Mildred Roe 406 East Avenue Charlotte, North CaroHna Gertrude Robinson 190 Summer Street Maiden, Massachusetts Margaret Elizabeth Roekel 1234 Ashland Avenue Zanesville, Ohio i i i w j w ¥ Olive Rockwell 315 Fifteenth Street Honesdale, Pennsylvania h Leslie Rosemoxd 452 East Rich Street Columbus, Ohio 79 Denise Rotival 88 Me S Lazene Paris, France Augusta Ladd Rubin 156 Harvard Street Springfield, Massachusetts Margaret Row 2027 North Delaware Street Indianapolis, Indiana 7. Marian Rubins 2008 Second Avenue, South Miineapolis, Minnesota Esther May Roy 907 Armory Street Springfield, Massachusetts Dorothy Ruggles 384 University Place Rochester, New York 80 F.VELYN RuSSE 1360 Peabody Avenue Memphis, Tennessee Helene Marie Sands Melrose Highlands Massachusetts Sadie Saffian 1016 West Girard Avenue Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Katherine Wildea Sawyer 96 Jason Street Arlington, Massachusetts Mary Lucretia Salmon 7 Montague Street Turners Falls, Massachusetts Vesta Spurr Sawyer VVhitinghani Vermont 81 Kathleen Grace Say Hamilton Hotel St. Louis, Missouri Hazel Alzador Scofield 145 Greenwich Avenue New Haven, Connecticut VVlLHELMINA SmITH ScHENCK R. F. D. No. 3 Princeton, New Jersey AIarjorie Scudder Marinette Wisconsin Elizabeth Wintersteen Schneider Bartow Florida Marion Adelaide Selden 42 School Street Andover, Massachusetts 82 n ' icTORiA Emily Sellstrom fill Jefferson Street Jamestown, New York Inez Dell SHAR L ■ 830 Ninth Street Salt Lake City, Utah RiTH Elizabeth Seltzer 1217 Mohautongo Street Pottsville, Pennsvlvania HI ' Darthea May Sharpli - 1309 Terry AveiuiL Seattle, Washington Mary Melita Seymour 64 South Street Auburn, Xew York Amy Tupper Sheffield 1771 Logan Avenue, South Minneapolis, Minnesota 83 Hilda Gant Shepard 205 Gardner Road Brookline, Massachusetts Dorothy Glynes Skiitii 20 Westland Street Worcester, Massacluisctts Mary Adalixe Shick LaPorte Indiana Elizabeth Copeland Smith Middleboro Massachusetts Mildred Leona Simpson 2306 Delaware Avenue Wilmington, Delaware Ella Marion Smith 81 Pearl Street Somerville, Masschusetts 84 I rances Adele AIarshall Smith 64 Bryant Street Xew Brunswick, New Jersey :s Mary-Stuart Snyder 120 West 22nd Street Minneapolis, Minnesota Helexe June Smith 67 Maple Avenue Maplewood, Xew Jersey Louise Scheffer Sommers 5 Crocus Hill St. Paul, Minnesota Ruth Evangeline Smith 52 Church Street White Plains, New York Edna Marion Soui.e Foxcraf: Maine 85 Helen Jane Stafford North Shore Hotel Evanston, IlHnois Edna Naomi Stewart Webster Massachusetts Edith Margaret Stein 5136 University Avenue Chicago, IlUnois Dorothy Sti.mson 75 Kensington Avenue Northampton, Massachusetts Priscilla Stetson 184 Main Street Middlcboro, Massachusetts Violet Alleyn Storey 1242 Dean Street Brookl) ' n, New York 86 Edith Lorraine Slllivan 295 Walnut Street Holyoke, Massachusetts JosEPHixE Gordon- Taylor 137 South Scoville Avenue Oak Park. IHinois Jessie Sumner ' Milford Illinois Ida Teller 1715 Green Street Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Helen Elizabeth Tappen 810 Grand Street Jersey City, New Jersey Charlotte Louise Thomas 420 West Ninth Street Erie, Penns lvania 87 Alice Wilmarth Thompson 24 South Portland Avenue Brooklyn, New York Ruth Thompson 549 Hight Street Fall River, Massachusetts Katharine Elizabeth Thompson The Wyoming Washington, D. C. Virginia Thompson Manhasset, Long Island New York Katharine Sara Thompson 55 Chestnut Street Lewistown, Pennsylvania Mary Elizabeth Tilson 803 Wood Street Texarkana, Texas 88 Constance Lincoln Torrey 263 Main Street Easthampton, Massachusetts T) Eleanor May Tucker 343 Ashburnham Street Fitchburg, Massachusetts Elizabeth VVadsworth Trine 303 West State Street Marshalltown, Iowa Lorraine Tuthill 6514 Yale Avenue Chicago, IlHnois DoRRis Elizabeth Tucker Peabody Massachusetts Elizabeth Haven Upton 20 Park iew Street Roxbury, Massachusetts 89 LisBETH Marshall Urban 71 ' ernon Street Hartford, Connecticut Helen Frances Veeder 4900 Greenwood Avenue Chicago, Illinois Harriet Florence van Zelm 8 Bancker Place New Rochelle. New York J Elsa ' ieh 167S Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, Massachusetts Elizabeth Vardell 4508 Lakeside Drive Dallas, Texas Helen Hunt Walker 1605 East Madison Street Seattle, ' ashington 90 ()li e Louise W ' all 411 Kast South Temple Street Salt Lake City, Utah Julia Chapman Warner 942 Michigan Avenue Evanston, Illinois Isabel Wallis 255 North Heights Avenue Youngstown, Ohio Marjorie Adele Warren 245 Vassar Street Rochester, New York Isabelle Carolyn Ward Care of Miss Julia Nutt Natchez, Mississippi Mildred Anna Warren 596 Benson Street Camden, New Jersey 91 Frances Waterman 25 Norwood Avenue Summit, New Jersey Dorothy Titus Wells Box 626 Fall River, Massachusetts Marion Wallace Webb 600 North Euclid Avenue Oak Park, Illinois Eleanor Adelaide Wells Warehouse Point Connecticut Bessie Irene Weibel 664 West Ninth Street Erie, Pennsylvania Edna Welsh 263 Bleecker Street Gloversville, New York 92 Alice Mildred White 49 Elmwood Avenue East Aurora, New York Lois Whitney St. Cloud Minnesota Barbara White 3 Federal Court Salem, Massachusetts 3 Lucy Preston Wickham 32 Summit Street Norwalk, Ohio Carol Whiting 282 Broadway Winter Hill, Massachusetts P ' annye Birch W ieder 6 Lexington Road Hartford, Connecticut 93 Virginia Wiley 1019 36th Avenue, North Seattle, Washington Iris Belle Williams Bane Alassachusetts Elisabeth Winslow Williams Brooklyn Connecticut Ruth Hammond Willian West Hartford Connecticut Florence Elizabeth Williams 66 Warner Street Hudson, Massachusetts Mary Knox Winton 1509 East First Street Duluth, Minnesota 94 Margaret Loring Wirt 23 Prescott Street Brookline, Massachusetts Elizabeth Griffith W ' yandt Abilene Kansa Anne Washington Wooldridge Wooldridge Tennessee ' iRGiNiA Antoinette Yates 1234 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, New York Ruth Hunt ' orcester Greenwood Lane Waltham, Massachusetts Arva Elizabeth Yeagley 820 Park Avenue South Bend, Indiana 95 Marian Yetmax !■ rcfhold i ' W Jersey Marion Grace Zimmerman 341 South Eighth Street Lebanon, Penns} ' lvania HORTENSE ZaCHARIAS 938 Third Avenue Columbus, Georgia Henrietta Lydia Zollman 5522 Kenmore Avenue Chicago, Illinois Photographs of the following omitted by request: VViLMA Dorothy Calder 1 25 Merriam Street . — J- Lexington, Massachusetts Barbara Foster Edge wood Claremont, New Hampshire 96 iForm r ilrmb rH Adams, Leta McLendon Agler, Katherine Alderman, Violet Irene Alexander, Susan Armistead Anderson, Ida Buena Anderson, La Vivian Violetta Austin, Oneita Loraine Avakian, Araxe Azerad, Clara Baker, Anna Frances Beasley, Margaret Proctor Beckett, Alice Beiderbecke, Lutie Seiffert Benjamin, Solene Hazel Benoit, May Cecilia Best, Alice Merrill Bice, Myrtle Elizabeth BicKNELL, Winifred Clara BixBY, Margaret Winslow Blanchard, Genevieve Boswell, Dorothy Roland Boucher, Marguerite Allen Boyle, Margaret Eleanor Brower, Angelyn Bruce, Jeannette Buck, Dorothy Burns, Jessie M. Burrill, Katherine Susanna Burroughs, Miriam Catherine Calder, Nancy Hyslop Canning, Jessie Frances Cary, Bettie Buckner Chamberlain, Clara Adaline Chapman, Mary Eleanor Choate, Marjorie Sanford Choate, Shirley Clark, Lillian Martin Clarke, Elizabeth Gibson Connoll y, Kathleen Dustin Cramer, Lillian Beach Crowley, Margaret Phoebe Cummings, Miriam Davis, Emma Louise Dean, Rhoda Deemer, Catherine Jane Dobbins, Marjorie Drury, Mae Kingsley Eaton, Flora Marion Emison, Susan Rabb Emmons, Edith Bertha Emrick, Gladys Ewan, Ruth Osborn Farmer, Susie Bartlett Ferguson, Ruth Fischer, Grace Eleanor FisK, Margaret Phillips Fleming, Frances Margaret FoRKER, Mary Matthews Forsythe, Ruth Marie Eraser, Gladys Genevra Funk, Dorothy Kathryn Funk, Rey Leland Gast, Mildreth Marie Godchaux, Lillian Grant, Dorothy Celia Greenhalgh, Dorothy Dodd Gridley, Pearl Farwell Griffin, Margaret Elliott Grimes, Helen Elizabeth Gross, Harriet Butler Guggenheimer, Clara Espen Hall, Faith Pearson Hamburg, Evelyn Hilda Handy, Edna Dilworth Hankemeyer, Nathalie Wilhelmina. Hanley, Helen Grace Harwood, Elizabeth Stone Hazlett, Hettie List Heile, Frances Wynn Hill, Ruth Hilson, Maxine Eleanor Hitchings, Dorothy Drew Hoard, Annie Laurie Hoffman, Mary Risser HoovEN, Sara Cox Horner, Emma Chapman Humphrey, Frances Millicent Huston, Mary Elizabeth HuTTiG, Elizabeth Hyatt, Phebe Campbell Irwin, Winifred Frances Jackson, Dorothy Gale 98 iFormrr iHrmbers — (QlmtttnupJii) James, Alice Fonda Job, Helen Cordella Jones, Jessamine Barbara JuDsoN, Josephine Voorhes King, Elizabeth Trueman Kluepfel, AIargaret Henrietta Kroll, Pearle Laxdsberg, Ethelwyn Elizabeth Earner, Isabella Wilson Leary, Emma Brenan Lee, Ruth Evelyn Lewin, Pauline Lewis, Sara AIuriel Liebmann, Kathryn Josephine Long, Marie Pauline Lownes, Sarah Margaret Lynch, Helen Theresa McAllaster, Elizabeth Jane McCann Helen McCarthy, Anna Mary McClure, Eleanor Louise McIlravy, IVLarion Louise McIlvaine, Priscilla Mackay, Winifred Helen MacKenzie, Maryanne Muriel McLallen, Frances Nickey MacLean, AIarguerite Rebecca Maltby, Virgene Sutherland Martin, Gertrude Belle Martin, Gertrude May Martin, Julia Martinez, Miriam Laura Marvin, AIarjorie Masten, Gertrude Elizabeth ALvther, AIildred Agnes Merrill, Ariana Pomeroy Moore, Lucy Morgans, Dorothy Preston Morrow, AIary Ethel AloRSE, Hilda Morton, ALaude Jones Mosely, Dorothy AiuLLANE, AL RGARET AlBERTA MULLIKIN, KaTHERINE FrEEMAN AIus, Helene M. Nauss, Dorothy Neal, Maude Laulani Keohokalain Nelson, Doris Newhall, Frances Ella Nyman, Gladys Elizabeth Odell, Elizabeth Carolyn Oldham, Anne Orbison, AIary Cook Painter, Helen AIaria Perkins, Anne Goodwyn Peterson, Nanette Elida Pontius, Elizabeth Powers, Beatrice Powers, AIamie Branch Proctor, Hester Elizabeth Pruemers, Janet Elizabeth Ranney, AIargaret Jennette Reeve, Louis Rettenmeyer, Eva AIatilda Rhoades, AIildred Bernice RiFENBURGH, GuiNEVERE GrACE Roberts, Helen AIar Roberts, Sarah Whitaker Rollins, Amoret Pierce Schaefer, Thea ScHROLL, Laura Elizabeth Seelye, Barbara Seip, Hilda Sessions, Grace AIcCall Sherrill, Edith Loraine Shire, Sara Ruth Simpson, Frances Hartwell Smart, Dorothy Hathaway Smith, Carol Smith, Eloise Clarke Smith, Gertrude Edgerton Smith, Heather AIary Eleanor Smith, Helen AIary Smith, Josephine AIorton Snyder, Libbie SoLT, Helen Sparks, AIargaret AIaylin Spencer, AIiriam Isabel Sprout, AIary Lucilla Stambaugh, AIargaret Henry Stearns, AIartha Jane Stephenson, Susan Cramer Stocking, Dorothy Adeline Sullivan, Mary 99 JFormpr Mtmbns — ((Slotttinued) Swain, Edith Adair SwANSON, Agnes Louise Tait, Mildred Emma Taylor, Margaret Anne Taylor, Ruth Greenwood Taylor, Sylvia Tebbetts, Helen Beaumont Thomas, Jessie Beatrice Thompson, Lorrain Edith Triest, Gertrude Helene Tuttle, Elizabeth Mary-Affa Tye, Ethel Tyler, Beatrice Elsie Van Dyne, Vitula Moorman VoLK, Adele Elizabeth Van Deesten, Viola Minnie Anna Wallace, Irene Charlotte Weichsel, Elma Frances Weldon, Anne May Wells, Mary AIanier White, Clarice Madolyn White, Millicent Russell White, Rosalind Louise Whitaker, ALarion Bresee Wiener, Helen Willard, Helen Heitshu Wilson, Abbie Anne OODRUFF, ' lOLA WeBSTER Anna iJlnrnspg t agra iRullt l rnrtpttp Mt n ilennir ilay iiIon;o AUrp IContBP Sualjtnn IN 101 Ea 1921 Hey diddle diddle We find it a riddle Your greatest charm to tell. We can ' t relate, we frankly state, The things that you do so well. In Spring you triumph at the Sings; In writing you amaze us; Dramatics too, and Allen Field Are quite enough to daze us. Advice you gave to Twenty-Three, When at the train you met her. You Froliced with Eclat, they say, Your Prom sounds even better. With nary a fear We leave you here. You ' ll take our place quite well. But hey diddle diddle We find it a riddle Your greatest charm to tell. 102 1 IP r km ' I HH 103 1922 At Chapel no one seems to know How big you are, dear Twenty-Two, But though your number ' s very great. It ' s not one half so great as you. In everything you seem adept, Perhaps in stunts excel the most; ' Alice in Wonderland on ice Not many classes dare to boast. You did your bit to help the Fund; Your show on Rally Day has proved That baby sisters can excel The ones by wisdom far removed. 104 I 105 1923 When first you left Ma ' s apron string And came to Smith to dwell, You passed examinations And found you ' d done quite well. Survivals of the fittest? Yes. But then in spite of keenness, Your advisors let you understand Your minds were full of greenness. To Ma, indeed you fain would go To whisper all your sadness, But quarantine, alas, came on! Itjseemed the end of gladness. But were you sad. ' ' Why, not a bit. You saved up every dime, And raised your quota with the rest. The Fund took all your time. 106 107 I i 109 § t«b nt nu rnmFttt To those of us who have been here during the past four years, Smith has undergone many a change. Whether it is that we, a small community, have unconsciously reflected the attitude of the wide, wide world, it is hard to say. At any rate it would almost seem that the changes that have been brought about are the result of a certain growth, a new impetus of thought which has awakened in us a clearer sense of individual responsi- bility. This has manifested itself in many ways, and in none so well as in the present system of Student Government. For so long a time little interest was shown in such an organization. In the first place, no one seemed quite to understand its inner workings. It was shrouded in mystery! Although Council supposedly represented the Student Body, and worked to the best of its ability toward that end, it really did not accomplish that purpose. Too few had a voice in affairs, and we came to look upon it as a body whose chief function was to be in league with the Faculty for the sole purpose of punishing miserable offenders. Because we felt that this was so, the tendency was to avoid coming in contact with it. Far-sighted members of the college, realizing that the system was not altogether ideal, put their thinking caps on to solve the question. Self-government was discussed in all its phases. Most of us, it must be confessed, were not very receptive at first. We were afraid that we would have to assume the roles of spies. But gradually we understood that it was not so much casting the mote from our brother ' s eye as it was attending to our own little motes, and we came to view the matter in a much saner and more enlightened manner. Who can forget the tedious House Meetings of yore, where we sat silently around, listening to the dry reports of our House Presidents. The chance we now get to express our views certainly livens things up. Shall there be Sunday motoring. — the ten o ' clock rule. These questions are a matter of legislation, and public opinion has been a power in itself. When the consensus of opinion is known, the House of Representatives — an outgrowth of the old system of House Presidents — submits certain recommendations to the Student Council for consideration. In the latter is vested the executive power, but nothing becomes a bill unless it is declared such by the Conference Committee. This is entirely a feature of this year, and is composed of the Administrative Officers of the College, five members from Council, and four from the House of Representatives. These act on all recommenda- tions referred to them by the House or the Council. If the question is approved, it becomes a bill, but in case of veto, the recommendation is returned with reasons for the decision. In this way, not only does the Faculty have a hand in forming new laws, but the students themselves have every chance possible to assist in legislation. Lest it be supposed that miserable offenders go scotfree, the old Judicial Board still flourishes, but no longer is it a grim specter in our lives, for the rules that are made, really express the opinions of the Student Body itself. 110 It ' s all very well to theorize, but the question to consider is this: Has the organiza- tion been put on a practical working basis? Obviously, it has not accomplished everything it set out to do, but as Browning said only too truly, ' ' A man ' s reach must exceed his grasp or what ' s a Heaven for? In striving toward an ideal, the weakness of the flesh certainly ■ asserts itself, but even in a short time, much has been accomplishe d. The length of Christ- mas recess has been permanently fixed at sixteen days. No longer is there a hit-or-miss method of canvassing. Instead of all sorts and conditions of subscription cards being thrust upon us at all times of the year, a systematic arrangement has been made whereby it can be decided at once into what thing one most wants to put one ' s meager allowance. No longer do we waste away until Glee Club or Prom presents itself, for Saturday night dances have been established. These have been most successfully run, contrary to expectations, and the co-operation of the students has been splendid. Speaking of dances, the manage- ment of the Amherst chaperonage has been entirely delegated to student committees — a thing unheard of in the days of long ago. Those of us who struggled in vain to climb up dreadful ropes, and breathed a sigh of relief when gym days were over, found we had the familiar blue serge affairs on our hands. The chances were that we knew no one would relieve us of the precious burdens, but now there has been established a gym suit agency. Aside from that the fire rules have been revised, the note-room reorganized. It had been taboo to take light cuts for movies, but when the beloved stock company departed and left Charlie Chaplin to hold the floor, we were given permission to remain at the Academy as before. Then, too, the number of light cuts has been increased. These are but a few things that have been accomplished. Constantly, new bills and recommendations are brought up, and along with new liberties has come better sense of citizenship. Individual responsibility has been repeatedly empha- sized and the aim throughout has been to control student action by public opinion based on a concious sense of community responsibility rather than by definite rules and regulations. Ill o Z P o U § mttl| (ttnllrgr (ttnuurtl Elizabeth Wyandt President Elizabeth Wyandt (Enunrtl JHrmbcra SENIOR YEAR Elizabeth Wyandt jMargaret Wirt Mabel Lyman Barbara Frantz Katharine S. Thompson JUNIOR YEAR Mabel Lyman Barbara Frantz Virginia Heinlein SOPHOMORE YEAR Elizabeth Wyandt Gertrude Robinson FRESHMAN YEAR Alice Best 113 i BUBt 0f S pr a ntattu B OFFICERS Carol Rice President Margaret Marsh Vice-President Carol Rice Mary Acuff Marjorie Adler Sara Anderson Barbara Arnold Lillias Armour Jeanette Croxford Lois Cutter Dorothy Douglass Anne Everett Alice Finger Rose Foreman Estelle Gardner Katherine Graha m Agnes Grant Hester Hollingshead MEMBERS Virginia Holt Char is Hutchinson Ina Hughes Edith Jacobs Margaret Kaliher Katherine Logan Margaret Marsh Jessie McCabe Dorothy Overton Frances Parker Dorothy Partridge Helen Pierce Elizabeth Prescott Carol Rice Elizabeth Rice Dorothy Richards Helen Richards Louise Ritsher Marion Selden Emily Sellstrom Hilda Shepard Ruth Smith Jane Stafford Priscilla Stetson Josephine Taylor Helen Walker Frances Waterman Bessie Weibel Eleanor Wells 114 House of Representatives i mM f rmi ntB 13ir, 1913, 1919 Ruth Andrew RozALiA Armstrong Florence Barnum hortense boyce Mary Buckner Lillian Clark Edith Coombe Allace Cowen Jeanette Croxford Mary Dangler Katharine Dickson Marion Dight Barbara Foster Madeleine Fuller Marind Hamill Jane Hastings Mary Hollingshead Edith Levy Ruth Langmuir Marjory Lord Ruby McCallum Hester Proctor Constance Reed Eva Rettenmeyer Carol Rice Helen Rights Gertrude Robinson Ruth Smith Violet Storey Eleanor Tucker Marion Webb Alice White 115 for Olhnattan Mork Barbara Frantz SENIOR OFFICERS President Barbara Frantz Vice-President, Carol Rice JUNIOR OFFICERS Treasurer, Margaret W irt Chairman of Extension Committee, Esther Gould Chairman of People ' s Institute Committee, Ruth Kirkpatrick SOPHOMORE OFFICERS Secretary, Virginla Yates STUDENT VOLUNTEERS Alice Barnhart Laura Ley Nyok-Zoe Dong Antoinette Price 116 R Q- ■jr ' ; % k5 ' |r,| K| %g JUi m ' r RK K ' ' 1 LJ| g ' . C A. C II. OlabtnFt Chairmen of Departments and Committees Missionary Department Religious Service Consumer s League Membership Bible Study Community Service Association Social .... Leader of Student Volunteer Band LiLLiAS Armour Katharine Kimball Marion Webb Carol Rice Marjory Lord Edith Coombe Jessie McCabe Laura Ley Left college 117 §lui nl AbutB ra Viola Aloe Caroline Allen Sara Anderson Jean Archibold Lillias Armour Mary Martha Armstrong Barbara Arnold Katharine Asher Bertha Bassevitch Elizabeth Bassick Lois Bateman Elizabeth Bates Katharine Beard Marion Benjamin Alice Best Winifred Bicknell Carolyn Boudo hortense boyce Annie Breuer Margaret Broad Katharine Bryan Mary Buckner Louise Burker Helen Cass Mary Louise Chandler Minnie-Brown Clare Helen Clark Anne Corlett Allace Cowen Louise Cramer Louise Crowley Jeannette Croxford Virginia Davis Katharine Dickson Laura Donnell Dorothy Dunham Charlotte Eaton Miriam Felt Helen Field Gertrude Fitzgerald Katherine Flower Rose Foreman Mary Forker Barbara Foster Barbara Frantz Ruth Freimuth Harriet Fuge EsTELLE Gardner Dorothy Gates Helen Gill Esther Gould Katherine Graham Agnes Grant Helen Graves Margaret Gutman Mildred Hackett Elisabeth Haerle Marion Hancock Ruth Hardin Ellen Hastings Jane Hastings Virginia Heinlein Dorothy Helman Allena Hendry A ARiAN Hill Grace Hiller Helen Hine Hester Hollingshead Isabel Hoppingarner Mary Howgate Elizabeth Humphrey Charis Hutchinson Helen Jack Emily Kalbach Nora Kelley Katharine Kimball Francisca King Ruth Kirkpatrick Eleanor Krusen Lucile Larson Harriet Lattin Olive Lawrence Jeanette Lawson Marjory Lee Edith Levy Laura Ley Elisabeth Liffler Mary Lincoln Marguerite Livingston Marjory Lord Florence Lovenheim Idella Lyman Mabel Lyman Judith Matlack Margaret Marsh Jessie McCabe Ruby McCallum Margaret McKee Vera MacKen Marie McMillan Cordelia Merriam Norma Mueller Madeline Murphev Glenna Newhall Hildegarde Olson Dorothy Overton Isabel Painter Catharine Patton Margaret Peoples Antoinette Price Janet Putman Mary Radel Jessica Raymond Helen Reece Constance Reed Marion Reynolds Carol Rice Helen Rights Helen Richards Louise Ritsher Sarah Roberts Margaret Roekel Leslie Rosemond AiARGARET RoW LucRETiA Salmon Marion Selden Mary Seymour Hilda Shepard Elizabeth C. Smith Frances Smith Helene J. Smith Ruth E. Smith Louise Sommers Priscilla Stetson Violet Storey Jessie Sumner Helen Tappen Josephine Taylor Ida Teller Alice Thompson Katharine E. Thompson Katharine S. Thompson Ruth Thompson Dorris Tucker Eleanor Tucker Harriet van Zelm Helen Veeder Helen Walker Marjorie Warren Marion Webb Bessie Weibel Barbara White Carol Whiting Virginia Wiley Elisabeth Williams Florence Williams Ruth Willian Margaret Wirt Ruth Worcester Elizabeth Wyandt Virginia Yates Arva Yeagley Henrietta Zollman 118 S ttor lag S bgat a Mary Acuff Jean Archibold LiLLiAs Armour Elizabeth Bassick Katharine Beard hortense boyce Annie Breuer Margaret Broad Helen Cass Mildred Cover Miriam Delano Nyok-Zoe Dong Helen Field Gertrude Fitzgerald Frances Flint Barbara Frantz Dorothy Gates Esther Gould Virginia Heinlein Marian Hill Anna Hooker Charis Hutchinson Helen Jack Nora Kelley Katharine Kimball Emily Knight Lucile Larson Marjorie Lee Laura Ley Beth MacDuffie Marian Meyers Margaret Peoples Antoinette Price Carol Rice Helen Rights Mildred Simpson Ruth Smith Katharine E. Thompson Helen Veeder Marion Webb Virginia Yates Arva Yeagley B a iMotn a S Ugat a LiLLiAS Armour Francisca King Laura Ley AIabel Lyman 119 g mitl| Qlolbg Atl lFtir ABaDriatton Francisca King SENIOR OFFICERS Vice-President Francisca King Representatives Basketball, Carol Rice Archery, Caroline Creed Baseball, Bertha Bassevitch Crew, Katharine Asher Helen Hadley JUNIOR OFFICERS President, Francisca King Manager of Boat House, Mary Lambert Manager of Club House, Idella Lyman Junior Referee, Elizabeth Prescott Representatives Basketball, Agnes Grant Archery, Caroline Creed Volley Ball, Caroline Allen Tennis, Elizabeth Prescott SOPHOMORE OFFICERS Resigned Secretary, Dorothy Gates Treasurer, Francisca King 120 Ueroitfitrurttou for t }t iffunb ylLTHOUGH war is over, Smith carries on just the same. Who, indeed, y can deny that we have lived up to the doctrine of a certain red-headed man who declared that the marks of an educated person lay in the quickness of making transitions? After filling the Sister Susie — sewing socks for Soldiers role and supporting the S. C. R. U. as much as our time and pennies allowed, we ventured into other channels under the auspices of the Reconstruction Board. As our lights shone abroad, so did we resolve that they should shine at home. No sooner had the 4,000,000 Fund put in an appearance than everywhere people strove to meet the demands. It was for this purpose that the Smith Salvage Shop was originated. Here our able A. A. Representatives were given an opportunity to show all their prowess. Arming themselves with huge boxes and waste baskets, they placed them in full view in the corridors of the various college houses, and urged their neighbors to fill them to the brim. There was to be no fine distinctions as to the assortment. Delicate blue satin slippers snuggled up to the coarsest of walking boots. Sweaters, hats, and dresses rubbed noses with books, cardboard boxes, and papers, and soon they were ready to be taken to the Students ' Building to be sorted and tagged. The Sale for Students was held March 19th, followed on the next day by a sale for townspeople in a building donated by the Federal System of Bakeries. At both of these was shown the same hearty spirit of co-operation characteristic of anything with the name of Smith attached to it. Everybody entered in with great enthusiasm, and the results were most gratifying. It is impossible to enu- merate all the donations. People not immediately connected with the college came to the fore. Among the most interesting of the contributions was the gift of Madame de Naucauze, of Ye Rose Tree Inn , a huge quantity of the 4,000,000 Cookie which did its share in helping to raise the amount we are so earnestly striving for. 121 ri milMmmi) Z.ks 1C m jj - I lU E ' riiK D LH ' PINGXRNCR 123 iMontlflg loari Editor-in-Chief Judith Matlack Business Manager Esther Gould Assistant Business Managers Margaret Peoples Helen Veeder Editors Caroline Allen Dorothy Criswell Gertrude Fitzgerald Barbara Foster Margaret Gutman Virginia Heinlein Edith Levy Beth MacDuffie Marian Rubins Helen Walker Barbara White Left college 124 SENIOR YEAR Editor-in-Chief, Margaret Broad News Editor, Helen Field Managing Editor, Janet Putnam Assistant Editor, Elizabeth Bassick Business Manager, Cordelia Merriam JUNIOR YEAR Assistant Editors Elizabeth Bassick Elisabeth Haerle Margaret Broad Janet Putnam Helen Field Jessie Sumner Assistant Business Managers Katharine Beard Marind Hamill Cordelia IMerriam SOPHOMORE YEAR Katharine Asher Katharine Beard Margaret Broad Resigned Marind Hamill Francisca King Laura Ley 125 OFFICERS President, Helen Clark News Editor, Ruth Smith MEMBERS HoRTENSE BOYCE Leah Brown Helen Cass Helen Clark Edith Cohen Louise Cramer Agnes Dowd Agnes Grant Margaret Gutman Mary Howgate Mabel Lyman Grace Merrill Vera MacKen Marian Rubins Ruth Smith Edith Stein Priscilla Stetson Helen Tappen Ruth Thompson Dorris Tucker Resigned 126 01f QIampuB (Unt MEMBERS Katharine Asher A ' Iargaret Broad Barbara Foster Virginia Heinlein Helen Hoyt Katharine Kimball Beth MacDuffie Judith Matlack Marian Rubins Helen Walker 127 IP 129 130 t i ttn Kappa JUNIOR YEAR Margaret Broad Francisca King Barbara Foster Marjory Bowen Lord SENIOR YEAR Ruth Marvin Andrew Katharine Idalia Asher Muriel Nichols Backus Bertha Bassevitch Marion Banks Benjamin Mary Wilkinson Buckner Catherine Louise Burker Helen Clark Agnes Gertrude Dowd Helen Ward Field Valeria Dean Foot Estelle Allison Gardner Agnes Campbell Grant Margaret Benjamin Gutman Katherine Hunt Harriet Pratt Lattin Mary Frances McConnaughy Marguerite Miller McKee Cordelia Beatrice Merriam Helen Elizabeth Moriarty Margaret Hill Peoples Janet Putnam Carol Margaret Rice Elizabeth Rice Helen Katherine Rights Mildred Roe Margaret Elizabeth Roekel Leslie Rosemond Marian Rubins Elisabeth Wintersteen Schneider Helene June Smith Josephine Gordon Taylor Helen Frances Veeder Helen Hunt Walker Ruth Hunt W orcester Elizabeth Griffith Wyandt Virginia Antoinette Yates Henrietta Lydia Zollman 131 132 11 Alplja OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER President, Marian Hill Se7iior Executive, Francisca King Editor, Helen Hoyt SECOND SEMESTER President, Francisca King Senior Executive, Helen Field MEMBERS Katharine Asher Elizabeth Bassick Rosalind Bement Hortense Boyce Margaret Broad Clarinda Buck Helen Carvalho Helen Cass Edith Coombe Anne Everett Helen Field Agnes Grant Left college Ruth Havey Marian Hill Helen Hoyt Elizabeth Humphrey SiLOMA Hunt Jean Kimball Francisca King Edith Levy Ula Orr Alice Rathbun LucRETiA Salmon Jessie Sumner Elizabeth Wyandt 133 OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER President, Mary AIartha Armstrong Editor, Beth MacDuffie SECOND SEMESTER President, Elizabeth Prescott Senior Executive, Virginia Yates MEMBERS I 1 Christine Adams Mary Martha Armstrong Alice Best Mary Frances Cathcart Barbara Frantz Esther Gould Margaret Gutman Virginia Heinlein Anna Hooker Laura Ley DoRicE Lord Marjory Lord Idella Lyman Mabel Lyman Judith AIatlack Beth MacDuffie Jessie McCabe Margaret Peoples Elizabeth Prescott Carol Rice Louise Ritsher Helen Walker Barbara White Ruth Willi an Marion Webb Margaret Wirt Left college Virginia Yates 135 PHILOSOPHICAL . SOCIETY Irene Aronson Alice Barnhart Bertha Bassevitch Elizabeth Bates Helen Benjamin Nina Bogart Mildred Chittim Helen Cole Allace Cowen Nyok-Zoe Dong Dorothy Dunham Helen Field Valeria Foot Ruth Freeman Resigned OFFICERS President, Marian Rubins Vice-President, Helen Rights Secretary, Helen Cole Treasurer, Helen Benjamin MEMBERS EsTELLE Gardner Helen Gill Helen Hardinge Ellen Hastings Jane Hastings Virginia Heinlein Siloma Hunt Charis Hutchinson Marjory Lord Judith Matlack Mary F. McConnaughy Elizabeth Prescott Elizabeth Rice 136 Helen Rights Mildred Roe Margaret Roekel Marian Rubins Hazel Schefield Helene J. Smith Louise Sommers Helen Veeder Elsa Vieh Helen Walker Anna W. Woolridge Elizabeth Wyandt Virginia Yates HORTENSE ZaCHARIAS DEBATING UNION OFFICERS President, Laura Ley MEMBERS Viola Aloe Ruth Bardwell Elizabeth Bassick Margaret Broad Ruth Cushman Katherine Graham Virginia Heinlein Dorothy Helman Nora Kelley Francisca King Margaret Hirsh Isabel Kron Olive Lawrence Laura Ley Ula Orr Helen Perry Helen Rights Marian Rubins Helene Smith Edith Stein Jessie Sumner Virginia Thompson Resigned INTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATE, 1919 Viola Aloe Nora Kelley Margaret Gutman Laura Ley INTERCOLLEGIATE DEBATE, 1920 Katherine Graham 137 POLITY CLUB OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER President, Elizabeth Bassick Chairviaji of Program Committee, Harriet Lattin Mary Acuff Marjorie Adler Viola Aloe Ruth Bardwell Alice Barnhart Elizabeth Bassick Katharine Beard Grace Bowman Margaret Broad Catherine Burker Mary Frances Cathcart Mary Louise Chandler Mildred Chittim Allace Cowen Louise Cramer Eleanor Doremus Helen Field Pauline Fox Katherine Graham Belle Gruskin Elisabeth Haerle MEMBERS Miriam Hawkins Dorothy Helman Hester Hollingshead Isabel Hoopingarner Helen Hoyt Christine Hubbard Carmen Kahn Margaret Kaliher Nora Kelley Isabel Kron Mary Lambert Ruth Langmuir Harriet Lattin Mildred Lee Edith Levy Laura Ley Elisabeth Liffler Marjory Lord Margaret McKee Marguerite Noyes 138 Dorothy Overton Florence Penfold Ruth Piotti Antoinette Price Constance Reed Louise Ritsher Margaret Row A4arian Rubins Sadie Saffian Helene Smith Ruth Smith Edith Stein Edith Sullivan Josephine Taylor Charlotte Thomas Alice Thompson Katharine S. Thompson Harriet van Zelm Elsa Vieh Bessie Weibel Elisabeth Williams SOCIOLOGY CLUB Irene Aronson Katharine Asher Barbara Ballou Grace Bowman Leah Brown Minnie-Brown Clare Marion Clark Louise Cramer Bernice Davidson Nyok-Zoe Dong Laura Donnell Elinor Fears Frances Flint Ruth Freeman Ruth Freimuth OFFICERS President, Margaret Ward Secretary, Josephine Taylor Treasurer, Esther Gould MEMBERS Helen Gill Esther Gould Katherine Graham Marind Hamill Jane Hastings Margaret Hirsh Carmen Kahn Nora Kelley Ruth Kirkpatrick Lucile Larson Elisabeth Liffler Margaret Marsh Elizabeth McCausland Marjorie McKay Ula Orr Dorothy Overton Marion Reynolds Evelyn Russe Sadie Saffian Darthea Sharples Louise Sommers Edith Stein Josephine Taylor Alice Thompson Harriet vanZelm Helen Veeder Marion Webb Iris Williams 139 LR 5DCIETE FRHNCHISE Ci W President, Edith Levy Executive Member, Jeanette Lawson MEMBERS Josephine Battle Clarinda Buck Helen Carvalho Edith Cohen HiLDEGARDE DrISCOLL Anne Everett Valeria Foot Rose Foreman Helen Graves Helen Hine Margaret Hirsh Helen Hoyt Katherine Hunt Ruth Kirkpatrick Virginia Ruth Lagasse Jeanette Lawson Edith Levy DoRicE Lord Judith Matlack Margaret Peoples Ruth Piotti Denise Rotival Josephine Taylor Lisbeth Urban Elsa Vieh Helen Walker IsABELLE Ward Frances Waterman Yates 140 OFFICERS President, Alice Finger MEMBERS Josephine Battle Valeria Foot Edith Cohen Elisabeth Haerle Ann Corlett Mabel Lyman Alice Finger LiSBETH Urban 141 EL CLUB ESPANOL OFFICERS President, Helen Broderick Secretary and Treasurer, Cordelia Merriam MEMBERS Marion Benjamin Mary Boyle Helen Broderick Mary Cooper Marjorie Day Valeria Foot Emily Knight Ruth Lagasse Jeanette Lawson Marguerite Livingston Hortense Mary Marley Cordelia Merriam Hildegarde W. Olson Frances Parker Margaret Peoples Janet Putnam Vivian Richtmyer Elizabeth Trine Edna Welsh Fannye Wieder Zacharias Resigned 142 IL TRICOLORE President, Ruth PlOTTI MEMBERS Helen Cole Ruth Piotti Alice Gardner Violet Storey Alice James Marjorie Warren Left college 143 •wf% i ( OFFICERS President, Agnes Dowd MEMBERS Mary Buckner Charlotte Cohen Mary Dangler Agnes Dowd Elizabeth Kambour Elizabeth Rice Helen Richards Elizabeth Upton 144 ' ; OFFICERS President, Gertrude TvIartin; Louise Ritsher Secretary, Antoinette Price MEMBERS Bertha Bassevitch Helen Benjamin Cecily Blackford Dorothy Brown Muriel Byard Mary Louise Chandler Elizabeth Coleman Barbara Foster Gertrude Fuller EsTELLE Gardner Frances Gee Marian Hill Julia Isabel Hoopingarner Laura Ley Gertrude Martin Rosalie Morris Thelma Parkinson Antoinette Price Louise Ritsher Jessie Roberson Sadie Saffian Helene Smith Ruth Smith Edith Stein Warner Resigned 145 OFFICERS President, Ida Teller Vice-PresidenU Idella Lyman Mary Acuff Margaret Andrews Lillias Armour Rozalia Armstrong Katharine Asher Louise Bailey Ruth Bardwell Alice Barnhart Elizabeth Bates Mary Bennett Frieda Claussen Elizabeth Coleman Louise Crowley Geneva Croxford Lois Cutter Helen Field Frances Flint Katherine Flower Harriet Fuge Margaret Gutman MEMBERS Ruth Havey Dorothy Helman Marian Hill Grace Hiller Isabel Hoopingarner Margaret Lane Ruth Langmuir Idella Lyman Mabel Lyman Mary Frances McConnaughy Helen Moriarty Esther Purrington Constance Reed Helen Richards Margaret Roekel Elisabeth Schneider Frances Smith Ida Teller H arriet van Zelm Margaret Wirt Alice White 146 Secretary, Harriet Lattin Executives Louise Crowley Jane L. Hastings MEMBERS Louise Bailey Elizabeth Bassick Mary Bennett Helen Clark Frieda Claussen Louise Crowley Lois Cutter Miriam Felt Margaret Gutman Ellen Hastings Jane L. Hastings Marjorie Hause Dorothy Helman Marian Hill Grace Hiller Harriet Lattin Marion Lundagen Helen Moriarty Rosalie Morris Marguerite Noyes Vena Prentice Constance Reed Margaret Reed Helen Reece Jane Stafford Ida Teller Mary Tilson Eleanor Tucker Bessie Weibel Henrietta Zollman 147 OFFICERS President, Marguerite Noyes Vice-President. Isabel Painter MEMBERS Helen Barry Elizabeth Bassick Katharine Beard Ruth Colsten Sophie Goldberg Agnes Grant Jane Hastings Francisca King Marjory Lord Marguerite Noyes Isabel Painter Janet Putnam Mary Tilson Constance Torrey Marion Webb Hazel Wentworth Henrietta Zollman ' ' Resigned 148 OFFICERS President, Mary Frances McConnaughy Secretary, Constance Torrey Treasurer, Ruth Andrew MEMBERS Ruth Andrew Katharine Beard Carolyn Boudo Ruth Colsten Miriam Courtney Margaret Doran Helen Frank Agnes Grant Ellen Hastings Ruth Lagasse Marjory Lord Mary Frances McConnaughy Isabel Painter Frances Parker Constance Torrey Arva Yeagley 149 OFFICERS President, Arva Yeagley MEMBERS Caroline Allen Dorothy Brown Katharine Franz Hannah Goldberg Agnes Grant Frances Parker Carol Rice Marian Rubins Katharine S. Thompson Constance Torrey Ruth Worcester Arva Yeagley Resigned 150 OFFICERS P resident, Jessie Sumner Secretary, Anna Hooker HORTENSE BOYCE Treasurer, Ruby McCallum MEMBERS HoRTENSE BoYCE Mary Frances Cathcart Jeanette Croxford Katherine Graham Ruth Havey Miriam Hawkins Anna Hooker Ina Hughes Ruby McCallum Helen McMillan Helen Pierce Jessie Sumner Resigned 151 OFFICERS President, Elizabeth Humphrey Vice-President, Lucretia Salmon MEMBERS Christine Adams Rosalind Bement Evelyn Bridger Helen Hadley Elizabeth Humphrey Eleanor Murphy Helen Reece Louise Ritsher Lucretia Salmon Elisabeth Schneider Ruth Willian 152 ' ' 1 ' i - OFFICERS President, Katharine Bryan Secretary, Frances Patten MEMBERS Katharine Bryan Helen Cass Frances Chick Mary Courtenay Louise Flanagan Ruth Havey Hester Hollingshead Isabel Hoopengarner Marjory Lee Frances Patten Alice Thompson Katharine E. Thompson Olive Wall 1.S3 President, Clarinda Buck Margaret Broad Clarinda Buck Helen Carvalho Frances Chick Elisabeth Haerle Virginia Heinlein Helen Hoyt Edith Levy Marguerite Livingston Beth MacDuffie Judith Matlack Madeline Murphey Marian Rubins 154 CURREMT EVEMTS President, Mary Seymour Mary Martha Armstrong Jane Caldwell Mary Frances Cathcart Rose Foreman Henrietta Fort Madeleine Fuller Katherine Hunt Elizabeth Prescott Carol Rice Gertrude Robinson Mary Seymour Virginia Yates 155 SPECTATOR o I I Tlh-rT-nh i i i iiriiFi r President, Katharine Kimball Margaret Broad Edith Coombe Miriam Delano Helen Field Barbara Frantz Esther Gould Nora Kelley Katharine Kimball Laura Ley Marjory Lord Margaret Peoples Marian Rubins Mildred Simpson Helen Walker Marion Webb Resigned 156 President, Marion Selden Christine Adams Elizabeth Bassick Lois Bateman Mary Chepon Dorothy Clough Ella Lindley Constance Reed Marion Selden Elizabeth Tuttle Elizabeth Upton Lisbeth Urban Barbara White Left college 157 cfl.O.K. OMesa TT TT ' 1 1 Pi IP ' H rw £ P ■riH w% ' f l Ai ' iHBi i . ' ' J|p nl v H 1 |n£a|| i Lq. : H 2 E v ■ H oaaNgcMCN 158 159 £) I flk r H 1 ' ■1 I B I El OFFICERS Leader, Bertha Bassevitch Assistant Leader, Elsa Vieh Business Manager, Mary Howgate MEMBERS Jean Archibold Barbara Ballou Bertha Bassevitch JosEPHiNE Battle Katharine Beard Helen Benjamin HoRTENSE BOYCE Frieda Claussen Mary Dangler Margaret Doran Agnes Dowd Barbara Foster Madeleine Fuller Elisabeth Haerle Ruth Hardin Allena Hendry Anna Hooker Mary Howgate Elizabeth Humphrey Francisca King Ruth Langmuir Jeanette Lawson Dorice Lord Idella Lyman Beth MacDuffie Janet Putnam Alice Rathbun Frances A. Smith fEoiTH Swain Katharine E. Thompson Elizabeth Upton Elsa Vieh jMary Manier Wells Resigned jLeft college 160 HanboUtt Qllub OFFICERS Leader Florence O ' Connor MEMBERS Resigned Barbara Ballou Elizabeth Bates Grace Bowman Dorothy Brooks Catherine Edwards Ruth Havey Marian Hill Florence O ' Connor Dorothy Ruggles Marjorie Scudder Jessie Sumner Helen Veeder Lucy Wickham 161 r ffirrli fitra Christine Adams Sara Anderson Rosalind Bement Frieda Claussen Barbara Foster Alice Gardner Harriet Pratt Lattin Idella Lyman Helen Reece Mildred Roe Esther Roy Lucretia Salmon Frances Smith Priscilla Stetson Ruth Willian 162 Ollintr Leader of First Soprano, Katharine E. Thompson Leader of Second Soprano, Frances Smith Caroline Allen Sara Anderson Ruth Andrew Jean Archibold LiLLiAS Armour Alice Barnhart Elizabeth Bates Helen Benjamin Hortense Boyce Dolores Carolan Helen Carvalho Barbara Foster Helen Frank Gertrude Fuller Madeleine Fuller Alice Gardner Dorothy Gates Frances Gee Katherine Graham Mildred Hackett Helen Hadley Elisabeth Haerle Mary Frances Cathcart Miriam Hawkins Frances Chick Edith Cohen Miriam Courtney Caroline Creed Marjorie Day Katharine Dickson Laura Donnell Margaret Doran Agnes Dowd Helen Field Alice Finger Louise Flanagan Allena Hendry Mary Howgate Elizabeth Humphrey Elizabeth Kambour Ruth Lagass Margaret Lane Ruth Langmuir Harriet Pratt Lattin Jeanette Lawson IVIarion Lundagen Idella Lyman Beth MacDuffie Hildegarde Olson 163 Janet Putnam Alice Rathbun Elizabeth Rice Helen Richards Helen Rights Louise Ritsher Olive Rockwell Helene Sands Vesta Sawyer Adaline Shick Frances Smith Helene Smith Helen Tappen Josephine Taylor Charlotte Thomas Katharine E. Thompson Eleanor Tucker Elizabeth Upton Elsa Vieh Marion Webb Hildegarde Wessman Alice White Ruth Willian Arva Yeagley 164 165 ,t,,-.. • . RP- Mr 1 , f I B. ■ ipippiiiin ■ ■■■• ■P ' ' ' . ■■■■laHaHBHBBHIKflHHI H HBH ' ' 7 1 66 Dear Clara: When your letter came, I was tearing my hair over a Nine- teenth written, and until now haven ' t had a second to answer it. And so you are surprised at our giving some plays down at the Academy? Oh, my dear girl, things have changed since your day, and there ' s no doubt about it. Dramatics have been utterly revolutionized, and from the way things have been going, no one can help being encouraged. I think everybody realized that Studes wasn ' t adequate for a truly artistic performance. It ' s no wonder that only a few, com- paratively, worked up an interest in Division Dramatics. There was little opportunity for anybody to show what she could do, but now, not only can the would-be divine Sarahs indulge their histronic talents, but people who are interested in staging, publicity, and Dramaturgy, have a wonderful chance to get ahead. Last spring they organized a Dramatics Association where twelve girls, chosen by the Spoken English Department and the Student Body, drew up a constitution which was put into effect this fall. You can imagine how lucky we were to get Mr. Eliot as a Faculty adviser. As you probably know, he has had a lot of practical experience in acting and pro- ducing plays, and you can ' t help becoming imbued with his wonderful enthusiasm. It wasn ' t long before try-outs were instituted, and everybody who wanted to act selected for trying out something in either poetry or prose, which had to be given within three minutes. Some of the girls were perfect screams and it was such fun to watch them! The staging trials weren ' t given until rehearsals, but in the meantime, other trials were carried on. Everybody worked like mad, either at making posters and planning the financing and managing of productions, or if they went out for Dramat- urgy, seeing about the selection of plays or attending to costum- ing and staging. You can see by this that there was plenty to do. Out of the four hundred and fifty who tried out, about one hundred and fifty made it. The poor old Freshmen are at last given a whack at things, too. Our dear Alma Mater certainly threw convention to the winds, and from now on, our baby sisters will be allowed to act after their first semester. Isn ' t that great. The almighty dollar which seems to be the root of most troubles, bothered us, too. We had absolutely no financial 167 1 k , 1 m II 1 ' 1! ■ k jlSaHbi!  « « i« 1 backing; — no place to produce the plays, and no membership; that is, until after the trials! But at any rate, we hired the Academy for November twenty-first, and brazenly launched forth. Didn ' t you tell me last summer that when you were here the whole college was divided alphabetically into four groups, each one of which was allowed sixty-five dollars for performances? It seemed to us that if the classes would give that much for four mediocre plays, they might be willing to give four hundred and sixty toward trying to produce a good one, and we certainly weren ' t disappointed. The two upper classes were the first to set the ball rolling, by donating two hundred and fifty dollars. That with nine hundred and forty dollars, set aside for Dramatics by Council, and membership dues of a dollar a year, constitutes our fund. Everyone is wondering whether the association is a moneymaking proposition. I can ' t say that it is. We try to cover expenses, but even that isn ' t possible at times. What we want to do is, to quote the learned words of the constitution, to stimulate a general interest in dramatic literature and in the art of acting, and to develop in the college a high order of theatrical endeavor and appreciation . But, to go on to the plays themselves. After hashing over everything that was sug- gested, we finally selected three short ones: The Slave with Two Faces , by Mary Carolyn Davies; Three Pills in a Bottle , by Rachael Lyman Field, and Behind a Watteau Picture , by Robert Emmons Rogers. I wish you could have seen how the girls slaved! There was rehearshal after rehearsal, and finally the night of nights arrived! Somehow, it brought back memories of Saturday nights of last year, when the good old stock company 168 ki 1 1 ! ; • was in full swing. The house was all sold out. Everybody was terribly excited, and when the curtain went up, it seemed too wonderful to be true that we were acting in a real live theatre. Could this be Smith. ' ' If you have any idea of the plays, you will know how absolutely unlike they all are. We shivered and shook during t he first one, where Helen Carvalho imperson- ating Life, the slave, lashed everybody furiously, and then we smiled sympathetically at the fancies of the poor little sick boy in Three Pills in a Bottle . I was surprised to see what wonderful scenic effects they got in the Watteau Picture . Really, you have no idea how beautifully it was staged. All through the play you were haunted by an atmosphere of mysticism, and the parts were acted awfully well. I sent you a program as I thought you would be interested. They hit upon a clever way of raising money. Between the acts, Judith Matlack, who was an Italian scissors grinder in the second play, came out and raffled off some of the posters. It got to be terribly excit- ing at times. The bidding really went quite high, and the amount that was made will help to pull us out of the financial hole into which we couldn ' t help being plunged. Not only did the girls respond, but also the handful of men who were sprinkled here and there in the audience. You asked what I meant by the Work Shop . No, it has nothing to do with the Dramatics Association, although lots of people have the impression that the two are related in some way. Mr. Eliot has two classes, one in Constructive Drama, and the other in Play Producing. The latter deals with the practical details of staging, and since Air. Eliot wants their experience to be as wide as possible, they have arranged to produce some of 169 the plays that the Constructive Drama people write. How ' s that for a scheme? It was terribly exciting the other night at Studes, when they put them on, for it was the first work that the girls in Constructive had put through. The first play, Ice Water, Please , adapted from Fannie Hurst ' s sketch of that name, by Violet Storey, certainly produced a howl of merriment. Naturally, it is hard to obtain dramatic effects from such a piece of work, and the girls did splendidly in their first attempt. You would have enjoyed the second, II est Mieux ici qu ' en Face , adapted by Katherine Cornwell. Knowing your scorn for the Bohemian poseur, I thought of you right away. The romantic impulse of the hero and heroine to die together and their attempt to get out of it, were too funny for words. Virginia ates ' s play, The Ferenghi Wife , was intensely absorbing. You were kept on the qui vive every minute. Like the plays of the Academy they were all dissimilar. Everbody who went was asked to write a criticism and hand it later to Mr. Eliot, so it was up to us to keep our eyes open. Next semester they are going to give some original plays which the Work Shop will manage, of course. Both the coaching and costuming were done by the girls. In fact, that is what the Work Shop and Dramatics Association want to emphasize, for they feel that it is about as important to be a good coach as it is to elocute . I forgot to say that the association is planning to have another play this year, so I suppose it won ' t be long before we are in the throes of rehearsing again. A lot of plays have been suggested, but as yet we are in the dark. One thing that I like particularly is the fact that nobody can take part in more than one play which the association gives. That isn ' t to be put into effect until next fall, however. In that way, more people will be given a chance to act, and the burden of rehearsals which take such a lot of time and effort, won ' t fall on such a few. Well, my dear, I had no intention of going on at such length, but I guess my subject carried me away. Anyway, I thought you ' d be interested in hearing about everything; you were so keen about Dramatics when you were here. It is true that a revolution has been started, but of course, it is only a beginning. It is up to the next year ' s classes to keep the ball rolling. There are so many things that have to be done. At any rate, I think lots more interest has been shown than in any other year. Write soon, and tell me that you are really coming on for Commencement. Much love, as ever, HARRIET. 170 ' ' Qil mmhn 2|at By Be7i Hecht and Kenneth Sawyer Goodman Presented February 23, 1920, by THE CLASS OF 1920 CAST Harlequin . . . . Agnes Grant Pierrot ..... . Margaret Hirsh Columbine . . . . Josephine Battle Punchinello . . . . . Ruth Thompson Margot . . . . . . Helen Osborne 171 So Allan Oh, Little Laugh-And-Run-Away, With curls so soft and wild, Do tell me — are you, maybe, A Presidential child? (Ho MuvQUvH Whether it rains or whether it shines, A shadow that I know Sticks very close to someone ' s heels Wherever he may go. She only knows one shadow rule — She cannot follow him to school ! (Uo OlaniltitP Have you a hidden secret Behind that smile serene? Oh, share your fair) ' wisdom, Learned playing with the Dean! 172 173 1920 m mb ra of AU- mtlI| laak t lall Ql am Katharine Asher, 1919, 1920 Charis Hutchinson, 1920 Marion Brumberg, 1919, 1920 Jean Kimball, 1918 Dorothy Gates, 1918, 1919 Carol Rice, 1920 Virginia Yates, 1919 Forwards Katharine Asher Marion Brumberg Virginia Yates SENIOR BASKETBALL TEAM Captain, Charis Hutchinson Centers Guards Louise Flanagan Agnes Grant Carol Rice Charis Hutchinson Margaret Wirt Francisca King Forwards Katharine Asher Marion Brumberg Virginia Yates JUNIOR BASKETBALL TEAM Captain, Charis Hutchinson Centers Guards Viola Aloe Dorothy Gates Carol Rice Charis Hutchinson Margaret Wirt Francisca King Left College 174 SENIOR SUBSTITUTE BASKETBALL TEAM Captain, Rose Foreman Forwards Helen Carvalho Harriet Lattin Marion Reynolds Centers Viola Aloe Ruth Dowell Jessica Raymond Guards Rose Foreman Marian Hill Marjorie Scudder JUNIOR SUBSTITUTE BASKETBALL TEAM Captain, Agnes Grant Forwards Helen Carvalho Harriet Lattin Marion Reynolds Centers Louise Flanagan Helen Gill Jessica Raymond Guards Rose Foreman Agnes Grant Marian Hill 175 Forwards Katharine Asher Marion Brumberg Virginia Yates SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL TEAM Captain, Jean Kimball Centers Jean Kimball Marie McMillan Margaret Wirt Guards Dorothy Gates Charis Hutchinson Carol Rice SOPHOMORE SUBSTITUTE BASKETBALL TEAM Captain, Agnes Grant Forwards Harriet Lattin Janet Putnam Marion Reynolds Centers Viola Aloe Mary Marley Jessica Raymond Guards Rose Foreman Agnes Grant Francisca King Forwards Katharine Asher Marion Brumberg Virginia Yates FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM Captain, Jean Kimball Centers Jean Kimball Priscilla McIlvaine Margaret Wirt Guards Dorothy Gates Charis Hutchinson Francisca King FRESHMAN SUBSTITUTE BASKETBALL TEAM Captain, Agnes Grant Forwards Harriet Lattin Elizabeth Prescott Janet Putnam Centers Viola Aloe Dolores Carolan Marie McMillan Guards Agnes Doud Rose Foreman Agnes Grant 176 1920 m mb rfi nf AU-i mttl| Ifnrkpg ® am Barbara Frantz, 1918, 1919, 1920 Marian Hill, 1919, 1920 Elizabeth Prescott, 1918, 1919, 1920 Elisabeth Schneider, 1919, 1920 SENIOR HOCKEY TEAM Captain, Gertrude Robinson FORWARDS Katherine Hunt Grace Merrill Barbara Frantz Jane Caldwell Marian Hill Grace Merrill Barbara Frantz Jane Caldwell Marian Hill HALF BACKS Elizabeth Prescott FULL BACKS AND GOAL Anna Hooker JUNIOR HOCKEY TEAM Captain, Gertrude Robinson FORWARDS Katherine Hunt HALF BACKS Elizabeth Prescott FULL BACKS AND GOAL Anna Hooker Ruth Kirkpatrick Elisabeth Schneider Gertrude Robinson Harriet Lattin Ruth Kirkpatrick Elisabeth Schneider Gertrude Robinson Harriet Lattin 177 Charis Hutchinson Helen Jack Annie Breuer SENIOR SUBSTITUTE HOCKEY TEAM Captain, Virginia Yates FORWARDS Heather McKinnell Carol Rice HALF BACKS Katherine Sawyer Mary Seymour Virginia Yates FULL BACKS AND GOALS EsTELLE Gardner Katharine E. Thompson Gertrude Fitzgerald JUNIOR SUBSTITUTE HOCKEY TEAM Captain, Virginia Yates FORWARDS Heather McKinnell Carol Rice Mary Seymour HALF BACKS Katherine Sawyer Virginia Yates Charis Hutchinson Helen Jack Annie Breuer FULL BACKS AND GOALS Estelle Gardner Katharine E. Thompson Gertrude Fitzgerald 178 SOPHOMORE HOCKEY TEAM Captain, Marion Selden FORWARDS Elisabeth Schneider Elizabeth Sherrill Hortense Boyce Barbara Frantz Grace Merrill HALF BACKS Margaret Sparks IVIarion Selden Elizabeth Prescott FULL BACKS AND GOALS Gertrude Robinson Anna Hooker Marian Hill SOPHOMORE SUBSTITUTE HOCKEY TEAM Captain, Virginia Yates FORWARDS Charis Hutchinson Laura Ley Carol Rice HALF BACKS Virginia Yates Katherine Sawyer FULL BACKS AND GOALS Katharine E. Thompson Miriam Delano Marie McMillan Mary Seymour Marian Rubins Estelle Gardner Elisabeth Schneider Helen Jack Marion Selden Marian Hill FRESHMAN HOCKEY TEAM Captain, Margaret Penney FORWARDS Laura Ley Bettie Carey Margaret Penney HALF BACKS Barbara Frantz Elizabeth Prescott FULL BACKS AND GOALS Margaret Sparks Marjorie Dobbins FRESHMAN SUBSTITUTE HOCKEY TEAM Captain, Virginia Yates FORWARDS Eleanor Krusen Helen Hadley Helen Cass Sinclair Dakin Louise Atwater HALF BACKS Katharine E. Thompson Virginia Yates Katherine Sawyer FULL BACKS AND GOALS Gertrude Robinson Marian Rubins Agnes Dowd 179 r laan MtmhnB 0f AU-g mttli CHrtrk t ® am Ruth Laylin, 1918 Louise Bailey, 1919, 1920 Cordelia Merriam, 1918, 1919, 1920 Elizabeth Bassick, 1919, 1920 Lois Bateman, 1919, 1920 SENIOR CRICKET TEAM Captain, Cordelia Merriam Louise Bailey Elizabeth Bassick Lois Bateman Muriel Byard Miriam Courtney Grace Hiller Gertrude Martin Ruby McCallum Cordelia Merriam DoRRis Tucker Eleanor Tucker Louise Bailey Elizabeth Bassick Lois Bateman Muriel Byard JUNIOR CRICKET TEAM Captain, Cordelia Merriam Miriam Courtney Grace Hiller Gertrude AIartin Ruby McCallum Cordelia Merriam Dorris Tucker Eleanor Tucker 180 Sara Anderson Virginia Davis SENIOR SUBSTITUTE CRICKET TEAM Captain, Grace Merrill Helen Gill Grace Merrill Florence Lovenheim Hildegarde Olson Sara Anderson Virginia Davis JUNIOR SUBSTITUTE CRICKET TEAM Captain, Grace Merrill Helen Gill Grace Merrill Florence Lovenheim Hildegarde Olson 181 LiLLiAS Armour Margaret Broad Muriel Byard Marjorie Choate SOPHOMORE CRICKET TEAM Captain Ruth Laylin Miriam Courtney Ruth Laylin Marian Leonard Mary Lincoln Cordelia Merriam Darthea Sharples Henrietta Zollman SOPHOMORE SUBSTITUTE CRICKET TEAM Captain Grace Hiller Louise Bailey Lois Bateman Barbara Frantz Virginia Heinlein Grace Hiller Ruby McCallum Grace Merrill Edith Sherrill Margaret Sparks Elizabeth Bassick Margaret Broad Eleanor Doremus Susie Farmer FRESHMAN CRICKET TEAM Captai?!, Mary Lincoln Ruth Laylin Mary Lincoln Cordelia Merriam Ruby McCallum Margaret Ranney Darthea Sharples Ruth Worcester FRESHMAN SUBSTITUTE CRICKET TEAM Captain, Helen Walker Louise Bailey Lois Bateman Helen Field Marian Hill Margaret Lane Marian Leonard Margaret Sparks Helen Walker IsABELLE Ward Marion Webb Henrietta Zollman 182 183 184 1920 li mb rB nf AU-S ' mttli laB ball JF am Bertha Bassevitch, 1918, 1919, 1920 Agnes Grant, 1918, 1919, 1920 Ruth Lagasse, 1918 Agnes Burnham, 1919, 1920 Bertha. Bassevitch Agnes Burnham Anne Corlett Bertha Bassevitch Agnes Burnham Anne Corlett Viola Aloe Bertha Bassevitch Agnes Burnham SENIOR BASEBALL TEAM Captain, Agnes Burnham Louise Flanagan Ruth Havey Frances Flint Idella Lyman Agnes Grant Katherine S. Thompson JUNIOR BASEBALL TEAM Captain, Agnes Burnham Louise Flanagan Frances Flint Agnes Grant Ruth Havey Idella Lyman Katharine S. Thompson SOPHOMORE BASEBALL TEAM Captain, Anne Corlett Anne Corlett Ruth Lagasse Agnes Grant Idella Lyman Ruth Havey Katharine S. Thompson 185 mti Viola Aloe Florence Bowman Marion Brumberg SENIOR SUBSTITUTE BASEBALL TEAM Captain, Rose Foreman Rose Foreman Marian Rubins Dorothy Gates Anna Hooker Helen Tappen Margaret Wirt JUNIOR SUBSTITUTE BASEBALL TEAM Captain, Rose Foreman Viola Aloe Rose Foreman Marian Rubins Florence Bowman Dorothy Gates Helen Tappen Marion Brumberg Anna Hooker Margaret Wirt SOPHOMORE SUBSTITUTE BASEBALL TEAM Captain, Katharine Asher Katha.rine Asher Dorothy Gates Jean Kimball Marion Brumberg Louise Flanagan Marian Hill Anna Hooker Ruth Kirkpatrick Margaret Wirt 186 SENIOR CREW Captain, Ruth Kirkpatrick Laura Donnell (Cox) Dorothy Overton EsTELLE Gardner Heather McKinnell Edith Coombe SENIOR SECOND CREW Francisca King (Cox) Florence Williams Isabel Hosack Frances Flint Helen Hadley SENIOR THIRD CREW Miriam Hawkins (Cox) Ruth Kirkpatrick Helen Jack Katharine Asher Elizabeth Bates 187 Jane Caldwell SENIOR TENNIS TEAM Captain, Elizabeth Prescott Elizabeth Prescott Virginia Yates Alice Rathbun SENIOR SUBSTITUTE TENNIS TEAM Mildred Hackett Idella Lyman Frances Flint Mary Seymour Caroline Creed SENIOR ARCHERY TEAM Captain, Caroline Creed Katharine Bryan Arva Yeagley Helen Reece Mary Lambert SENIOR SUBSTITUTE ARCHERY TEAM Barbara Vhite SENIOR VOLLEY BALL TEAM Sara Anderson Mary Buckner Ellen Hastings Marion Lundagen Ruby McCallum Edna Stewart 188 (ggmnaatum iExl|ibtttnn 1920 CAPTAINS 1917 Carol Rice Virginia Yates 1919 VirginiaY ates 1918 Carol Rice 1920 Gertrude Robinson WINNERS Cl Flag ass Work Class Cup and Individual W 3rk 1917— Class of 1917 1918— Class of 1918 1919— Class of 1919 1920— Class of 1920 1917— Class of 1919 1918— Class of 1918 1919— Class of 1921 1920— Class of 1923 Resigned 189 Game Baseball Cricket Volley Ball Archery Basketball Hockey Tennis Jtplb Bag May, 24, 1919 IS 5 15 5 I 9 I 3 f 9 3 i 15 I 5 15 5 15 5 Points for the first for the second for the first for the second for the first for the second for the first for the second for the first for the second for the first for the second for the first for the second place place place 1 place place place place ] place place place place ] place J place ] place Players 1919-1920 1919-1920 1919-1922 1919-1920 1921-1920 1919-1920 1919-1920 Winners 1919 1919 1919 1920 1921 1920 1919 FINAL WINNERS 1919 190 II. III. 3Flnat iag May 26, 1919 EVENTS Straight-away Rowing for Form Senior III and Junior III Senior II and Junior II Senior I and Junior I Rowing with Turn for Form Senior III and Junior III Senior II and Junior II Senior I and Junior I Speed Rowing Senior III and Junior III Senior II and Junior II Senior I and Junior I Totals FINAL WINNER 1920 Senior 6.66 7.83 8.66 8.33 9.83 10.5 59.81 Junior 8.33 7.17 9 10.16 9 10.33 15 68.99 191 Jffloat lag Jpag antfi FORTY SINGING SEAMEN May 26, 1919 Bobby Shafto Dear Golden City Old Fa shioned Wife The Pink Lady Chocolate Soldier Joan of Arc Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean Sweet Little Buttercup The Little Dutch Garden Little Japanese Maid Indianola Baby ' s Boat ' s a Silver Moon Owl and the Pussy Cat My Old Kentucky Home Wearin ' o ' the Green Out of the East Burmah Moon Honolulu Girl Pinafore Poor Butterfly Garden of a Rose I Am Always Chasing Rainbows Gypsy Trail Good Night, Ladies Old Black Joe School Days Turkey in the Straw Merry Widow Drifting Little Boy Blue 192 The Start The Finish 193 194 [Ulivi M Tnt:? ' ' ' 195 3Fr?0ljman f Far OFFICERS President, Alice Best Vice-President, Margaret Marsh Secretary, Henrietta Fort Treasurer, Mabel Lyman Historian, Marian Rubins Song Leader, Katharine Kimball Assistant Leader, Margaret Gardner CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Pin, Katherine Agler Motto, Alice Finger RALLY DAY Decoration, Marion Webb Animal, Edith Sherrill BIG GAME Decoration, Dorothy Damon Mascot, Elizabeth McAllaster CANDY-SELLING, JUNIOR FESTIVAL Margaret Row Class Color, Purple 196 Class Animal, Unicorn 3?r?Bl|man QUaaa l iatorg IN the beginning, the powers postponed our coming. News of that first quarantine reached us through the mail, and we left our packing to spend two unexpected weeks at home. When they were over, belated, we thronged to Northampton, and were told when we arrived that we were 1920. We hadn ' t thought of that. Crowded days those first ones were. Our bibles seemed not to have texts for all occasions. We tried to register, but couldn ' t find College Hall; we took examinations and bought wastebaskets. Suddenly inti- mate with strange room-mates, we discussed cretonne patterns and wall space. Upper class- men called, and we, still in dusty traveling serge, looked with awe and delight at white skirts and miraculous sweaters (some were knitted in stripes in the fall of 1916). We went to the S. C. A. C. W. T., whose last letter turned out to be tea, meaning lemonade. People seemed very glad to see us, although they had little conversation except requests for Chapel dates. But afternoons of shopping, tempered by examination, were not to last forever. On Thursday morning, October 5th, the balcony of John M. Greene Hall was weighted with our excited selves. There we sat and looked on at first Chapel. We left the service, remembering a tall man with red hair who had said something about the worth of honest doubt, and we thought as we wedged ourselves for the first time down the stairs that we were going to like him. Two days later came first classes, and following quickly upon their heels, a long afternoon on Allen Field from which we trailed back to announce with pride that the evens had won . Such a busy place, college, we said as we hurried through dinner and were off to Our Frolic. We were glad that our names were pinned to us that night, they might so easily have gotten lost along with the rest of our identity in that crowd. Suddenly the introductions, that made this seem madder than Alice ' s famous one, ceased. A tall girl sang to us droUy and groups behind her chanted the choruses. It was all very flattering: Upper classmen are green For they re still in their teens But Freshmen all are twen-y so they surely must be wise . This is college, we noted to ourselves, enjoying very much the vim of clapping to Where- O-Where , and the solemnity of Alma Mater. Ice cream and cake capped a memorable day. From Monday Freshman lecture to Monday Freshman lecture, those next weeks went on. Chapel it seemed had unplumbed possibilities. One morning, the president an- nounced a quarantine — no riding on streetcars and no leaving Northampton. That was gloomy, but it taught us what the organ could do, for the Seniors marched out to the tune of WE won ' t get home until morning . Our first class meeting was held on October 1 1th. We list- ened a little wearily to the unlively speeches of sports representatives. We had already begun to learn more than they could tell us. But our first Sing was a revelation. Eddie was col- lege to us then — radiant, vigorous, graceful. We sang very badly and liked it tremendously. Those of us who had discovered the public opinion column had heard rumors of interest in a Presidential Election. On Saturday evening, the 4th of November, we found John M. Greene marvelously hung with banners and flags and the floor space marked off by States. We sat with our own Ohio, Virginia or Maine and listened to a short, masterful person who stood on that revered platform, thumped the table familiarly, made us laugh and introduced the speakers. We voted for President of the United States, and together with the rest of the college, elected Hughes by 500 to 376. Was it evidence that we were already educated persons, according to President Burton ' s famous formula, that we torchlight-paraded four days later for Wilson. ' ' 197 It was after Thanksgiving, on December 2nd, tliat the great day came. It will take you all afternoon , they had told us, and it did. We sat in Assembly Hall, a class at last, 1920, and the hours went by unheeded while we voted for Freshman President. It was dark outside by the time they brought her in, slender and charming in cap and gown, to preside over the tumultuous last half hour. This is college , we exulted, as we watched the privileged climb up to sit on the platform at her feet, and again, this is college , as we serenaded her at Haven House that night. Snow came, and Christmas hymns in Chapel, caroling, and then after a flurry of pack- ing, we left Northampton for home and vacation, thinking that college expressions were fitting and beautiful, remembering them by snatches through the holidays. Back we came on the 3rd of January to a college that was nearly buried under a heavy snow. Just a little more than three weeks to mid-years, they said, and we shook in our shoes. Even Hamlet had shrunk from evils that he knew not of. Ours were very near and quite inescapable, so being practical, we set to work. When they had really come upon us, we found that they were not half bad, particularly since one could fly to the solace of out-of-doors or of organ vespers. We heard that 1918 was going to frolic in the gym and that it was up to us to get in. Some of us did. And then hard upon that merry night came Rally Day, barely a week later. We liked the prospect of ourselves in white and purple, were delighted by the decorated gym and ' 17 ' s song — The Dormitory ' s had a boom, we boom the new curriculum, boom-boom if you ever get lonely — , and then the game and our first dangling. We watched the Seniors win; we heard the Juniors telling us that we must do better for the evens when it came our turn. And we did. ' 20 ' s greatest pride was her basketball. We fairly swelled with pride. Though you are young yet doni be forlorn, For you are our little mascot, our unicorn we sang, and knew that it must be a source of immense satisfaction to a beast to belong to a class that could boast of a score of 39 to 37 in the preliminary and 27 to 20 in the final game against a Sophomore team. All 1920 strutted with the nursemaid in the Fate of the Ninepins stunt on that great day. Surely this was college — triumph and chariots and singing till one was hoarse. Why look for more. We didn ' t have to look. More came pouring in upon us. There was talk of student government. The college had voted down a plan for an honor system and now the weekly was besieging us with other plans. We who remembered high school troubles more clearly than the others did, threw ourselves into the discussion. During that Easter vacation, war was declared. We had gone to Red Cross meetings all the winter. They were small meetings in the Reading Room, and one knitted or sewed for an hour a week. But when we came back for Spring term, the work began in earnest. The Juniors gave up prom. Was this college, to sing at Step Sing about something one had given up and to make for oneself a witty substitute. Spring term with its Sings was lovelier than we could have guessed. He hollered bow-bow , the Seniors sang; and we had a reply, Smith shan ' t go to the dogs . We studied a bit when time would permit , batted, took fifty-cent chances on a famous fur coat and wondered all the while just what phase of this multitudinous life was really college. Almost before we knew that the weeks had all galloped past, we had clapped ourselves safe now in the Sophomore Class , and were being hurried out of our beds, out of our rooms, out of town without a minute for good-byes, to make room for the Alumnae. Marian Rubins 198 199 OFFICERS President, Elizabeth Wyandt Fice-Preside?it, Katharine Asher Secretary, Marian Rubins Treasurer, Katharine S. Thompson Historian, Virginia Heinlein Song Leader, Barbara White Assistant Leader, Margaret Row CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES SOPHOMORE RECEPTION General Chairman, Carol Rice Invitation, Mary Lambert Music, Christine Adams Grind Book, Helen Walker Floor, Carol Rice Decoration, Frances Patten Ushers, Katharine Kimball Faculty Invitation, Alice Best RALLY DAY Decoration, Sophie Acheson Ribbon, Mary Forker BIG GAME Decoration, Marian Leonard Stunt, Viola Aloe JUNIOR CARNIVAL Finance, Margaret Broad Refreshments, Virginia Yates Ushers, Dorothy Gates 1918 COMMENCEMENT Class Supper, Viola Aloe Push, Mary Seymour 200 Now it happened that in September, 1918, in radiant expectation, we once more assembled from all corners of the earth, sans anxious parents, sans Freshman Baede- kers, sans the hundred superfluities that a year ' s experience had taught us to leave behind. Sophomores! It was a good world after all, and we were all good Sophomores in it. However, we were neither advised nor advisees, and only a gay assurance of our own im- portance got us safely through some rather puzzling first weeks. On Thursday, September 20th (what is a history without dates . ), President Seelye, on his eightieth birthday, presented our new president to the college. Most of us can reckon our affection for him, which steadily grew all year, from that first day, and we strutted around, consoling the Seniors as much as we dared, and patting ourselves on the back for being so fortunate as to have three more years at school. Two days later, we Froliced in the gym, and verified what we had suspected a year before that Freshman Frolic is a sad misnomer. We were the ones v ho caught the jokes, who knew the songs and sang them, and thought Gullible ' s Travels with its refrain — Oh, Miss Adviser, We ' re so much wiser — so clever. Crowded. — yes! — Pushed and poked and rushed and stepped on. ' ' — by all means! But what was so strange and hectic to the Fresh- men was pie to our sophisticated souls and we reveled in our competent guidance. Later, too (December 8th), came our formal reception, when, looking very handsome, we led a somewhat subdued Justine Smith the snail march in and out the lockers of the gym basement and down the line of those who were there to welcome her, our Dean and three class presidents. But the thought of our country at war, occupied our minds most of the time. At Mr. Hoover ' s suggestion, we said farewell to white sugar in its many pleasant guises and proudly directed our attention toward the activities of the SCRU which had sailed August 13th for France on the Rochambeau . We sighed with exasperation. It was just our luck to be 1920 instead of 1915 or 18 — , to be inexperienced and unnecessary instead of competent graduates in uniform, able to do everything, from cobbling shoes to leading an army. In answer to Dr. Goldthwait ' s urgent plea for Red Cross dressings, each month we sent a huge box to his hospital. Then we began to save for the 2nd Liberty Loan, and as our quarters and dollars accumulated, our Thrift Stamp cards turned a patriotic green. Dis- cussion of Glee Club men and Who ' s Who on the Faculty was replaced by intelligent observations on the Fourteen Points, and Polity Club was founded. Debating Union flourished, and with the help of Buzz and 1920, Smith entered Intercollegiate Debating. For six weeks we contended among ourselves and then debated Wellesley at Wellesley and won, but the same night, Vassar (evidently inspired by the example of the Sophomore basketball players who beat the Freshmen 37-5) proved at Smith that the Japanese immigration should be restricted, and went home victorious. Never was class so capable, so energetic (ahem!) and with a determination to do every- thing and see everything. We rushed from one noteboard to another, from this meeting to that, leaving our names boldly inscribed on every try-out sign. At this time, too, we rejoiced in the acquisition of a new Dean, a sympathetic councillor who paid attention to us alone. (See frontispiece.) But soon we came to the point where we had to be active or freeze. The coal gave out! Astronomers warned us that the heat given forth by the sun was decreasing; we realized that if we used up all the wood in New England, we would have less lovely hills to climb in the spring, and certainly no sticks on which to roast our hotdogs. What was to be done. We had been having two meatless and wheatless days a week and conserving butter and 201 sugar and saving electricity, and now there was really nothing else to do but to embark upon a heatless season. We closed our windows at six o ' clock. We gave up the gym and some classrooms and sported in the open. Hares and hounds cavorted all over Hampshire County, and 1920 ' s most efficient workmen helped Abby build a thrilling toboggan slide over Paradise. But in spite of our release from gym work, we still were able marchers. On Friday, April 19th, we displayed the skill of Faculty and students to the Northampton world, in a great Liberty Loan parade. 1920 wore white skirts and blue coats and carried large purple banners, and even helped to lead the procession on a big black horse. There were occasional dark days that would tax anyone ' s strength, and it behooved 1920 with the help of a clever sister classman to brighten up her little corner. So on a Monday morning the Campus Cat came to life. ' TA Campus Cat is not a joke, He s meant for educated folk . The college laughed appreciatively and fed him catnip whenever the spirit moved him to appear, while Abe Sleeper helped him to gather gists. Soon after a successful Washington ' s Birthday celebration, the ice on Paradise began to break, and late in May on the first Float Day, 1920 watched the upper classes match their skill and she herself took part in a canoe pageant of Mother Goose rhymes and fairy tales. A few days later on Allen Field, the deplorable conditions in Fairy Land were made very real to her, and she resolved to follow 1919 ' s example and give up Frolic and Prom the next year if the War continued. But 1919 wasn ' t the only class with ideas! 1920 had a most enchanting one — a Three-Ring Circus on Allen Field, excelled by none on earth, with a parade and a calliope that could be heard on the top of Mt. Tom, and performing animals and chariot races and purplish pink lemonade and peanuts (C. M. had said they were nutritive) and balloons in class colors and a Sideshow. But the best laid plans — Alas! The lady skeleton had almost starved herself, the juggler had juggled his gold balls every day for a week, the Siamese twins were thinking alike, when the fatal news came. No vacant day or night could be obtained. Field Day brought visitors from all our sister and brother colleges who stood and looked and wondered. 1920 played tennis and archery — and won the tennis match! And to her great amazement, received two S sweaters. But it was almost time to have a final fiing and go home for long vacations. 1918 sang sad songs to us from the steps, and we answered her in songs half of mournful leavetaking and half of cheery invitation to take us batting. And let us say that she responded royally. We saw 1918 ' s end rapidly approaching, but before givi ng ourselves over to weeping and wail- ing, we cast one long look over our second college year, in a spiritof inventory and appraisement. We had done our best to help our country raise the 12, 000,000 and keep the soldiers cheerful, and miraculously, had had almost enough time for our work. In June, when our typewriting, nursing, and automobile courses were completed, our FINALS over, we undertook the responsibility of seeing that President Neilson was properly inaugurated. Ivy Day, Illumi- nation Night, Alumnae Parade, did not appear, but there were certain substitutes. Even Apollo and Diana appreciated the dignity of a double celebration, and appeared on the platform of J. M. G., during the evening of Carmen Saeculare. Then 1918 suddenly left. With the exit of a much-loved class, we, too, moved upward and onward, and were JUNIORS, the jollity of whom would have to be determined the next year. Virginia Heinle in 202 1 203 Suntnr f ?ar OFFICERS President, Mabel Lyman Vice-President, Judith Matlack Secretary, Margaret Wirt Treasurer, Mary M. Armstrong Historian, Helen Walker Song Leader, Margaret Row Assistant Leader, Katharine Kimball CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES RALLY DAY Decoration, Jeanette Lawson Mascot, Lois Bateman Ribbon, Elizabeth Coleman JUNIOR FROLIC General Chairman, Carol Rice Katharine Asher Beth MacDuffie Margaret Peoples Marion Webb 204 Ntn t rn-®m?ntg. Suntnr With hat o ' er one eye rudely pushed, But gladness in the other, She greeted each friend at the train Just like a long-lost brother. How nice it was to see each one! Her best friends, next best, any — She hugged them all impartially. Herself among the many. For was she not a Junior now. ' And college for her, by her. ' Her chest expanded quite a foot, She stretched three inches higher. She looked up ' Liza Jane and Sue, About three hundred others, Delightedly gave them advice Still wiser than their mothers ' . Now Jack Josephus, best beau, framed, And Maxfield Parrish dusted. She told the Dean they could begin, For She was all adjusted. In Conservation-days, she saved All sugar and each penny; From soup to pudding she conserved; The pounds she lost were many. Then Flu germs brought strict quarantine. And with her usual ardor She searched each innovation well Then innovated harder. In blazing valleys. Twenty farmed; Besides a backbone broken. The beet-bug language she acquired, By all the best bugs spoken. At five she ' d wink her sunburnt eye, Triumphant, snatch her payment, Not knowing it would cost twice that, To clean her dusty raiment. Drugstores in miniature were hid Behind the desk or under. Until she learned to gargle hymns, Which saved her — now we wonder! The Armistice! And disappeared The old gray weight of sadness. She sang and sang until she thought Her heart would break from gladness. 205 She turned to Reconstruction next; But skated when they ' d let her, And slid down hills on dishpans (or The crust was even better). Then mid-years came and gave her time To see her favorite heroes, The movie-stars; and still, she got Phi Beta Kap, not zeroes. At Junior Frolic, Freshmen hung Suspended from the ceiling. But flu de coop was all that came Of midnight poultry stealing. The skies turned blue and elms were green. Those spring days; Did she love them! White shoes and batting clothes again, And lolly-pops above them. In work or play, where ' er she led, The college followed meekly. The all-important Junior now Was Monthly, Press Board, JVeekly. And though Josephus couldn ' t dance, And rain fell like an ocean, (They thought they ' d have to use an ark) The Prom met every notion. At Sings she sang songs to herself, (For someone must begin it) Then, finally, she took the steps, And cried . Well, just a minute. And when she got that Senior pin. Pride almost stopped her breathing; And no one knew quite how she felt. To think of Nineteen leaving. The college knew her social grace; Commencement-time employed it; She Junior-ushered everything. And hugely she enjoyed it. Yes, I believe in signs; she smiled, Time ' s proved them true a-plenty, Northampton ' s Paradise enough For me! ' said Nineteen-Twenty. Helen Hunt Walker 206 w. . JUNIOR FROLIC ®I|r agu0 0f Nattnna China Haven, Chapin, Hatfield Turkey Clark, 41 Elm Fiji Islands Baldwin, Bedford Terrace Holland Tyler, Lawrence Greenland Wallace Poland Left Side of Belmont Avenue France Gillett, Northrup, Elm Street England Right Side of Belmont Avenue Italy West Street 207 208 LiLLiAS Armour Mildred Cover dommttoFB for Sumor Prom na r , 7 • ( Elizabeth Wyandt ueneral Chairman, ■ ' ( Helen Walker Head Usher, Alice Best FLOOR COMMITTEE Chairman, Marion Webb Laura Ley Nora Kelley Alice James Isabel Hosack Jessie Roberson Annie Breuer PROGRAM COMMITTEE Chairman, Miriam Felt Mary Seymour Katharine S. Thompson MUSIC COMMITTEE Chairman, Hortense Boyce Elizabeth Humphrey Lucretia Salmon Catherine Patton INVITATION COMMITTEE Chairman, Marjory Lord Dorothy Gorton Virginia Thompson Marian Loenard Edith Levy REFRESHMENT COMMITTEE Chairman, Jeanette Lawson Mary Lambert Elizabeth Bassick THEATRE Virginia Yates Lucille Larson Resigned 209 210 3lunt0r Hslfrra Mary Acuff Christine Adams Caroline Allen Jean Archibold LiLLiAS Armour Katharine Asher Elizabeth Bassick Lois Bateman Ruth Bardwell Josephine Battle Elizabeth Bates Katharine Beard Rosalind Bement Alice Best HORTENSE BoYCE Margaret Broad Elizabeth Brown Leah Brown Marion Brumberg Grace Bowman Clarinda Buck Muriel Byard Helen Carvalho Helen Cass Elizabeth Clark Edith Cohen Elizabeth Coleman Edith Coomee Allace Cowen Mary Courtenay Louise Cramer Dorothy Criswell Virginia Davis Louise DeGaris Miriam Delano Mary Dangler Katharine Dickson Agnes Dowd Laura Donnell Anne Everett Miriam Felt Helen Field Gertrude Fitzgerald Alice Finger Frances Flint Rose Foreman Barbara Foster Barbara Frantz Dorothy Gates Helen Gill Esther Gould Katherine Graham Agnes Grant Margaret Gutman Helen Hadley Elizabeth Haerle Marind Hamill AIiriam Hawkins Virginia Heinlein Allena Hendry Grace Hiller Helen Hine Isabella Hosack Mary Howgate Helen Hoyt Ina Hughes Siloma Hunt Charis Hutchinson Helen Jack Nora Kelley Katharine Kimball Francisca King Ruth Kirkpatrick Emily Knight Marion Kron Eleanor Krusen Ruth Lagasse Mary Lambert Margaret Lane Harriet Pratt Lattin Jeanette Lawson Marjory Lee Edith Levy Laura Ley Mary Lincoln Marjory Lord Idella Lyman Mabel Lyman Ruby McCallum Heather McKinnell Beth MacDuffie ' era MacKen Marie McMillan Margaret Marsh Gertrude Martin Judith Matlack Cordelia Merriam Grace Merrill Dorothy Overton Isabel Painter Frances Patten Catahrine Patton Nan Peterson Margaret Penney Margaret Peoples Janet Putnam Marion Reynolds Carol Rice Helen P. Richards Louise Ritsher Sarah Roberts Gertrude Robinson Margaret Row Marian Rubins Lucretia Salmon Marion Selden Darthea Sharples Hilda Shepard Mildred Simpson Elizabeth Smith Frances Smith Helene Smith Ruth Smith Edith Stein Priscilla Stetson Jessie Sumner Helen Tappen Katharine E. Thompson Katharine S. Thompson Ruth Thompson DoRRis Tucker Eleanor Tucker Harriet Van Zelm Helen Veeder Elsa Vieh Helen Walker Frances Waterman Marion Webb Eleanor Wells Bessie Weibel Hildegarde Wessman Barbara White Ruth Willian Florence Williams Virginia Wiley Margaret Wirt Ruth Wocester Elizabeth Wyandt Virginia Yates Henrietta Zollman 211 213 OFFICERS President, Katharine S. Thompson Vice-President, Idella Lyman Secretary, Marion Selden Treasurer, Marian Hill Historian, Beth MacDuffie Song Leader, Anna Hooker Assistant Leader, Ruth Lagasse CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES SENIOR PINS Chairman, Grace Bowman Miriam Hawkins Ruth Havey Iris Williams RozALiA Armstrong CAPS AND GOWNS Chairman, Catharine Patton Laura Donnell Ruth Smith Leslie Rosemond Eleanor Krusen Ruth Freeman SENIOR BASKETBALL GAME Chairman of Decorations, Agnes Burnham Frances Flint Grace Merrill Mascot, Lois Bateman 214 QlammtttF H for Olomm nr mrtit xtrtms Grace Bowman ORDER OF MARCHING Chairman, Margaret Marsh Isabel Painter Harriet Lattin Isabel Ward Katherine Flower Marjory Lee PRINTING Chairman, Katherine Graham Emily Sellstrom Josephine Taylor Arva Yeagley Elizabeth Haerle Bertha Bassevitch IVY SONG Chairman, Virginia Heinlein Rosalind Bement Beth MacDuffie Helen Walker Carol Allen Bertha Bassevitch IVY DAY EXERCISES Chairman, Nora Kelley Elizabeth Prescott Marion Reynolds Virginia Yates Katherine Graham COMMENCEMENT ORATOR Chairman, Katharine Dickson Margaret Marsh Grace Hiller CLASS SUPPER Chairmayi, Katharine Dickson Ruth Hardin Margaret Wirt Marjorie Scudder 215 OInmmitoFa for ntor iramaltra General Manager, Marion Webb Assistant to the Chairman ..... Business Manager Assistant B usiness Manager ..... Stage Manager ....... SCENERY Chairman, Helen C.4SS Margaret Gutman Helen Field Frances Patten COSTUME Chairman, Ruth Havey Isabel Painter Hilda Shepard STAGE MANAGER ' S ASSISTANTS Viola Aloe Mary M. Armstrong Helene Smith MUSIC Chairman, Lucretia Salmon Helen Hadley Alice Rathbun CALL BOYS Gertrude Fitzgerald Marian Hill . Henrietta Zollman Virginia Yates SiLOMA Hunt Christine Adams Rosalind Bement Miriam Felt Katherine Flower Alice Thompson Nora Kelley Helen Reece Louise Ritsher Isabel Hosack Resigned PRELIMINARY CHAIRMAN Francisca King 216 5IIj0 iimliant nf mm ' Duke of Fenice . Prince of Morocco Prince of Arragon Antonio Bassanio Solanio Salarino Gratiano Lorenzo Shylock Tubal Launcelot Gobbo Old Gobbo . Salerio Leonar do Balthazar Antonio s Servant Portia Nerissa Jessica Singer Frances Flint Helen Carvalho Caroline Allen Margaret Hirsh Katherine Grah-vm Jeanette Croxford Madeleine Fuller SiLOMA Hunt Helen Hoyt Ula Orr Judith Matlack Mary Frances Cathcart Katharine Bryan Jeanette Croxford Margaret A ' Iarsh Francisca King Alice Thompson Agnes Grant Josephine Battle Edith Levy Hortense Boyce 217 QIommttorH for S ntnr JProm na r General Chairman, Mary M. Armstrong Head Usher, Katherine Sawyer FLOOR COMMITTEE „, . f Carol Rice Lnairman, Jessie McCabe Mildred Cover Miriam Felt Gertrude Robinson Gertrude Fitzgerald PROGRAM COMMITTEE Chairman, Katherine Flower Grace Hiller Mary Courtenay MUSIC COMMITTEE Chairman, Margaret Penney Anne Corlett Louise Atwater INVITATION COMMITTEE Chairman, Hilda Shepard Grace Bowman Ruth Lagasse Katharine E. Thompson Ruth Havey Charlotte Thomas REFRESHMENT COMMITTEE Chairman, Helen Graves Rose Foreman Katherine Brown GARDEN PARTY COMMITTEE Chairman, Madeleine Fuller ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE Chairman, Mary Seymour chaperonage committee Chairman, Elizabeth Prescott ' ' Resigned 218 g mnr (UlaBH l|tBtnrg 1920 arrived in Northampton a bit giddy and dizzy, for was she not a Senior? She recalled her past days of irresponsibility, and shuddered. Was there ever a time when she was frivolous to the point of Campus Cats and such? She had reflected during the summer on her attitude in the position of Top Crust of the college. She had been a Radical, a Socialist, a Soviet, but she must be serious and consider her more than probable influence on the others. Her sense of importance was not lessened by discovering, after Mountain Day had given 1923 a damp hint of what college is, that we, as a col lege, were worth four million dollars to the alumnae. She found that her grown-up sisters were going to prove it, and she asked anxiously if 1920 were not to help at all? Just before Christmas, she heard more of quotas and headquarters and stickers than she understood, but she bore up bravely and flaunted her Christmas bag-from-Miss-Comstock in the face of the admiring and questioning world. When mid-years had disappeared for the last time, 1920 learned more of her quota, and struggled to keep up with the example set by 1923, who ran errands and shined shoes madly for the Fund . She was proud and glad to have a share in the oversubscription. But at the same moment, she found herself in the middle of her third quarantine. She heaved a sigh, wrote to New Haven and tried to be philosophical and find sustenance and comfort in President Neilson ' s prescription of food for thought . When Miss Comstock was pleased at her grown-up behavior, she was glad she had not gone on a strike — which she might easily have done in her Sophomore year. She began to think well of the Student Government, that had so frightened her a year ago, and thought of further good acts, with reference to Chapel, which she might perform. There was a day in spring, however, when 1920 looked at her reflection in the mirror and sighed deeply. This was not the same young person who had donned a Senior pin so blithely last June. Care was on her brow and responsibility smoldered in her eyes. She 219 was getting old. So she went next door to play with 192 1 and made herself so agreeable that her younger sister invited her to come along and have Senior Prom, when I do . So 1920 smiled and wrote to New Haven again (and again) and bought the simple little dress for Garden Party. While she waited for the days to go by she took the faithful-but-stupid one to Glee Club and liked the Mikado and forgot to be bored. And she took new interest in life and let some Sophomores be on her little pet Monthly. Then Prom really did arrive, and disappeared with alarming and terrifying swiftness. 1920 found herself, after the sudden reversion to her youthful days, a bit weary and ready to sentimentalize over the last things but she remembered how completely and satisfyingly she had done it for 19 19 last year, and cheered up. She thought complacently of her choice for Senior Dramatics and was glad that she had deserted Sappho and Phaeon and the dead baby for The Merchant of Venice . The family arrived and exclaimed over everything from the Fountain Lady to wieners on the Connecticut. Someone gave 1920 the Long-Hoped-For and Little-Expected Sheepskin and it was over, almost. She went to Class Supper and ran around the table and clapped all the jokes. But she was in a trance. Luck was still with her, she knew, and she gripped him firmly by the hand for com- pany when she went out from her Smith College. Beth MacDuffie 220 Sunday, June Thirteenth Baccalaureate Exercises in Assembly Hall, 11 A. M. Address, President Neilson Organ Vespers in John M. Greene Hall, 8 P. M. Organist, Wilson Townsend Moog 221 Monday, June Fourteenth Ivy Exercises on Campus .... 10 A. M Ivy Exercises in John M. Greene Hall . . 10:30 A. M Society Reunions ...... 2 P. M Closing Concert ...... 3 P. M Art Exhibition ...... 4-6 P. M College Sing ...... 7 P. M President ' s Reception in the Library 8-10 P. M 999 3ug g ong Let ivy grow, and let our dream grow too With urging life, and always with desire Even in content; O let us make a song Of hope for growing higher! Praise now the hours of dreams we ' ve found in books — Glad soul-adventures in a world of thought; Praise now the days that were like blazing banners, And all the joy they brought. Praise now the times that taught us friendliness, The touch of life, the dream of soul, The glint of vision and the spark of wonder. The swift glimpse of the precious, flying goal. Let ivy grow, and let our dream grow too With urging life, and always with desire Even in content; O let us make a song Of hope for growing higher! Helen Underwood Hoyt. 223 COMMENCEMENT Tuesday, June Fifteenth John M. Greene Hal! 10:30 A. M. Address by Frederick J. E. Woodbridge Alumnae Meeting 4:00-6:00 P. M. Class Supper in Alumnae Gymnasium 7:00 P. AI. 224 B A -M ' SUPPER lM PinO RHEP Toastmistress — Katharine Kimball Wilt thou show the whole wealth of thy wit in an instant? ' The Alerchant of Venice, Act III, Scene 5. Our Past — SiLOMA Hunt Have you anything to say? But little I am armed and zvell prepared. ' ' Act IV, Scene 1. Let me play the fool. ' ' ' ' Act I, Scene 2. The Present — Henrietta Fort We turned over many books together. Act IV, Scene 1. What Next? — Helen Graves cannot get a service: no, I have ne ' ' er a tongue in my head. ' Act II, Scene 2- The Faculty — Beth MacDuffie Happiest of all is that her gentle spirit commits itself to yours to be directed. ' ' Act III, Scene 3. Roll Call — Katharine Asher you did know to whom I gave the ring — you did know for whom I gave the ring, and would conceive for what I gave the ring and how unwillingly I left the ring., when naught would be accepted but the ring. Act V, Scene 1. 225 226 1 227 Qlnmm mnrattnn (§h Across the heat and turmoil of our days The cleansing wind of iieaven sweeps wide and free. Serene and high, above the shifting sea, The radiant moon holds still her endless ways. But we whose house is dark, See not the glory of her light, nor hear The rushing wind, nor mark Its mighty force; or, dimly sensing, fear A clearer vision, dreading Strength and Light, Lest they might tear us from this fetid night Whose very phantoms are, through custom, dear. It was not always thus; our nation ' s pride Counts rightly as her mightiest moments those When, standing at the parting ways, she chose The untried path where Faith would be her guide. She names supremely great Those who with eyes fixed on the constant right Bowed in no servile state To weakling ' s fears or cynic ' s doubts — their might Rising by Faith, not held enchained by Fate. And first among these names of power stands his Who championed, through the weariness of strife. The truth of things unseen, — whose steadfast life Desired and reached Faith ' s high immensities. His strength was, not to heed The old, disheartening pleas of Circumstance; His pride was, not to need The day ' s rewards; through night he dared advance To meet the dawn he felt, but could not see; From doubt and indecision strongly free, He dared believe the truth he knew to be — And lived to show his vision true indeed. The Faith in which he nobly lived and died Has shone above us in these later years Undimmed, though veiled by doubts and blinding fears. Though half forgotten in our hours of pride, We found it glowing still When war ' s reality broke our selfish dream; When with a common will We fled hypocrisy, and dared to seem What in our hearts we knew ourselves to be — Fighters for brotherhood — knights of the free, Against the stifling forces that would kill. We won our common cause and live — by power Of faithful men, who with their latest breath Bade us to take the life they bought with death And win the glory of this crowning hour. Now while the lands are torn With strife of restless hordes, no longer weak, In watching souls is born The hope that now at last all men may seek The promised gift of morn. 228 No mad excess shall win that sacred right. But noble self-restraint and common might, With common faith and common rallying cry: We are one blood, one kindred, you and I! Fling wide your arms! across our heated da ' s The cooling wind of heaven sweeps broad and free. Lift high } ' our head! abo ' e the shifting sea. The radiant moon holds still her endless wa ' s. BARBARA FOSTER Nflui Will 1p (Soup e shall forget each other some tomorrow: You will forget me, I shall forget 3 0u, All the swift music of your radiant thinking. Your eyes that burned unspoken things and true, rii not remember ways we played together, Or how you made me happy for awhile; I shall not even want you to be near me, I shall not need the helping of your smile. Now will be gone, nor needed in tomorrow, But there will last — I know, for I can see Down changing thought — there will be left, forever, Eternal dreams you dared to give to me. Helen U. Hoyt. all|f Ifitviii While all mv friends to Ian Hay And movies gayly flit, I stay at home and stitches count — And knit and knit and knit. They will not let me take my work And with the public sit; It seems like such a waste of time — I ' d so much rather knit. So while without I hear the din Of Smith ' s gay social whirl, I click my needles back and forth: Knit one, knit two, and purl . I ' m on my fourth, a dreamy blue, It ' s bound to make a hit! I wish that I could eat and sleep And study while I knit! Instead, to ease my weary mind, This little poem I ' ve writ, But e ' en the rhyming scheme, you ' ll find, Two knit, one purl, two knit. [Author ' s note: This sounds quite well; it is a lie! I ' ve never done a bit; I only watch my friends, you know, And say: Well, I guess nit! l Judith Matlack. QIl|p |[Ionplg-l|partp5 Knnut The lonely-hearted know The sorrow I have had. The lonely-hearted go The paths that I have trod. The lonely-hearted weep For death and are most sad. The lonely-hearted sleep Eternally with God. Elizabeth McCausland. A mpf ting (Srnuttb nf SCinga My motlier used to tell me this at night (The story ' s dim with sleepy voices still) — My little head would droop against her knee Although I tried so hard to keep awake! There were two kings a long, long time ago, Who came together in a field in France To spread their golden rugs upon the ground And fling their sparkling banners to the winds. Beneath their silken canopies, the song And laughter, rising, reached the gleaming place Where kings in council talked of friendship long, But haggled over peace all day and night. The glamor of their gilded luxuries So vied with Nature ' s handiwork. Men called the place ' The Field of Cloth of Gold ' . I never heard the end; I always woke To find the morning peeping in my door; The sun was making patches, warm and bright, Of gold upon my bed ' s white coverlet. 229 Full four long centuries of fleeting time Have passed o ' er that same Field of Cloth of Gold. In that same meadow men in thousands meet, And monarchs count the price of peace today. Since gold of Nature, lavished in the field, Holds warmth of sunshine in each flowercup, The country keeps its ancient lovely name. The laughter must be echoes in the woods For all the dancing is of wind-blown leaves. Men pass beneath, half-hidden by a mask Of dust, each like a ghastly, grim Pierrot. The Field of Cloth of Gold — we want to know The story ' s end, or what will happen next. Just tell us once — we drowsy children slept, Although we tried so hard to keep awake! Beth MacDuffie. ®trp lain (dall The Child Open the door and let me out! The clouds are low; the leaves are still; The rain is coming; let me out! The tree-frogs call me from the hill. I hear a patter on the roof; I see pale drops creep down the pane; A damp, fresh breeze sweeps through the trees; I must go out to join the rain! It marches from the misty sea; It shifts across the patchwork grain; I feel its breath; I hear its voice; Let me go out to greet the rain! It closes in and blots the light; It stamps a path beneath the eaves; Its volume pours; its music roars; Its beauty gleams upon the leaves. Open the door and let me out! You lock and bar my way in vain. Once more, I pray you, let me out. To laugh and shout amidst the rain! The Housewife No, little one, you cannot go, To share the revels of the rain; The shades are low; the fire aglow; Come back to the hearth again! The Child I am not happy, here with you, These four walls are a prison room; The seagulls flutter in the dusk; Their white wings beckon through the gloom. The storm is wild upon the shore; It leaves the curving flood-tide higher. Far up the beach the black waves reach, And spread a sheen of phosphorous fire. The green woods drip, and underfo ot The dead leaves shine with rusty gold; Far, far beyond, the racing pond Piles foaming castles, fold on fold. Open the door and let me out! You lock and bar my way in vain. Once more, I pray you, let me out, To be the soul of all the rain! The Housewife No, little one, you cannot go! Forget the calling of the rain! The baby sleeps; the firelight leaps; Come back unto the hearth again! In sweeps the gale; the flames grozv pale; Wide is the door, arid rent its chain. The baby sleeps; the houseztiife weeps; On drives the triumph of the rain. Judith Matlack. Mm iFillrul I have a Belgian soldier Who is far across the sea. And although I ' ve never seen him, He corresponds with me. Sometimes such funny things he says I can ' t make out the sense; But I always understands his thanks When he pays me compliments. Should English be so hard for him. I write French so beautifully; But they tell me ' twasn ' t quite correct When I called him mon ami . I send him smokes and sweaters, And at Christmas a surprise, And he sent me his picture — My, he has good-looking eyes! He ' s very young to be at war — I worry for him so — And he hasn ' t seen his family Since eighteen months ago. So I think it ' s my duty To be family, pro tem, But it does seem sort of ancient When I have to sign marraine . Caroline Kittredge Allen. 230 A (Cnmplaint Gee! I wonder why that grocer Wouldn ' t let me catch a ride. He ' d got two girls hitched on behind, But lots of room inside. I wouldn ' t hurt his eggs and stuff, And anyhow I ' m small. But though those girls weigh twice as much, He makes no fuss at all; Just grins, and showin ' all his teeth. He act ' ch ' ly stops his sleigh And yells, Why certainly, get on, I ' m going right your way! Aly mother says them college girls Just think they own the town; They go a coastin ' on the walks And knock their elders down. She ' d like to talk to them just once And say a thing or two ' Bout what young ladies of their age Should be ashamed to do. But father says, They bring the trade . And uncle booms, That ' s true . Do you suppose when I get old, I ' ll fall for women, too. Margaret Gutman. Give me cool words, cool words to ease my thinking Words that make rippling sounds to soothe my mind! Tell me of waters soaking through deep mosses. And let your voice be smooth upon my mind. Give me in rhythm, words of moving branches That gather sunlight in their outspread hands. Glad to possess it, just as happy children Hold in their little palms, soft white sands. Tell me of leaves that hold the silver sunlight. And keep it away from the damp, scented ground; Tell me of shadows resting on dark water. And let your words make a quiet sound. Now I am tired, and I need green branches; Giv ' e me your words that sing as the shadows do, Over cool waters in leaf-hushed places; Sing to me, beloved, as green shadows do. Helen Underwood Hoyt. A (Ennn B ong Ah met Brer Rabbit in de road one day; Ah say, Howdy , and, Howdy , he say. He had on a jacket an ' an old straw hat Wid nothin ' but a hole where de crown was at. He look mighty onery but he walk with pride. Like he had fo ' ty hosses fo ' to ride; Like he ' d been a-co ' tin ' , an ' had won his bride, An ' was comin ' home wid her at his side. So, fo ' to tke dat sassiness out, Ah ask him what he ' s so proud about. ' He flirt his eye at me an ' say, Mah garment hit ' s made by de Lawd today . Ah thought Brer Rabbit had los ' his mind, An ' Ah look for de Debbil close behind. Brer Rabbit , says Ah, you ' re crazy as a loon, Dat jacket hit ' s made by ole Sis ' Coon. Brer Rabbit , says I, you ' re crazy as a snake, Dat ' s de brim of a hat marsa dropped in de lake . G ' wan, nigger , says he, you ' re crazy as a bat. Didn ' t de Lawd make de air what ' s de crown o ' dat hat.? Margaret Broad. I watched God weave the morning On a loom of passing night. His warp was the mist of autumn. And his woof, the dawning light. I saw the fabric growing. Blue lines across the grey. Then streaks of red and yellow. And the mystic gleams of day. God ' s Will, the silent shuttle. Worked quickly to and fro. Against a sky of sunrise The trees began to show. And some had flaming branches Like the sunset of the year, While others stood majestic, With branches bare and sere. I watched God weave the morning On a loom of passing night. His warp was the mist of autumn. And his woof, the dawning light. Violet Alleyn Storey. QIIjp 3Ftal|UJifp (Inspired by Mr. Senseny ' s etching) In every bone I own I ache; I ache in every bone I own. The world is old and I am cold; M ' hands are rough, my life is tough; My heart is sad, my boys are bad; I eat sea food in bitter mood; My life is grey, my man ' s away. I ache in every bone I own; In every bone I own I ache. Helen Underwood Hoyt. 231 (With apologies to T. Hood) With fingers weary and slow, With heavily hanging head, I sit in the Red Cross room. Plying my needle and thread. Stitch — stitch — stitch ! For the Belgian refugees. I fear when they get the things I make, They will chill with exposure, and freeze. Work — work — work ! I never did know how to sew! Prick — prick — prick ! Three bright crimson drops in a row! Band and bias and seam — Now don ' t make those stitches so long! ' The monitor frowns and takes it away — It seems I am doing it wrong. Oh, but to breathe the air That sparkles and tingles like wine! Oh, that sun that shines in the window. Mocking this labor of mine! For only one short hour And I am ready to shriek! I guess I ' ll go biking this time. And make it all up next week! Elizabeth Haerle. Qlolbg? S 0ng0 Jffatr mitlj Fair Smith, our praise to thee we render, O dearest college halls. Bright hours that live in mem ' ry tender Are winged within thy walls. O ' er thy walks the elms are bowing. Alma Mater. Winds ' mid branches softly blowing, Ivy ' round thy towers growing, Alma Mater. The ' time may prove the pleasure fleeting, No hour is spent in vain. True hearts behold the future meeting; Our friendships cannot wane. Of thy c are forgetful never. Alma Mater. Bound by ties that naught can sever, Still to thee returning ever, Alma Mater. And while the hills with purple shadows Eternal vigil keep. Above the happy river meadows In golden haze asleep. May thy children thee addressing. Alma Mater, Speak with grateful praise unceasing. Speak in loyal hearts thy blessing, Alma Mater. Alma Halpr Words by Henrietta Sperry, ' jo Music by H. D. Sleeper To you. Oh! Alma Mater, Oh! mother great and true. From all your loyal children Comes up the song anew. Where swings the red sun upward, Where sinks he down to rest. Are hearts that backward turning Still find you first and best. Chorus — And gladly singing to you always Our loyal hearts with joy shall fill; Oh! fairest, fairest Alma Mater, You hold and claim us still. You gave us dreams unnumbered, And life we had not known. And now. Oh! Alma Mater, We give you back your own. For memories, for friendships. That bless each passing day. Our toil unsought we render. Our debt unasked we pay. Chorus — Alma ilater ong 191B JVords by Angela Richmond, l6 Music by Mabel Austin, ' i6 Alma Mater, through the years. We, your daughters true. Bring our hope, our joys, our fears. And our lives to you. For your tender guiding strength. Through our happy college days, Offer we our loyal hearts, And our loving praise. Every year the joyous throng Tastes of life anew, Every year increasing strong. Comes our love for you. For the glory of your gifts, Shining on our happy days, Offer we our loyal hearts. And our loving praise. 232 Tune: Marching Through Georgia Since President Burton ' s left us all in such a hectic state, A wild and wooly institution for to educate, We ' ve put that famous warning sign upon the college gate Smith shan ' t go to the dogs! Chorus — ■ We ' re too young to save the nation For the future generation, We ' ve but one determination, Smith shan ' t go to the dogs! Tune: Blufs When on the train I had landed, My brain it was so expanded, French, Math and Chemistry Were all a mystery. Life was just one long exam. Breathing a Latin declension Thinking of mother and home I must be right at the college door Because I heard the brakeman roar — Chorus: Smith ' s Ferry! Smith ' s Ferry! This is Smith ' s Ferry! This is Smith ' s Ferry! I gave a sigh of relief, Said good-bye to my grief. Grabbed m ' things, dashed to the door. Smith ' s Ferry, this is Smith ' s Ferry — The boat to take me ' cross Paradise — I looked around me sure that I would find Someone who ' d be very kind, But I stood there on the platform all alone. V ' erse Two Back in the summer vacation I had a notification Saying that I should have sent My gym suit measurement So that it would ready be. Mother so carefully measured, Each little detail was there, For its beauty to take good care I sought a fitting everywhere. Chorus: Miss Richards! I ' d like Miss Richards! Miss Richards, How do you do. ' ' Fve heard the Juniors and Sophs say Girls must look well each day. Specially at Gym class, too. .Miss I ichards! Oh, Miss Richards! Won ' t you please attend to it. ' rd like to have my gym attire Everthing that you desire My gym suit must be made a perfect fit. Verse Three Landed at my destination, After such sad complication. Mother had said to me That I must careful be — Trust my course card to no one young, So I had told my advisor Don ' t come back early for me. If Vm in need of authority The President will look after me. Chorus: President Neilson! President Neilson! Wont you please make out my course, For mother said don ' t experiment, Your metal development Is quite important, you see . I don ' t need examination, For my brain is quite mature. There are many who will tell you so. Telephone to BufTalo. Oh, President Neilson I depend on you! V ' erse Four I was so very affrighted, By all my troubles excited, I thought I ' d go and see If the Dean would look after me— Straighten all my troubles out. Once in the office I halted, Feeling, alas, in the way. To my horror I heard these words (They were not what I ' d meant to say) — Is the Bean — is the Bean dizzy. ' Is the Bean — is the Bean dizzy. ' I gave a terrified cry. Then made just one more try. But I found that I ' d said it again Is the Bean — is the Bean dizzy. ' (I thought I ' d really lost my head) — Could she note me in the Meet Room, please. ' I cried, and fell on my knees. But jumped to my feet and quickly fled. Encore Chorus Twenty-Three, We bid you welcome, Twenty-Three, We ' re glad you ' re here! It ' s true we ' ve made lots of fun of you, 233 But every one of you The weight of tradition must bear. Twenty-Three For those who go But Twenty-Three For those who stay For in many ways you ' re not so slow Though you stay, you ' ve lots of go. Oh, Twenty-Three Smith College welcomes you. § pntnr Uallg lag Baix Freshman Verse Germs are bound to come along and get you some day, For those funny little bugs will sure come your way! You may think that you ' ve missed the flu, But the mumps are waiting for you. Spend your week-ends at the new infirmary; It ' s free, you see, that ' s why you paid that fee. Chorus Twenty-Three, you know we ' ll love you just the same. Even when you get the mumps! Freshman dimples altogether disappear ]n sophisticated bumps. You ' re not to blame, but just the same, it is a shame! Twenty-Three, you had a hard time to get in. Then we tried to freeze you out. But in spite of all the trouble you have had, We are not so bad, you will soon be glad That you ' ve realh ' come to stay, yes, come to stay! Sophomore Verse Fame is bound to come along and get you some day. When the papers print the news that you ' ve gone astray! Anxious families in distress, call you up by wire- less, Daughter, what is this we hear, concerning you. It can ' t be true! Won ' t you give us a clue. ' Chorus Twenty-Two, the world can read of what you do. In the papers every day. Now it seems they ' re going to know your faces, too. Every week in the Pathe. You ' re not to blame, but just the same, it is a shame! Repeat Twenty-Two, you hav ' e been skating on thin ice, Where ' s your maiden modesty. ' But we really like your feats on Paradise. Spite of what you do, 1922, We are awfully strong for you, yes, strong for you! Junior Verse Trouble ' s bound to come along and get ) ' 0u some day. Though you thought your Junior year would be OH, so gay! You may think that no one but you ever had a cause to be blue. When your second quarantine occurred. Absurd! For have you heard that this one is our third. ' Chorus Twenty-One, oh, tell us what you ' re going to do With the clothes that you have bought. ' Evening gowns no longer hold their charms for you, All your money gone for naught. You ' re not to blame, but just the same, it is a shame! Repeat Twenty-One, we know the very thing to do. With the gowns that you have bought! Junior Prom will ruin them for you. Meanwhile do not eat of forbidden sweet, This will give you food for thought, yes, food for thought . Senior Verse Luck has always come along and caught us each year. We have testimony in our brilliant career! We ' ve been ruled by two presidents, In our class deans did commence. Since our prom was such a great success before It ' s so, you know, we ' re going to have one more i Chorus Twenty — everything has come our way, Since we entered long ago. Fixed the treaty for the Senators they say. Their intelligence is slow. We ' re not to blame, but just the same, it is a shame! Re FEAT Junior year we got Phi Beta Kappa keys, For to wind our Baby Bens. Now we want four million dollars, if you please, Just to leave behind, Keep us in your mind, And to make a knockout end, yes, knockout end! 234 Tune: The Wedding oj Sandy McNab I ' ve just come back home with my course card; My heart is so heavy toda} ' , I hear that my teachers have asked me To pick out a major , some way. I ' ve looked through the Courses of Study , I ' ve searched every page through and through, And though I have pondered and worried, I do not know what to do. Chc For I ' d really Hke to wager I cannot find a major , For they have all gone off to France so far away. I could easily find a minor , But I want something finer, A Major in the U. S. A. Tune: Clemeniitie Dante talks of his Inferno, But it ' s nothing up to mine, What I suffer in the classroom With assignments in springtime. Chorus: Oh my teachers, oh my teachers, Stop those writtens and be nice! Let me fly from this Inferno Let me be on Paradise. Do they stop. ' Oh, what a question! O ' er my books I still must pore; Burning looks and scorching glances Do they give me evermore. Chorus: Have they mercy, be they kindly, When my lessons I ' ve not read. ' My Inferno is when they heap Coals of fire upon my head. Chorus: hen summer was over and autumn came. You gathered for one last year. But even the long winter months seemed short- Ve realized that springtime was here! The spring has flown by on the wings of a bird; It has been like a wonderful dream. Now June is here and we bid farewell To vou, dear 1919. D ear Senior Class, as you depart. Our thoughts arise anew. We think of the days of work and play While our friendships grew. As we descend these steps tonight. Our hearts are sad, ' tis true. We ' ve learned to love and hold you dear, We ' ll cherish fond memories of you. Chorus; Our song goes out, 1919, with all our love to you, It brings a promise that we are and alwa ' s will be true. It comes from deep down in our hearts. Each year will bring anew The tears that rise up as we part, And bid you fond adieu. May fate and fortune bring the very best in life to you. Tonight, as the evening shadows fall Across the campus green. We come down the steps to take the place You ' ve held all this spring, ' 19. Our spirits are dark as the twilight that falls In the wake of the setting sun, For you are our light, and our hearts fill with grief That your last college year is done. ' 19, you ' ve left these steps tonight, Given them up for aye; You ' ve come to the end of your college life. And now you must go away. We have been friends for three long years. Through da) ' s both gray and gold. While you prepared to realize Dreams and hopes untold. Chorus: Final Chorus: Farewell, ' 19, altho ' this hour Is fraugtit with wistful sadness. You ' re leaving us to go, we hope, Into a world of gladness. For those ideals you ' ve set so high. We lack fit words of praise. They ' ll guide us as we take your place And fill our after days. This final trust, you ' ve given us, We ' ll guard with care always. Tune: Rufus Rastus Johnson Brown Oh, you odd teams on the floor, How do you dare to fight any more. ' What you goin ' to say. ' How you goin ' to play. ' When old ' 20 comes your way. ' Rip ' em, smash ' em, tear ' em through. We are way ahead of you, 1921, we ask you What you goin ' to do when we pass through. ' 235 Marion 236 237 ICatu Oh here ' s to the tort! Long may it waive O ' er t ' hose nervy young damsels, Courageous and brave, Who dash in so fearless, To Commercial Law, So studious and brainy They fill me with awe. They learned about minors And what they may do. It ' s a dangerous practice W hen they ' re out after you. They can disaffirm contracts Whenever they please — When you contract with infants. Just fall on your knees. There ' s nothing in law That an infant can ' t do- Beware, oh adults. You ' ll be sorry, too. They can get all your money; Defenceless you ' ll be; You may think it ' s funny. But just look at me! I studied Commercial And a contract I made. With an innocent maiden I was put in the shade. She has my allowance — All gone is my fun. For she was but nineteen, And I, twenty-one! M. S. A. ' 20 Mr. Kimball (in reference to a written): evidently struck the area of honorable ignorance. iEUzabftl) MyanM There is a girl in our class And she is mighty sweet, Liz rules us well With smiles that tell And graciousness good to meet. M. W. H. ' 20 ? ? ? A farmer can tell by the size of his silo how many cows he can plant to the feeding . Mr. Chapin (to a class in Statistics): How many think it is more important to be married than to live at home with a father. ' Miss Elkus: Has anyone in this class a human brain she could bring to class with her tomorrow. ' Sowgonp SCnawa et ! It liappened in a certain class. One maiden had the floor, She cussed and discussed, did this lass, (We wished her out the door.) Then answered the doctor in this strain, Prolonged pleasure does give pain! iluditt; Mntlatk Come on men, come, beat the ladies! Said our Judy — young and slender — Ain ' t it awful. ' Auctioneering Makes a brute of one so tender! M. M. ' 20 Mr. Gray: Now I ' m going to illustrate a bath . Ma rk Broad (in Senior Class Meeting): I don ' t think we ought to vote on insurance policies today — it ' s a serious matter, one of life and death! Anb g-ltU ®1]P0 a Jt ! Evens singing: They scrambled, they scrambled — . A Freshman to another — Why are they singing to Miss Rambo. ' 238 so NEVE SEE Ruth Smith (talking on the Peace Treaty voting): ' All we, like sheep, have gone a Fay . Mr. Patch (in reference to a written in Grammar): I warned you not to cram for the exam. — and as usual, as in everything I say, I was right. (!) Mr. Withington on cremation — Why not crema- tion? You earn your living, why not urn your dead.? Someone to Jessie Sumner who had just succeeded in getting a copy of the much-sought Pride and Prejudice — What course are you reading that for. ' Jessie: For edification! Someone: My, there must be a lot of people taking that course! Mrs. Bradshaw (talking of Maxim Gorki): His father died at the age of four and he was brought up by his grandfather . Iptt; jiciuffir There is a girl in our class And she is wond ' rous clever — Beth writes and sings, Does many things. But stoppeth talking, never. M. W. H. ' 20 Mr. Rogers (in a discussion of dreams): Of course, you don ' t remember your dreams unless you wake up, do you. ' lil o aib ' Em? I object to that point , Throw me down or pick me up , On next Tuesday we will have a sprung written . Fm glad to welcome 1923 back to the balcony, they ' ve had a long vacation . Fve made a new pu n! When I was in Rome — That ' s simply Tweedle-dum and Tweedle-dee . So shy, demure and good you seem, But listen (this is on the level). Did you not ask us at a Sing, Don ' t you all know — ' I am a Devil. M. l., 20 Miss Elkus: The reason you are puzzled, is be- cause you do not understand what we are doing . Miss Cutler: Is it right to marry your brother ' s deceased wife. ' Mr. Patch (speaking of primitive sign writing): There are two kinds — imitative and symbolic. When you have a picture of a lady representing Fortune, that is. Chance, it is imitative. When you have a picture of a lady representing Truth, it is purely symbolic! Mugs Marsh (to State Hospital): You mented, too. ' cat at the Northampton poor kitty! Are You de- Miss King: We are standing on an era of a threshold and must fish the a-ssue . Mr. Kimball: Now I believe in the principles of woman suffrage, and the German Government recog- nized this fact . Miss Elkus: today . There ' s not an absent pupil here 240 i aurn ' t au 3Fplt (Uliia lllag ? I want to know! She wants to know! Will wonders never cease? I thought that she knew everything — I take on life, new lease. I feel much more at home in class, She awes me not, no more. No longer feel I dull and cross. My spirits high do soar! Mlle. Delpit to Miss Jordan: I see you have a very tali new member of the English Department . Miss Jordan: Yes, he ' s only a Patch — think what it would be if he were a who le! Helen Hoyt (in reference to the method of making a chart in Grammar): Would you mind if I worked from top to bottom. Going from left to right, breaks up my sense of time . Mr. Kimball: If you talk with lawyers — or if you talk with people . Miss Elkus: Is there anyone sitting in that vacant seat. Mr. Kimball: If you leave material in the librar ' it will help your predecessors. Mr. Lieder: Quintilian ' s a handy man to know . Facetious Student: Maybe he does plumbing . Mr. Kimball: Breaking laws is always criminal, but not always disreputable . Anatl|pr Argumritt 3For (Eompulanry Qll appl Helen Carvalho: I think it would be much nicer if we signed the little slips at chapel and put them in a little box — then we would have something to go to chapel for. Miss Bigelow: ( in a sign to those interested in Astronomy): All those who wish to see Venus, see me . Mr. Patch (reading quotations from Shakespere that have become part of every-day language): Single blessedness (smiling), that way madness lies . Mr. Rice (coming into a somewhat disarranged class room): What happens in here before this class. ' Student: Math Class . Mr. Rice: Well, they needn ' t get so excited about it . 5IpBt We 3Forgrt! Mr. Whithington: You know the definition of melodrama, of course — drama that is so rotten, it ' s mellow. Mr. Patch: I saw the new Pinero comedy in Springfield; it was amusing to see what caused the most excitement — the pouring of a highball. You can plainly see what will be the subject of many comedies of the future (if that ' s not prohibited!). When the man staggered across the stage slightly drunk, the audience didn ' t ridicule him — they envied him. 241 242 , H L f fL. k wi 9 H 1 1 1 v ii y 1 HV 4 H ' JIKSi% K} ' . , ' H r - H l IMH 243 (Halettbar. 1019-1320 September 23 Registration. Classes begin (Welcome ye Faculty on platform.) First Mass Meeting of the Student Government Association. Elizabeth Wyandt spoke. Field Day. Freshman Frolic. President Neilson spoke at Vespers. Open meeting to explain new Dramatic Association. First S. C. A. C. W. Meeting of the year. Barbara Frantz, President, spoke. 24 25 27 28 29 30 October 1 15 22 29 First Senior Class Meeting. Mountain Day. First Concert of the Concert Series: Boston Symphony Orchestra. Concert by American String Quartet. Nc iber 15 17 19 21 27 Fall Field Day. Rally for Four Million Dollar Fund. Mrs. Andrews and Mrs. Morrow spoke. Red Cross Drive. Senior Class Meeting. Morris House Reception. Tyler House Reception. Talk on Social Work Among Girls — Speaker: Miss Jean Hamilton, Secretary of the National League of Women Workers. Lecture by Sir Johnston Forbes- Robertson. Subject: Macbeth, Othello, and King Lear. Concert by the Flonzaley Quartet. Dramatic Association Plays given at the Academy of Music. The Slave With Two Faces , Three Pills in a Bottle , and Behind the Watteau Picture . We bow! Thanksgiving Day. Army-Navy Bas- ketball Game. December 4 Lecture by Professor RafTaello Piccoli. Subject: Fiume. French Club Play. 6 Dickinson House Reception. Lawrence House Reception. 7 Christmas Organ Recital — Mr. Moog. Carols by the Choir. 10 11 13 14 16 17 20 Miss King spoke to Christian Associa- tion. Illustrated Lecture bv Garrett Chat- field Pier. Subject: Chinese Influence on the Painting and Sculpture of Japan. Song Recital by Miss Dale. French Club Play. Christmas Concert by the Smith Col- lege Musical Clubs. Lecture by Graham Wallas. Subject: The Cement of Civilization. Christmas Miracle Play. Reading of Christmas Poems by Presi- dent Neilson at Christian Associa- tion Meeting. Concert by Frieda Hempel, Soprano. Beginning of the Christmas Recess. January, 1920 7 Opening of College. 9 Lecture by Professor John L. Lowes. Subject: The Fine Frenzy and The Quiet Eye: A Study in Poetic In- spiration. ote of the College taken on the question: How Shall the Peace Treaty be Ratified. ' Lecture by Mr. Piccoli. Subject: Intellectual Tendencies in Modern Italian Literature. Concert by Albert Spalding, Violinist. Illustrated Lecture on Colonial Houses by Professor Bassett. Hubbard House Reception. Beginning of Mid-year Examinations. Organ Vespers. 12 13 14 16 17 19 February 4 Song Post. Recital bv Mr. Theodore H. 9 18 19 Lecture by Miss Marie A. Czaplica, Oxford University Lecturer. Lecture by Miss Caroline F. E. Spur- geon. Professor of English Literature in the University of London. Subject: The International Federa- tion of University Women. Week of Prayer Services — Dr. Caulkins. Freshman-Sophomore Basketball Game Sophomores victorious. Concert by the Phiharmonic Society of New York. Open Meeting of French Club Pre- sentation of Le Bourgeois Gentil- homme. 244 Ma 23 Washington ' s Birthday. Commemoration Exercises. Invocation by Dr. Lyman Abbott. Commemoration Ode by Ruth O ' Han- lon. Oration by Frank Arthur anderHp, LL.D. Student Rally. Junior-Senior Basket- ball Game. Seniors victorious. ' 20, ' 21, ' 22 Show for the benefit of the Four Million Dollar Fund. 26 Lecture by Mr. Ernest Barker. Subject: Problems in British Admin- istration — India. 27 Lecture by Mr. Ernest Barker. Subject: Problems in British Admin- istration — Ireland. 28 Lecture by Mr. Ernest Barker. Subject: The Relation of the State to Society, and Especially to oluntary Associations. 1 Violin Recital by Fritz Kreisler. 2 Lecture by Mr. Piccoli. Subject: Characters and Currents in Italian Politics Since 1870. 3 Haven House Tea. Hampton Quartet Recital. 4 Lecture by Mr. Ernest Barker. Subject: Problems in British .Admin- istration — Labor. 5 Lecture by Air. Ernest Barker. Subject: Problems in British Admin- istration — Education. 6 Faculty Tea for Seniors. Junior Frolic. 8 Lecture by Mr. Emerick. Subject: The Federal Reserve Board and Inflation. 9 Miss McElwain spoke to the Christian Association. 10 Recital by Rudolph Ganz, Pianist. 11 Lecture by Mr. Piccoli. Subject: Characters and Currents in Italian Politics since 1870. Illustrated lecture by Miss Marie Czaplica. Subject: An Anthropological E.xpedi- tion to Siberia in 1914. 12 Lecture by Miss Marie Czaplica. Subject: Primitive Religion. Lecture by A. Hamilton Gibbs, Major Royal Artillery. Subject: The Press and the War. 13 Lecture by Miss Marie Czaplica. Subject: The Reaction of Physical Environment on Racial Characteris- tics. Faculty Tea for Seniors. Freshman-Sophomore Basketball Game. Sophomores won. It ' s an Even Team! 14 Lenten Recital. 16 Illustrated lecture by Signorina Italia Garibaldi. Subject: Italy of Today and Italy of Tomorrow. 17 Concert by the Smith College Sym- phony Orchestra. 18 Lecture by Mr. John A. Lomax of the University of Texas. Subject: The Songs of the Cowboy. 19 Reading by Elizabeth Valentine Louden. 20 Annual Gymnastic Drill. Wellesley-Smith Debate. 24 Vacation begins. April 8 College opens. 10 Lecture by Miss Helen 18 Shakespeare Week. 24 Glee Club Concert. May 4 Senior Recital. 5 Chapin House Tea. Dramatic Association Plays at Acad- emy of Music. 12 Junior Promenade. 13 Senior Promenade. 15 Field Day. 17 Oratorio Concert. 18 Senior Recital. 19 Float Day. Faculty Recital. 27 June 8 Final Examinations. 31 Holiday (Memorial Day). June 10-12 Senior Dramatics — The Merchant of enice . Baccalaureate Sermon. Ivy Day. Orator: Virginia Heinlein. Meeting of the Alumni Association. Reception by the President and Faculty. Commencement Exercises. Address by Frederick J. E. Woodbridge. Alumnae Assembly. Class Supper. Chairman: Katharine Dickson. 13 14 IS 245 Arknnml gm ntB The 1920 CLASS BOOK BOARD appreciates the kind assistance of Professor William Francis Ganong in his capacity of adviser to the board, and thanks Mr. George Senseny for his valuable suggestions to the Art Editor. The board also thanks the following contributors for their efforts and active interest in supplying material: LITERATURE Caroline Allen Margaret Broad Dorothy Criswell Barbara Foster Margaret Gutman Elisabeth Haerle Helen Hoyt Marguerite Livingston Elizabeth McCausland Beth MacDuffie Judith Matlack Violet Storey Alice Barnhart Helen Cass Louise Cramer Katherine Flower ART Ruth Havey Isabel Hoopingarner Frances Patten Olive Wall Ruth Langmuir BUSINESS Catharine Patton SNAP SHOTS Phyllis Creasey Barbara Frantz Helen Green Elisabeth Haerle Virginia Heinlein Anne Johnston Wilhelmine Rehm Virginia Wiley 246 QIlaHH ln0k Inarft EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Ina Harriet Hughes Assistant Editor AIarion Oller Kron Business Manager Marjory Bowen Lord Assistant Business Managers Ruby Isabelle AIcCallum Gertrude Robinson Literary Editor Madeline Murphy Art Editor Vera Ruth MacKen Photograph Editor SiLOMA Hunt Senior Photograph Editor Louise Ritsher Clubs Editor Dorothy Jane Gates Jokes and Cartoons Mary Wallace Howgate 247 248 ADVERTISEMENTS INDEX — ♦ — Alberts, E 23 Alpha Portland Cement Co. . . .22 Bailey, Banks and Biddle Co. . 9 Baker, Walter and Co. Ltd. . . . 19 Baker, Jones, Hausauer, Inc. . .31 Beckmann ' s 16 Belanger, Miss 16 Berry, James 27 Bicknell, H. E 23 BiSTANY, S 24 Blum, Julius 23 Bon Marche 18 Boston Fruit Store 19 BoNWiT Teller and Co 32 Boyden ' s 4 Brandle, Frank A 20 Bridgman Lyman 6 Brooks Brothers 13 BucHHOLZ Son 28 Butler Ullman 30 Cahill, Julia B 16 Central Grocery, The 30 Childs, Thomas S 13 CoBURN Graves 20 College Mending Shop 12 Copeland ' s 28 Copper Kettle, The 12 Davis, Frank E 17 Dewhurst, O. T 6 Dieges Clust 21 Draper Hotel 30 Elliott Co., Charles H., The. . .28 Elms, The 18 Equitable Life Assurance Society 25 First National Bank 12 FiTTs, C. N 8 Fleming 16 Foster Farrar Co 19 Green Dragon, The 6 Hampshire Bookshop 20 Hampshire County Trust Co. . .17 Hardiman, Mrs. M. S 24 Harlow, Geo. F 12 HiATT, R. M ' l4 Hill Brothers 24 Hotel Garage, The 9 Huyler ' s 11 Jahn Ollier 29 Jensen 12 Kimball Cary Co 10 Kinsley Inc 30 La Foe, Mme 23 Lambie, J. E. Co 21 La Montagne, A. J 20 Levy Co 14 Luce, Geo. N 18 McCallum Co 11 McClell n 25 Mandell Co., The 20 Metcalf Printing Co 26 Niquette 23 Northampton Art Store 21 Northampton Garage Co 20 Northampton Institute for Savings 28 Northfield, The 13 Ono, T. Co 21 Park Co., Inc., The 19 Pierce, J. Hugh 18 Plaza, The 19 Plymouth Inn 8 Raysel ' s 7 Richards Co., R. J 8 Rose Tree Inn, The, A. de Naucaze 15 Schultz 18 Spalding, A. G. Brothers. . . .17 Sutherland, R. L 12 Tiffany Co 3 Todd 12 Toohey, a. a 5 Warren Watt 19 WiSWELL 24 Wood, Arthur P 27 Tiffany Co. Jewelry Silverware Watches Clocks Bronzes China Glass Stationery Distinctive Merit The Mail Service gives prompt attention Fifth Avenue 37™ Street New York DDnDnDDnnDnaaDaDaaannnDaDDDDDDaaaanDCDDnDDnDnaaDDa I BOYDEN ' S 1 n D D n DDDDnDDnannnnnnDaDnDaaDDDDaDDDDDaDnDDDnnDnnDDDnnnD DDDnDnnnnnDnnnnnnDnnnnnnnDnaDnnDDDDDnnnDnnDDDDnDnn D a a n DcnGGDCDOannaDDnannDnnnDDDanaaannDDDDDDDDDnnnDnnnn □nnnaaDnDDDDnnnnnnnnannDDanDaDDDnaGDDnnnDnnnaDDnnn I BOYDEN ' S I ° n DGDnnanDDDDnDnDDnDnnnnnDnnnnnnnDnnnaDnnDDnnnnnnDDD FASHIONS FOR MID-SUMMER Now Being Shown First at all times to introduce the new and smart We go a bit further in our effort to please our clientele by keeping our models exclusive and individual, and by eliminating all that is commonplace. : : : (Mail orders for Margretta Corsets a specialty.) A. A. ®floI| g SHOPS NORTHAMPTON MASS. PORTLAND MAINE At Y Sign of Y Green Dragon A variety of Unique and Artistic Articles — Domestic and Foreign POTT ERY, PICTURES, BASKETS, ARTS and CRAFTS, JEWELRY, CARDS, LEATHER i 1 Glasses seldom escape un- conscious criticism of others. They make a favorable or an unfavorable impression ac- cording to the way they are suited to you. HAVE THEM SUIT II We design glasses that suit your individual characteris- tics and make you look and see as well as possible. If your glasses doinot suit let us ad- vise you for their betterment. O. T. DEWHURST REGISTERED Optonietrists--Opticians 201 Main St. Northampton, Mass. BRIDGMAN LYMAN Send us your mail orders for SMITH CLASS BOOKS, SONG BOOKS BANNERS AND PENNANTS STATIONERY, VERSE and anything else in the book and stationery line The College Book Store = = = NORTHAMPTON, MASS. The Academy Is Opposite Raysel ' s R A Y s E L ' s The Acme of College Footwear The complete exclusiveness of our line of Footwear demonstrates our genuine ability to meet every requirement of the College Girl Each style in our shop is absolutely of the latest design and altogether charming. For the Exclusive Girl Tailored Waists and Dresses, Sport Suits in Jersey and Camel ' s Hair, Polo Coats, Suede Jackets, Imported Beret. RAYSEL ' S SPORT SHOP TAILORED SHOES Distinctive Jewelry Avoidance of the common- place, distinguishes our stock. R. J. RICHARDS COMPANY NORTHAMPTON ' S FINEST JEWELRY SHOP Plymouth Inn The Hotel Approved by the Com- mittee on Social Regulations. Here students may go and dine without a special chaperon. Visit Plymouth Inn Tea Room All Home Cooking TWENTY-FIVE YEARS ' EXPERIENCE Selling Students ' Room Furnishings We Solicit Your Business ..AT.. 137 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON, MASS. C. N. FITTS Honor Roll Tablets, Fraternity Emblems, Rings, Seals, Charms, Plaques, Medals, Etc. of the better kind THE GIFT BOOK Illustrating and pricing Graduation and other Gifts MAILED UPON REQUEST BAILEY, BANKS BIDDLE CO. Diamond Merchants, Jewelers, Silversmiths, Heraldists, Stationers. PHILADELPHIA The Hotel Garage ENTRANCE, MAIN STREET, OPPOSITE CITY HALL FORD AGENCY Firestone and United States Tires Storage for loo Cars OFFICIAL PREST-0-LITE SERVICE STATION Telephone 439-W Chase Motor Sales Company Established 1881 Incorporated 1896 KIMBALL GARY COMPANY Hard and Soft COALS of best quality iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiip OFFICE: 2 MAIN ST. :: NORTHAMPTON, MASS. 10 Rely on Huylers The most delicious flavor too often repeated loses its zest. But there is never this danger with Huyler ' s, for the choice of candies is so varied that it will sharpen the most jaded candy appetite. Whatever the occasion, there is a Huyler variety that just fits the mood or taste of the moment. f $ioO per pound 5 .2J per pound ' NEWYOWe 67 Stores Agencies almost every where In Canada-inaii7 agencies ; Eactott and store in Toronto Prices Higher in Pacific Coast Slates A. McCallum Company The Department Store That Makes College Furnishings a Specialty For years this store has stood for quality and service. Specializing in all the needed COLLEGE SUPPLIES-- 5o Suits, Coats, Dresses, Blouses and Millinery A Cordial Invitation is Extended to You to Make Our Store Your Store A. McCALLUM and COMPANY n Commencement Week in our Drapery Section WE want you to come and look around in this department at any time, but particularly dur- ing Commencement Week, the week we set aside for featuring Curtains, Drap- eries and other Merchan- dise of interest to Students furnishing rooms. v y v Todd ' s Day Light Store THE COPPER KETTLE Tea Room Forty-Five State Street THE COLLEGE Blouse AND Mending Shop 28 CENTER STREET The Shop where you find everything that ' s new and smart in blouses. EXCLUSIVE Dressmaking French Dry , Mending, Repairing, Altering, Cleaning, Steaming and Pressing FIRST NATIONAL BANK NORTHAMPTON THE BANK ON THE CORNER We make every effort to render a faultless Personal Service. | May we serve you. -■- Wm. G. Bassett, Presi dent F.N. Kneeland, Vice-President and Cashier Elbert L. Arnold, Asst. Cashier J ensen ' s Ice C 7 earn an d Candies 319 Main Street, Springfield HARPER METHOD R. L. Sutherland Shampooing, Manicuring Facial Massage 78 Main Street Northampton, Mass. A Good Place To Buy YOUR Desks, Chairs and Tables G. F. HARLOW ' S 19 CENTER ST. 12 Fashionable Footwear FOR ALL OCCASIONS Correctly Fitted and Moderately Priced Thomas S. Childs INCORPORATED 275 High St. HOLYOKE, MASS. ESTABLISHED 1816 MADISON AVENUE COP. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Telephone Murray Hill 8800 OF INTEREST TO WOMEN While we do not sell women ' s clothing, it is our experience that there is, on the part of many women, especially those interested in sport, a growing tendency to purchase from us for their own use Motor Coats, Sweaters, Wool Caps, Waistcoats, Gloves, Mufflers, Boots, Leggings, Puttees, etc., liking these articles all the more apparently because, as distinct from being mannish , they are the very things that are worn by men. Send for Illustrated Catalogue BOSTON TniMONTCOR. BOVt.6TON NEWPORT 220 BKLLCVUC AVCNUC The Northfield open all the Year. EAST NORTHFIELD, MASS. FOR REAL VACATIONS :: AN ATTRACTIVE HOME-LIKE HOUSE An attractive, home-like Hotel; on the approved list of Smith College; only thirty-four miles from Northampton by automobile over State roads or by railway on the Boston and Maine. A comfortable and enjoyable place at which to spend vacations, week- ends or a day ' s outing. Rooms en suite with or without private bath; Electric lights. Steam heat. Open fire-places and Sun parlor, Libraries in House and Town. Modest Rates. Golf course and Tennis courts on grounds immediately surrounding the House. All kinds of Winter sports as the weather man permits. Livery and Automobiles for Hire Large Cement Garage Ambert G. Moody, Mgr. Frank W. Kellogg, Asst. Mgr. 13 Telephone 80 Day or Night Service R. M. HIATT Successor to W. S Hibbard Taxiy Touring Car, Limousine Service DRIVING BY THE HOUR Trips Over the Mohawk Trail and to Historical Points of Interest a Specialty Comfortable Cars Competent Chauffeurs Efficient Service OFFICE, 1 88 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON, MASS- CAmZOIYCZQr fF 5 cAC c e in Cariron cS iopi S. D. Levy Company 74-76 Fifth Avenue New York 14 a To be popular is to be endorsed in the To-day and forgotten in the To-morrow 5 Please do not forget YE ROSE TREE INN A. de Naucaze 15 BECKMANN ' S Candy Shop and Soda Fountain FINE CANDIES CHOCOLATES ICE CREAM NOVELTIES We make a specialty of Mail Orders. Grads everywhere know this. Let us add you to our out-of-town customers. 247-249 Main Street Northampton A Complete Assortment of THE NEW PUMPS AND SLIPPERS Fleming Boot Shop 211 Main Street Go to Miss Belanger jor SHAMPOOS, MARCELLING MANICURING OR FACE MASSAGE 277 Main Street Julia B. Cahill 219 Main Street fVomen s JVear 16 Services that we render Smith College Graduates wherever they may be Frank E. Davis Northampton, Mass. MANUFACTURING Jeweler and Optometrist TWENTY-FIVE YEARS IN THIS STORE Jewelry — We send it anywhere. Write us and we can quickly come to an understanding of what you need. Watch work of the highest grade. Jewelry Repairs — This includes new designs, remounting of jewels, cleaning, burnishing, and other work. Write to us. Engraving — Send in the article. We shall be glad to submit sketches of proposed designs. Optical Work — Let us measure your glasses and make a detailed record before you go, and then repairs or new work will be sent upon receipt of your letter or wire. If you break a lens send the pieces and frames, and repairs will go to you quickly. The IV Oman The woman is the Econ- omist — Which is a word meaning, Original Housekeeper. :: :: :: The Best Housekeeper uses a Check Book and has her account with the Hampshire County Trust Company SPALDING Sports Specialty Shop Sportwear and Sportgear for Young Ladies A. G. SPALDING „.:- BROS. - ' -::; 523 FIFTH AVE. New York City 74 SUMMER STREET BOSTON, MASS. 17 ' ' The Elms NORTHAMPTON ' S Popular Restaurant Convenient for College Students and Guests Let US convince you that we serve the Best Quality Foods at Moderate Prices E. G. DILL, Prop. BON MARCHE Millinery College Hats a Specialty 183 Main St. Northampton George N. Luce Ladies ' ' Tailor 111 Main St. Northampton Telephone Connection MANICURING FACIAL MASSAGE S C H U LT Z HAIR DRESSING and SHAMPOOING J. Hugh Pierce WALL PAPER PAINTS 186 Main St. Northampton 18 90% of the Students of Smith College come to us for their optical work. The reasons for this large following are not far to seek. We do our work with the most painstaking care; examinations are made by a skilled optometrist; our equipment is complete, and our service is maintained at a high state of efficiency. The Park Company, Inc. An Optical Shop of Distinctive Beauty and Superior Service 257 Main St., Northampton Plaza Theatre Where Everybody Goes Program changed daily except Monday and Tuesday FRED P. BELMONT, Manager W - ■w WARREN WATT ' Everything Electrical 179 Main St. Northampton Telephone 126 Comforlinq Cu lb BAKERS COCQ l is pure cuid delicious. Trade nicirk on every package. WALTER BAKER CO. ltd. ESTABLISHE.O I7SO DORCHESTER.MASS. VOU Will Never - Regret Trading at the Boston Fruit Store M. GIUFFRE CO. The Pioneer Fruit House of Northampton 1 f E ijivite the custom of Smith College Students for SPORTING GOODS TENNIS and GOLF Foster Farrar Co. 162 Main St. : Northampton 19 J O N T E E L Toilet Preparations Talcum, Face Powder, Rouge Cream, Odor EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR NORTHAMPTON Also Headquarters for Those Big Peppermints Coburn Graves ' ' The Rexall Store ' ' Orders sent by mail anywhere Opposite Court House NORTHAMPTON Frank A. Brandle COLLEGE PHARMACY 271 Main Street 271 Agent for Huylers Cajidies A. J. LaMontag-ne Successor to E. B. EMERSON CO. Distinctive Decorator and Painter 267 Main St. Northampton Telephone 146-W Northampton Garage Co. Cadillac and Dodge Agents Telephones, 583-8240 Next to Post Office Cadillac Cars to Rent By Day or Hour STORAGE, REPAIRS AND ACCESSORIES 65 PLEASANT STREET Northampton, Mass. Printalk We are doers of clever things in type, and our master touch confers distinction on your Hterature as well as on our own. Metcalf Printing Co. 8 CRAFTS AVENUE Your account here is always good SEND BACK FOR BOOKS 20 T. Ono Company . . . DEALERS IN JAPANESE AND CHINESE GOODS TELEPHONE 1253-W 14 CENTER STREET NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Dieg-es Clust Manufacturing Specialty Jewelers CLASS RINGS, CLASS PINS, MEDALS 149 Tremont St. Boston, Mass. Northampton Art Store . . DEALERS IN . . Pictures, Artists ' Materials, Stationery, Novelties, Toys and Greeting Cards for All Occasions Picture Framing a Specialty 229 Main St. :: Northampton J. E. LAMBIE CO. 92 Main Street Northampton, Mass. ff e Specialize in the Following Merchandise : Imported and Domestic Trimmings. Fancy Silks and Dress Goods. Ribbons and Laces. Veilings, Kid and Fabric Gloves, Hosiery. Silk and Fine Nain- sook Undergarments. Curtains, Curtain Materials and Curtains made to order. Couch Covers, Cretonnes and Drapery Materials. Silk and Lingerie Blouses. Agents in This City for Betty Wales Dresses 21 22 Smith Girls, The World Over, Remember BicknelPs fl Orders Come to Us From Near and Far And the Mails Deliver the Goods. We buy for the college trade, and it follows us, in college and afterwards, because it gets just what it wants. Write us. You ' ll find our service expert and prompt. Shoes, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, Gloves, Cravats, Mufflers, Toques, Sweaters, Men ' s Furnishings Quality Always High, Prices Always Reasonable Harry E. Bicknell, Northampton, U. S. A, NIQUETTE ' S The College Drug Store Northampton, Alass. CAMERAS and SUPPLIES Mail Us Your Films JULIUS BLUM Ladies ' Tailor and Furrier Telephone 954-W 259 Main St. : Northampton VI ' E are showing distinctive lines of patent leather, kid, satin, silver and white kid pumps. Prices $8.50 to $10.00 E. ALBERTS The Shoe Man IV rARCEL and American Waving, Hair Dressing, Manicuring, Shampooing, Henna, Facial and Scalp Treatment a Specialty. (Combings made into all kinds of hair goods) Madam LaFoe 269 iMAIX STREET (over Brandle ' s) Open Evenings by Appointment Telephone 954-M At Your Home Any Time 23 M rs. M. S. Hardiman Dry Cleaning Parlors FANCY DRESSES, WAISTS and SWEATERS LAUNDERED All JVorli Done by Hand 73 CENTER STREET :: :: NORTHAMPTON Hill Brothers 118 Main Street Northampton COUCH COVERS DRAPERIES RUGS CRETONNES at Reasonable Prices The Popular Soda Fountain The place to get good things to eat Toilet Requisites from the best domestic and imported makers Wiswell the Druggist 82 MAIN STREET ORIENTAL SHOP S. BISTAN Y . . DEALER IN . . All Kinds of Fancy Work, Japa- nese Articles and Embroideries and Turkish Rugs. Phone 1172-JV 239 MAIN ST. : Northampton 24 r ID YOU KNOW THE CLASSES OF - ' i8 AND ' 19 ARE USING THE Equitable Life Assurance Society OF THE UNITED STATES TO ENDOW THEIR ALMA MATER? Frederic W. Fuller, Edward J. Reece, Manager. Special Agent. Clark L. Richards, Assistant to the Manager. FULLER BUILDING, SPRINGFIELD, MASS. SHOES and HOSIERY Keeping pace with all that is new and fashionable — a domi- nant principle upon which Mandell service is built. FOOTWEAR of QUALITY and REFINEMENT THE MANDELL COMPANY The Draper Hotel Building : NORTHAMPTON, MASS. 25 The McClellan Studio ERIC STAHLBERG, Manager Official Photographers To: SMITH COLLEGE SMITH 1919 SMITH 1920 Northampton, Mass. :: :: 44 State Street TELEPHONE 131 26 Gold IVrist JVatches Bracelet Watches have endeared themselves to all womankind. No lady now feels at ease without one. Correct time is necessary for everyone these days. Ask to see the Gruen Watches — they have a world-wide reputation for their time-keeping quali- ties and exclusiveness from the ordinary watches. ARTHUR P. WOOD THE JEWEL STORE 197 MAIX ST. Tel. 1307-M Opp. City Hall WHEN IN NEED OF GOOD WATCH, CLOCK OR JEWELRY WORK See JAMES BERRY J E IV E L E R Draper Hotel Building : 161 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS 27 Copeland ' s Fancy Goods Shop FURNISHES A LARGE AND CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF High class Wools, for Knitting and Crochet- ing. Also a complete line of Stamped Goods and Embroidery Materials of every descrip- tion. Class and Society Designs, a Spe- cialty. Art Novelties, Ribbons, Laces, Etc. COPELAND ' S Mail Orders Receive Prompt and Careful Attention 104 MAIN STREET :: NORTHAMPTON H. Buchholz Son Theatrical Costumers and Decorators 33 LYMAN ST., Springfield, Adass. Costumes and Wigs Furnished for Fancy Dress Balls, Theatrical Performances, Operas, Tableaux and Pageants. U Decorations Furnished for Halls and Buildings. Flags and Banners made to order. The Chas. H. Elliott Co. The Largest College Engraving House in the World Wedding Invitations Calling Cards Commencement Invitations Class Day Programs Class Pins and Rings Dance Programs and Invitations, Menus, Leather Dance Cases and Covers ijth St. and Lehigh Ave., Philadelphia jV TANY people prefer to ■ leave their unused money in a Savings Bank where it will be drawing interest. If one who reads this belongs to that class, let this be an invita- tion to call at the Bank between the First Church and the Court House. You will find attractive quarters and accommodating service. Northampton Institution for Savings 109 MAIN STREET Northampton, Mass. 28 Hrtlsts PhotD-GtngrdtJ rs Besides being the largest organization in the country specializing on 9 ality College Illustrations, handHng over 300 annuals every year, including this one, we are general artists and engravers. Our Large Art Departments create designs and distinctive illustrations, make accurate mechanical wash drawings and birdseye views, retoucli photographs, and specialize on advertising and catalog illustrations. Our photographic department is unusually expert on outside work and on machinery, jewelry and general merchandise. We reproduce all kinds of copy in Halftone, Zinc Etching, Ben Day and Three or Four Color Process ; in fact, make every kind of original printing plate ; also Electrotypes and Nickeltypes by wax or lead mold process. At your service — Any time — Anywhere — for Anything in Art, Photography and Photoengraving. 29 Say it with y lowers ' ' Phone or wire us — we will send the right Flowers with your message anywhere on SHORT NOTICE tf E GROW OUR FLOWERS THAT ' S WHY THEY ' RE FRESH BUTLER ULLMAN FLORISTS Draper Hotel Northampton, Mass. WILLIAM M. KIMBALL, Proprietor LUNCH AT THE LUNCHEONETTE The Most Tempting Sodas and Sundaes at the Fountain KINGSLEY ' S, Inc. The Central Grocery Carries a Full Line of IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC GOODS 221 Main St., Northampton, Mass. Telephone 1553-4 30 Beautiful forms and compositions are not made by UR claim to your considera- V tion lies in the fact that we cfiance, nor can they ever, in any material, be made have applied to our own business the thought contained in this at small expense. A composition for cheapness and quotation from one of the world ' s greatest thinkers and practical not for excellence of workmanship. workers. is the most fre- quent and certain cause of the rapid If there is anything attractive beyond the ordinary, in the page decay and entire destruction of arts and manu- arrangement, cover decoration, presswork,and general harmony factures. — Ruskin which distinguish our work, be assured it has not been due to chance. We leave nothing to chance. Every line, page, volume, as it comes from our establishment, is the result of a carefully laid, conscientiously executed plan. The thought and the super- vision which our system provides is your guarantee of excellence. If you have anything to be printed, write us; if we under- take it, we will do it well. Q Q Q g ry|! Baker, Jones, Hausauer, Inc. ) 45-51 Carroll Street Buffalo, N. Y. The Class Book is one of our products 31 n 0 BONWIT TELLER. GbCQ UMe (Speccallu rSAofy OnainaConA FlfTH AVENUE AT 38 ' STREET. NEW YORK tri or c ovctrL is xrv ESPECIALLY DESBNEDMffiS FOR THE MSS ir COLLE® 5S cY ' Ol h xil qraee of Ltn eJ, GTva ccna GSprtt criaraci eriXG in CJtpparGl TOT cllLo (joliGqe opori , (jiuclir ana zjormal QtchvitiGS B 32 4


Suggestions in the Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) collection:

Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923


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