Smith College - Smith College Yearbook (Northampton, MA) - Class of 1923 Page 1 of 270
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1923 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 270 of the 1923 volume: “
ELEANOR J. BLISS ! 1953 — L -1 - • II J CoJy 1923 Upfctratinn One of the few endowed With wisdom in her touch; To grant a course of freedom, To guide, yet yield, as much. And in the years that follow May you look on with pride, To see the minds you moulded, Live worthy of their guide. Rosemary Thomas. K _H ■T SB , m r W, } ' f u B H C( ui -€ -juej£u - X 1923 (ElaBB Maak 1323 TSmU S ana Untr Publish bij tljr (Ulaaa of 1923 X K 1923 Ulabl? nf (Cnntputa Frontispiece Dedication President Emeritus Seelye Board of Trustees The Faculty The Class First Year Second Year Third Year Fourth Year Commencement Week Other Classes . Organizations . Publications Societies and Clubs . Dramatics Musical Clubs . Athletics Verse Fun, Fact, and Fiction Advertisements page 1 3 4 8 9 23 89 93 97 105 109 119 127 139 146 173 179 185 199 209 221 K X 1923 ErmtwB Ruth Bowles Baldwin, A.B. Anne Chapin, A.B. H. Clifford Gallagher Helen F. Greene, A.M. John A. Houston, M.D. Frederic Marshall Jones, A.B. Thomas W. Lamont, A.B. . Samuel W. McCall, LL.D. . George B. McCallum, A.B. . Elizabeth Cutter Morrow, A.B Paul J. Sachs, A.B. George Stanley Stevenson, A.M Mary Van Kleeck, A.B. Marguerite Milton Wells, B.L Brooklyn, New York Springfield, Massachusetts Dorchester, Massachusetts . Boston, Massachusetts . Northampton, Massachusetts Springfield, Massachusetts New York, New York Winchester, Massachusetts . Northampton, Massachusetts . Englewood, New Jersey Cambridge, Massachusetts . Hartford, Connecticut New York, New York . Minneapolis, Minnesota X the faculty: jf H ,A IP ©;y ar W E =P PRESIDENT NEILSON X H923 K AbmintBtrattu? (©ffters ■ADA LOUISE COMSTOCK, A.M., Litt.D., LL.D., L.H.D. Dean LAURA HOPE SCALES. GEORGE HLISS McCALLUM, A.B. Wnnlt a Treasurer FLORENCE OILMAN, M.O. Collegi Physician AMY LOUISE BARBOUR. PH.D. MARY BELLE McEI.WAIN, Dean of (lass of I9ts ] ,, d Dean of Class of 19S4 MARY MERROW COOK. B.S. SUSAN ROSE BENEDICT, PH.D. GIFFORD CLARK, m Dean oj CIuhh of It Dean - Clou • Registrar K 11 K 1923 iflarulttj of Jlnatrurttfln Dwight W. Tryon, N.A. Professor of Art Irving Francis Wood, Ph.D., D.D. Professor of Biblical Literature Alfred Vance Churchill, A.M. Professor of Art Robert Seneca Smith, A.M., B.D. M Professor of Biblical Literature Kfl| Harriet W. Bigelow, Ph.D. Professor of Astronomy William Francis Ganong, Ph.D. Professor of Botany 12 X j J9Z5 X H. Edwards Wells, Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Herbert Vaughn Abbott, A.B. Professor of English Frank H. Hankins, Ph.D. Profe ssor of Economics ami Sociology Richard Ashley Rice, A.M. Professor of English Elizabeth Deering Hanscom, Ph.D. Proft esor of English Albert Schinz, Ph.D. X X 1:; [1923 X Louise Delpit, Licenciee es Lettres Professor of Frank Carl F. A. Lange, Ph.D. Professor of German Language and Literature William John Miller, Ph.D. Professor of Geology Everett Kimball, Ph.D. Professor of Government X Ernest Heinrich Mensel, Ph.D., Litt. Professor of German Language and Literature Julia Harwood Caverno, A.M. Professor of Greek 14 K 1923 X Sidney N. Deane, Ph.D. Professor of Greek John C. Hildt, Ph.D. Professor of History John Spencer Basset, Ph.D., LL.D. Professor of History William Dodge Gray, Ph.D. Professor of History Sidney Bradshaw Fay, Ph.D. Professor of History Joel Ernest Goldthwait, B.S., M.D., F.A.C.S., D.S.M., C.M.G. X X 923 X J. Everett Brady, Ph.D. Professor of La I in Henry Dike Sleeper, F.A.G.O. Professor of Music Florence Alden Gragg, Ph.D. Professor of Latin Robert E. S. Olmstead, A.B. Professor of Music Harriet Redfield Cobb, A.M. Professor of Mathematics Rebecca Wilder Holmes Professor of Music X 16 1925 Arthur Ware Locke, A.M. Professor of Musi: Anna Alice Cutler, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology Roy Dickinson Welch, A.B. Professor of Music David Camp Rogers, Ph.D. Professor of Psycholoini Harry Norman Gardiner, A.M. Professor of Philosophy Frank Allan ah ' i man Profi ssor of Pi X JB925 Caroline Brown Bourland, Ph.D. Professor of Spanish Harris Hawthorne Wilder, Ph.D. Professor of Zoology Ruth Goulding Wood, Ph.D. Esther Lowenthal, Ph.D. Inez Whipple Wilder, A.M.. Ph Osmond T. Robert, B. es L. . William Aylott Orton . Laura Adella Bliss, A.M., A. CM Ellen Parmelee Cook, A.M. . Julia Warner Snow, Ph.D Emma Bates, Mus.B. Elizabeth Spaulding Mason, A.B Louisa Sewall Cheever, A.M. Frances Grace Smith, Ph.D. . Josef Wiehr. Ph.D. Margaret Bradshaw, Ph.D. . Aida Agnes Heine, A.M. Mary Louise Foster, Ph.D. Wilson Townsend Moog, Mus.B., Harvey Gates Townsend, Ph.D. Mary Delia Lewis, A.M. ♦Margaret Rooke, M.A., Oxon. Arthur Taber Jones, Ph.D. . Howard Madison Parshley, ScD. 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., O.A. Howard Rollin Patch, Ph.D. Chase Going Woodhouse, A.M. Clara Willoughby Davidson, A. Stanley Alden, A.M. Susan Miller Rambo, Ph.D. . Grace Hazard Conkling, B.L. Edward James Woodhouse, LL Elizabeth Avery, Ph.D. Mary Lilias Richardson, A.M. Laura Sophronia Clark, A.M. Helen Isabelle Williams Sarah Hook Hamilton . Mary Merrow Cook, B.S. Helen Ashhurst Choate, Ph.D. Absent for year. F.A G.O. Professor of Mathematics Professor of Economics and Sociology . Professor of Zoology Professor of French Language and Literature Professor of Economics and Sociology Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of Botany Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of English Language and Literature . Associate Professor of Botany . Associate Professor of German Associate Professor of English Language and Literature . Associate Professor of Geology Associate Professor of Chemistry Associate Professor of Music Associate Professor of Education Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Associate Professor of Italian Language and Literature . Associate Professor of Physics Associate Professor of Zoology Associate Professor of Chemistry . Associate Professor of Art Associate Professor of Latin Associate Professor of Philosophy Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Associate Professor of Economics and Sociology Associate Professor of Biblical Literature. Associate Professor of English Language and Literature . Associate Professor of Mathematics Associate Professor of English Language and Literature Associate Professor of Government Associate Professor of Spoken English Assistant Professor of Latin Assistant Professor of Chemistry . Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of Music or of French and Dean of the Class of 1925 Assistant Professor of Botany Assistant Profess =K 18 X [1923 X Myra Melissa Sampson, A.M. Samuel A. Eliot. Jr., A.H. . Katharine Shepherd Woodward, A.B Rose Frances Euan, A.M. . Clarence Kennedy. A.M. Roy Richard Denslow, B.S., A.M. Elizabeth M. Whitmore, A.M. Emily Ledyard Shields, Ph.D. Eleanor Shipley Duckett, Ph.D., Litt Elizabeth Andros Foster, Ph.D. Elizabeth Faith Genung, M.S. A. Clifford H. Riedell Florence Farnham Olmsted . Mary Ella Williams Anna Adele Chenot, A.M. Margaret Lewis Bailey, Ph.D. Emmett Reid Dunn, Ph.D. . ♦Louise E. W. Adams. Ph.D. Ivan T. Gorokhoff Catherine Elizabeth Kock. A.M., M.L. Margaret Brackenbury Crook, A.B. Lizbeth R. Laughton, A.B. . Cesar Barja, Doctor en Derecho Florence McArdle, A.M. Sidney R. Packard, Ph.D. . Robert Merrill Dewey, B.S. . Amy K. MacMaster. A.M. Abba Bowen, A.P.. Lucile Marsh, A.B. Lilian Mary Lane, Ph.B. Mary J. Garber. A.M. . Alice Margaret Holden, A.M. Willard Thorp, A.M. . Harriet McWilliams Parsons, Ph.D. Esther Cloudman Dunn, Ph.D. Elliott M. Grant, A.M. . Leland Hall, A.M. . Paul Hansel! .... Sarah Hincks, A.M. Geraldine Jebb, A.M. Edward Morris Grace A. Taylor, A.B. . Alice De Villele, Agregee eg Lett] Margaret Wooster. Ph.D. Hannah Louisa Killings, A.M. Lucy Lord Barrangon, A.M. Abbie Mabel O ' Keefe, M.D. ' Gladys Amelia Anslow, A.M. Eunice Elizabeth Chace, A.M. Helen Joy Sleeper, A.M. Elizabeth Fiances Rogers, Ph.D. Eleanor Ferguson Rambo, Ph.D. Louise Bourgoin, Licen lee Letl K. Frances Scott, Ph. I!.. M.D. Mildred Burnette Porter, A.M. Vera Marie Gushee, M.S. Helen McGregor Noyes. A.B. ♦Mina Stein Kirslein, A.M. . Germaine Ferio, Licenciee es Lettres Absent for year. Assistant Professor of Zoology Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature and of Spoken English Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature . Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of Chemistry . Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of Latin D. ..... . Assistant Professor of Latin . Assistant Professor of Spanish . Assistant Professor of Botany . Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of English and German . Assistant Professor of Zoology Assistant Professor of Latin . Assistant Professor of Choral Music Assistant Professor of Botany Assistant Professor of Biblical Literature Assistant Professor of Spoken English Assistant Professor of Spanish Assistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education Assistant Professor of History- Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature and of Spoken English Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology- Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of Spoken English . Assistant Professor of English Assistant Professor of Spoken English Assistant Professor of Government Assistant Professor of Spoken English Assistant Professor of Astronomy Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of MuBic Assistant Professor of Spoken English Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology Assistant Professor of Music Assistant Professor of Education Assistant Professor of French Assistant Professor of Psychology . Instructor in Physics Instructor in the History of Art . Instructor in Hy. Instructor in Physics Instructor in Zoology Instructor in Music Instructor in History Instructor in Greek Instructor in French Instructor in Hygiene Instructor in Physics Instructor in Astronomy Instructor in English Instructor in English Instructor in French lit JB925 Anacleta Candida Vezzetti Instructor in Italian Anna Hobbet, A.B Instructor in Geology Sara Bache-Wiig. M.S. Instructor in Botany Dorothy Louise Merchant, A.M. .......... Instructor in Geology Helene Cattanes, Docteur de 1 Universite ........ Instructor in French Mira Bigelow Wilson, A.B., B.D. ...... Instructor in Biblical Literature Magdelaine Pellet, A. B. .......... . Instructor in French Margaret M. Sherwood, Ph.D. .......... Instructor in French Ruth Doggett Kennedy, A.B. ...... Instructor in Economics and Sociology Dorothy Sears Ainsworth, A.B. .... Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Educ ation Abby Snow Belden, A.B. ..... Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Ruth Wendell Cooper, A.B. ......... Instructor in Spoken English Edith Harrison Morrill, A.M. .......... Instructor in English Margaret Gale Scott, A.M. ........... Instructor in History Margaret Cameron, A.M. ........... Instructor in French Florence N. Schott, M.S. .......... Instructor in Chemistry Helen Sinclair Pittman, A.B. .......... Instructor in Zoology Newton Arvin, A.B. ............ Instructor in English Mathilde de Bernardi, A.B. ........... Instructor in Italian Frances Rebecca Botkin, A.M. ......... Instructor in Psychology Eleanor Clifton, A.B. ...... Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Jean Young Currie ............ Instructor in Music Louise Evarts, A.B. . . . . . . Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Priscilla Fairfield, Ph.D. .......... Instructor in Astronomy Lorine Pruette Fryer, A.M. ....... Instructor in Economics and Sociology Clayton M. Hall, Ph.D. Instructor in Latin Mary B. Hume, A.M. ............ Instructor in History Margaret Kincaid, Ph.D. .......... Instructor in Psychology Frances C. Mclnnes, A.B. ..... Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Antoinette Noel, A.M. ............ Instructor in French Adela M. Pond, A.B. ............ Instructor in Geology Alice M. Richardson, A.B. ........... Instructor in Physics Katharine Wendell Townsend, A.B. . . . Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Constance Wiener, A.M. .......... Instructor in Mathematics Frank Edward Dow ............ Assistant in Music Dorcas Brigham, A.B. ............ Assistant in Botany Dorothy L. Cheek, A.B. .......... Assistant in Chemistry Esther Eisler, A.B. ........... Assistant in Chemistry Virginia M. Giles, A.B. . . ...... Assistant in Chemistry Louise Kingsley, A.B. ........... Assistant in Geology Katharine E. O ' Brien, A.B. ..... Assistant in Hygiene and Physical Education Lois T. Slocum, A.B. ........... Assistant in Astronomy E. Frances Stilwell, A.B. . . . . . . . . . . . Assistant in Zoology Charlotte Day Gower, A.B. ......... Demonstrator in Psychology Gladys Page, A.B. . . . . . . . . . . . . Curator in Art Marion Whittemore, A.B. ............ Reader in Music William James Short ............ Lecturer in Music Margaret Louise Farrand, A.B. . Director of the Press Board, Secretary of Committee on Special Assistance in Written English K K K 20 X j[[925 X 21 X j J9Z5 Dorothy Lois Abel 185 Linden Avenue Brooklyn. N. Y. Margaret Barr Allan 720 Erie Street Oak Park, 111. Isabel Adams Beaver Street Sewickley, Pa. Virginia Roberdean Annan 411 Washington Street Cumberland, Md. Mary Louisa Aldrich 587 June Street Fall River, Mass. Frances Arnold 230 French Street Bangor, Me. X 24 X [1923 Isabel E. Ayres 4T2 ' i Woodlawn Avenue Chicago, III. Clara Elizabeth Baldwin 2232 E. 1st Street Duluth. Minn. Oriana Bailey 21 Lake Avenue Newton Center. Mass. Margaret Aitken Baldwin Shelter Island, N. Y. Lillian Maude Baker Swamscott. Mass. i iroline Bancroft L081 Downing Street Denver, Colo. K X X [1923 Rachael Sherman Barker 3 Kinsman Place Natick, Mass. Elizabeth Bartol 11421 Bellflower Road Cleveland, O. Barbara Barnes 1701 National Avenue Roekford, 111. Adolfa Louise Basch 6035 Ellsworth Street Philadelphia, Pa. Ann Elizabeth Barney 8 McClellan Avenue Mount Vernon, N. Y. Margaret Byrd Bassett 58 Pomeroy Terrace Northampton, Mass. X 26 X H923 Mary-Louise Bates 76 South 14th Street Richmond, Ind. Christine Elizabeth Berger 16th Bath Avenue Ashland, Ky. Anne-Gilbert Bell Randolph, Vt. Marion Bissell 2729 Caldwell Avenue Birmingham, Ala. Mary Virginia Bergan 75 Harrison Avt ' iiuc Northampton, Mass. Margaret Blake Olda PMdatOM ' ton, Mass. X [1923 K Charlotte E. Blanch ard 48 Montgomery Street Bangor, Me. Alice Winchester Blood 127 W. Dutton Avenue Kalamazoo, Mich. Anna Faithe Blanchet 34 Fruit Street Northampton, Mass. Adeline Louise Boyden 1118 Hinman Avenue Evanston, 111. Edith Bryan Bleakly 318 Cooper Street Camden. N. J. Barbara Lothrop Boyer 38 Fletcher Street Winchester, Mass. 28 K 1923 X Alice Freeman Brackett Exeter, N. H. Anne Broad First National Bank Building Fort Worth, Tex. Josephine Pauline Bree Forestville. Conn. Alice Rebecca Brooks 2204 N. 17th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Margaret Breithaupt (Hi Margaret Avenue Kitchener, Ontario, Canada Patricia Brown 16 Prospw.1 Street Ni w Londoni Conn. 29 H923 K Elizabeth Virginia Browne 307 W. Cass Street Greenwich, Mich. Elizabeth Buck 252 Pine Street Fall River, Mass. Hilda May Bryant 466 E. 17th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Eleanor Bumstead 45 Edgehill Road New Haven, Conn. Katharine True Bryant 265 Hammond Street Bangor, Me. Anne Amelia Burnham 478 Franklin Street Buffalo, N. Y. 30 11923 Constance Curtis Burt Easthampton, Mass. Elizabeth Lang Campbell 6405 Northumberland Street Pittsburgh, Pa. Helen King Burt Easthampton, Mass. Julia Elizabeth Campbell 1733 Hinman Avenue Evanston, 111. Edith Augusta Campbell 76 Rose Street Metuchen, N. J. Priscilla Capps Princeton, N. J. 31 1923 Lucy Pettibone Carr 76 Carnegie Avenue East Orange, N. J. Jane Margaret Cassidy 48 Church Street Norwich, Conn. Sara Elizabeth Cartmell 730 North Fountain Avenue Springfield, O. Elizabeth Chadbourne 83 Reservoir Street Cambridge, Mass. Madeline Jessie Cary St. Johnsbury, Vt. Anstes Dorinda Cladek 93 West Milton Avenue Rahway, N. J. K X 32 1923 Margaret Fuller Clark Chestnut Street North Andover, Mass. Margaret Clough 340 Montrose Avenue South Orantfe, N. J. Mary Elizabeth Clark 490 Riverside Avenue Trenton, N. J. Caroline Coghlin 25 Richards Street Worcester, Mass. Muriel Whitmore Clarke IT Bidgeview Avenue White Plains, N. Y. Carolyn Leland Coi.hy ti Pleasant Street Claremont. N. 11. X JB925 Mary Huntington Coley 1103 Howard Avenue Utica, N. Y. Sydney Seabury Cook Bleacher Place New Brunswick, N. J. Leah Griffin Collins Trappe, Md. Margaret Cooley 50 North Mountain Avenue Montclair, N. J. Miriam Winifred Conklin 210 Sixth Avenue East Hutchinson, Kans. Dorothy Corbett 6 Wellington Terrace Brookline, Mass. K K 34 X [1923 Dorothy Crane 474 Washington Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Margaret Kathryn Davenport 322 First Avenue Baraboo, Wis. Elizabeth Cutler Barton, Vt. Dorothea Davis 98 Clay Street Kane, Pa. Marion Daly 78 Russell Street Worcester, Mass. RUTH Kvei.yn Davis i 19 Strathmore Road Brookltne. Mi K K. [1923 X ISABELLE MUNGER DEAN Portland, Ark. Eleanor Price DeLamater New York City, N. Y. Katherine Price Debevoise Summit, N. J, Marion DeRonde West Englewood, N. J. Alice Louise Decker 253 Midland Avenue Montclair, N. J. Miriam Augusta Deware East Pepperell, Mass. 36 1925 X Elizabeth Dierks 335 Locust Street Edgewood. Pittsburgh, Pa. Mary Maud Doyle 531 Ocean Avenue New London, Conn. Dorothy Marguerite Dorman W. 522 Cotta Avenue Spokane. Wis. Dorothy Drew 500 Fourth Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Olive Holden Dougherty 1411 Judson Avenue Evanaton, III. Evangeline Bobzin Drew Morton and Preeldent Avenuei Rutledge, Pa. X X j J9Z5 Marya V. Driscoll 714 Dwight Street Holyoke, Mass. Alice Bell Eggleston 1777 Dupont Avenue South Minneapolis, Minn. Julienne Dumortier 53 West Avenue Norwalk, Conn. Rose Eichberg 45 West 14th Street Atlanta, Ga. Mary Elizabeth Dunbar 1883 East 84th Street Cleveland, O. Minerva Tenney Ellis 610 Springfield Avenue Summit, N. J. K 38 X j J9Z5 X Ruth Lydia Emerson 35 Columbia Park Haverhill, Mass. Veera Carol Engle 229 West 78th Street New York, N. Y. Charlotte Emery 404 Riverside Drive New York, N. Y. Ida Epstein 10 Russell Street Hartford, Conn. Esther Reynolds Emery Monson, Mass. Amy Louise Erlandsen 849 Ilillsid .- Avenua Jamaica, N. Y. X 39 X 1923 Adeline Reed Eveleth Care Warren Webster Co. Pearl and Point Streets Camden, N. J. Phebe Hazel Ferris Conomo Point Essex, Mass. Lyle Ewing Franklin, Tenn. Nerissa Fitzsimmons 212!) Iroquois Avenue Detroit, Mich. Janet Ferguson 35 West 53rd Street New York, N. Y. Phebe Fleming 137 A Street N. E. Washington, D. C. X 40 X X 1923 Virginia Jane Forbes 1140 Forest Avenue Evanston, 111. Helen Holford France 1801 Caciwell Avenue Cleveland Hts.. O. Frances Lavinia Ford Oak Lane East of 10th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Janet Birbeck Frantz Princeton, N. J. Adelaide Hopkins Foster :t ; Bedford Terrace Northampton, Mass. Mary Frazier 100 Wrsi Mermaid Lane St. Martin ' s, Philadelphia, Pa. X K 1923 K Elizabeth Moor Freeman 55 Highland Street Portland, Me. Gertrude Elise Funke 267 Bedford Park Building New York, N. Y. Eleanor Frost Hanover, N. H. Margaret Hughe Gantt Box 356 Woodstock, Va. Mildred Harriet Frost Salem Street Andover, Mass. Josephine Garrett 29 Kingsbury Place St. Louis, Mo. 42 K [1923 Henrietta Gazan 122 East 37th Street Savannah, Ga. Helen Goetzman 400 Ridgewood Avenue Minneapolis, Minn. Margaretha Christine Geisel 74 Fairfield Street Springfield, Mass. Sadie Edith Goldberg 168 Trafton Road Springfield. Mass. Florence King Gilman 815 Nebraska Street Sioux City, la. Dorothy Johnson Gongweb i Fairfax Road Cleveland His.. 0. K K i:: 1923 Helen Marie Gottschaldt Hempstead Long Island, N. Y. Geraldine Elizabeth Graves 1618 North Michigan Avenue Saginaw, Mich. Alice Ross Gould Somerville, N. J. Matilda Gross 1X7 Marey Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Jeanette Rodger Graham Lee, Mass. Louise Patterson Guyol Concord, N. H. X 44 K 11923 Eva Josephine Hamilton 2308 Robinwood Avenue Toledo, O. Janet Flagg Harlan 1207 19th Street Washington, D. C. Katherine Hannon 120 Fisher Avenue Roxbury, Mass. Margery Coe Hawley u - js Smith Russell Avenue Ames. [a. Margaret Hannon 120 Fisher Avenue Roxbury, Mass. Ernestine Haynes ii w.-t niih Street New York, N. Y. K. X 923 K Helen Vincent Hazen 185 Moraine Street Brockton, Mass. Mary Elizabeth Henry 1827 Wilton Road Cleveland, O. Marion Elizabeth Healy 50 Virginia Street Boston, Mass. Mary Elizabeth Henry 402 Carothers Avenue Carnegie, Pa. Ethel Blanche Henin 274 Forest Park Avenue Springfield, Mass. Harriet Josephine Herrick Amherst, Mass. K 46 [1923 Helen Andromache Hines 1001 7th Street Huntington, W. Va. Helene Marson Hodgkins 75 Westford Avenue Springfield, Mass. Bernice Hirschman 318 Second Avenue Salt Lake City, Utah Hannah Jeannette Hoffman 334 Helmont Avenue Newark, N. J. Lucy Maxwell Hodge 80 Mercer Street I ' rinceton, N. J. Leila Stuart Holt 163 w.si 78rd street New York. N. Y. K X 17 X 1923 X Mary Eleanor Holt 523 Main Street Oconto, Wis. Emily Mills Hopson 217 Ocean Avenue New London, Conn. Adelaide Homer 169 Forest Street Medford, Mass. Clarabel Hord East Irving Street Washington, D. C. Josephine Hopkins Pointed Firs East Haddam, Conn. Elizabeth Burdick Hotchkiss 102 South Waiola Avenue LaGrange, III. X 48 X 1923 Helen Elizabeth House 9701 Laraont Avenue Cleveland, O. Hannah Sylvia Huebschman 1618 East 115th Street Cleveland, O. Katherine Marion Howk Rochester, N. Y. Mary Louise Hughes 110 Maple Street Gardner, Mass. Rosalind Hubbell Lexington, Mass. Gertrude Homan Humphrey 18S Atlantic Avenue Marblehead, Mass. X. X j[J925 Dorothy Alberta Hunt 32 Merrimack Street Nashua, N. H. Rosamond Ingalls 4 Urban Street Mount Vernon, N. Y. Elizabeth Storer Hunt Mountain View Park Cape Elizabeth, Me. Helen Caroline Jacobs 98 Fuller Street Brookline, Mass. Katherine F. Hunt 366 Ashland Avenue St. Paul, Minn. Lillian Ruth Jacobs Lakewood Hotel Lakewood, N. J. 50 K [1923 Katharine Jacobus 92 Gates Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Josephine Joel 61 West 14th Street Atlanta. Ga. Beatrice Mary Jaques 407 Chandler Street Worcester, Mass. Catharine Robie Johnson 1062 West Sixth Street Erie, Pa. Helen Elizabeth Jenkins 459 Whalley Avenue New Haven, Conn. Betty Johnston 10TS Park Avenue New York. N. Y. X X 1923 X Lucy Joseph 1689 East 115th Street Cleveland, O. Alice Mary Kelly Sodno Wayne Co., N. Y. Valerie M. Jourdan 84 Maple Street Hranford, Conn. Grace Gavina Kelsey Hranford, Conn. Lois Kane 403 West 115th Street New York, N. Y. Hazel Mae Kendrick 27 High Street Easthampton, Mass. X 1923 Elizabeth Helen Kennedy 36 Pleasant Street Boston 25, Mass. Ruth Elizabeth King 9 Magnolia Street Arlington, Mass. Henrietta Kilborn 26 Hawthorne Avenue Akron. O. Louise Collamer Kittredge Woodstock, Vt. ROCHELLE KlNCAIU K07 Ten Iiroeck Street Paris. 111. Eleanor Frances Koiin 271 Central Park Wist N.-w York. N. Y. 923 Ella Margaret Lamont 342 Mt. Prospect Avenue Newark, N. J. Elizabeth Lathrop New Hope, Pa. K Laura Carson Lane 1631 Boulevard West Hartford, Conn. Margaret Frances Lawler 16 James Street Greenfield. Mass. Mary Veronica Lange Harrison Westchester Co., N. Y. Edith Adelaide Leach 71 St. James Avenue Lee, Mass. X 54 X fi9Z5 K Ruth Amelia Leberman 15 Barton Avenue Toronto, Canada Anita Ottilie Leo-Wolf 108 Buffalo Avenue Niagara Falls, N. Y. Arlene Pierson Lee 56 Halsted Street East Orange, N. J. Jessie Lewis Manhattan, Munt. Louise Leland Springfield, III. Clara Lieber B602 Centra] Avenue Indianapolis, End, X 1923 Tony Liebman 380 Clinton Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Constance Evelyn Long 163 North Euclid Avenue Oak Park, 111. Davidson. N. C. R LlNGLE H H a P i ' Dorothy Lourie 1 W ' S v- ,« : w b 50 Bradshaw Street k Dorchester, Mass. ■iLJi Olive May Loeb 2406 Mott Avenue Far Rockaway, L. I. Josephine Marian Lucchina 6 Cottage Street Barre, Vt. K 56 [1923 K Isadore Leighton Luce 82 Court Street Portsmouth, N. H. Katherine Dorothea Lynch Easthampton, Mass. Florence Lufkin Concord, Mass. Helen L. McCandless 351 Jefferson Street Rochester, Pa. Dorothy Edna Lutz 284 Hancock Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Elva Beatrice McCormick 226 Center Street South Manchester. Conn K X 1923 X Nora McDonough 63 Summit Avenue Plainfield. N. J. Mary-Lois McMullen 408 Breenwood Boulevard Evanston, 111. Elsbeth Gordan McGoodwin 2740 Ridge Avenue Evanston, 111. Margaret Stewart Macleay 999 Chestnut Street Manchester. N. H. Isabella C. McLaughlin 5609 Woodlawn Avenue Chicago, 111. Katheryn Devers Maley Daytona. Fla. X 58 X [1923 Gladys Stewart Manee The Apthorp, 79th Street and Broadway New York, N. Y. Elizabeth Walker Marshall 138 Vaughan Street Portland, Me. Onnolee Mann 5205 Cass Street Omaha, Neb. Irene Muriel Martin 532 South Webster Avenue Green Bay, Wis. Vivien Katherine Marrion 35 Franklin Street Barre, Vt. Catharine Williams Mason 81 Graoc Court Brooklyn, N. Y. K ,K X K jfr925 Marjorie Atlee Mason La Jolla, Cai. Ruth Aileen Mechler 2514 Parkwood Avenue Toledo, O. Jeannette Mathers 516 North Ohio Avenue Sidney, O. Sarah Harriet Mensel 146 Elm Street Northampton, Mass. Janet Adele Matthew 3828 Euclid Avenue Cleveland, O. Virginia Merrill 12 Riverside Drive Cranford, N. J. 60 X 923 K Grace Elinor Meyercord 420 West Coulter Street Germantown, Pa. Charlotte Weir Moore 230 West 7th Street Erie, Pa. Mildred Miron 465 Madison Avenue Elizabeth, N. J. Crucita Leslie M ore L54a Hii-ks Street Brooklyn, N. Y. Harriet Chamberlin Montross ;i. r : Smith Street IV.-kskill. N. V. Dobothi Morgan Santa EUta Apti All:. nti, ' City, N. J. X •;i [1923 Edith Nelson Morris Box 2022 Ancon, Canal Zone Martha Elizabeth Morse 109 West Prospect Street Kewanee, 111. 1 l V K y Marion Claire Morris 110 Pleasant Street Holyoke, Mass. Margaret McBurney Morton Plymouth, Mass. Mary Elinor Morrison 7 Laton Street Nashua, N. H. Gertrude Eleanor Mullaney 163 Vernon Street Worcester, Mass. K 62 1923 Florence Helen Munsie 7 Grace Street Maiden, Mass. Sara Wadsworth Neher 148 Library Place Princeton. N. J. Dorothy Woodin Myers 802 Linwood Avenue Evansville, Ind. Dorice Elizabeth Neiman 102 East Scribner Avenue Du Bois, Pa. Dorothy Neff S09 Prairie Avithh; Kenosha. Wis. Rosie Nelson 405 Western Avenue Mae.imli:!, Mass. K X X 1923 K Esther Sargent Norton 507 Ashland Avenue ButTalo, N. Y. Margaret O ' Connor Brandon, Vt. Lucia Garrison Norton 4 East 66th Street New York, N. Y. Mona Gertrude O ' Hara Forestville, Conn. Helen Wasson Nowels Columbia City, Ind. Alice Estelle O ' Leary 4331 Drexel Boulevard Chicago, 111. 64 X 1923 X Dorothy Flint Page 270 Porter Street Melrose, Mass. Alice Farwell Parker 301 East 4th Street Julesburg, Col. Helen Marlowe Paige 1645 South Fifth Terre Haute. Ind. Jessie Patrick 15 Whaley Street Freeport, L. I. Mildred Carey Palmer Lee, Mass. Dorothy Lyman Patten i he Currier Nashua, N. 11. X X 05 X j f9Z5 X X Helen Thomas Payson 82 West Street Portland, Me. Nella Louise Pfau Ticonderoga, N. Y. Isabelle Kittredge Pease 57 Coyle Street Portland, Me. Katharine DeWitt Phelps Wilton, N. Y. «£k « l ¥ M 0 m 3 y mff y w. Elsie Jane Peterdon 8(i7 Fairmont Avenue St. Paul, Minn. Charlotte Day Phillips 10 Normal Street Worcester, Mass. 66 X [1925 Eugenia Madge Plumb Hoffman Apts. Grand Rapids, Mich. Frances Converse Powers 42 Ridgewood Place Springfield, Mass. Ruth Janet Polacheck 2614 Cedar Street Milwaukee, Wis. Lillian Adele Prediger Pittafield, Mass. Annie Childs Porter 106 Washington Avenue Northampton, Mass. Kl 111 I ' l l IS 10.17 Kasi lMh Street Brooklyn, N V X X JB925 Margaret Adelaide Putnam Wellesley Farms, Mass. Helen Wilson Read 312 West Britannia Street Taunton, Mass. Alice Lynnette Quayle 1911 East 90th Street Cleveland, O. Eloise Castle Reder 6346 Pershing Avenue St. Louis, Mo. Margaret Hildred Ramsay Farmington, Me. WlLHELMINE REHM 2201 Burnet Avenue Cincinnati, O. X X 68 X H923 Ina Helen Reid 56 Oriole Street West Roxbury, Mass. Sarah Randall Riggs 478 Manheim Street Germantown, Pa. Esther Rhodes 34 Churchill Street Little Falls. N. Y. Marguerite Rose Rihbany 1511 LonKwood Avenue Hrookline. Mass. Dorothy Frances Rice 8 West 40th Street New York. N. Y. Jane Knox Robinson BO] Lexington Avenue New York, N. Y. 89 1923 Carolyn W. Rosenstein Martling Avenue Tarrytown, N. Y. Marion Pawley Rudnick 28 Littell Road Brookline, Mass. Louisa Perry Ross St. Joseph, Mo. Lois Rundlett 15 Summit Avenue Concord, N. H. Louise Rowley Prairie du Chien, Wis. ftteAj (foAj Louise Russell 1 West 67th Street New York, N. Y. 70 X 1923 X Mary Elizabeth Ryan 94 County Street New Bedford, Mass. Margaret Butler Salinger 1831 Ramona Avenue South Pasadena, Cal. Esther Evelyn Shapiro 534 Chestnut Street Springfield. Mass. Veronica Edla Savage 1047 West Main Street Waterbury, Conn. Hope Douglas St. Amant 21 Hawthorne Avenue Auburndale, Mass. Martha Schaibuc Troy. O. X 1923 K Helen Louise Schulze 2305 Commonwealth Avenue Chicago, 111. Henrietta Sebring Bellefonte, Pa. Geraldine Wager Scott Geneva. 111. Miriam Hutchins Shaw 1426 Hinman Avenue Evanston, 111. Elizabeth Janeway Scudder 253 Livingston Avenue New Brunswick, N. J. Dorothy Shea 250 Oak Street Holyoke, Mass. X 72 X 1925 Evelyn Ray Shekhan 136 Campbell Avenue Revere, Mass. Eleanor Gray Sidwell Collinsville, Conn. Frances Sheffield 46 Ayrault Street Newport. R. I. Constance Siegel 7 West End Avenue New York. N. Y. Agnes Isabel Shepard 218 Barrington Street Rochester, N. Y. Adeline E. Sinsabai gh EOS Coran Bhelton, Conn X [1923 Harriet Sleeper 76 Crescent Street Northampton, Mass. Dorothy Smith 20 Ridgeview Avenue White Plains, N. Y. Anna Lillian Smith Rushford. Minn. Esther Durrell Smith 48 Oxford Road Newton Center, Mass. Dorothy Holmes Smith 1073 East Broad Street Columbus, O. Frances Maude Smith 50 Andrew Road Swampscott, Mass. K X 74 X IT923 Harriet Smith Dellwood White Bear Lake, Minn. Jeannette A. Soulliere 800 Main Street Worcester, Mass. Helen M. Smith 41 Broad Street Milford, Conn. Helen Spahr 27 Washington Snuare, North New York, N. Y. Marion Eleanor Smith 148 North Grove St net K;.st Orange, N. J. Helen SPERO siit West End Avenue New York, N. Y. X H923 Elisabeth Steele Madison, Conn. Jane Overton Stewart 38 South Highland Avenue Ossining, N. Y. Josephine Martha Stephens Monongahela, Pa. Ermina Stimson 75 Kensington Avenue Northampton, Mass. Miriam Margaret Stevenson 27 Hudson Street Mount Vernon, N. Y. H. Co nstance Stoner 18 Middlesex Road Buffalo, N. Y. K 76 X ] 19Z5 Catherine Pease Stow 6607 North 10th Street, Oak Lane Philadelphia, Pa. Eleanore Kimbal Taylor 17 Sound View Avenue New Rochelle, N. Y. Dorothy Edna Strasser 216 West 89th Street New York, N. Y. Harriet Shotwell Taylor Lombard, 111. Eva Folsom Sully 6161 Wayne Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. Lillian Mary Taylob 188 Charlet Stree1 Fitchburgi M;iss. K. [1923 K Celeste Speck Terry 9 Lenox Place St. Louis, Mo. Rosemary Thomas Sherborn, Mass. Dorothy Barber Thomas 6 Chestnut Street Rockville, Conn. Margaret M. Towle 420 Church Street Evanston, 111. Paula Romare Thomas 815 West Peachtree Street Atlanta, Ga. Edith Dorothy Treadwell 11 Parker Avenue Lynn, Mass. K _K 78 K 1923 K Lenore Louise Treat Spring Valley, N. Y. Felicia Marianna Tucker 495 West End Avenue New York, N. Y. Beatrice Blanche Treeger 318 West 100th Street New York, N. Y. Charlotte Ferrell Vail 1950 Madison Road Cincinnati, O. Grace Caroline Tripi ' 5 Berkeley Place Cranford. N. J. Comfort Vegely 115 Mason Avenue Webster Groves, Ho. i ' J X [1923 X Elsa Wachter 192 Partridge Street Albany. N. Y. Lelia Ware 2819 East First Street Long Beach, Cal. Irene Pollard Walber 240 North Fulton Avenue Mount Vernon, N. Y. Florence Adelaide Watts 296 Main Street Northampton, Mass. Jane Stuart Walker 1224 Main Street Racine, Wis. Marian Watts Philadelphia, Pa. X 80 =x 1923 Helen Geddes Webster Pieton, Nova Scotia Eleanor Veeder Wemple Saugerties, N. Y. Dorothy Elizabeth Welch 502 East Washington Street liloomington, 111. Catharine Hill Wheeler Meriden, Conn. Helen Elizabeth Welch 14 Northey Streel Salem, Mass. Elizabeth Wheei eh s.ui Dlmas, CaL X 81 1923 Katharine Howard White 30 Cliff Road Wellesley Hills, Mass. Margaret Doyle Wilcox 64 Hawthorne Avenue Akron, O. Katharine Whitlock Scarsdale, N. Y. Katharine Abbot Wilder Sterling Junction, Mass. Pauline Wakefield Whitney 524 1st Avenue South St. Cloud, Minn. Clarice Elizabeth Williams 55 Hrainerd Avenue Middletown, Conn. K 82 X 1923 Ellen Susan Williams 3 Cherry Heights Lyons, N. Y. Agnes Mitchell Wilson 318 Neville Street Pittsburgh, Pa. Akron, O. Ruth Williams Avenue J m ■Patience Winchester San Rafael, Cal. Page Williams 39 Auburn Street Brookline, Mass. Elizabeth Rosabkli.k Wise 602 Glenview Place Joplin, Mo. K X 83 K 11923 Anna Wohl 1845 Seventh Avenue New York, N. Y. Dorothy Woods Hatfield, Mass. Harriet Crosby Wolverton 106 Gambier Street Mount Vernon, O. Marjory Woods Woodlawn Lewistown, Pa. K Catherine Woodruff 23 Howard Street Holyoke, Mass. Mildred Woodward 1535 East 60th Street Chicago, 111 84 X [1923 Lillie Marcaretta Wright 415 Midland Avenue St. Davids, Pa. Edith DeGraw Yereance 118 Centre Street South Orange, N. J. Rosemary Ruth Zonne iHO Mount Curve Avenue Minneapolis. Minn. K 3tt fBrmmiam Harriet fie ffiatupy (Eljarluttr E. Hail Be [1923 X $ovxxm MnnbttB Ackroyd, Mary E. Adams, Marjory E. Adler, Theresa Babbitt, Esther Barber, Margaret C. Barnhart, Ruth Barrows, Eunice Barton, Isabel J. Barwis, Millicent A. Bates, Elizabeth Bates, Elizabeth M. Beard, Matilda Beatty, Katharine E. Bebb, Katherine M. Beers, Helen H. Beidler, Elizabeth L. Benedict, Frances Binney, Marian Blomberg, Cornelia E. Borton, Eleanor B. Bowyer, Laura M. Brewer, Augusta C. Brickett, Esther D. Brown, Margaret P. Buck, Eleanor F. Buckminster, Constance Burch, Dorothy Burt, Ruth Butler, Elsie M. Carvey, Anne C. Cauthorn, Ruth dinger, Florence LeV. Cochran, Margaret W. Cohen, Marion K. Craig, Marie E. Crandell, Marian R. Cumming, Anna L. Curran, Frances Davenport, Helen A. Davidson, Margaret L. Davies, Priscilla Davis, Virginia R. Deacon, Virginia K. Dean, Alice D. Deiches, Helen de Lancey, Harriet A. Delmarle, Mary E. Derby, Dorothea Dettenborn, Carolyn L. DeVoe, Annette Dyer, Grace Dykman, Florence P. Earhart, Grace M. Elliott, Florence L. Ely, Katherine G. (Mrs.) Emerick, Constance W. Engle, Weona C. Estes, Dorothy Fellows, Beatrice W. Fetter, Ellen C. Fox, Dophia N. Frankel, Elsinore Gaus, Helen 0. Gimbal, Eleanor E. Gleason, Elizabeth E. Goodell, Catherine M. Goodhue, Ann P. Graves, Caroline Gray, Elizabeth H. Green, Frances 0. Greene, Alice D. Greenlaw, Dorothy D. Hansen, Carolyn A. Havemyer, Helen M. Hayden, Anna E. Hayne, Mary H. Hogg, Elisabeth Holliday, Alice B. Houghton, Gladys R. Hubbard, Helen W. Huntress, Dorothy Hutt, Louise O. Irwin, Chere Jacot, Dorothy M. Janssen, Catherine Q. Johnson, Dorothy C. Jordan, Lois Isabel Keith, Anne F. Kennedy, Lillian J. Kimball, Eleanor L. King, Eleanor Van Cise Kirk, Mary E. Klotz, Elizabeth M. Lagerman, Elinor E. Lambertson, Elizabeth S. Lawler, Anna M. Leeming, Honor Legier, Henrietta 0. Liddle, Gladys H. Linville, Edith J. Long, Marion Lovett, Margaret H. Lucas, Janet P. McConnell, Mildred M. McDuffee, Maude C. Mcintosh, Elizabeth McKnight, Sara M. Maclay, Jean E. _K 86 1923 K Marchant, Ruth E. Mee, Bernice E. Merrell, Mary A. Merrill, Bernice H. Moore, Elizabeth F. Myers, Helen E. Nash, Eva L. Nash, Geraldine L. Neel, Elsie M. Noble, Sue H. Northrop, Mildred B. Norwood, Beatrice T. Nusbaum, Geraldine I. Odell, Helen W. Ogsbury, Sara E. Pennock, Louise E. Perkins, Eleanor H. Potter, Ruth J. Prickett, Helen C. Proudfoot, Mattie G. Pugsley, Esther M. Read, Helen L. Rindge, Eleanor Robinson, Frances E. Robinson, Sarah W. Rogers, Catherine F. Rohden, Helen C. Rowe, Ethel M. Russell, Flora M. Sanborne, Josephine Schurman, Beatrice M. Sessions, Judith H. Shafer, Lucile D. Shirley, Anna K. Shobe, Maisee L. Smith, Dorothy Smith, Gertrude B. Smith, Marion G. Snyder, Elizabeth Staats, Helen Standish, Eleanor S. Stanley, Phyllis Stearns, Ruth L. Steiger, Ruth Stenson, Mabel Sweetser, Isabelle Taylor, Dorothy M. W. Teare, Martha D. Thieme, Martha E. Thorpe, Sumner W. Towle, Margaret M. Trafford, Melinda Vincent, Elizabeth H. Waldron, Ruth 0. Warren, Eleanor W. Watson, Mary E. Wetherbee, Marjorie H. White, Dorothy J. White. Margaret M. White, Nancy P. Wilcox, Louise B. Willis, Gretchen Winslow, Solvieg E. 87 -; X X 1923 3tealjman fear K isabelle Mclaughlin Chairmen of Committees Ring and Pin Eleanor Bumstead Song Leader- Lucy Hodge Rally Day Decorations Virginia Merrill Ribbons Eleanor Perkins Class Color Green Class Animal Grasshopper Officers President Isabelle McLaughlin Vice-President Nerissa Fitzsimmons Treasurer Helen Payson Secretary Miriam Conklin Song Leaders Lucy Hodge Lyle Ewing 90 1923 (Ulaaa ijiatory--- iFrpabmatt fear Enter fairy bearing fruit — And so — the Springfield train Bearing the green-picked lot of us To leave us in the rain That fell and fell and— well, It was the Freshman rain! To leave us there to ripen fair Or slowly go to seed — The difference is just personal. (One may do both indeed!) We straight descended on the town, Which quickly fell on us, And over all our innocence Was made a wicked fuss. We followed in the beaten paths And broke ourselves to stage Our future so-collegiate selves With what was all the rage (The desperate, howling rage!) The Dinkey Bird, some wild cretonne, The ever missing link With home — the canvas laundry-case, A fountain pen, some ink, A dozen, darling note books dear, So cunning, don ' t you think? We took our chapel date books, And our tea, and some advice, And we wore our clothes like Seniors, Who were really very nice. We smiled upon the College As newcomers from the world. Bringing a fresh, new message To those left when on it whirled. We were really very clever And our hair was neatly curled. (0 before we struck our midyears Artificially our hair was curled!) We chose the courses we could choose With calm deliberation. We picked the most attractive ones To help our conversation, Astronomy was fine indeed (And such a dissipation To be out nearly every night! O what a reputation.) We learned to stretch our legs and mouths On gym and lollypops, And how to get to chapel well And fix goloshes ' tops, We learned the names of the town dogs And all the trolley stops. We went to Sophomore Carnival And skated on thin ice, Politely laughed to hear it crack, And thought the Grind Book nice, Though a bit silly then for us Who had seen Springfield twice. We made our friends on Allen Field — And lost them in the pool. We tripped the Amherst trolley And we spoke of Smith as school. We were really model Freshmen And we never broke a rule (No never — as a rule.) We learned professors ' College names, And how the choir sings, And whether some by Paradise May or may not have wings, And even in our grotto cool We harked to many things. We knew the latest rumors and Could make some of our own. We hunted for the college slang And pulled a battered bone (When a college doesn ' t feel its slang You must let it alone!) We strained our necks in chapel To watch the clubs take out. And our eyesight al the Plaza Kiii-cvcr. without doubt. And, (), how college-laundry wise 91 K 11923 We were — and ironed out. We went on bats and bats and — bats And called burned bacon sweet. We had a little practice in Making the week-ends meet. (Probably this same joke is made On every other sheet!) When finally we ceased to hum The year ' s topical song To give us (?) some diversion The Step Sings came along. And now we make here a sad end — This history is too long. For marveled we when Sophomores sang, When Juniors sang we cheered, And when the lovely Seniors sang We wept and parting feared! But when we Freshmen tried to sing The others cried and leered. Spring — fountain — Seniors — mountain — green — We waveringly grew lyrical, The fairest class we ' ve ever seen — The others grew hysterical. And when we ' d faltered shrilly through The smiles were all satirical! Then came the final parting rain Of tears, of trunks, of bills. We took exams and colds and trains, And everything but pills, And cheered to be real Sophomores And up the worst of hills. Now since you doubtless think rhyme Is weak in spots, not clear, A flippant handling of something Which slowly grows more dear, I say, I know it is, but then — So was — our Freshman year! ISADORE LEIGHTON LUCE. this K _K 92 1923 § 0pl)nmnr? f par Officers President Harriet Mensel Vice-President Lucy Carr Secretary Sarah Riggs Treasurer Virginia Forbes Song Leader Dorothy H. Smith Assistant Song Leader Adeline Sinsabaugh HARRIET MENSEL Chairmen of Committees Sophomore Ice Carnival General Chairman, Isabelle McLaughlin Invitations, Miriam Conklin Music, Rosemary Thomas Entertainment, Eleanor Perkins Refreshments, Frances Sheffield Grind Book, Isadore Luce 1921 Commencement Rose Committee, Miriam Conklin Push Committee, Louise Leland Decoration Committee, Martha Morse K 94 X 1923 X (ttlaas ijiBinqj — npljmttflr? f?ar -yea, This is the tale of a wondrous dance that lasted for an entire year- even for the year of nineteen hundred twenty and twenty-one. School days, school days, dear old golden rule days, was wafted out on the fall winds to the ears of nineteen twenty-three, and gradually became more in- sistent as September slowly closed its cycle. We all found partners and the dance began. The orchestration was black with its mystic notations of — EJ. i yJan ai -£«f«« r -M- EJ J oa i C - ?l  J iq g tc l with here and there a repeat sign which could mean so much! But the music took on a more frolicsome, almost infantile aspect on the night of the first Saturday in October. The thirteenth day of this same month dawned clear and beautiful. This day was entitled the Mountain One-step on our programmes — and proved to be rather a tired and breathless, but with of lovely autumn leaves in On election night, No was very patriotic and en until after ten o ' clock, and for all those who were for John M. Greene or the over strenuous one, leaving us our arms full of the favors rich and variegated colors, vember second, the music thusiastic. The dance lasted was followed by a celebration tunate enough to get into flow meeting down town. The intermission of one day on Thanksgiving for refreshments was followed by a two-day tag-dance on November thirtieth and December first for the benefit of the Four Million Dollar Fund. The dance was fast and furious at first, but slowed down very considerably later in the afternoon. The next morning the music became a little more cheerful and showed signs of several repeat marks on its score — but, however, almost died away late in the afternoon. But at six that night there was a blare of trumpets and a resounding song of victory — we had not only raised our quota of four thousand five hundred and fifty dollars, hut had gone over it a hundred and forty-nine dollars. (N. B. 1 for history students: The first of December was memorable not only because of the oversubscription of our quota, but also because it was the author ' s birthday). The Christmas Sale Dance came on December eighth, and on the Lost and Found Extra alone, over two hundred dollars was made by ' twenty-three. The next day the Goldthwaite Drive Dance began for modesty in dress and for an abandonment of extreme styles. This led to further results after Christmas. X {mu We treated ourselves to a dance on December eighteenth in the new Crew House, whose upper floor we had made possible financially the year before. Two Santa Clauses gave us favors of red and green lollypops from bulging packs on their backs as we followed a winding serpentine in and out down the hall. A few days later the Christmas intermission of about three weeks took place — to give the dancers and orchestra a little rest. After this intermission, there was the Goldthwaite Fashion Dance with prizes for the best dress and skit on Goldthwaite principles. Then the music became slow and mournful — ushering in two weeks of frantic, tortuous exam, dances. (The metaphor is becoming somewhat involved for the author at this point!) But these were relieved a few days later by the Carnival dance which had been post- poned until the third of February, due to the wiles of the ice dancing floor. The pond was gay with colored lights which revealed a circus dance — with clowns, ringmaster, choruses and strange animals who cavorted to circusy music. The reception was held in the Crew House, and Dean Barbour — just returned from Europe — was able to be there. Choruses worthy of Ziegfeld danced and practised to music equally worthy — but all in vain. The T. T. R. or Twenty-three Revue was destined by the terpsichorean fates never to be presented to the public eye on Rally Day. Undaunted, we got up another play just in time for the performance. As for the remainder of February, we were not very lucky as regarded the basketball dances — losing to the Freshmen by one basket on the twenty-sixth. But we retrieved this later — winning the final dance from them to the tune of Oh, the Evens are purple with rage. We danced on for about a month until our Easter intermission, returning to find the time flying and the music becoming rather exotic, resulting in numerous Spring Fever Extras. As the end drew near, the music became more sad for we were losing our sister class — the best partners we had ever had. We sor- rowfully watched their grand march up the aisle of John M. Greene to be given their last programmes — but we could not stay long to weep for the enticing melody of Home, Sweet Home was calling us. Thus ended this wondrous dance — never to be forgotten by all those partici- pating in it. (N. B. The modest author wishes to com- pliment herself for not having once used the m u c h-q u o t e d phrase, trip the light fantastic with which many a less subtle writer would have begun and ended a like history). Miriam W. Conklin. =K 96 K 1923 Junior f par X MIRIAM CONKLIN President . Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer . Song Leader Assistant Song Leader Officers ELIZABETH MARSHALL Miriam Conklin Elizabeth Marshall Sarah Riggs Mildred Woodward . Dorothy Smith Adeline Sinsabaugh Chairmen of Committees Fund, Harriet Smith Rally Day Decorations, Josephine Hamilton Stunt, Alice Decker Ribbons, Adelaide Homer Show, Esther Norton Junior Frolic General Chairman, Nerissa Fitzsimmons Stunts, Louise Russell Music, Rosemary Thomas Decorations, Virginia Forbes Police, Ina Reid Inv itations, Ina Reid Costumes, Jane Robinson Resigned .X 98 X 1923 Junior flromenanp Lucia Norton Marian Watts . Chairman Head Usher Floor Committee Louise Leland,. Chairman Janet Harlan Elizabeth Lathrop Program Committee Barbai ' a Barnes, Chairman Katherine Debevoise Music Committee Mildred Frost, Chairman Pauline Whintey Invitation Committee Virginia Forbes, Chairman Betty Johnston Marjorie Woods Katharine Jacobus Lucy Carr Refreshment Committee Elizabeth Chadbourne, Chairman Mary Elizabeth Dunbar Theatre Committee Isadore Luce, Chairman Elizabeth Dierks Florence Gilman Chaperonage Jane Robinson, Chairman Helen Goetzmann Ruth Purvis Jane Walker Rosemary Zonne Janet Harlan Adeline Eveleth Edith Yereance X. X X jft925 02 « W K 02 o  -8 X 100 X Jlmttnr lal ra Dorothy Abel Isabel Adams Mary Aldrich Virginia Annan Frances Arnold Oriana Bailey Caroline Bancroft Barbara Barnes Elizabeth Bartol Margaret Bassett Mary Bates Anne Bell Mary Bergan Marion Bissell Charlotte Blanchard Edith Bleakly Alice Blood Adeline Boyden Barbara Boyer Alice Brackett Josephine Bree Ann Broad Patricia Brown Katharine Bryant Elizabeth Buck Kleanor Bumstead Anne Burnham Elizabeth Campbell Julia Campbell Prisrilla Cappfl Lucy Carr Madeline Cary Jane Cassidy E I i z.cbet h Chadbourne A nstes Cladek Mury Clark Margaret Clough t tarolyn Colby Mary Coley Miriam Conklin Sydney Cook Margaret Cooley Frances Ourran Marion Daly Dorothea Davis Virginia Deacon Katherine Dcbevoise Alice Decker Eleanor DeLamater Marion DeRonde Annette DeVoe Elizabeth Dierks Olive Dougherty Dorothy Drew Mary Dunbar Grace Earhart Alice Eggleston Rose Eichberg Minerva Ellis Amy Erlandsen Adeline Eveleth Rebekah Swing Phebe Ferris Nerissa Fitzsimmons Phebe Fleming Virginia Forbes Frances Ford Janet Frantz Elizabeth Freeman Eleanor Frost Mildred Frost Certrude Funke Margaret Gantt Josephine Garrett Margaretha Geisel Florence Oilman Helen Gootsma.i n Helen Gottschaldt Alice Gould Jeannette Graham Geraldine Graves Louise Guyol Margaret llannon Maii. in Healy Ethel Ileiiin Mary Henry Harriet Herrick Lucy Hodge Helen I loilvk i MS Mary Hol1 Adelaide Homer Josephine Hopkins Elizabeth Hotchkiss Helen House FRANCES ARNOLD, Head Usher Kathefine Howk Rosalind Hubbell Gertrude Humphrey Elizabeth Hunt Helen Jacobs Katharine Jacobus Beatrice Jaques Josephine Joel Betty Johnston Lucy Joseph Valerie Juurilan Alice Kelly Grace Kelsey Hazel Kendrick Elizabeth Kennedy Rochelle Kincaid Louise Kittredge Eleanor Kohn E. Margaret Lamont Laura Lane Elizabeth Lathrop Edith Leach Sylvia Leach Ruth Leberman Arlene Lee Louise Leland Anita Leo-Wolf Jessie Lewis Clara Lieber Tony Liebmann Olive Loeb Dorothy Lourie Josephine Lucchina [sadore Luce Dorothj l.utz Katherine Lynch Jeannette Mathers Elva McCormack Man, l McDuffee Katheryn Maley Onnolee Mann Kai herine Mason Marjoi I M Hair hi Mensel Virginia Merrill (ii are Meyercord Harriet Montroas Charlotte Moore Crucita Moore Dorothy Morgan Edith Morris Mary Morrison Martha Morse Margaret Morton Helen Myers Sarah Neher Dorice Neimm Rosie Nelson Esther Norton Lucia Norton Margaret O ' Connor Dorothy Page Helen Paige Mildred Palmer Alice Parker Jessie Patrick Dorothy Patten Helen Payson Isallelle Pease Elsie Peterson Nella Pl ' au Charlotte Phillips Eugenia Plumb A nnie Porter Frances Pow era Lillian Prediger Kuth Purvis Alee Quayle Helen Bead Bloise Reder Ina Reid r Rhodes Sarah Kiggs .1 ane Robinson Louisa Ross Lois Itundlett Louise Russell Hope Si. Amant I ' Mla Savage Martha Sensible Geraldine Scott ■th Scudder Henrietta Seining Miriam Shaw Frances Sheffield Eleanor Sidwell Adeline Sinsabaugh Harriet Sleeper Dorothy Smith Harriet Smith Helen Spahr Josephine Stephens Jane Stewait Ermina Stimson Catherine Stow Eleanore Ta lor Harriet Taylor Celeste Terry Dorothy Thomas Rosemary Thomas Paula Thomas Sumner Thorpe Margaret Towle Melinda Trafford Edith Treadwell Beatrice Treeger Grace Tripp Charlotte Vail Comfort Vegelv Edith Wade Walker Florence Watts Helen Webster Dorothy Welch Helen Welch Eleanor Wemple Catharine Wheeler Elisabeth Wheeler Pauline Whitney Margaret Wilcox Ellen Williams Page Williams Wilson Elisabeth v Catherine WiKidrutT Dorothy Woods Marjory Woods Mildred Woodward Edith Yercance Rosemary Bonne 101 W I3925] l K dluntor Jffrnltr Cassandra, shrouded in a suitable cloak of mystery, made what she stated as a last attempt to reform the class, at Junior Frolic, on Wednesday evening, March 8, 1922. The famous daughter of Priam and Hecuba, becoming bored with her exist- ence with the gods, went before their council, (for the gods, being progressive, ha ve self-government), and was generously allowed by them to return to earth again. The stunts at the Frolic were as varied as the pleas of the prophetess herself, and though some were poetic and some prosaic, some musical and some dramatic, all were amusing and to a greater or less degree clever. Since the purpose was to instruct by amusing, the moral could never be forgotten, and, as in the case of the sugar-coated pill which Cassandra cited, the instruction was always there, even though it might be overshadowed for the time being by the amusement. The Flappers and Phi Beta Kappas were the first stunt, the moral of which was rather hard to ascertain, since each considered the other very stupid and neither was victorious in the end, as the A ' s and E ' s came equally to both. Graduation Day in the School of Polite Unlearning was one of the funniest stunts. The heroine, after having followed the undergraduate routine for four years, came up before the jury for her final examination. A dramatization of her state of mind followed. Her knowledge of contemporary drama was confined to Mary Pickford ' s productions. To her, literature meant Peter Rabbit, The Little Colonel and The Smart Set. She had studied both the art of modern painting and the Eternal Triangle. Although her knowledge of the Near East question was limited to The Sheik, she was about to be acquitted, when the Canterbury Pilgrims and Beowulf were introduced to her in order that she might have at least a speaking acquaintance with them. The former Smith girl was present and also some modern representatives of the class whose jaws are never static. These brought with them not only their gum, but also the latest rules: First you fetch it, then you stretch it, If you drop it you must catch it. The organized and the unorganized, the batting societies and the departmental clubs were all present. Cassandra included them all and from each drew her moral. The imitation can never be quite as good as the real thing, but the imitations in College isn ' t what she used to was were very good. Alpha, more athletic than dramatic, and Phi Kappa, lopsided with personality, the chicken coop which could be opened only with a Phi Beta key, and the fountain were all, if not realistic, surely ingenious representations. When her evening ' s work was done, Cassandra withdrew, still concealing her true identity; and her co-workers told no more than, We must confess, it ' s all a guess. We leave it all to you. 102 H923 K (Class iJjtstiiry— Juntnr f par It was impossible to think of ourselves in the position occupied by twenty- one when we were freshmen. It was impossible to get along without twenty- one anyhow. Why, there was no one to look up to now, — unless possibly the class we should always think of as Sophomores. The first part of junior year was a struggle to adjust ourselves, and the strange part was that we succeeded. At least there was evidence that most of the College was fooled into thinking us as important as we tried to seem. Positions of responsibility were thrust upon us! We were president of Athletic Association and college fire captain. We ran the Institute and the Christmas sale. And, test of all distinction, we spoke at Freshman class meetings. But there were other things to get accustomed to. The College had spread itself up Prospect Street and Henshaw Avenue, and it was so queer to see great hordes of girls pouring to chapel from th at direction. Instead of the smooth green turf of Allen Field there were three holes in the ground and fierce looking engines that thumped and stared at the sports on fall Field Day. Then we missed Jordy and wondered if things could ever be the same. Probably not. But rather than let the already homesick advisee know what she had missed by not coming to College with twenty-three, we swallowed our grief and proceeded — to Thanksgiving. Here we took advantage of the new cut system and returned to the bosom of our families (or was it hearthstone that the Governor ' s proclamation suggested?). And then we were home for Christmas and back again for Mid-Years before we knew it. Time and classes dragged wearily, as always at this stage of the year, until Rally Day. We were defeated by twenty-two, but so much less ignobly than those games years before — our Freshman year to he accurate- that we scarcely heeded it among the other glories of the day. Yor we sat on the floor of John M. Greene for the exercises, and distinguished ourselves by applauding Sarah ' s ode more loudly than all the rest of the audience put together. Junior Frolic helped make Cassandra famous and gave us a good time inci- dentally. The combination of pop-COm halls and our own ingenuity was supcrh. |u;; X JB925 X That hectic and delightful week before Spring vacation was the climax of Junior year. Then did we acknowledge our importance without conditions. For when the members of one ' s class become Council president and Monthly editor, Junior Phi Bets and a hundred other things, there is no longer need to bluff. We felts rather sorry for the Seniors. It must be hard to see one ' s place filled by so apt a successor. But this was merely a preliminary to feeling sorry for ourselves. After Junior Prom, the acme of three years ' anticipations realized, we were aware that it was almost over. We took the steps on one of the two clear nights in Commencement Week and then consoled ourselves by deliberating as to which sweater was the best background for rendering conspicuous the Senior Pin. Margaret Lamont. X 104 X 1923 S ttinr §?ar Officers President Lucy Carr Vice-President Rosemary Thomas Secretary Eleanor Holt Treasurer Elizabeth Marshall Committees Senior Pins Edith Yereance, Chairman Sara Neher Katherine Debevoise Helen McCandless LUCY CARR Class Insurance Isabelle McLaughlin, Chairman Elizabeth Dierks Florence Watts Anne Bell Rally Day General Chairman Virginia Forbes Decorations, Harriet Montross Ribbons, Tony Liebman Stunt, Margaret Clough Sho2v, Martha Morse K 106 X (UlasB l talory— fninr fear We came back in the Fall with several theories and plans more or less defi- nitely formed. We advanced on the College with calm self-confidence; was not our place assured? The novitiate had been long; the privileged hour would be short indeed; let us enjoy it to the full. As Seniors we would reap our reward of deference and repose. Of course we would not be overbearing or distant, but the calm serenity which we intended to preserve, the sweet graciousness with which we would point the way to the Freshmen, could not fail to obtain for us thai respect, that admiration (hitherto withheld) which we really deserved. This was our last year for definite mental development; we would make the most of it. Marks would have no more effect upon our classroom efforts than they had ever had, but we would work with a worthier aim, that of developing our intellectual curiosity (first cast your rabbit!) and enlarging our capacities. Nor would our social lne be neglected; we planned teas, we mapped out a series of dates — say, one a week with Betty, because I really see too much of her; and I must take Alice out to tea; I ' ve meant to ever since Freshman year. Sternly we resolved to follow a schedule; to let no temptation, no emotion — certainly no emotion! move us from the path of mature and dignified righteousness. We planned to unpack and be beautifully settled that evening, but Betty came in and suggested that we go down to see the new Allen Field, and we spent some money that we really ought to have saved — you need so many books for Govern- ment — at the Lunch Box, while we listened to the talk about us. She isn ' t back, either — Why, nobody came back! (We did!) She ' s in Jordan this year — — in the middle, I think. One of those little white ones? — private telephones in every room, my dear! We determined to see for ourselves soon, and went home to our bare rooms and discarded suitcases. At chapel we sat right in the front row or, just to prove our independence, mounted to the balcony. It was satisfying to note that we really weren ' t emo- tional, as we calmly listened to President Neilson ' s words about John; but a few minutes later we found ourselves looking up at the balcony-corner by the door (now filled with alien faces) where he had used to come, quietly, midway of an entertainment just to see how the singer was making out. With a sniff we turned to contrast amusedly the trailing skirt of our classmate leading out with the abbreviated fringe of her companion. But later, at times when we passed the dim back door of College Hall and saw the porch empty in the edge of the lamp- light, we were consoled by no such considerations. Studies began, but not before we had examined the wonders of the New Dorms, and decided that even those decorations weren ' t worth going ' way up there for. And imagine having to sit up straight at your desk! But the chairs were really awfully com- fortable; and did you see the bathrooms? The festivities be- gan, of course, with Freshman Frolic, where we met every- body ' s little sister, and a few who weren ' t; but they con- tinued with even mon intensity than usual. Northampton, wish- ing like our amatory instructors to keep us here, imported entertainment a n d edification for us. We traversed English lit- erature with Mr. Walpole; under his amiable guidance we K _K id- X X JI925 surveyed Hardy, made the acquaintance of Gissing, confirmed the claims of the younger writers, and even took a comprehensive and general peep into the future. Immediately upon Mr. Walpole ' s departure we transferred our attention to a point nearer home, and, whatever the call of concert, lecture, or club, regaled ourselves twice a week upon dramas, poweriul and subtle, and comedies, farcical and Classic. Small wonder that the Powers decided to test our right to be here; and by the sacrifice of a morning ' s classes and many pencil ends (one must eat something) we attempted to prove that we still possessed the mentality by which we had achieve d our entrance, back in the dim days of 1919. But how could they expect us to have any power of thought, anyway, what with trying to figure out just when we should consult our new Mentor, Mrs. Scales, concerning the perplexities of life; and trying to understand just what the Dramatics Association was up to now, and approving the results; and with seeing our perfectly nice friends disguise themselves as Russians below while they affected the Lost Romance of the Western Plains in neckgear. Even if these had not been too much of a strain, there still remained class-meetings, an eternal procession of them, at which, with the energy of desperation, we did a tremendous amount of business, invested in our future, decided to get our Senior pins at home (whereat Hamp, in gratitude, gave a series of pyrotechnic displays in our honor), and, as ever, proved our wisdom by choosing The Black Maskers to crown our dramatic career. We waded through the welter of cards from the Appointment Bureau, cheered on by the prospect of vacation and a remarkable concert by the Glee Club. At Christmas Vespers our Freshman date asked us, much to our indignation, not to be mushy; but then, Freshmen can ' t be expected to comprehend the poignancy of the last Christmas Vespers. Returning reinforced with funds to aid our stricken neighbors, we found, as usual, a fresh supply of them, as well as unpaid pledges lying in wait for us across the gulf of Mid-Years (anybody can comprehend the poignancy of a last Mid- Years) ; but all depressing reflections were soon lost amid the excitements of more and yet more elections, the exhilaration of Rally Day, trials for parts (even if your family can ' t recognize you they like to see your name on the program), sleigh-rides and snowy hikes, debating (we had tied Williams, anyway), and — but suddenly we found that ' 24 was stepping into the limelight. Our day was declin- ing, but we accepted the situation gracefully, paddled languidly about Paradise, eyeing critically our athletic sisters in the shells, and applauding their prowess in exhibition, talked of What Had Been and What Was To Be on the Libe steps and the window-seats of Cushing, now familiar, attended sings, rehearsed, and, upon occasion, descended even to the relaxation of the movies. And then that was over — Senior Spring, and we were sitting in John M. Greene, warm in our gowns, and a little tremulous as we thought. It had been a good year, even though all our resolutions had failed; a year of happiness, and so soon over! Only Class Supper now, and we would be really out. All done now; the world was before us, and our sheltered days were over. And though we were solemn, w e were glad. Jane M. Cassidy. X 108 X [1923 « - • 4J IF ' 1 ■™ S ' ' ' l $ui fv ■1 T i«r 3f .. BS| 1 Vm  j « 39 A .jji . 4 jIC«... Jfvi , , ' T . . H Ammh mlH£ ' i_ J ■IJI § nttnr Eramattra (ttommttteFH Property Committee Anne Bell Esther Norton Louise Kittridge Celeste Terry Dorothy Neff Pauline Whitney Elizabeth Wise Assistant Business Manager Adeline Boyden Costume Committee Margaret Clark Virginia Forbes Dorothy Corbett Josephine Hamilton Alice Decker Adelaide Homer Elizabeth Dierks Louise Rowley Mary Dunbar Marjory Woods Nerissa Fitzsimmons Lillie Wright Music Committee Marion Deronde Eleanor Frost Harriet Mensel Staging Committee Florence Gilman Annie Porter Catherine Johnson Helen Spahr Eleanor Kohn Margaret Wilcox Edith Yereance no 923 flrinripalB of S ntnr iramatirs (Cast Lorenzo . Francesca Ecco Cristoforo 2d Lorenzo 2d Francesca Patruccio . Marian Watts Ethel Henin . Martha Morse Margaret Clough Dorothy Shea Arlene Lee . Mildred Frost X 1 1 (mi X BACCAMMTE Sunday, June Seventeenth Baccalaureate Exercises in Assembly Hall, 11 a. m. Address by President Neilson Organ Vespers in John M. Greene Hall, 8 p. m. K 112 1923 X IVYIW Monday, June Eighteenth Ivy Exercises on the Campus 10 a.m. Ivy Exercises in John M. Greene Hall . . . n a.m. Society Reunions 2 p. m. Closing Concert •. . . 3 p. m. Art Exhibition u; p. m. College Sing 7 p. m. President ' s Reception in the Library . . . 8-10 p. m. X X l L8 X JB925 K 3ug S ong Cool winds blow to us in June The fragrance of far flowers ; The daisy drops her blue-white points, Counting the lazy hours. Silver-throated, emerald plant, Count not the hours soon passed, But build your green memorial To ideals that will last. Care for the highly visioned thoughts Of lives that still are young ; Weave for us with your cool-veined hands The hopes that we have sung. For other Junes your tapestry, In upward growth designed ; Aspiring ever on, as we Seek higher than we find. Rosemary Thomas. K 114 i9Z5 QlmmmttwB for dDmrn nrrmntt ExrrnarB Ivy Day Committee Frances Powers, Chairman Sydney Cook Alice Quayle Eleanor DeLamater Paula Thomas Harriet Mensel Dorothy Woods Ivy Song Committee Eleanor Frost, Chairman Jane Cassidy Marion DeRonde Elizabeth Clark Rosemary Thomas Harriet Wolverton Commencement Printing Sara Neher, Chairman Dorothea Davis Katharine Mason Josephine Hamilton Eleanor Sidwell Commencement Orator Lucia Norton, Chairman Lucy Carr Isabelle McLaughlin Class Supper Committee Louise Leland, Chairman Edith Bleakly Eleanor Bumstead Alice Brackett Adelaide Homer Jane Walker Committee on Order of Marching Arlene Lee, Chairman Edith Campbell Clara Lieber Valerie Jourdan Onolee Mann Cap and Gown Committee Katherine Jacobus, Chairman Josephine Bree Dorothy Lutz Madeline Cary Eugenia Plumb Eva Sully x l L6 H923 COMMENCEMENT Tuesday, June Nineteenth John M. Greene Hall Alumnae Meeting Class Supper in Alumnae Gymnasium . 10.30 A, m. 4-6 p. m. 7 p. m. K 116 X [1923 (MS SUPPER Toastmistress, Lsabelle McLaughlin Speakers Virginia Forbes Isadore Luce Harriet Taylor Roll Call Celeste Terry 117 1923 3o 1924 Oh, Twenty was a noble class ! We treated her with awe ; And Twenty-one was not outdone By any that we saw; We followed proudly in the steps Of Nineteen Twenty-two, But when it comes to Senior Pins — We ' re giving ours to you ! Oh, Twenty-six is promising, No telling where she ' ll end ; And Twenty-five is sure to thrive, On her we can depend. We know they ' ll love the College as We brought them up to do, But when it comes to Senior Steps — We pass those on to you ! We leave the College in your hands, Dear Nineteen Twenty-four; We ' ve not a doubt you ' ll carry out The aims we ' ve struggled for. We ' ve had you with us three long years, We ' ve known you through and through And when it comes our time to go — We ' ll leave our hearts with you ! K =X 120 [1923 X X 121 [1923 ®o 1325 You were our first advisees, And you won ' t know about it, until, Next year, when you are advisors You too get that matronly thrill. And you were quite sweet about letting Us show off our motherly ways ; Patient, you heard over tea cups, About courses, professors and plays. But this year you got quite beyond us, At Carnival drowned all your dates ; In place of the ice and your Freshman, You found only water and skates. We hope that when we have gone, Our wisdom will with you remain ; That you, as advisors, will not Lead the Freshmen to such straits again ! But take care of yourselves, ' 25, The Odd family must be intact ; When another one next year arrives, Don ' t forget this old matter-of-fact. K 122 X 11923 l -2: X X fi9Z5 So 192B We were quite scared to see you In chapel, row on row, But since then we ' ve decided You ' re very nice to know. You brought the best of weather ; You spared us Freshmen weeps ; You knew that we liked skiing, So you gave us snow in heaps. We ' ve had you for our playmates A year, and now we see That you ' re a lovely mixture Of qual- and quantitee. And so our cause for sorrow, That we must leave in June, Is just that, having known you, We ' ll say good-bye so soon. =x 124 X [1923 X X i ■i m A W ffl S W I— I o o u H W tt ! w Eh w 1923 § mtth (Enllrgp (Eonnril MIRIAM CONKLIN President of Council HARRIET MENSEL President of Judicial Iioard Council Members freshman year Isabelle McLaughlin SOPHOMORE YEAR Harriet Mensel Rosalind Hubbell JUNIOR YEAR Eleanor Bumstead Lucy Can- Miriam Conklin SENIOR YEAR Rosemary Thomas Mildred Woodward Lucy Can- Barbara Barnes •Resigned K L29 j 925 ?Jj0U0P of JteprpfientattwB President Lois Rundlett Vice-President Lucia Norton Member of Judicial Board Margaret Lamont LOIS RUNDLETT President of the House K iUpmtefi of tlje Sjouhp Junior Year Anne Bell Barbara Boyer Alice Brackett Josephine Bree Patricia Brown Elizabeth Buck Anne Burnham Dorothea Davis Alice Decker Dorothy Dorman Marion DeRonde Olive Dougherty Nerissa Fitzsimmons Phebe Fleming Virginia Forbes Helen Gottschaldt Margaret Hannon Marion Healy Mary Henry Lucy Hodge Josephine Hopkins Elizabeth Hunt Grace Kelsey Edith Yereance 130 Margaret Lamont Tony Liebman Dorothy Lutz Crucita Moore Edith Morris Nora McDonough Doris Neiman Lucia Norton Charlotte Phillips Sarah Riggs Carolyn Rosenstein Lois Rundlett Miriam Shaw Frances Sheffield Harriet Sleeper Marion Smith Harriet Taylor Rosemary Thomas Edith Wade Irene Walber Florence Watts Helen Welch Eleanor Wemple X 1923 X Senior Year Clara Baldwin Anne Bell Edith Bleakly Alice Brackett Josephine Bree Ann Broad Elizabeth Buck Miriam Conklin Dorothea Davis Elizabeth Dierks Nora MeDonough Dorothy Dorman Alice Eggleston Esther Emery Phebe Fleming Helen France Josephine Garrett Katharine Hannon Margaret Hannon Margery Hawley Helen Hazen Marion Healy Dorothy Hunt Elizabeth Hunt Grace Kelsey Margaret Lamont Edith Leach Tony Liebman Harriet Montross Martha Morse Gertrude Mullaney Doris Neiman Lucia Norton Dorothy Page Eloise Reder Lois Rundlett Miriam Shaw- Frances Sheffield Harriet Sleeper Marion Smith Jeannette Soulliere Harriet Taylor Irene Walber Helen Welch Edith Yereance 131 1 925 SARAH RIGGS Association for OltfrtBttan Hork (Eabtnet ilrmbpra Isabelle McLaughlin Sophomore Year Secretary Katherine Debevoise Elizabeth Marshall Josephine Hopkins Lois Rundlett Junior Year . Treasurer Mission Cabinet Institute . Extension Sarah Riggs Rosalind Hubbell Senior Year . President Vice-President X 132 fi9Z5 Pi 1° B W- 1 • ) Bf 1 1 i L • f lv V l !■■' J ' ■T - p t. s m m ' w Jmm . ( . A. (£. W. fflabinrt Chairmen of Departments and Committees Elizabeth Marshall Harriet Taylor . Alice Kelly Laura Lane Eleanor Holt Margaret Gantt Jane Robinson . Isabelle McLaughlin Religious Service Missions Social Deputations . I. C. S. A. Studi nt Volunteers . Publicity Member Advisory Committee ' Resigned L33 fl9Z5 hm Sag Irlpgatfa Margaret Bassett Mary Bergan Josephine Bree Lucy Carr Mary Coley Miriam Conklin Alice Decker Katherine Debevoise Phoebe Ferris Margaret Gantt Helen Gottschaldt Lucy Hodge Eleanor Holt Josephine Hopkins Helen House Rosalind Hubbell Alice Kelly Laura Lane Louise Leland Katherine Lynch Elizabeth Marshall Edith Marsh Dorothy Page Dorothy Patten Jessie Patrick Charlotte Philipps Sarah Riggs Jane Robinson Marian de Ronde Lois Rundlett Louise Russell Henrietta Sebring Miriam Shaw Frances Sheffield Helen Spahr Harriet Taylor Helen Welch Ellen Williams Katherine Woodruff Mildred Woodward Ira fining Bdrrjatra Charlotte Brown Isabelle McLaughlin Edith Leach Jane Robinson MIRIAM SHAW X X 134 [1923 K L36 X 1923 S tubent Abbisprs Louisa Aldrich Virginia Annan Frances Arnold Oriana Bailey Clara Baldwin Barbara Barnes Elizabeth Bartol Mary Bates Anne Bell Mary Bergan Margaret Blake Charlotte Blanchard Anna Blanchet Edith Bleakly Alice Blood Adeline Boyden Barbara Boyer Alice Brackett Josephine Bree Ann Broad Patricia Brown Katherine Bryant Eleanor Bumstead Anne Burnham Elizabeth Campbell J. Elizabeth Campbell Edith Campbell Priscilla Capps Madeline Cary Lucy Can- Elizabeth Chadbourne Anstes Cladek Elizabeth Clark Margaret Clough Mary Coley Miriam Conklin Sydney Cook Margaret Cooley Dorothy Crane Olive Dougherty Dorothea Davis Katherine Debevoise Alice Decker Helen Deiches Dorothy Dorman Mary Doyle Evangeline Drew Julienne Dumortier Muriel Earhart Alice Eggleston Rose Eichberg Minerva Ellis Ruth Emerson Adeline Eveleth Lyle Ewing Phebe Ferris Nerissa Fitzsimmons Virginia Forbes Frances Ford Mildred Frost Margaret Gantt Henrietta Gazan Margaretha Geisel Florence Gilman Helen Goetzmann Dorothy Gongwer Helen Gottschaldt Alice Gould Jeannette Graham Matilda Gross Josephine Hamilton Margery Hawley Katherine Hannon Margaret Hannon Helen Hazen Marion Healy Ethel Henin Harriet Herrick Lucy Hodge Hannah Hoffman Eleanor Holt Adelaide Homer Josephine Hopkins Emily Hopson Elizabeth Hotchkiss Helen House Katherine Howk Rosalind Hubbell Gertrude Humphrey Dorothy Hunt Elizabeth Hunt Katherine Jacobus Josephine Joel Betty Johnston Valerie Jourdon Lucy Joseph Lois Kane Alice Kelly Grace Kelsey Hazel Kendrick Henrietta Kibbon Rochelle Kincaid Ruth King Louise Kittredge Margaret Lamont Laura Lane Elizabeth Lathrop Edith Leach Louise Leland Clara Lieber Tony Liebman Sarah Lingle Constance Long Josephina Lucchina Isadore Luce Dorothy Lutz Katherine Lynch Elva McCormick Maude McDuffee Elsbeth McGoodwin Margaret Macleay Gladys Manee Elizabeth Marshall Katherine Mason Marjorie Mason Ruth Mechler Harriet Mensel Harriet Montross Crucita Moore Edith Morris Mary Morrison Martha Morse Florence Munsie Dorothy Myers Dorothy Neff Sara Neher Dorice Neiman Margaret O ' Connor Mona O ' Hara Dorothy Page Mildred Palmer Alice Parker Jessie Patrick Dorothy Patten Helen Payson Eleanor Perkins Louise Pfau Katherine Phelps Charlotte Phillips Eugenia Plumb Annie Porter Frances Powers Ruth Purvis Alice Quayle Helen Read Ina Reid Sarah Riggs Jane Robinson Aimee Rosenberger Carolyn Rosenstein Lois Rundlett Louise Russell Edla Savage Hope St. Amant Geraldine Scott Miriam Shaw Evelyn Sheehan Frances Sheffield Eleanor Sidwell Harriet Sleeper Lillian Smith Frances Smith Helen Smith Elizabeth Snyder Jeannette Soulliere Helen Spahr Josephine Stephens Jane Stewart Ermina Stimson Catherine Stow Harriet Taylor Celeste Terry Dorothy Thomas Rosemary Thomas Dorothy Treadwell Grace Tripp Felicia Tucker Charlotte Vail Comfort Vegely Elsa Wachter Florence Watts Marian Watts Dorothy Welch Helen Welch Katherine Wilder Page Williams Agnes Wilson Elizabeth Wise Harriet Wolverton Catherine Woodruff Dorothy Woods Marjory Woods Mildred Woodward Lillie Wright Edith Yereance Rosemary Zonne -K 136 X 11923 X HARRIET MENSEL Junior Officers Harriet Merisel, President Representatives Club House Manager Adeline Boyden Elizabeth Marshall Boat House Manager Lois Rundlett Sophomore Officers Sydney Cook, Secretary Eleanor Perkins, Treasurer Harriet Mensel ' Resigned Attilrttr AHBDriattan Senior Officers Harriet Mensel, Vice-President Representatives Tennis Helen House Hockey Eleanor Bumstead Crew Frances Powers Basketball Comfort Vegely Cricket Katherine Debevoise Chairman o f Outing Committee Mildred Woodward ..H) ■' ■■;■mm i. ' ii jfr925 K Unntljlg Snarb Editor Alice F. Parker Business Manager Lucy Hodge Jane Cassidy Literary Editors Elsbeth McGoodwin 140 X [1923 K A ' « l ■M M ' 1 fi A A | Hi Hft V ■B al H Senior Year Harriet Smith Helen Read Helen Welch Grace Kelsey Helen Webster Helen Spahr . Editor-in-Chief News Editor Business Manager Assistant News Editor Assistant Neivs Editor Dramatic Critic Junior Year Assistant News Editors Anne Bell Margaret Lamont Helen Read Marion Healy Dorice Neiman Catherine Woodruff Art Critic Music Critic Helen Webster Elizabeth Clark Assistant Managing Editors Mary Coley Louise Kittredge Assistant Business Managers Eugenia Plumb Helen Welch Sophomore Year Assistant Managing Editors Mary Coley Louise Kittredge Sydney Cook Ina Reid K Ml H923 Edith B. Bleakly fMuriel Earhart Edith B. Bleakly M. Elizabeth Clark Dorothy E. Lutz Patricia Brown flrrBB ffioari . President News Editor Senior Executive . Picture Editor Members Charlotte E. Blanchard Edith B. Bleakly Patricia Brown Katharine T. Bryant M. Elizabeth Clark Margaret K. Davenport fG. Muriel Earhart Eleanor F. Kohn Dorothy E. Lutz Edith N. Morris Harriet Smith fSumner Thorpe fMargaret Towle Elizabeth Wheeler ' Resigned tLeft College K X 142 JL1925 (Campus (Cat Sophomore Year Mary Coley Isabelle McLaughlin Elinor Lagerman Celeste Terry Junior Year Mary Coley Helen Deiches Celeste Terry Mary Coley Sydney Cook Louise Guyol Senior Year Isabelle McLaughlin Lucia Norton Marjory Hawley I, eft Collet ' L43 .X X 1923 ■■n IK ■■9 E YJ m -+ bh H , ' V ' G B Jy m LiK m V ■B B « M B ' ■M. J ]i A B | 1 . S 73S B 1 l .- ' f W . — - Ml K. ' Aj 1953 (Class look loari Editor-in-Chief Assistant Editor . Business Manager Sales Manager Advertising Manager Art Editor . Assistant Art Editor Literary Editor Senior Pictures Board and Snaps Editor Assistant Board and Snaps Editor Clubs and Lists Editor . Fun, Fact and Fiction Editor . Jane K. Robinson Adeline Boyden Katherine Debevoise Harriet Wolverton Margaret Bassett Florence Gilman Ermina Stimson Margaret Lamont Mildred Palmer Josephine Hopkins Priscilla Capps Dorothy Page Alice Decker X 144 [1923 145 X 1923 K. pit Irta JKaypa Junior Year Miriam Conklin Elizabeth Marshall Mildred Palmer Lenore Treat Edith B. Bleakly Josephine P. Bree Lucy P. Carr Elizabeth Cutler Dorothea Davis Evangeline B. Drew Rose Eichberg Mary Frazier Gertrude E. Funke Margaret H. Gantt Janet F. Harlan Marion E. Healy Ethel B. Henin Senior Year M. Eleanor Holt Josephine M. Joel Louise C. Kittredge Clara F. Lieber Elsbeth G. McGoodwin Isabella C. McLaughlin Katheryn D. Maley S. Harriet Mensel Marion C. Morris Mary E. Morrison Rosie Nelson Alice F. Parker Eugenia M. Plumb Alice L. Quayle Sarah R. Riggs Frances Sheffield Esther D. Smith Jane 0. Stewart Elsa M. Wachter Florence A. Watts Marian Watts Anna Wohl Catherine Woodruff Mildred Woodward Lillie M. Wright 1 r 4 X [1923 It d ' %5 y 1 J £ ' J v ••• ! - if ' i UBI - %,. ! Alplja Officers — First Semester Rosemary Thomas Elizabeth Clark Margery Hawley Margaret Bassett Patricia Brown Jane Cassidy Elizabeth Clark Margaret Clough Miriam Conklin Sydney Cook Eleanor Frost Florence Gilman Margery Hawley Ethel Henin Lucy Hodge . President Senior Executive Editor Memrers Elizabeth Hunt Anita Leowulf Elsbeth McGoodwin Crucita Moore Lucia Norton Sarah Riggs Miriam Stevenson Dorothy Smith Harriet Smith Rosemary Thomas Charlotte Vail Marian Watts Dorothy Woods K l L9 =K % X [1923 X 1 ff Officers — First Semester Harriet Wolverton Isadore Luce Celeste Terry . President Editor Senior Executive Members Adeline Boyden Lucy Carr Eleanor DeLamater Marion DeRonde Mildred Frost Josephine Garrett Louise Guyol Rosalind Hubbell Katherine Hannon Margaret Lamont Isadore Luce Isabelle McLaughlin Harriet Mensel Martha Morse Alice Parker Esther Rhodes Ermina Stimson Harriet Taylor Celeste Terry Page Williams Harriet Wolverton X LSI X PHILD5DFHICAL SOCIETY K Officers Hannah Hoffman .... . President Laura Lane ..... . Vice-President Josephine Joel ..... . Secretary Katherine Lynch .... . Treasurer Members Oriana Bailey Josephine Joel Elizabeth Bates Laura Lane Edith Bleakly Clara Lieber Lucy Carr Katherine Lynch Elizabeth Clark Elsbeth McGoodwin fMiriam Conklin Isabelle McLaughlin Alice Decker Helen Myers Minerva Ellis Esther Norton Adeline Eveleth Alice O ' Leary Nerissa Fitzsimmons f Mildred Palmer Mildred Frost Ruth Polacheck Gertrude Funke Alice Quayle Josephine Hamilton f Frances Sheffield Hannah Hoffman fEleanor Sidwell f Leila Holt Helen Spahr Left College t Resiened 152 X jfr925 UMillilU DEBATING union Officer Louise Kittredge President Barbara Barnes Margaret Bassett Adeline Boyden Lucy Carr Margaret Clough Katherine Debevoise Dorothy Drew Helen Gottschaldt Marion Healy Lucy Hodge Louise Kittridge Laura Lane Members Isabelle McLaughlin Martha Morse Margaret O ' Connor Alice Parker Helen Read Wilhelmine Rehm Marguerite Rihbany Frances Sheffield Helen Spahr Katherine Wilder Page Williams Mildred Woodward Resigned X X 1 925 INTERNATIONAL RBSDONS C1UB Isabelle McLaughlin Margaret Cooley . Officers . General Chairman Secretary and Treasurer Dorothy Abel Virginia Annan Barbara Barnes Margaret Bassett Anne Bell Christine Berger Marion Bissell Margaret Blake Anna Blanchet Charlotte Blanchard Hilda Bryant Eleanor Bumstead Priscilla Capps Lucy Carr Madeline Cary Anstes Cladek Elizabeth Clark Caroline Coghlin Mary Coley Miriam Conklin Marion Daly Dorothy Davis Katherine Debevoise Mary Doyle Evangeline Drew Dorothy Drew Alice Eggleston Vera Engle Adeline Eveleth Nerissa Fitzsimmons Virginia Forbes Janet Frantz Members Mary Frazier Josephine Garrett Helen Gottschaldt Jeannette Graham Janet Harlan Helen Hazen Marion Healy Harriet Herrick Louise Hughes Rosalind Hubbell Beatrice Jaques Betty Johnston Lucy Josephs Lois Kane Alice Kelly Grace Kelsey Rochelle Kincaid Louise Kittridge Eleanor Kohn Margaret Lamont Laura Lane Mary Lange Elizabeth Lathrop Edith Leach Louise Leland Dorothy Lourie Isadore Luce Josephina Lucchina Dorothy Lutz Vivien Marrion Elizabeth Marshall Marjorie Mason 154 Katherine Mason Dorothy Morgan Martha Morse Gertrude Mullaney Florence Munsie Margaret Morton Dorothy Myers Elsbeth McGoodwin Isabelle McLaughlin Sara Neher Lucia Norton Jessie Patrick Elsie Peterson Charlotte Phillips Wilhelmine Rehm Marguerite Rihbany Louise Russell Elizabeth Scudder Harriet Sleeper Evelyn Sheehan Dorothy Strasser Eva Sully Felicia Tucker Comfort Vegely Jane Walker Marian Watts Helen Webster Patience Winchester Elizabeth Wise Harriet Wolverton Marjory Woods Mildred Woodward X K 1923 X 5DETCE Ann Broad Elizabeth Chadbourne Dorothy Abel Officers . President Vice-President . Secretary Members Dorothy Abel Ann Broad Virginia Brown Eleanor Bumstead Elizabeth Chadbourne Alice Decker Rose Eichberg Eleanor Holt Emily Hopson Lucy Joseph Elizabeth Kennedy Dorothy Myers Rosemary Zonne X 1923 GEEM A N OB Officer Margaretha Geisel President Members Sydney Cook Mary Frazier Margaretha Geisel Mathilda Gross Clarabel Hord Gertrude Humphrey Harriet Mensel Dorothy Thomas K X 156 X 19Z3 X FRENCH CUB Officers Janet Harlan Lucia Norton fSarah Riggs Margaret Bassett Barbara Boyer Elizabeth Campbell tAnne Carvey Elizabeth Cutler Rose Eichberg Nerissa Fitzsimmons Janet Frantz Josephine Garrett Janet Harlan Ethel Henin Helen Hinea Elizabeth Hotchkiss ♦ I... It C.M,.,... I Resigned Members Katherine Howk Helen Jacobs Beatrice Jaques Josephine Joel Betty Johnston Grace Kelsey [Louise Leland Josephina Lucchina Isadore Luce Elizabeth Marshall Lucia Norton Mona O ' Hara Mildred Palmer . President Vice-President . Treasurer t Alice Parker Eleanor Perkins fSarah Riggs Esther Smith Jeannette Soulliere Lilian Taylor Paula Thomas Charlotte Vail fElizabeth Vincent tRuth Waldron tPage Williams Anna Wohl K X [1923 X S NISH CIIJB Officers Mary Ryan . Vice-President Mary Bergan Members Secretary and Treasurer Frances Arnold Ethel Henin Mary Bergan Mary Ryan Alice Brooks Esther Smith Evangeline Drew Edith Yereance 158 1923 K ITMANC1UB K Officers Josephina Lucchina . . . President Edith Bleakly . Members Secretary and Treasurer ♦Edith Bleakly Josephina Lucchina Helen Hines Clarabel Hord Edith Morris •Resigned K I ,! K 1923 X GBffi CLUB Officer Josephine Bree President Members Josephine Bree Jane Cassidy Frances Sheffield Leonore Treat K 1G0 H923 X Officer Josephine Bree . President Members Josephine Bree Helen Nowels Lenore Treat K. X i ' ■. i 1923 ORIENTAL CDJB Officers Margaret Baldwin Laura Lane Katharine Jacobus Margaret Baldwin Patricia Brown Elizabeth Campbell Madeline Cary Anstes Cladek Ruth Emerson Lyle Ewing Margaret Gantt Matilda Gross Mary Henry Emily Hopson Katharine Jacobus Members . President Senior Executive . Secretary Alice Kelly Laura Lane Rosie Nelson Dorothy Patten Charlotte Phillips Isabelle Pease Louisa Ross Eleanor Sidwell Lenore Treat Florence Watts Helen Welch Dorothy Woods K 162 U923 BIDLDDICA Josephine Hopkins Alice Brackett . Officers . President Vice-President Members Rachel Barker Alice Brackett Priscilla Capps Miriam Deware Marya Driscoll Mary Frazier Josephine Hopkins Dorothy Hunt Lillian Jacobs Tony Liebman Jessie Lewis Onolee Mann Mary Morrison Charlotta Phillips Dorothy Rice Louise Rowley Lillian Smith Josephine Stephens Ermina Stimson Constance Stoner Catherine Stow Dorothy Thomas Elizabeth Wheeler Katherine Wilder Mildred Woodward ' Kvttigllfd X L6; X jft92S CDLL Lillie M. Wright Officer Secretary Members Margaret Baldwin Olive Dougherty Marya Driscoll Alice Eggleston Ruth Emerson Ida Epstein Margaret Gantt Lillian Jacobs Marion Morris Mary Morrison Margaret Morton Louise Pfau Josephine Stephens Elsa Wachter Lillie Wright 164 K X H923 X PHY5IC5;iCLUB Officers aide Homer . . President Members Lillian Baker Margaret Morton Ruth Emerson Ruth Polacheck Amy Erlandsen Josephine Stephens Adelaide Homer Elsa Wachter Marion Morris Lillie Wright 1 1; 5 X 1923 v f«c TELE5CDPIUIi Officer Catherine Woodruff Vice-President Members Edith Bleakly Miriam Conklin Dorothy Dorman Nerissa Fitzsimmons Marian Watts Anna Wohl Catherine Woodruff ♦Resigned K K 166 X [1923 Gladys Manee Elizabeth Hunt Officers . President Vice-President Members Anne Bell Josephine Garrett Elizabeth Hunt Arlene Lee Jessie Lewis Tony Liebman Gladys Manee Geraldine Scott Dorothy Shea Dorothy Smith Harriet Taylor Marian Watts ' Resigned X L67 X H923 X Officers Miriam Stevenson Eleanor Frost . . President Vice-President Members Marion DeRonde Eleanor Frost Harriet Mensel Crucita Moore Esther Rhodes Sarah Riggs Harriet Sleeper Charlotte Vail Katharine Wilder Dorothy Woods Resigned K 168 X X 1925 X Officer Ermina Stimson President Members Virginia Annan Miriam Conklin Alice Kelly Grace Meyercord Marion Smith Ermina Stimson Helen Webster Page Williams X 169 1923 BEL Officers Isadore Leighton Luce Margaret Lamont . President Secretary-Treasurer Members K Caroline Bancroft Patricia Brown Jane Cassidy Elizabeth Clark Frances Curran Eleanor DeLamater Muriel Earhart Florence Gilman Louise Guyol Left College Page Williams Margery Hawley Eleanor Kohn Margaret Lamont Isadore Luce Elsbeth McGoodwin Alice Parker Sarah Riggs Paula Thomas Rosemary Thomas 170 X 1923 X Barbara Barnes Eleanor Bumstead Constance Burt Katherine Debevoise Florence Gilman Katherine Jacobus Lucia Norton Helen Spahr Katherine Wilder 171 1923 MfflEMfflgcmB Officers Florence Watts . . . Vice-President Members Katherine Debevoise Marion Morris Miriam Deware Rosie Nelson Dorothy Dorman Ruth Purvis Dorothy Morgan Florence Watts Grace Tripp K 172 DRAMATICS 1923 Sramattrs Association (Eounril Director Page Williams Chairman of Scenery Celeste Terry Head of Student Coaches Margaret Clough Business Manager Dorothea Davis Dramaturgy Patricia Brown C ostume Committee Chairman Martha Morse _x 174 923 X Iramattr AaHflriatimt From the beginning, 1923 has been a class of quality rather than quantity. Like the familiar Steero Soup Cube, its energy is concentrated in a small space. And so in dramatics we must expect to find, and indeed we do, a small group of amazingly bright stars. It is unusual for a Freshman to have a leading part in a play given at the Academy. Marion Watts, however, so far surpassed any one else in college in her trials for Monsieur Beaucaire, her Freshman year, that she was im- mediately given the title role. The whole audience was captivated, and half of it fell in love with her, and she has remained the idol of the class from that moment on. One of the most interesting actresses in college is Ethel Henin of the class of ' 23. Possessed of a quick appreciation of many types of characters and a flexible voice, she is able to adapt herself to a wide variety of plays. She is a delightful Scapin in Moliere ' s play, and Scapin alone possesses a host of personalities. We see her continuously and in all places. She is at one time red-headed Queen Elizabeth, and at another George Sand, and always her characterization is smooth and consistent. Torches was played by an all star cast, the two men ' s parts being taken by members of 1923, Marion Watts and Margaret Clough. Margaret Clough pos- sesses an ability to delineate masculine characters and has at the same time a certain subtlety, which is quite unusual. In Torches she played the husband, K. 175 1923 K and in Rostand ' s Far Away Princess, the lov er. Besides being active behind the footlights, she is one of the staunchest leaders in all dramatic projects at college. Martha Morse is another person of individuality on the stage, and of sound judgment in matters connected with dramatics. She has probably taken part in more plays than anyone in the class. She plays the part of an Italian servant, an Ethiopian slave, a Russian Bolshevist, and numerous others. Josephine Garrett, Elizabeth Hunt and Katherine Hannon were all discovered late. Josephine was found just in time to become a most lovely lady for If I Were King. Elizabeth Hunt and Katherine Hannon both were remarkable in Everyman, a play given Senior year. Charlotte Phillips played in Tom Thumb the Great and in The Dragon. She has that capacity for making much out of little. Given a small part, she creates a vivid personality. Sometimes we are grateful to find people who can make a mountain out of a mole hill! Mildred Frost sings as well as acts. She took the part of a girl in George Washington ' s time in the Rally Day musical play written by Esther Norton, Junior year. Senior year she played Rachel in The Scarecrow. Josephine Garrett and Mildred are the leading ladies of the class. Dramatics are to be found in every nook and cranny of college life. There are Alpha and Phi Kappa plays, a Departmental Club production and Workshop performance. Besides this, girls from Smith are asked to take part in Amherst plays. Patty Brown and Marion Watts have kept up 1923 ' s reputation with the Amherst Dramatic Club and very successfully they have done it. 1923 has stars which are more than merely brilliant. They are not interested in their own glory so much as in dramatics for dramatics ' sake. Bright behind the footlights, they have been faithful to all dramatic projects throughout the four years. Margaret Clough, Page Williams and Isadore Luce have done very good work in coaching. More attention has been paid to scenery than before and great efforts have been made to make it more effective. At the same time the Council has tried to have new people in the lower classes work with scenery and costumes so that when their turn comes they will not be entirely unused to that type of work. In this direction the Dramatics Council spent about five hundred dollars having a new lighting system installed in Students ' Building. The Council also has tried to select more suitable plays and has spent much time and reading in careful consideration of such as seemed possible. The Dramatics Association grew to such proportions during the last few years that reorganization became necessary. A plan was proposed which should eliminate the difficulties of the present system. Many people were in the Dramatics Association, which was made up of about 400, who were only vaguely interested and yet whose vote was counted on in elections. The result was that not being entirely interested, they could not be counted on in mass meetings. It 176 1923 was therefore arranged that the Association should have two classes of members, active and associate members, all of whom were to pay dues and were to be admit- ted free of charge to all productions. Only those members who were actively interested were to be allowed to vote, or to take parts in any production. By this arrangement dues were to be paid at the beginning of the year, which made it easier for the Council to know how much could be spent on each production. Thus they did not have to count on a large audience paying for the scenery and costumes. It was also arranged so that next year the work of the Association would be divided between two heads, an artistic director and an executive head. It remains to be seen how successful this plan will be. So we see that 1923 has done much in dramatics in all directions, and the fruits of its labor will be seen in Senior Dramatics in June. X 177 MUSICAL CLUBS JB925 Geraldine Scott Lois Rundlett . (Slrr (Klub Officers Business Manager Business Manager Members Marion DeRonde Frances Ford Mildred Frost Louise Guyol Ethel Henin Helene Hodgkins Eleanor Holt Katherine Howk Edith Leach Anita Leo Wolf Onolee Mann Mary Morrison Lois Rundlett Geraldine Scott Harriet Sleeper Harriet Taylor Pauline Whitney Harriet Wolverton ♦Resigned X 180 .K [1923 Ulatt uHn (ttlult Leader Alice Decker Members Dorothy Abel Josephine Bree Lucy Carr Mary Coley Marion DeRonde Adeline Eveleth Mary Frazier ' Resigned Helene Hodgkins Lois Kane Charlotte Moore Crucita Moore Dorothy Morgan Helen Payson Frances Powers Marion Smith X 18] H923 ($rrljp0tra Mary Bergan Marion DeRonde Valerie Jourdan Harriet Mensel Charlotte Moore Isabelle Pease Charlotte Vail Katherine Wilder X 182 1923 X (Kljmr Katherine Hannon Leaders Harriet Sleeper Assistant Leader Helene Hodgkins Members Frances Arnold Oriana Bailey Mary Bates Anne Bell Elizabeth Campbell Carlotta Creevey Dorothea Davis Alice Decker Marion DeRonde Elizabeth Dierks Olive Dougherty Evangeline Drew Marya Driscoll Rose Eichberg Amy Erlandsen ' Resigned Harriet Smith Eleanor Frost Mildred Frost Phebe Ferris Gertrude Funke Janet Frantz Alice Gould Louise Guyol Margaret Hannon Margery Hawley Marion Healey Lucy Hodge Eleanor Holt (larabel Hord Katherine Howk Rosalind Hubbell X 183 1923 K Hannah Huebschman Josephine Hopkins Betty Johnston Hazel Kendrick Rochelle Kincaid Laura Lane Edith Leach Arlene Lee Anita Leo Wolf Clara Lieber Katherine Lynch Onolee Mann Elva McCormick Harriet Montross Dorothy Morgan Mary Morrison Martha Morse Esther Norton Dorothy Page Dorothy Patten Louise Pfau Charlotte Phillips Annie Porter Lillian Prediger Edith Yereance Esther Rhodes Sarah Riggs Lois Rundlett Louise Russell Henrietta Sebring Geraldine Scott Helen Schultz Miriam Shaw Evelyn Sheehan Lillian Smith Elizabeth Steele Josephine Stephens Miriam Stevenson Catherine Stow Harriet Taylor Dorothy Thomas Florence Watts Dorothy Welch Catherine Wheeler Elizabeth Wheeler Pauline Whitney Katherine Wilder Dorothy Woods Marjory Woods X 184 K ATHLETICS X (1923 .«. § g toatera Isabelle McLaughlin Harriet Mensel Mildred Woodward K 186 .X 1923 Baseball Basketball Hockey itfielb lag Saturday, May 27, 1922 Points Won by 1923 First Teams 5 Tennis 5 Second Teams . . 3 Hockey 6 Third Teams . . 4 Archery 4 1ST 1923 1023 ilmbpra nf AU- mttlf laakrtball 3?am Elizabeth Bartol, 1923 Isabelle McLaughlin, 1923 Elizabeth Chadbourne, 1923 Alice Quayle, 1922, 1923 Adeline Eveleth, 1922 Louise Russell, 1923 Comfort Vegley, 1923 Forwards Madeline Cary Alice Quale Louise Russell Senior Basketball Team Captain, Alice Quayle Centers Guards Elizabeth Bartol Adeline Eveleth Elizabeth Chadbourne Helen House Isabelle McLaughlin Comfort Vegley K Senior Substitute Basketball Team Captain, Mildred Woodward Forwards Marion Daly Lois Kane Crucita Moore Centers Helen Jacobs Patience Winchester Mildred Woodward 188 Guards Lucy Carr Elizabeth Clark Helen Gottschaldt =x X [1923 Forwards Madeline Cary Alice Quayle Louise Russell Forwards Anne Keith Elizabeth Klotz Alice Quayle Junior Basketball Team Captain, Alice Quayle Centers Elizabeth Bartol Elizabeth Chadbourne Mildred Woodward Guards Adeline Eveleth Helen House Comfort Vegely Forwards Anne Keith Isabelle McLaughlin Alice Quayle Sophomore Basketball Team Captain, Alice Quayle Centers Guards Elizabeth Bartol Adeline Eveleth Isabelle McLaughlin Helen House Mildred Woodward Comfort Vegely Freshman Basketball Team Captain, Alice Quayle Centers Guards Margaret Clough Alice Blood Katherine Jacobus Marjorie Mason Adeline Eveleth Helen Gottschaldt K 1923 K 1023 iUemhrrB of All- mttlj Ifnrkn} ®™w Eleanor Bumstead, 1922 Rosalind Hubbell, 1921, 1922 Janet Frantz, 1922 Junior Hockey Team Captain, Janet Frantz Forwards Janet Frantz Mildred Frost Edith Bleakly Helen Schulze Frances Sheffield Patience Winchester Half Backs Eleanor Bumstead Helen Gottschaldt Full Backs and Goal Margaret Cooley Rosalind Hubbell Josephine Hopkins K 190 X X [1925 Sophomore Hockey Team Captain, Rosalind Hubbell Forwards Helen Deiches Janet Frantz Lucy Hodge Edith Bleakly Elizabeth Mcintosh Helen Schulze Patience Winchester Half Backs Eleanor Bumstead Helen Gottschaldt Full Backs and Goal Alice Decker Josephine Hopkins Rosalind Hubbell fMary Morrison Helen Deiches Mildred Frost Freshman Hockey Team Captain, Madeline Cary Forwards Elizabeth Mcintosh Katharine Whitlock Patience Winchester Half Backs Dorothy Abel Madeline Cary Edith Bleakly Full Backs and Goal Josephine Hopkins Rosalind Hubbell Mary Morrison I. . ' it College 1 Resigned 193 X X ] 19Z5 1923 iMembms of AU- mttlj Alice Brackett, 1921 Josephine Bree, 1922 Sydney Cook, 1921 Gertrude Humphrey, 1921 Helen Jacobs, 1922 Louise Leland, 1921, 1922 Edith Yereance, 1921, 1922 Junior Baseball Team Captain, Louise Leland Alice Brackett Josephine Bree Elizabeth Buck Marion Daly Helen Jacobs Katherine Jacobus Louise Leland Helen Payson Rosemary Thomas Edith Yereance K. 192 =K [1923 Sophomore Baseball Team Captain, Louise Leland Alice Brackett Harriet Mensel Katherine Debevoise Helen Payson Gertrude Humphrey Rosemary Thomas Louise Leland Page Williams Edith Yereance Freshman Baseball Team Captain, Louise Leland Sydney Cook Louise Leland Marion DeRonde Harriet Mensel Gertrude Humphrey Comfort Vegely Eleanor King Page Williams Edith Yereance v X 198 K 1923 1923 Imtera nf All-£ mtil? (Urtrket Gfcam Oriana Bailey, 1922 Ruth Mechler, 1921, 1922 Katherine Debevoise, 1922 Dorothy Patten, 1921, 1922 Miriam Shaw, 1922 Junior Cricket Team Captain, Dorothy Patten Oriana Bailey Anstes Cladek Katherine Debevoise Phebe Ferris Jeannette Graham Ruth Mechler Dorothy Patten Miriam Shaw Eleanor Sidwell Helen Spahr Agnes Wilson X 194 =x 19251 K Sophomore Cricket Team Captain, Dorothy Patten Virginia Annan Ruth Mechler Oriana Bailey Dorothy Patten Anstes Cladek Harriet Sleeper Katherine Debevoise Hope St. Amant Phebe Ferris Jane Stewart Helen Welch Freshman Cricket Team Captain, Harriet Sleeper Frances Arnold Elizabeth Marshall Margaret Brown Dorothy Patten Anstes Cladek Sarah Riggs Dorothy Drew Harriet Sleeper Phebe Ferris Hope St. Aamant Helen Welch M M L96 X 1923 g mttlj (fining? utntnia Seams 1923 Member of All-Smith Tennis Team Helen House, 1921, 1922 First Team Patience Winchester Helen House Second Team Margaret Cooley Alice Quayle Third Team Helen Welch Elizabeth Buck K. 196 ] 19Z5 K 1923 ©retoB 1923 Member of All-Smith Crew Mildred Miron, 1922 Junior Year Captain, Lucy Can ' Cox, Annie Porter Lucy Carr Muriel Earhart Edith Wade Helen Webster Cox, Frances Powers Ann Barney Jessie Lewis Mildred Miron Helen M. Smith Cox, Lyle Ewing Harriet Herrick Elizabeth Hunt Lois Kane Laura Lane Lefl College 1 )7 1923 (gymnaamm iExljibtiifln Saturday, March 17, 1923 OSSIBLE Won by 1923 POINTS WON BY POINTS EVENT 1923 10 Marching .... . 9.21 Total for Banner 9.21 20 Floor Work . 16.09 30 Apparatus Buck, rear straddle . 8.01 Boom somersault . . 8.45 Double boom fence vault . 8.67 Total for Cup Total Points . 41.22 50.43 X 198 m zM K [1923 Commemoration Ode Too loath are we to turn our eyes again, Our thought sustain On those dim years before our time began, On those dim heroes, who with eager eyes Behold our enterprise. We follow where they led ; the course they ran, Worn by their steps, is smoother to our feet ; The air we breathe is yet more free and sweet Which by their sacrifice was purified. But we pass, careless, not remembering The glory whence we spring, Nor the first greatness of the land which is our pride. Ah, well for us that from the shadowy years There yet appears Some glow of former splendor on our life. To guide us when our feeble torches fail, Quenched in a whirling gale Of furious rivalries and futile strife. Our littleness is lost in majesty When through the tumult of our days we see The august face of one, grave and serene, Knowing our weakness and our high desire. Who quickens with his fire Our deeper purposes of good that burn unseen. O Washington, yet living to our age, What heritage Is ours, who call the beauty of this land Our own, and by your presence consecrate To freedom ' s high estate ! In gratitude and reverence we stand. Let us recall your faith that left us free ; Let us recall your great humility That bore with common men their suffering ; Let us recall your kindly will to bless In simple friendliness, Rejoicing in the name of Father, more than king. Let us return to those more noble days. When worldly praise Was left unsought, and glorious deeds were done In the calm strength of everlasting right. And in the vision ' s light Such as was yours, immortal Washington. More than the wealth of universal power, We need a humble courage for this hour. The new America of purer worth Needs an assurance in the conquering Good. Then, standing as you stood, We shall in meekness rise, inheriting the earth. Sarah Randle Riggs. April Evening The faintly-budded birch swayed in the breath Of evening like some delicate sea-moss, Brushing its floating tendrils ' gainst the moon, The clear, smooth moon, a brightly-polished shell Curving its rounded ear to catch the sigh Of blue and rhythmic wind-waves in the pines. Swishing and sighing in the deepening green. ' Tis thus on April evenings all becomes A green, cool, quiet sea with gentle flood, The earth a sunken galleon with afar The blue-green shimmer of the evening star. ISADORE LEIGHTON LUCE. The Harpsichord Ethereal, faint, like the spirit of ages, Passes before me thy tone ' s magic tale. Dim like remembrance, yet clear as a perfume It penetrates years that to grasp are too frail. Did I once remember, or did I once know this? Was life to me other than this that surrounds ? A magic flute leads me, I cannot but follow The sweet, faint compulsion that comes of those sounds. Enveloped, enshrouded in mists of dull feeling I struggle, but only to sink still more deep, Till faint with the pain of an exquisite moment. My seared eyelids close in enchanted sleep. Rosemary Thomas. Japanese Silks Great round tangerines. Soft, sweet fruit lumped together — Green leaves drawing close about them — Flowers sucking in their joyful breath — The smells of fruit and yellow honey On a hot day. When the air hangs heavy, But the colors bright Blue and orange, blue and green Cupped in gold, and drunk by an emperor. A weight of silks, I cannot get up. I am bound by its richness, Stifled with the weight. The day is hot and my head is tired — But buzzing around, the bees pour yellow honey on me. The fruits thrust their odors at me, The flowers smother me in the madness of their color. The lanterns before my eyes Swing, and go out. One by one .... Rosemary Thomas. 200 X 1925 X Hush! I ' m waiting for the fairy That winds up the Four o ' Clocks. And sews on Hachelor ' s Buttons And gathers in the Phlox ; The one that tolls the Hare-bells When each weary day departs, And comes stealing down the twilight To bind up the Bleeding Hearts. Makuery Hawley. Mayblosom Oh, I was a queen and I rode a blue steed — Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Mayblossom — About all my kingdom with wonder ful speed — Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Mayblossom. - And I was a mother with children fourteen Who all rode behind their dear mother the queen Up and down rocky hills, over smooth meadows green, Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Mayblossom. The Gracious Lover Small wonder that roses love wind ! Clean-winged, beautiful, free, He passes them white as romance. Swift as the sea. But wonder at this: that the wind Can pause in his infinite flight To ruffle the locks of a rose, To kiss her good-night. Louise Patterson Guyol. The Scullery Maid The red meat turneth slowly on the spit And I sit in the corner watching it. The fat drips down and sizzles, burning hot ; The broth doth bubble in the good black pot. Old Grizzle, grumbling crossly to herself Doth take the blue bowl from the corner shelf. While Joan the minx, burnisheth silverware And tries to see her own bright face and hair ; For now comes Tom, the master ' s lackey, he — Tall and well formed and good enough for Joan, But not what I shall love when I am grown. When crumbs are swept from off the gray flagged floor, When shut and bolted is the great house door, When long, black shadows in the corners lurk — Then done at last are toil and weary work. Grizzle with candle raised above her head. Mumbling her prayers, goes slowly up to bed, But I sit quiet in the chimney-place And watch the orange firelight on Joan ' s face. Now Tom has put his arm around her waist ] He is well formed, and good enough for Joan — But not what I shall love when I am grown. Alack ! ' Tis late, good folk are safe in bed. A kobold brown doth prowl with noiseless tread Into the patch of moonlight on the floor And in the shadows, I sit alone. Thinking of him I ' ll love when I am grown. Patricia Brown. My little blue palfrey, a right royal horse, Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Carried all the fifteen as a matter of course — Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Mayblossom ! And if I desired she would gallop all day Or, impatient, would wait while I stopped by the way To let the dear children get rested or play — Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Mayblossom. And what if you never went out of the door, Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Mayblossom ? If you had no hoof you could lift from the floor, Mayblossom, Mayblossom, Mayblossom ? I still will affirm (and it can ' t be denied) That you carried me far and you carried me wide rocking-chair ' s speed and high With all of a pride, Mayblossom, Mayblososm, Mayb lossom. Jane Cassidy. Sonnet If there should come at length an end of pain ; — If, some clear morning, one should wake to find Joy in the sunshine and the buoyant wind. Shadow and light, and leaves new- washed in rain ; — If I could see the winter pass again With hopeful eyes, knowing no doubt behind: — If, in a tranquil and a quiet mind. 1 could forget that spring once waked in vain: — Though peace were now returned, and sorrow past. Yet for the sake of sorrow ' s kindliness, And for the crown of pity that she won-. May beauty never fully take at last Her memory. If I forget distress Heed not my joy. but give me pain once more. Sarah Handle RlOOB. X 201 X 1923 Evening Wolves As times at evening on a winter moon, The bare trees black against the blue, deep sky, The moonlight chilling blue upon the snow, A ghostly pack of grey wolves flits across The open spaces — floating through the trees Like a grey mist — blowing and blowing on ; So thoughts of mine — once real and strongly swift — Come back at lonely times to mock my moon With silent howls of scorn, derision mute. And try to make old footprints in new snow. Watching the moon, I see them skim the hill. I hear them soundless — for they once were mine — And wonder when my new thoughts on the hearth Will hear the chimney-wind and flee the flames To run in the blue moonlight with the ghosts. ISADORE LEIGHTON LUCE. Ad Portum Optatum The foam curls silver on the track we leave, — A silver track across a purple sea, — And westward, to the misty sunset rim We trace our journey ' s path, — a silken thread, Like Ariadne ' s winding after us From well-known shores through this mysterious sea, A labyrinth, unlighted save by stars. Darkened before us toss the restless waves To break in sparkling, phosphorescent drops Beneath our prow, and stretch away in dim And shifting shadows of continued sound, Black to the skyline. Yet with steady helm Unswerving, and with all sails set, we ride To eastward and the Elder Hemisphere. Our course is clear with hope, and all the way Unseen, the winds are singing in our ears, A land of long-sought treasure lies ahead ! A land enchanted through a thousand years ; Made glorious by poets ; rich in song ; Far-famed in legend of past heroes ' deeds ; Blessed in the memories of classic days ; The garden still of youth and joy and art ; Beloved of Time, and in a world of change. The same, rare, ancient land of new delight, The golden Italy! Sarah Randle Riggs. Browning A chest of varied coins, bronze and gold, Found with a broken lock one afternoon Under the cobwebbed, silver window-panes Of a rich attic. Throw the windows wide To let in garden scents on the field breeze, Blowing from birches cool by wood brooks dark And sifting softly through the fruited tree, Swaying so brightly-heavy near the sill. See — all the treasure of the coins heaped, Thin clips and dull-edged foreign discs. All making music, ringing each one sweet, All cast and moulded in most perfect forms With heavy-crusted wreathes and little fruits, Fair-shaped and pointed to the tiniest stem, An olive-branch in dullest gold, and here A quill-winged bird with quivering-caught wings. On other coins — gold and finely worn — Pure profiles with sweet lips and high-coiled hair. Or ehurchly faces with thin lips and eyes. Grave pontifical robes and stately pose. Some rough, bronze discs with laughing cheek- filled face Of grape-wreathed satyr, horned and curly- haired. And here and there among the coins burns A jewel like the fair Italian sky. Or Roman sunsets and Venetian dawns. Jewels of glistening, painful radiance That slip among the coins and give light And warmth, falling through searching hands, Being — too beautiful. ISADORE LEIGHTON LUCE. 202 QJnllnjr g ottg0 DOROTHY SMITH, 1923 College Song Leader Alma Mater Words by Henrietta Sperry, 1910 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 Hater 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. ( ' hortu Fair Smith Words by Regina Katherine Crandall, 1890 Fair Smith, our praise to thee we render, O dearest college halls, bright hours that live in mem ' ry tender, Are wing ' d 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. Tho ' time may prove the pleasure fleeting. No hour is spent in vain ; True hearts behold the future meeting, Our friendship cannot wane. Of thy care 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, Still with grateful praise unceasing Speak with loyal hearts thy blessing, Alma Mater. Alma Mater Song 1916 Alma Mater through the years We your daughters true liring our hopes, 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 our gifts Shining on our happy days Offer we our loyal hearts Anil our lu ina oral ■X 203 X 1923 K Words by Marion Patton, ' 10 Music by Marion Greenwood, ' 10 To Smith College, Fall or Springtime, Or in midst of winter drear To our college, night or day time, When the skies are grey or clear. To Smith College, odd or even, Any class or any year, To our Fairest Alma Mater, Now together give one long cheer. Tune: Polly-Wolly-Doodle All the Day I had a man one Sunday here Walkin ' , walkin ' , all the day. The man was a dear, but I couldn ' t make it clear Why we were — walkin ' , walkin ' all the day. Fare-thee-well, fare-thee-well Fare-thee-well my man I fear For the weather it was slippy And I walked him around dippy Walkin ' , walkin ' all the day. The movies were taboo There was nothing else to do Walkin ' , walkin ' all the day. There were quite a few in the parlor too Talkin ' , talkin ' all the day. Fare-thee-well, fare-thee-well Fare-thee-well, my man I fear If it didn ' t make him lame He was never quite the same After — walkin ' , walkin ' all the day. Tune : O Mr. Moon, Moon Oh ! Mr. Hat Cop, crafty Mr. Cop Won ' t you please be kind to me? Oh ; Mr. Hat Cop, crafty Mr. Cop Please don ' t pick on me. And when I ' m — Down below Beckman ' s and I haven ' t a hat Just ' cause you ' re — Wanting a drink don ' t take advantage of that. Oh! Mr. Hat Cop, crafty Mr. Cop Won ' t you please be kind to — I said Be kind to — I mean be kind to me. Oh! Mr. Grass Cop, husky Mr. Cop, Won ' t you please be kind to me? Oh ! Mr. Grass Cop, husky Mr. Cop, Please don ' t pick on me. And when I — Get absent-minded and I step on the grass Don ' t blow that — Whistle at me with such an almighty blast Oh ! Mr. Grass Cop, husky Mr. Cop ; Won ' t you please be kind to — I said Be kind to — I mean be kind to me. Tune : Finiculi Finicula Some say the world is full of alcoholics Their pedigree Is sad to see Some say the world is made of pains and colics We ' d hate to be As sad as she. But since we have to spend our time in hearing Miss Sitler talk Miss Sitler talk We pass our every day and night in fearing The germs that walk The germs that walk. Chorus Hygiene, hygiene, microbes are a pest Monococci, Diplococci, spores and all the rest For it ' s phagocytes, leucocytes and hydrophobia, So be careful, do be careful, of hysteria ! be In chapel they tell us not to talk We don ' t — we don ' t Upon the grass we must not walk We don ' t — we don ' t They tell us it is wrong to go Downtown without a hat, you know Or wear galoshes flapping in the snow Well, we don ' t. It ' s wrong to ride with a man alone But then we don ' t Or dance without a chaperon Of course we don ' t. And as we tell you you can see What model freshmen we must Now don ' t you envy ' 23? No! You don ' t! Serenade to ' 21 Tune : And a Little Bit More You ' ve been to us a sister-class Um ' hm and a little bit more. You ' ve been to us the best of friends Um ' hm and a little bit more. And though we — Can ' t be very eloquent We ' ve often failed before We want to tell you that we like you lots Um ' hm and a little bit ' Hm and a little bit ' Hm and a little bit more. K 204 X [1923 Sophomore Farewell Song Tune : Good-Bye The trees and grass are green The summer sun is shining And our one last cloud Has shown its silver lining. It ' s time for leaving And not for grieving But there is one thing that makes us sad We can ' t forget that soon The juniors will be seniors And our dear sister class The only one we ' ve had Will leave us all behind. The time ' s drawing nigh And we ' re so sad — We can ' t even try — To say one word — 13 ut just Good-Bye. Tune: 1 Went To See My Darlinu I went to see my advisee One Saturday night To see about her course card And heip her fix it right I took her course — of — study And what do you think she said? I handed mine in Tuesday We ' ll make out yours instead. I called up my advisee Last Saturday night. To ask her to the movies To make her week-end bright. She answered very firmly. And what do you think she said? There ' s a lecture here on Einstein, We ' ll go to that instead. Senior Pin Song Tune: You Only . . My Disposition Oh ! I ' m looking for ■loving senior. Who will give her pin to me. Then I won ' t feel so queer Every time they sing — Oh! Who ' ll wear our pins When we ' re all far away ' . ' That ' s why I ' m— I, i oking for a loving senior Who will stive her pin to mr. Oh dear ! I ' m as sad as can be Oh dear! What ' s the matter with met Becauw ' haven ' t got I loving senior So I ' m feeling blue most of the tint ' -. Junior Step Song Evenings in June bring a class once again Back to those steps we hold dear. Draws to a close now the long golden spring We have spent joyfully here. Knowledge we ' ve sought and ideals we ' ve gained, Pleasure has not passed us by Now as your mantle you are giving to us Useless it shall not lie. Always our effort shall be for the best. Ever our aim shall be high. Chorus The portals to achievement open wide You leave us for a future yet untried Your memory we hold Sad to be left behind you Our constant love shall bind you. Though you are leaving us here For another long year Now once more we tell — Our last long Farewell! You were a guide in our earlier years You we have loved all the way May we be worthy to stand in your place Since you yourselves cannot stay. Now that your time for departing has come We are regretful to stay. We who are chosen your place to fill Now with reluctance obey. Watch you with love as you go from these step: Wishing you well on your way. Chorus Swiftly the years since we came here have gone Years both of sorrow and joy. All that we ' ve gained from our friends and our work Nothing in life can destroy. Now as these steps you are giving to us Pride thrills us through and through, Though we have waited so long for this tunc There is a sadness too — For as our places we take on these si. ip W ■s;iy farewell to you. Chorut X X X [1923 Freshman Frolic Tune: Where Is One Man of My Dreams? ' And what is the best crowd — I will not be a dowd — Oh — just ask the class dean for me. I am feeling quite bewildered And if you were I, no doubt I think you would be too. Here ' s what it ' s all about — Chorus There ' s some one that I must find My adviser — where can she be — I know that we ' ve never met — But I ' ve described myself to her And told her that I ' d wear fox fur. (She ' ll know me, I am sure.) Who are those girls over there, S. C. A.— C. W. With badges in black and white? They show so much pretention There must be a convention I think I ' ll keep to the right. Took a taxi from the station Went right up to college hall Registering — is the thing That you do first of all. Chorus After I ' d written my name Home address ? Ninth Street — of course We ' re very well known at home. My mother made so many breaks You ' ve never heard of such mistakes I nearly died of shame — She asked them where West Street was How silly! — not to know that Why, West Street is west, you see — I don ' t think I ' ll take a Bible They ' re so small and hard to read I ' ve a big one, all my own — That will be all I ' ll need. At last I ' ve found Mary Jones, my adviser. She looked me up. I think that she ' s rather dumb. The one thing that appealed to me Was the small gold pin with S. C. I think I ' ll get one too. She called me by my first name, Now really — I call that nerve. She ' s never known me before. She treats me like a child, It nearly drives me wild, She is a terrible bore. Tuesday when I went to chapel, Wore my hat and took a dime. Came so late, missed my date Barely got in in time. Chorus I didn ' t know what to do, So many people were the re. I never saw such a crowd. The faculty were dressed in black. And all the young ones sat in back. They all forgot their hats. We learned how to spend our time Every day — and every night. We never should stay up late I suppose it ' s nice To get so much advice I call myself collegiate. X 206 (1923 Rally Day Song Tune : Heavens Above 1926. we ' re in consternation Youth ' s fresh bloom seems lading from your cheek But we greatly fear, too much dissipation And not studying makes you thin and weak. Chorus Freshman, they say About you, you are too gay No doubt, you ' ll not last long at this rate. Movies each night allure you Writtens don ' t fright or cure you You leave them all to fate. Long, long ago, we too thought Life was too slow And so sought Riot, revel and crime Mid-years showed some their error Others reformed in terror Take our advice While yet there is time. 1925, what an innovation Swimming lessons free of charge you gave Sophomore carnival made your reputation Freshmen now can all breast the stormy wave. Chorus Sophomores it ' s true about you Though we can ' t do without you We, your pep must restrain. Skating is nice, we grant you When there is ice, but can ' t you Stop when it starts to rain. We also had when young The carnival fad and clung To wobbly freshmen on skates. We chose a night for ours Minus your April showers And didn ' t drown The Dean and our dates. 1924, we have worked together Tried four million dollars to subscribe Three long years we ' ve sat in the wind and weather Raking pledges in, there outside the lib. Chorus Juniors, maybe you ' re saying Since you ' ll be free from paying Any fund pledge next year. No more of strain and pinching Need you sustain, unflinching But you ' ll be fooled, we fear. Russian relief again Will bring you to grief and then There ' s Ginling, Red Cross and worse. President Neilson told you That he would always hold you - Responsible to the end of your purse. 1923, old and wise and hoary Greets you youthful pillars of the age Each grey hair we have tells its own sad story Four collegiate years have made us sage. Chorus Seniors are we, and truly Though we may be unduly Small in numbers, it ' s true We are above perfection Principle of selection Marks our distinguished few No one can take our places When our familiar faces No more here shall be seen So when next year has started Think of the dear departed Tenderly keep our memory green. DOROTHY WOODS Senior Song Leader X K K ] 19Z5 K .X 208 K jfr92S K - TKree tirrves a, week You Kold us helpless wkile ou speak, •aj-vd fill our- tKirsty souls with. tKe ;t -year ' s of vour philosopk.y swee K ' fironch of Hair -Side Entrance BrdiuH of Hair-5i i£ Eatrance - Branch, of Hair-Side Earrdace X 210 19251 K READ THIS PAGE Keep from opening this book as long as you can. Within you will find facts that every Alum ought to know. It has been designed and locally colored especially for Smith College Graduates. It is earnestly hoped and prayed that you will enjoy this little quizz and that in after years it will give you pleasure in retrospect. Show it to the children. They will love it. Try and be honest in your work. You are left to your own devices. If you have compunctions about signing the pledge, sign anyway. Miriam has enough to do already. Keep cool ! TURN TO PAGE ONE. X 211 JB925 Write the Usual Meaning in English for Each of the Following Abbreviations: 1. $ 2. q. v. 3. Kappa Beta Phi 4. T. B. M. 5. ad Libe 6. R. U. R. 7. 4711 8. 3.1416 9. E. B. B. 10. time! Who Wrote the Following: 1. The Death Pulse 2. Nicotine and Tricolette 3. Many Marriages 4. Age of Innocence Abroad 5. Last Days of Pompeii (Have you read it?) (Then bring it back.) Did You Ever Hear of Any of These? 1. Samuel Clemens 2. William Sidney Taylor (Henry 3. 0. ) Cedar (Rion 4. Marion Evans (Eliot 5. George Sand (Booker T ( Washington j D ° , er Who Painted the Following: 1. The sixteen Bananas 2. Banana and Child 3. Pope Innocent X 4. Age of Innocence Conjugate: Monet Millenium Manet Mullaney Millet Mohamet 212 m m5i X When did the Gracchi ' , Rome? (found ( Do all roads lead to Rome? Was Rome built in a day? Where does one do as the Romans? Identify: 1. Bok a Edward b Johann 2. Kreisler a Fritz b Johannes 3. a Schumann b Schubert c Schirmer 4. Palestrina Palestina Cross Out All But the Right One { ' train 1. The complexion complex is attributed to motor (trolley { ' inebriation 2. Alcohol should be corked to prevent intoxication (sublimation (in lilac time 3. Come to Q in lilac time (in lilac time [ Bailey 4. The Mt. Tom Golf Club is noted for j Banks I Biddle f box springs 5. Clarabel hordes in her hair« sponges I cantilever bridges (defective 6. Based on the Nov. Intelligence Test, I am a ' dependent (delinquent f was , 7. The Black Masquers , is now [with us forever shall be 21 : X X 1923 Do You Say: 1. Green-wich or Grinnidge 2. cribb-wich or cribbage 3. sand-wkh or sanditch 4. scrimm-wich or scrimmage 1. sang-froid, or 2. sang-freud, or 3. sans-frau, or 4. Siegfried 1. It is time to retire, or 2. It is time to re-tire, or 3. Cherrio, or 4. Put out that light. Put An X After Those You Think Are Funny: Mr. Churchill — Now this is Childe Hassum ' s girl, peeling an orange with red hair. Mr. Leider — If you don ' t understand, you can find it all in the foot-print at the bottom of the page. Every day in every way the Zoo Department is growing Wilder and Wilder. Mr. Orton — The Rubber Case is an excellent example of the elasticity of demand. (Sign outside E. Alberts) — Shoes — all prices — all sizes. Come in and have a fit. Miss Wooster — A baby can support itself by one arm for three months. General Information 1. Who is Sylvia? 2. What is your attitude toward marriage? 3. Are you an optimist? 4. Ever taste a nice juicy apple? 5. Ubi sunt the verdant freshman? 6. Who lies beneath their spell? 7. Who are the cultured ? 8. What ' s it to you? k :■: 214 [1923 K Number the Following In Order of Their Efficiency as Beauty Aids: certified cement prepared putty sterilized stucco granite and -alabaster Write the Answer for Each Problem on a Blank Line. Figure It Out for Yourself 1. Take the number of students who have read Patrologia Latina, multiply by two, subtract their I. Q. ' s, square the equation, and state what you think of the mean proportion. 2. Add all the money you have donated for any cause during your four years, and any other examples of it ' s not the thought but the gift. Who ' s ahead? 3. How much over an hour will it take to go from the New Barns to the New Athletic Field? (Daylight Saving Time, tempera- ture; constant, K:.68) Place the Following : Tempora praetereunt; nunc sol nunc umbra vicissim Praeterunt; super ast ecce Perennius amor. State reasons pro and con placing it under clock at the Biltmore. Scan the Folloiving: (tune Solomon Levi) Tiger, tiger burning bright, Can spring be far behind? Day after day, Day after day, A loaf of bread and thou, The one before the last, my dear, Stood in his retreat. Only the brave deserve the fair, Oh world! oh life! oh time! Do you see anything? 215 X 1923 Fill In the Following Blanks So As To Make a Complete Sentence: 1. Has mail ? 2. S A W . 3. Oh be England! 4. rolling gathers moss. 5. Ask man owns . 6. at movies? 7. dear have cracked book ! Criticize Constructively: The textbooks written by the Faculty are steadily increasing in numbers. ' (cf. Man cannot live by bread alone. ) The pledge-card system has simplified matters on pay day. (cf. A man ' s reach should exceed his grasp. ) A Working Philosophy of Life — Your Choice: Q. What is mind? A. No matter. Q. What is matter? A. Nevermind. Why did Walter Camp say : We learn to skate in summer and to swim in winter ? Can you deny your antecedents? Mark With a Cross the Adjective That Most Exactly Describes Each Capitalized Word: Carnival courageous Gregory tedious Eve carnivorous E ' en eerie Corregio hallow Te Deum gullible Gulliver gregarious Erie even Which of These Turn Litmus Paper Pink: pepsin, gypsum, flotsam, jetsam, moslem, ibsen, hassum, goetzman. Can one study dynosaurs and still be a Christian? In what book may the following be found?: Matthew, Arnold, Luke and John. Fold tenderly, and put on the shelf with tortoise-shells and other memories. You must now prepare yourself to meet life. Therefore waive the last four years make yourself lovely,- and buy Fanny Farmer ' s cook book. 1 A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. - A thing of beauty is a joy forever. K K 216 X [1923 X !17 1923 218 X 1923 The Board of the 1923 Class Book wishes to express the apprecia- tion of its advisor, Professor William Francis Ganong, and also wishes to thank the following for their co-operation: Mrs. Grace Hazard Conkling Sidney Cook Lois Bannister Martha Hooker Louise Russell Miriam Shaw Mildred Woodward Edith Bleakly 21!l X 19Z5 X 221 X INDEX Armchair, The 7 Bailey, Banks Biddle Co. . . . 7 Baker, Walter Co., Ltd. ... 23 Beckmann ' s 19 Belanger, Celia M 10 Belkin, Mitchell 17 Berry ' s . 18 Bicknell, H. E 31 Bon Marche 27 Boston Fruit Store 19 Boyden ' s 4 Brandle, Frank A 7 Bridgman Lyman 21 Brigham, D. H. Co 12 Bruck-Weiss 14 Buchholz, H. Son 8 Butler Ullman 16 Cahill, Julia B 23 Central Grocery 14 Charles, Inc 9 Childs, Thomas S 19 City Taxicab Service 21 Clark Coal Co 14 Coburn Graves 31 Coe, David C 10 College Blouse Mending Shop . 22 College Taxi Co., The 2 4 Commonwealth Bond Corporation . 13 Copeland ' s 25 Copper Kettle 26 Davis, Frank E 26 Dewhurst, O. T 27 Draper Hotel 16 Electric Shoe Repair Co 21 Elms, The 12 Equitable Life Assurance Society . 24 Fitts, C. N 14 Fleming ' s Shoe Shop 14 Forbes Wallace 23 Gare, E. J. Son 2 2 Gazette Printing Co 8 Gleason Bros 22 Goldman, H 10 Green Dragon, The 16 Hall, Charles, Inc 25 Hampshire Bookshop, The ... 26 Hampshire County Trust Co. . . 6 Heffernan, J. W 7 Hill Brothers 25 Howard-Wesson Co 3 2 Huchholz, H. Son 8 Jensen ' s 26 Karkanedes, Philip 23 Kimball Cary Co 20 Kingsley ' s 6 Lambie, J. E. Co 8 LaMontagne, A. J 10 Laythe Shoe Co., G. W 28 Luce, George N 2 8 Mary Marguerite, The 11 McCallum 28 Metcalf Printing Publishing Co. . 29 Mother ' s Cupboard 29 Niquette ' s 29 Northampton Electric Lighting Co. 11 Northampton Garage Co 11 Northfleld Hotel, The 8 Ono, T., Co 28 Paddock Tailoring Co 29 Park Co., Inc., The ll Pierce, J. Hugh 29 Plaza Theatre 31 Plymouth Inn 18 Richard ' s Co., R. J 30 Schultz 9 Stahlberg, Eric 30 Steiger Co., Albert 6 Sutherland, Miss R. L 30 Sweetheart Tea House 27 Tiffany Co 3 Todd 9 Toohey ' s 5 Trebla 7 Warren Watt 31 Wiswell 31 Wood, Arthur P 30 fr TlFFANY Co. Jewelry Silverware Stationery Exacting Standards Mail Inquiries Given Prompt Attention Fifth Avenue 37- Street NewYork DnnnnnnnnDdDDnDDnDDnnnDnDDanDDnaanDDcnnDonnDnDDDnn I BOYDEN ' S I a □ □ □ annaaDDDDnnannannnnnnnnnnnannnnnannaaaDnDnnnnnnnaa nDDDnnnnDaDnnnnannnnnDnDnnnnaannDDDDDnDnnDDanaDnnn a a a a a D D a a a D □ a a a a □ a a a D D a a D □ D a D a □ D □ D a □ a D a D a D a a oDDOonnnDaiDaaQQDnaaonDnQaQaQaoDnaDDnaaaaaaanaDDQna DDnnaaDDnDDDDDDDDnaaDDODDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDnnn D n a I M m m I ■1_J m. I a D n a D BOYDEN ' S □DaanannanDnanDDDDDnnnnnnnnnnnnDnnnnnDnDnDnnnnnDDa (Fmiljfg ' B It has always been our aim to give our personal attention to the anticipation of every requisite of the fashionably gowned woman, and also to the details of each garment, and so enhance the personality of every client. mttlj 1923 We take this opportunity to thank you for your valued patronage while in college, and should you care to continue to consider us, we will be pleased to give your mail orders the same careful atten- tion as though personally selected. A. A- (Hflnfjrg 177 jEain trrrt Nnrtfjamptiitt, Mvlbb. 8 hll}lfi 51iB (EmuuTHB iptrrrt Jlurtlauit, ittaiur Albert dinger (Eompany A Store of Specialty Shops prtttgfiplb, Mvlbb. That note of individuality, that finesse, is so easily effected if you choose your apparel here. Everything is carefully selected for the college girl — from the smart but always favored sports apparel to the most charm- ing of evening gowns. Visit our Specialty Shops whenever you happen to be in Springfield. Kingsley ' s The best of all places for College Girls to get everything they desire CANDIES ICE CREAM LUNCHEON SODAS TOILET ARTICLES IMPORTED PERFUMES The White Bank WAS ALWAYS My Bank WHILE AT Smith We hope you will always think kindly of Northampton and when you return rest assured that a hearty Welcome will await you here. Hampshire County Trust Co. NORTHAMPTON JEWELS, WATCHES, _ vll C - Dt APPROPRIATE CLOCKS, SILVER, $ 3 6 J )r CHINA, GLASS ft fAP 1 T , wcl , r , L WEDDING, ) X? f ANNIVERSARY AND 1 A GRADUATION AND P Sawramlhs MJ GIFTS NOVELTIES Y Stationers MODERATELY PRICED PHILADELPHIA The Gift Suggestion Book, Illustrating and Pricing Several Hundred Carefully Selected Articles, will be mailed upon request. THE ARMCHAIR GRILL AND TEA ROOM On the approved list Service a la carte Hours: 8 A. M. - 10 P. M. Fine Chocolates Choice Bonbons Trebla ' s SWEETS - AND - FRUITS 265 Main Street Northampton, Mass. MAKERS— RETAILERS Crispy Candies Fancy Fruit Baskets COLLEGE STATIONERY Fountain Pens, All the Leading Makes BLANK BOOKS General Agent for All Newspapers and Magazines J. W. Heffernan OPPOSITE WHITE BANK Frank A. Brandle COLLEGE PHARMACY 271 - Main Street - 271 Agents foi Hurler ' s Candies J. E. LAMBIE CO. 92 MAIN STREET, NORTHAMPTON, MASS. WE 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 Nainsook Undergarments. Curtains, Cur- tain Materials and Curtains Made to Order. Couch Covers, Cretonnes and Drapery Materials. Silk and Lingerie Blouses. AGENTS IN THIS CITY FOR BETTY WALES DRESSES THE NORTHFIELD East Northfield, Mass. Open All the Year A homelike house combining: comfort, pleasing service, and attractive menus. Desirable as a stopping-place during the Commencement Season or for a visit at its close. Friends of graduates and other guests will enjoy motoring over the ex- cellent State Roads between our house and Smith College. Motor service furnished by our Garage, when desired, at moderate rates. Golf, Tennis, and Croquet on Grounds. Extensive Area of Woods and Mountains Overlooking Connecticut Valley. B. M. R. R. direct line from Northampton. On Smith College approved list of Hotels. Ambert G. Moody Frank W. Kellogg Manager Assistant Manager H. Buchholz Son Theatrical, Historical and Masquerade Costumiers Pageants and School Productions a Specialty Wigs, Beards, Make-ups, Etc. 33 LYMAN ST. SPRINGFIELD, MASS. (fanutti Printing (Ea 14 GOTHIC STREET PRINTING OF ALL KINDS IMPORTER FORMERLY OF FIFTH AVENUE GOWNS SUITS COATS BLOUSES HATS Correct y4ttire for every occasion. Steams Building Two Eighty Nine Bridqe Street SprinqfieidL TodcTs Daylight Store Draperies for Your College Room If you would choose from a large variety of unique and unusual cretonnes in attrac- tive colorful patterns — or chic, dainty ginghams for draperies — come to Todd ' s. We are always ready to be of service to you whenever we can and we take real pleasure in pleasing you and helping you make your rooms attractive. Draperies, couch covers, pillows and chair seats made to order on short notice. Reasonable Prices Delivery Service If you want an artistic wave, one that is truly becoming, and will withstand all kinds of weather, let our experts give you a PERMANENT WAVE (Guaranteed for Six Months) And your hair will always look its best. Mul(c an Appointment VoIP at SCHULTZ Tel. 567 223 Main St. The DAVID C. COE Shop - - - Importers - - - VICUNA JACKETS NOVELTY SWEATERS SILK AND LISLE HOSE SPORT HOSE FOULARD HANDKERCHIEFS FOULARD TIES SCARVES THE COE BUILDING TWENTY-SIX VERNON STREET SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS CELIA M. BELANGER HAIRDRESSER 277 MAIN STREET - NORTHAMPTON, MASS. PERMOIL WAVING SYSTEM Oil Treatment for Permanent Wave Specializing in Water Waving and Marcel TELEPHONE 688-W A. J. LaMontagne Distinctive Decorators and Painter 267 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON Telephone, 146-W H. Goldman Ladies ' Tailor and Furrier Special Order on New Fur Coats Remodeling and Repairing PHONE 868-M 217 MAIN STREET 10 THE PAR K COMPANY, Inc. Art Department As soon as you cross our threshold you are in the midst of a thousand de- lights. Pictures, pottery, glass, book ends, candlesticks, lamps, objects d ' art in wood and metal — and a multitude of other distinctive wares of high quality and reasonable price. 257 Main Street Northampton Massachusetts Northampton Garage Company Cadillac and Dodge Brothers Motor Cars Telephones, 582-8240 Next to Post Office Cadillac Cars to Rent by Day or Hour STORAGE, REPAIRS AND ACCESSORIES 65 Pleasant Street Northampton Massachusetts The Mary Marguerite Tea Room and Food Shop Luncheons and Suppers Served Hours: 1 1.00 to 6.30 TWENTY-ONE STATE STREET How many times have you wished to press a shirt waist, etc., for a party? Oh! for a Universal Electric Traveler ' s Iron with velvet bag, weight only three and one-half pounds. Or to add a couple more waves to that coiffeur? Oh! for a Universal Electric Curler. Now for the studying which takes many long hours. Oh ! for an Electric Study Lamp. See Them at Our Store Northampton Electric Lighting Co. 11 H . lb. Brigbam Company Springfield, Mass. Specializing in Smart Apparel and Furs for the College Girl Make Brigham ' s Your Meeting Place Whenever In Springfield The Elms Northampton ' s Popular Restaurant CONVENIENT FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GUESTS Let us convince you that we serve Best Quality Food at Moderate Prices G. HARVEY BLISS PHONE 804 12 Commonwealth Bond Corporation Mortgages and Real Estate Bonds 50 EAST FORTY-SECOND STREET - NEW YORK CITY Offi cers and Directors ALLAN ROBINSON, President CHESTER L. DANE, First Vice-President HUGH HERNDON, Vice-President ROBERT W. SHERWIN, Treasurer BURT L. FENNER JAMES E. R. CARPENTER Of the Firm of McKim, Mead White Architect and Builder Director Commonwealth Insurance Co. LAWRENCE B. ELLIMAN President, Pease Elliman G. RICHARD DAVIS Director National American Bank President, G. Richard Davis Co. LEWIS H. PARSONS J. WILLISON SMITH Of the Firm of Graham, Parsons Co. President, West End Trust Co. of Philadelphia J. CLAkENCE DAVIES Real Estate 13 Authorized Distribution PARK AND TILFORD ' S FOOD PRODUCTS The Central Grocery 1554-1553 NORTHAMPTON J. F. Wells, Proprietor Students ' Room Furnishings 19 Center Street Northampton Massachusetts C. N. FITTS Bruck-Weiss 6-8 WEST 57TH ST. NEW YORK CITY HATS - GOWNS - FURS WRAPS - NOVELTIES Most Exclusive Models in LADIES ' PUMPS and OXFORDS are found at Fleming ' s Shoe Shop 211 MAIN STREET William A. Clark Coal Co. Coal 202 MAIN STREET TELEPHONES 5 115 I 1170 14 GIFT OF A FRIEND 15 Guests from 48 States Praise the ©taper IBotel NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS WILLIAM M. KIMBALL, PROP. Smith Grads as well as Smith Students may always feel free to write or wire flowers and expect the very best that we can give. Butler Ullman FLOWERS THE GREEN DRAGON 207 MAIN STREET A Gift Shop of Distinction 16 Telephone 1753 iMtcbell JBelfun photographer 241 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Official Photographer to Smith, 1922-23 M. A. C. Photographer to Index, 1923 [portraits ARE OF CHARACTER, LIKENESS AND INDIVIDUALITY Prints made on short notice for teachers ' agency and passports. StuMos at 172 AND 465 MAIN STREET SPRINGFIELD, MASS. 17 Plymouth Inn Northampton, Mass. HOTEL ACCOMMODATIONS which are attractive and comfortable. Adjoining Smith College Campus. Rooms single or en suite, with or without private bath. NEW COLONIAL TEA ROOM Excellent well-planned meals in a dainty, artistic setting. Meals served from 7 A. M. to 10 P. M. Arrangements made for pri- vate parties. Open Sundays. WILLARD A. SENNA, Manager - - - Gifts That Last - - - You will find that we have a complete line of gifts in jewelry for college girls. Our stock of Smith Seal Rings and Pins is complete BERRY ' S Jewelers 161 MAIN STREET - Next to Western Union - NORTHAMPTON 18 Beckmann ' s takes this opportunity to extend to every member of the graduating Senior class, a host of sincere congratulations ; we hope you will always remember the happy days spent at Smith ; we know you will always think of the happy hours you spent at BECKM ANN ' S. And no matter what course the future may have in store for you ; no matter what clime or time, whether in some far-off land or in the uttermost parts of this good old U. S. A., remember, too, that BECKMANN ' S will always be ready to extend to you the same service and attention that helped to make your days at Smith such happy ones. You will never regret trading at the BOSTON FRUIT STORE M. GIUFFRE CO. The Pioneer Fruit House ot Northampton Telephone 370 235 MAIN STREET Footwear of Quality and Fashion With Hosiery to Match Moderately Priced The largest assortment in Western Massachusetts THOMAS S. CHILDS INCORPORATED 273-279 HIGH STREET HOLYOKE 19 Established 1881 Incorporated 1896 Kimball Cary Company Hard and Soft COALS of best quality Office: 2 MAIN STREET, NORTHAMPTON, MASS. 20 BRIDGMAN LYMAN NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Extend Greetings to the Class of ' 23 and Thank Them for Their Patronage Send Us Your Mail Orders for Ch IJ ' TLJ CLASS BOOKS, SONG BOOKS, BANNERS DlVll 1 11 AND PENNANTS, STATIONERY, VERSE AND ANYTHING ELSE IN THE BOOK AND STATIONERY LINE Father to Son — I see from your re- port that your marks were very low last term. Now when I was your age I was at the head of my class. Son — Yessir, and when George Wash- ington was your age he was the Presi- dent of his country. Electric Shoe Repair Co. 15 Masonic Street Northampton Massachusetts GIRLS! WHAT ' S THAT TAXI NUMBER? Why It ' s 96- W of Course City Taxicab Service 20-PASSENGER CLOSED BUS Draper Hotel Building Cars for All Occasions E. Sarazin, Prop. 21 AMBITION We have but one aim — to prove deserving in our capacity as creators and exponents of individuality in style — to give you the most of the best for the least expenditure — to always maintain the College Blouse and Mending Shop STANDARD OF VALUE Telephones 7 Pearl St. — 41 3- W R. R. Station — 153-W P. Gleason — 413-R GLEASON BROS. P. P. GLEASON, Prop. Member of National Furniture Warehouse- men ' s Association Storage and Warehouse Freight Forwarders Office: 7 Pearl Street Northampton Massachusetts EVE E. North, W AH L PENS RSH A RP PENCILS J. Gare Son JEWELERS 112 Main Street ampton Massachusetts 22 Julia B. Cahill WOMAN ' S WEAR Blouses - Corsets - Bandeaux Underwear - Hosiery Philip Karkanedes 233 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON, MASS. College Shoe Shine and Hat Cleaning Parlor POSTAL CARDS, MAGAZINES HATS DYED SHOES DYED BAKER ' S Sweet Chocolate — --.. [ ■■; ■-■' . . ■■.:... ' . BAKERS CARACAS SWEET CHOCOLATE DORCHESTER, MASS. ■- DELICIOUS FLA VOR ABSOLUTE PURITY HIGH QUALITY Sweet Chocolate is very sustaining, as it contains more nourishment than the same amount of beef. WALTER BAKER CO., LTD. Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS. Jforbee Wallace SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS A STORE that stands among the finest institu- tions in the community — a store with policies, ideals and initiative that place it on a standard with the most famous stores in the country 28 The Classes of 1918, 1919 and 1922 have arranged their Memorial Fund Endowments through the Equitable. The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States CLARK L. RICHARDS EDWARD J. REECE SPRINGFIELD, MASS. GREENFIELD, MASS. QUALITY SERVICE We have any kind of a car for anywhere ' ■f at any time THE COLLEGE TAXI CO. WILLIAM G. MAHER Telephone 80 EFFICIENCY RELIABILITY 24 HILL BROTHERS 118 MAIN STREET YE OLD TYME RUGS WINDOW DRAPERIES COUCH COVERS BURLAP CRETONNES FLOSS FINGERING YARNS DOWN PILLOWS SPORT COATS UMBRELLAS RELIABLE MERCHANDISE AT REASONABLE PRICES The Tea Room at Hall ' s Luncheon served from Twelve to Txvo Afternoon Tea from Three to Five Waffles and Syrup a specialty Cosy Corner especially in favor with college girls Charles Hall, Inc. THE HALL BUILDING 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 Specialty Art Novelties, Ribbons, Laces, Etc. COPELAND ' S Mail Orders Receive Prompt and Careful Attention 104 MAIN STREET :: :: NORTHAMPTON Main Street Springfield, Mass. 22 Pratt Street Hartford, Conn. Makers and Retailers of Fine Candies YOUR ACCOUNT IS ALWAYS GOOD AT The Hampshire Bookshop Send back f ° r B o o I( s COPPER KETTLE Tea Room Antiques 45 STATE STREET Davis ' Jewelry Store is known all over the world through Smith College Girls They find it a unique, beautiful and useful store while they are here, and the more they travel, the farther they go from Alma Mater, the more evidence they find that there are few stores of its kind. That ' s why our mail order business is so large among the graduates of the famous college. At home or abroad let us serve you. FRANK E. DAVIS Jeweler and Optician Northampton, Mass. Over a quarter of a century ' s business 26 — Our Shop is Convenient to You — We are centrally located ; those little adjustments that your glasses occasion- ally need are only matters of a few minutes ' work. We pride ourselves that our interest in you does NOT end with your original purchase. Prescription work, mail and telegraph orders are finished same day received. Opticians to your President ' s family and the majority of the Faculty, Heads of Houses and Students. Imitation and real Tortoise Shell our Specialty. O. T. DEWHURST REGISTERED OPTOMETRISTS AND PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS 201 MAIN ST., opposite City Hall Telephone 184-W COMPLIMENTS OF 3Boii Iftarcbe Sweetheart Tea House MOHAWK TRAIL SHELBURNE FALLS - MASSACHUSETTS Opening Mas r th Closes Halloweeni October :n t Our Specialty — Fried Chicken and Waffles Maple Sugar Products 27 Compliments of T. Ono Company DEALERS IN Japanese and Chinese Goods Telephone 1253-W 14 CENTER STREET G. W. Laythe Shoe Company Shoes and Hosiery of Distinction and Character Draper Hotel Block Tel. 571-M George N. Luce Ladies ' Tailor 277 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON MASSACHUSETTS Telephone Connection McCallum A 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 — also Suits, Coats, Dresses, Blouses and Millinery A Cordial Invitation is Extended to You to Make Our Store Your Store McCALLIUM 28 WALL PAPER, PAINTS PICTURE CLASS ETC. We Paint Students ' Furniture J. HUGH PIERCE 186 Main Street Northampton Massachusetts HIGH QUALITY RIGHT PRICES QUICK SERVICE — Three sound reasons why you should give us your PRINTING iiptralfPrinttng publishing (£n. 3nr. - Printers of the Smith College Monthly NORTHAMPTON, MASS. WE ARE AT YOUR SERVICE - - - Paddock Tailoring Company CLEANERS AND DYERS Masonic Street NIQUETTE ' S The College Drug Store Northampton, Massachusetts CAMERAS AND SU PPLIES Mail Us Your Films Agency for PAGE SHAW CHOCOLATES Mother ' s Cupboard 40 STATE STREET Tea-Room Service from 8 A. M. to 7 P. M. on Week-Days Dinner and Supper on Sundays Distinctive Jewelry Avoidance of the commonplace distinguishes our stock R. J. RICHARDS COMPANY NORTHAMPTON ' S FINEST JEWELRY SHOP ERIC STAHLBERG McCLELLAN STUDIO NORTHAMPTON, MASS. HARPER METHOD Miss R. L. Sutherland 78 MAIN STREET BEMENT BLDG. Scalp Treatment, Shampooing Manicuring, Facial Massage and Marcel ARTHUR P. WOOD The Jewel Store of Northampton You will always find here a choice selection of nice jewelry at reasonable prices We make a specialty of Watches, Diamonds, Cut Glass and Silver- ware. We solicit special order work in Club Pins or Jewelry of any description Telephone 1307-M 197 MAIN STREET Opposite City Hall 30 All through their College Course and for Many Years After the Smith College Girls Deal With Us They ' re wide awake, up-to-date and refined. They want the best, they know what it is, and they soon see that they can depend on us to supply it. And the result is their patronage while here, and mail orders from all over the world after they leave Alma Mater. We, like the college, stay with and serve them as the years pass. Footwear - Hosiery - Wool Goods - Novelties H. E. BICKNELL 158 MAIN STREET :: :: NORTHAMPTON, MASS. W — — W WARREN WATT Everything Electrical 179 MAIN ST. NORTHAMPTON Telephone 126 WISWELL The Druggist 82 MAIN STREET NORTHAMPTON MASSACHUSETTS CAR A NOME and J ON T EEL Creams, Face Powders Talcs, Etc. LIGGETT ' S CANDIES COON ' S ICE CREAM Coburn Graves Opp. Court House The Rexall Store Northampton, Mass. Plaza Theatre NORTHAMPTON, MASS. Program changed daily except Mondays and Tuesdays Frederick P. Belmont, Mgr. 31 HOWARD-WESSON (p. WORCESTER, MASS. The College Engravers of New England Conveniently Located With Years of Experience in Producing College Annuals. Ready to Give You Complete Service. Business Managers and Editors Appreciate our Constructive Help. JYrtte for our Liberal Contract Designing Retouching Half Tones. Color fe Plates r rr rrrrrrrr nr nrrrmrrT rr h I rr rrrr r.cre rrrr rr ja 3 ear? s s ess ? i m T zi? Finest Engraving Shop in New England 7 floon Printers J31dg. PUBLISHERS OF THE CLASS BOOK 32
”
1920
1921
1922
1924
1925
1926
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.