Wellesley College - Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA)

 - Class of 1936

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 240 of the 1936 volume:

LEGENDA 1936 Published, 1936 by Esther Ed ' wards Editor-in-Chief Edith White Business lAanager Photography by Aime Dupont Studio, New York Engraving by Jahn and Oilier Engraving Co., Chicago Printing by Andover Press, Andover, Mass. The Legenda 1936 WELLESLEY COLLEGE WELLESLEY -. MASSACHUSETTS DEDICATION TO MARY CROSS EWING Dean of Residence we dedicate this book in affectionate appreciation for her untiring and sympathetic service throughout our years at Wellesley TABLE OF CONTENTS Administration 33 Seniors 55 Underclassmen .... . 141 Organizations .... . 147 Societies, Music, Letters 191 Features . 219 FOREWORD ' ' ' Singing we march to hail thee, Welles ley. Hearts attuned to thy praise. In purpose as in step united. Loving the name ive raise ... Thus the class of 1936 has purposed — to march gallantly forward, ever bearing aloft the ideals of Wellesley College. It is our hope that this Legenda will be a faithful record of the episodes and the spirit of that march. X. ■ y -. fe fl •: ■ ■-. sTiiSa- Sst - y ' ii iss asi S IaRi- [i V ss « :;s;|5;:j}ir-- r;r y-T ' T a 4. ' it M ' Board of Trustees Robert Gray Dodge Miss Candace C. Stimson Miss Grace Crocker James Dean . President of the Board Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Mr. William T. Aldnch Hon. Frank G. Allen Miss Bertha Bailey Mrs. William H. Baltzell Mrs. William H. Coverdale Mr. Frederic H. Curtiss Mr. F. Murray Forbes Dr. Paul H. Hanus Miss Caroline Hazard, Ei?2eritus Mr. Walter Hunnewell Dr. Albert D. Mead President Ellen Fi ' Deceased Rev. Boynton Merrill Mrs. Frank M. North, Emeritus Mr. Hugh W. Ogden Mrs. John T. Pratt Rt. Rev. Henry K. Sherrill Miss Belle Sherwin President Kenneth C. M. Sills Mrs. Walter S. Tower Mrs. Percy T. Walden Prof. Edward A. Whitney tz Pendleton, ex-officia Thirty-jive Officers of Administration ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS Ellen Fitz Pendleton, M. A., Lite. D., LL.D. . . . - . . . . President Mary Lowell Coolidge, Ph.D. De,ni of the College and Associate Professor of Philosophy Frances Louise Knapp, M. A. Dean of Freshmen and Chairman of the Board of Admission Alice Ida Perry W ood, Ph.D. Director of the Personnel Bureau and Associate Professor of English Literature Grace Goodnow Crocker, B.A. Executive Secretary of the College and Secretary of the Board of Trustees Mary Cross Ewing, B.A Dean of Residence Helen Sard Hughes, Ph.D. Dean of Graduate Students and Professor of English Literature Ella Keats U hiring, Ph.D. Dean cf the Class of 1936, and Assistant Professor of English Literature Lucy Wilson, Ph.D Dean of the Class of 1938 and Professor of Physics Kathleen Elliott, B.A. College Recorder Anne Wellington, B.A Secretary of the Board of Admission Florence Risley, M. A. . . . Executive Secretary of the Alumnae Association HEADS OF HOUSES Helen Willard Lvman, B.A Head of Ca:ienove Hall Charlotte Henderson Chadderdon Head of Claflin Hall Ethel Isabella Foster Head of Olive Davis Hall Elizabeth Donnan, B.A. ... ... Head of Crofton House Martha Hoyt Wheelwright Head of Tower Court Helen Drownc Bergen . Director of Horton, Halloirell, and Shepard Houses Frances Badger Lyman . ■ Head of Norumbega House Inez Nicholson Cutter Head of Ehiis Marv Elizabeth Lindsey, B.A Head of Dower House Katherine Ursula Williams, B.A Head of Severance Hall Thirty-six Lilian Haskell Lincoln, B.A Head of Homestead Dorothy Warner Dennis, B. A., Dipl. E.U Head of Maison Crawford Frances Hoyt Lewis, M. A. . . . Head of Sbafer Hall Louise Bolard More, M.A. Head of Stone Hall Marguerite Malletr Raymond, B.A. .... ' . Head of Pomeroy Hall Mary Isabelle Wiggin, B.A Head of Noanett House Henrietta Page Alexander, B.A Head of Eliot House Josephine Williams Brown Head of Washnigton House Nancy Eugenia Foster Head of Beebe Hall Marguerite Livingston Thomas, B.A Head of Little House Amy Kelly, M.A Head of Munger Hall RESIDENT and CONSULTING PHYSICIANS Elizabeth Louise Brovles, M.D Kesident Phys ciati Mary Fisher DeKruif, M.D. Health Officer, and Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Education Margaret Rioch Anthonisen, M.D. .... Consultant in Mental Hygiene Marion Cotton Loizeaux, M.D. Assistant Physician Annina Carmela Rondinella, M.D. .... Consulting Ophthalmologist BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION James Dean, B.A. Treasurer Evelvn Amelia Munroe, B.A Assistant Treasurer Essie May Van Leuven Decker . Comptroller Charles Bowen Hodges, M.E Business Manager Frederick Dutton Woods, B.S Superintendent of Grounds Wilford Priest Hooper, B.S Superintendent of C:illege Buildings Florence Irene Tucker, B.A Purveyor Mary Elizabeth Cutting, Ph.B. Dietitian Thirty-seven Ava Close Minsher Manager of the Post Oifice Elizabeth Bradstreet Walsh, B. A Director of Publicity Eleanor Carr Phillips, M. A Manager of the hiformat ion Bureau ASSISTANTS, CUSTODIANS, and SECRETARIES Anna Elizabeth Anderson Secretary to the Department of Hygiene and Physical Education Grace Ethel Arthur, B.A Secretary to the Presidejtt Stella Frances Brewster, B. A. . . Getieral Secretary of the Christian Association Katherine Bullard Duncan Custodian of the Whitin Observatory Virginia Phillips Eddy, B.A Assistant Secretary to the President Marion Frances Finlay, B.A. Secretary and Custodian to the Department of Botany Celia Howard Hersey, B.A Secretary of the Farnsworth Art Museum Emily May Hopkins, B.S .... Custodian to the Department of Chemistry Marion Dorothy Jaques, B.A. Recorder in the Department of Hygiene and Physical Education Marion Johnson, B.A. . Secretary to the Dean of the College and to the Class Deans Kathleen Millicent Leavitt . Secretary and Custodian to the Department of Zoology Marion Lewis, B.A Assistant to the College Recorder Marion Douglas Russell, B.A., B.S. . Appointment Secretary in the Personnel Bureau Carol Maryette Terry, B.A Cataloguer in the Art Museum Thirty-eight Officers of Instruction ART Professor Myrtilla Avery, Ph.D. (Chairman ' ), Director of the Museum Lecturers Eliza Newkirk Rogers, M.A. Harriet Boyd Hawes, M.A., L.H.D. Associate Professors Sirarpie Der Nersessian, Lie. es Let., Dipl. E.S., Dipl. E.H.E. William Alexander Campbell, M.F.A. Assistant Professors Laurine Mack Bongiorno, Ph.D. Agnes Anne Abbot Bernard Chapman Heyl, M.F.A. Thomas Buckland JefFery, Dipl. Oxon., M.F.A. Instructors Helen Hamilton W ' erthessen, B.Des. Adele Barre Robinson, B.A., B.Des. Cataloguer Carol Maryette Terry, B.A. Secretary of the Museum Celia Howard Hersey, B.A. Museum Assistants Alice Churchill Moore Mary Catherine Keating ASTRONOMY Professor John Charles Duncan, Ph.D. (Chairman ' ) Instructor Helen Walter Dodson, Ph.D. Assistant Alice Eleanor Taylor, B.A. Custodian Katherine Bullard Duncan Thirty-nine BIBLICAL HISTORY, LITERATURE, AND INTERPRETATION Associate Professors Muriel Streibert Curtis, B.A., B.D. Chairman) Seal Thompson, M.A. Louise Pettibone Smith, Ph.D. Gordon Boit W ' ellman, Th.D. Assistant Professors Katy Bovd George, M.A. Joseph Garabed Haroutunian, B.D., Ph.D. Lecturer Katharine Hazelton Paton, B.A., B.D. Instructor James Philip Hyatt, M.A., B.D. Assistant Margaret Hopkins Wengren, B.A. BOTANY Professors Howard Edward Pulling, Ph.D. Laetitia Morris Snow, Ph.D. (Chairman ' ) Alice Maria Ottley, Ph.D., Curator of Herbarium Associate Professors Mary Campbell Bliss, Ph.D. Helen Isabel Davis, B.A., Director of Botanic Gardens Assistant Professors Ruth Hutchinson Lindsay, Ph.D. Theodore Lindsay Steiger, Ph.D. Grace Elizabeth Howard, Ph.D., Assistant Curator of Herhariicm Instructor Ernest Hocking Runyon, Ph.D. Assistant Jean Louise Williams, B.A. Laboratory Assistant Helen Winifred Parker, B.A. Secretary and Custodian Marion Frances Finlay, B.A. Party CHEMISTRY Professors Helen Somersby French, Ph.D. Mary Amerman Griggs, Ph.D. (Chairman ' ) Ruth Johnstin, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Helen Thayer Jones, Ph.D. Instructor Dorothy Jane Woodland, Ph.D. Laboratory Assistants Kathryn Sue Potter Vilter, B.A. Margaret Skelton Atwood, B.A. Catherine Mary Gens, B.A. Custodian Emily Mary Hopkins, B.S. ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY Professors Elizabeth Donnan, B.A. (Chairman ) Henry Raymond Mussey, Ph.D. Leland Hamilton Jenks, Ph.D. Associate Professor Lawrence Smith, M.A. Assistant Professors Lucy Winsor Killough, Ph.D. Mary Bosworth Treudley, Ph.D. Instructors John Winchell Riley, M.A. Margaret Shaughnessy, Ph.D. Assistajit Ruth Morley Warfield, M.A. Forty-one EDUCATION Professor Arthur Orlo Norton, M.A. (Chairman) Associate Professors Dorothy Warner Dennis, B.A., Dipl. E.U., Associate Professor of French Muriel Streihert Curtis, B.A., B.D., Assistatit Professor of Biblical History Visiting Professor Guy Mitchell Wilson, Ph.D. Lecturers Abigail Adams Eliot, B.A., Ed.D. Charles Swain Thomas, M.A., Litt.D. Eugene Randolph Smith, M.A., Ped.D. Mary Chaplin Shute John Robert Putnam French, M.A. Rachel Louise Hardwick, M.D. histructor Alice Burt Nichols, B.A., Ed.M. Assistants Grace Allerton Andrews, M.A. Frances Dunbar Nichols, M.A. Elizabeth Koontz Sanford, B.A., B.S. in Ed. ANNE L. PAGE MEMORIAL Director Matilda Remy, B.S. in Ed. Kiiidergartners Anna Alden Kingman, B.A., Ed.M. Jane Talmadge Loomis, B.A. Nancy Anne Jacobs, B.A. First Grade Helen Cooley WELLESLEY NURSERY SCHOOL Director Lorna Lougee, B.A. Forty-tivo ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Professors Martha Hale Shackford, Ph.D. Laura Hibbard Loomis, Ph.D. Elizabeth Wheeler Manwaring, Ph.D. Helen Sard Hughes, Ph.D. (Chairman Annie Kimball Tuell, Ph.D. Associate Professors Alice Ida Perry Wood, Ph.D. Katherine Canby Balderson, Ph.D. Bertha Monica Stearns, M.A. Assistant Professors Ella Keats Whiting, Ph.D. Grace Ethel Hawk, B.Litt. Oxon. T. H. Vail Motter, Ph.D. Assista 2t Evelyn Kendrick Wells, M.A. ENGLISH COMPOSITION Professors Sophie Chantal Hart, M.A. Agnes Frances Perkins, M.A., M.S. (Chairmati) Elizabeth Wheeler Manwaring, Ph.D. Alfred Dwight Sheffield, M.A. Associate Professors Josephine Harding Batchelder. M.A. Edith Christina Johnson, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Edith Hamilton, M.A. Lecttirer Emma Marshall Denkinger, Ph.D. Instructors Louise MacDonald Chapman, M.A. Enid Constance Straw, M.A. Mary Eleanor Prentiss, M.A. Assistant Frances Eldredge, M.A. Porty-three FRENCH Professor Ruth Elvira Clark, Litt.D. (Chairman ) Visiting Professor Rene Escande de Messieres, Agrege de I ' Universite Associate Professors Dorothy Warner Dennis, B.A., Dipl. E.U. Marguerite Juliette Brechaille, Agregee de I ' Universite Andree Bruel, Docteur de I ' Universite de Pans Assistant Professors Francoise Ruet, Agregee de I ' Universite Edith Melcher, Ph.D. Lecturers Simone David, Agregee de I ' Universite Nicolette Ina Pernot, Lie. es Let. Instructors Marie Ma ' Marie-Antoinette Quarre, B.A., C.E.S., Dipl. E.S. Alice Marguerite Marie Malbot, Lie. es Let. GEOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY Professor Mary Jean Lanier, Ph.D. (Chairmayi) Associate Professor Margaret Terrell Parker, M.A. Assistant Professor Louise Kingsley, Ph.D. Lecturer Russell Gibson, Ph.D. hstructors Harriet Elizabeth Lee, M.A. Katherine Fowler Lunn, Ph.D. Assistant Elizabeth Richards Roy, M.A. Forty-four GERMAN Professor Natalie Wipplinger, Ph.D. (JZhairmari) Associate Professor Marianne Thalmann, Ph.D. Assistant Professors Barbara Saldirr, Ph.D. iMargaret Jeffrey, Ph.D. Instructors Johanna Elisabeth ' olbchr Doris Elizabeth Rich, M.A. GREEK Associate Professor Helen Hull Law, Ph.D. (Chairman ' ) Assistant Professor Barbara Phillippa McCarthy GROUP LEADERSHIP Professor Alfred Dwight Sheffield, M.A. HISTORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE Professors Julia Swift Orvis, Ph.D. Elisabeth Hodder, Ph.D. (Chairman) Edna Virginia Moffett, Ph.D. Edward Ely Curtis, Ph.D. Barnette Miller, Ph.D. Judith Blow Williams, Ph.D. Associate Professor Louise Overacker, Ph.D. hzstructors Margaret Hall Cole, Ph.D. Elizabeth Runkle, M.A. Assistant Margaret Holmes Habermeyer, M.A. Forty-five HYGIENE AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION Profe. Eugene Clarence Howe, Ph.D. Ruth Elliott, Ph.D. (Chairmati) Health Officer Mary Fisher DeKruif, M.D. Assistant Professors Charlotte Genevieve MacEwan, M.S. Elizabeth Beall, M.A. Instructors Margaret Johnson Marion Isabel Cook, M.A. Katharine Fuller Wells, M.S. Jean Helen Harris, M.S. Fannv Garrison, B.A. Harriet Lucy Clarke, B.A. Mary Elizabeth Powell, N.S. Elinor Marie Schroeder, M.A. Txecorder Marion Dorothy Jaques, B.A. Secretary Anna Elizabeth Anderson Special Lecturers William Russell MacAusland, M.D., Lecturer on Orthopedics Andrew Roy MacAusland, M.D., Lecturer on Orthopedics Loretta S. Cummins, M.D., Lecturer on Hygiene oj the Skin Hilbert F. Day, Ph.B., M.D., F.A.C.S., Lecturer on Preventive Surgery Mary Fisher DeKruif, M.D., Lecturer on Health Problems Leigh ton Johnson, M.D., Lecturer on Hygiene of Nose and Throat Samuel R. Meaker, Lectur:r on Gynecological Problems Abraham Myerson, M.D., Lecturer on M.ental Hygiene Clifford L. Derrick, M.D., Lecturer on Internal Medicine ITALIAN Professor Gabriella Bosano, Dottore in Filologia Moderna (Chairman Assistant Professor Angeline La Plana, Dottore in Lettere Instructor Maria Priglmeir Bizzoni, M.A. Forty-six LATIN Professors Caroline Rebecca Fletcher, M.A. Anna Bertha Miller, Ph.D. (Chairman Associate Professor Helen Hull Law, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Dorothy Mae Robathan, Ph.D. MATHEMATICS Professor Mabel Minerva Young, Ph.D. (Chairmaii) Associate Professor Lennie Phoebe Copeland, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Marion Elizabeth Stark, Ph.D Instructor Helen Gertrude Russell, Ph.D. MUSIC Professor Howard Hinners, B.A. (Chairma?i) Assistant Professor Helen Joy Sleeper, M.A., Mus.B. Visiting Lecturer Walter Piston, B.A. Instructors Edward Barry Greene, B.A., Director of Choir Hubert Weldon Lamb, B.A. Forty-seven Assistant Barbara Goldsmith Trask, B.A. Instructors in Practical Music Jean Evelyn Wilder, B.A. (Voice) Gladys Avery Leber: (Voice) Yves Chardon (Violoncello) Clarence Everett W ' atters, Mus.M., F.A.G.O. (Organ) Richard Burgin (Violin) David Barnett, B.A. (Piano) Malcolm Haughton Holmes, B.S. (Conductor of Orchestra PHILOSOPHY AND PSYCHOLOGY Professors Thomas Hayes Proctor, Ph.D. (Chairman Edna Frances Heidbredcr, Pli.D. Associate Professors Michael Jacob Zigler, Ph.D. Mary Lowell Coolidge, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Edith Brandt Mallorv, Ph.D. Instructor Virginia Cnderdonk, B.A. Assistants Grace Allerton Andrews, M.A. Thelma Gorfinkle Alper, M.A. Louise Ward Gates, M.A. Alfred Harold Holway, M.S. Harriet Faust Metzger, B.A. PHYSICS Professors Louise Sherwood McDowell, Ph.D. (Chairman ' ) Lucy Wilson, Ph.D. Associate Professor Grace Evangeline Davis, M.A. Forty-eight Assijtiint Professors Alice Hall Armstrong, Ph.D. Dorothy Heyworth, Ph.D. Laboratory Assistants Emily Buckingham Wilson, M.A. Jessamine Roberta Goerner, B.A. SPANISH Professor Alice Huntington Bushee, M.A. (Cbamiia}t) Associate Professor Ada May Coe, M.A. Assistant Professors Anita Oyarzabal, M.A. Helen Phipps Houck, Ph.D. SPEECH Assistant Professors Edith Margaret Smaill, A. A. Edith Winifred Moses, M.A. (Chairman ' ) Instructors Cecile de Banke Jeannette Barry Lane, Ph.B. John Huber McDowell, M.A. Assistant Sarah Emilv Brown, M.F.A. ZOOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY Professors Marian Elizabeth Hubbard, B.S. Julia Eleanor Moody, Ph.D. {Chairmaii) Associate Professor Margaret Alger Hayden, Ph.D. Forty-nine Assistant Professors Helen Warton Kaan, Ph.D. Harriet Cutler Waterman, Ph.D. Gladys Kathryn McCosh, Ph.D. Mary Lellah Austin, Ph.D. Ada Roberts Hall, Ph.D. Instructors Rosemary Anne Murphy, M.A. Helen Elizabeth Butts, Ph.D. Eva Elizabeth Jones, Ph.D. Altha Louise Palmer, M.S. Margaret Elliott Van Winkle, M.S., Curator of Museum Custodian of Laboratories Eleanor Leach, M.A. Laboratory Assistants Gwynneth Pease, B.A. Pauline Burgess Rohm, B.A. Judith Dudley Smith, B.A. Secretary and Custodian Kathleen Millicent Leavitt LIBRARY STAFF Ethel Dane Roberts, B.A., B.L.S. Librarian and Curator of the Frances Pearsons Plimpton Library of Italian Literature Antoinette Brigham Putnam Metcalf, M.A. . . Associate and Reference Librarian Lilla Weed, M.A. . Associate Librarian and Curator of the English Poetry Collection Helen Moore Laws, B.A., B.L.S Cataloguer Mary Louise Courtney, B.A. . . Secretary to the Librarian, and Order Assistant Ethel Adele Pennell, B.A Periodical and Binding Assistant Eunice Lathrope, B.A. Assistant Cataloguer Agnes Emma Dodge Librarian of Edith Hemenxcay Eustis Library of the Department of Hygiene and Physical Education Fifty Ruth Ford Catlin Librarian of Susan M. Hallowell Memorial Library and of Caroline B. Thompson Me- morial Library Elizabeth Maria Trumbull Librarian of the Art Library Margaret Dve Truitt, B. A. Librarian of the Music Library Jane Sarah Hawkins, B.A., B.S Assistant Cataloguer Ethel A. Hunter, B. A. Assistant in Charge of Keserved Books Madge F. Trow, B.S Catalogue ani Circulation Assistant Florence H. Robinson . . . ■ . . Catalogue ani Circulation Assistant Lucy E. Tripp, B. A Order and Circulation Assistant Doris S. Hattox, B.A. Catalogue ani Circulation Assistant Lucile M. Keating, B.S Circulation Assistant lola C. Hirst Assistant Hazel C. Godfrey Assistant Fifty-one Phi Beta Kappa Eta of Massachusetts Chapter OFFICERS Miss Elizabeth W. Manwaring Mrs. Launne M. Bongiorno Miss Helen S. French Miss Ada M. Coe . President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer IN FACULTATE Myrtilla Avery Katharine C. Balderston Maria P. Bizzoni Mary Campbell Bliss Mrs. Laurine Bongiorno Alice H. Bushee Helen Elizabeth Butts William A. Campbell Mrs. Louise Chapman Ada M. Coe Mrs. Margaret Cole Lennie Phoebe Copeland Mary L. Courtney Emma M. Denkinger Helen Walter Dodson Elizabeth Donnan Ruth Elliott Caroline R. Fletcher Helen S. French Ada R. Hall Sophie C. Hart Mrs. Harriet Hawes Grace E. Hawk Edna Heidbreder Mrs. Elisabeth Hodder Katharine Irwin Thomas B. Jeffery Margaret Jeffrey Edith C. Johnson E. Elizabeth Jones Helen W. Kaan Jeannctte Lane Marv J. Lanier Helen H. Law Ruth N. Lindsay Mrs. Laura H. Loomis Barbara P. McCarthy Louise S. McDowell Charlotte G. MacEwan Mrs. Edith B. Mallory Elizabeth W. Manwaring Anna B. Miller Julia E. Moody Henry R. Mussey Virginia Onderdonk Alice M. Ottley Louise Overacker Margaret T. Parker Fifty-two Ellen Fitz Pendleton Ethel Dane Roberts Ernest H. Runyon Marion D. Russell Martha Hale Shacktord Helen Joy Sleeper Laetitia Morris Snow Marion E. Stark Bertha M. Stearns Enid C. Straw Charles S. Thomas Seal Thompson Annie K. Tuell Mrs. Margaret E. Van Winkle Harriet C. Waterman Ella Keats Whiting Judith B. Williams Lucy Wilson Alice I. P. Wood Dorothy J. Woodland Mabel M. Young RETIRED MEMBERS OF THE FACULTY Ellen L. Burrcll Mary S. Case Angie C. Chapin Katharine M. Edwards Elizabeth K. Kendall Eliza H. Kendrick Laura E. Lockwood Helen A. Merrill Vida D. Scudder Margaret P. Sherwood Clara E. Smith Alice V. Waite Alice Walton Fifty-three s E N I O Class of 1936 Elizabeth T. Brazee Eleanor H. Smith . Caroline Wilson Ruth Harris Cora Nielsen Lena Everett Margaret R. Forsyth Florence F. Whitehead Jane H. Decker Frances H. Forsdick J Elizabeth L. Anderson . President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer . Executive Committee . P actotums Song header Pijty-seven Ellen Fitz Pendleton Wi HEN, fifty years ago, the class of 1886 was graduated, Wellesley was a very different place from the college we know now. The changes and develop- ments of those years have been to a great extent the work of one member of that class — Ellen Fitz Pendleton. Except for one year, 1889-90, which she spent in England, studying at the University of Cambridge, Miss Pendleton has served the college in some official capacity continuously, ever since her graduation. From instructor and professor of Mathematics, she became Dean of the College, at a time when there was only one Dean to carry all the manifold responsibilities of the position, and finally, in 1911, President of Wellesley. For twenty-five years she has been President, and in the course of that time, has sustained, strengthened, and firmly established the college. We all know the story of the burning of College Hall, of the fire which consumed not only the main dormitory, but the very heart of Wellesley, equipment, classrooms, books, files, all the apparatus so essential to the carrying on of college life. From the ruins of the older Wellesley, President Pendleton has built up, through her unwavering faith which has encouraged and inspired others, the new Wellesley. New dormitories — Tower Court, Severance, Claflin, Stone and Davis, Munger; Founders and Green Halls, with their modern equipment and classrooms; the new Science Buildings; and above them all, the height of the Galen Stone Tower, pointing to the sky — all these are the work, not of Miss Pendleton ' s hands, perhaps, but certainly of her mind and heart. But not onlv tangible creations have come into being during her administration. The structures of brick and stone are easier to see, but the invisible structures of the spirit have kept pace with them. President Pendleton leaves the college with a higher scholastic standard than when she came to it — a standard equal to that of any other American institution. All through her years as President, she has been the first to encourage greater intellectual excellence, and to suggest new ways whereby students might work independently, and thus gain more from their college life. The honors plan was her idea, and it was during her time, too, that the principle of a General Examination, to be taken by all seniors in their major subject, has been adopted. The Faculty, as well as the students, have been aided and strengthened by President Pendleton. She has been instrumental in obtaining for them more opportunities for Sabbatical leaves, during which time a new outlook may be obtained, or creative intellectual work accomplished; and hers was the idea of dividing the office of Dean, grown too complex for any one individual, among several, some, members of the Faculty, and others, specially trained for their positions. And not only has President Pendleton strengthened the mind and spirit of Wellesley within its walls, but she has given it a new and more significant place in the greater affairs of the world, both by her own participation in national and international events, and by the part she has inspired Wellesley graduates to play in the unfolding drama of our times. She has been a gu ide to us, and a giver of standards, and what is more than that, even, a friend. We, of the class of 1936, are glad and proud that we may claim her as an honorary member; and we look forward, in the years that are to come, to carrying still farther on the work she has begun. Fifty-eight Ellen Fitz Pendleton Honorary Member of the Class of 1936 Christopher Morley Author, and editor, and writer of charming letters, Christopher Morley takes his place among his new classmates , to their complete satisfaction and pleasure: The idea of being an honorary member of the Class of ' 36 is delightful, and of course I accept with gratification and humility. Will you explain to my spiritual classmates that I am unfortunately incapable of serving them in practical w ays; alas, I will not be able to find jobs for them in the pub- lishing busmess nor even render solid advice in their choices matrimonial; but I shall feel a genuine interest in their future adventures; what the young English poet Nichols called their ' Ardors and Endurances ' . I am sincerely pleased by the honor they do me and wish them, in a world of much per- plexity, much exaggerated solemnity and not nearly enough intelligent laughter, every excitement and ecstasy that are available. And my best greetings to you all — Your aspiring classmate, Christopher Morley Sixty Christopher Morley Honorary Member of the Class of 1936 Helen Isabel Achenbach Homestead Stock Farm Rockbridge, 111. Elizabeth Lucilla Anderson 446 W. 62nd St. Kansas City, Mo. Marjorie Ruth Andres S. 1309 Ferris Ct. Spokane, Wash. Katharine Hale Andrews 301 Bedford Rd. Pleasantville, N. Y. Leah-Althea Andrews 121 Dartmouth Terr. Springfield, Mass. Marjorie Holmes Applegate 319 Morris Ave. Rockville Center, N. Y. Sixty-tivo Ardell Judith Arenson 1126 W. Exchange St. Akron, Ohio Evlla Marjone Acherholt Newtown and Church Rds. Newtown Square, Pa. Alice Eunice Avery 33 Elm St. Peru, N. Y. Doris Marguerite Babbidge 555 E. 17th St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Margaret Burton Bailey 21 Appleton PI. Arlington, Mass. Phyllis May Baker 686 Centre St. Newton, Mass. Sixty -three Elaine Ruth Bassler 1026 Redway Ave. Cincinnati, Ohio Janet Becton Hotel Suburban East Orange, N. J Mary Louise Beebe Pleasant St. Marion, Mass. Mary Walden Bell 6405 Meadow Lane Chevy Chase, Md. Ruth Bennett 33 Garden St. Cambridge, Mass. Charlotte Lucille Berman 64 Eastern Promenade Portland, Me. Sixty-four Joy Frances Bernstein 129 Linden St. X ' oodmere, N. Y. Lexie Rosalie Beverlin 207 Belmont PI. Wichita, Kans. Jane Doris Beyer 449 Delaware Ave. Buffalo, N. Y. Dorothy Bidwell 9 Putnam Rd. Scarsdale, N. Y. Sylvia Bieber 1070 Park Ave. New York, N. Y. Phvllis Marie Bieberbach 11 Morningside Rd. Worcester, Mass. Sixty-five Frederica Billard 3015 Ellicott St. Washington, D. C. Dorothy Anna Blaesing 24 Franklin PI. Summit, N. J. Adelaide Blumenthal 251 St. Paul St. Brookline, Mass. Catharine Demarest Bogert Dorothea Hammond Boorn Piermont Rd. 138 Elmer Ave. Demarest, N. J. Schenectady, N. Y. Yvonne Elizabeth Bradley South Lawn Ave. Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Sixty-six Elizabeth Toaz Brazee 9 Leatherstocking St. Cooperstown, N. Y. Esther Brezner 44 Mandalay Rd. Newton, Mass. Julia Baird Brown 18 Abbey PI. Yonlcers, N. Y. Jean Brownell 233 Dawes Ave. Pittsfield, Mass. Jean Adeline Brundage 219 Pelhamdale Ave. Pelham, N. Y. Katherine Louise Bryan 2 Barnes St. Providence, R. 1. Sixty-seven Katherine Elizabeth Buchanan 684 Highland Ave. Newark, N. J. Jane Burgess 53 Hundreds Circle Welleslev Hills, Mass. Mildred Margaret Burnes 690 Main St. Woburn, Mass. Eleanor Rochford Butler 19 Kinsbury St. Welleslev, Mass. Margaret Louise Butsch 4 Berkelev PI. Buffalo, N. Y. Sixty-eight Marion Frances Card 69 Woodland Ave. Summit, N. J. Mary Valentine Carroll 192 Chestnut St. Holyoke, Mass. Anne Gidley Carter North Dartmouth, Mass. Marion Elizabeth Carter 402 U St., N.W. Washington, D. C. Barbara Cassidy 6 Park St. Webster, Mass. Virginia Catharine 4000 Cathedral Ave. Washington, D. C. Barbara Ann Caton 203 Monroe Ave. Alexandria, Va. Sixty-nine Marion Carter Chapman 375 Sprmg Sr. Portland, Me. Helen Kathrina Chase 64 Sumner St. Newton Center, Mass. Virgmia Hatch Childs 8 W. 9th St. New York, N. Y. Dorothy Chinnock 102 S. Fullerton Ave. Montclair, N. J. Gertrude Kimber Clark 579 Charles Ave. Kingston, Pa. Margaret Agnes Clark 45 Riverside Dr. Saranac Lake, N. Y. Sevinty Jean Sheldon Clarkson 16 Monmouth St. Springfield, Mass. Muriel Esther Coffin Deerfield, Mass. Clara Esther Cohen 142 Woodland St. Hartford, Conn. -S Katrine Colvocoresses 2114 N. Central Ave. Phoenix, Ariz. Ruth Conklmg 11 Woodland Ave. East Orange, N.J. Mary Coverdale 1020 Fifth Ave. New York, N. Y. Seventy -one Mary Elizabeth Coykendall 808 Ridgewood Ave. Ames, Iowa Anne Douglas Coyle 10 Miller PI. Bronxville, N. Y. Margaret Crawford 512 Vernon Dr. Cedar Rapids, Iowa Martha Jane Curtiss Union St. Thomaston, Conn. Rosemary Bertha Danhof 2480 Longfellow Ave. Detroit, Mich. Rhoda Adele Daum 235 West End Ave, New York, N. Y. Seventy-two Helen Jean Davenport 328 W. Jersey St. Elizabeth, N. J. Ester Davidson 103 Lorraine Ave. Upper Montclair, N. J. Henrietta Maria Davidson 657 N. Broad St. Elizabeth, N. J. Jane Hamburg Decker 2136 Seminole Ave. Detroit, Mich. Irma Deitz 146 Alta Ave. Yonkers, N. Y. Marv Jane Delmarsh Inlet, N. Y. Seventy-three Edna Howell Dempewolff 18 Langdon Terr. Bronxville, N. Y. Teresa Marie D ' Esopo 33 Elm St. Hartford, Conn. Eleanor Adele DeVilbiss Berkeley Rd. Merion, Pa. Christine Elizabeth Diener 145 S. 3rd St. Hamburg, Pa. Helen Barr Dolan 29 Wallmgford Rd. Brighton, Mass. Priscilla Donnell 37 Park St. Dan vers, Mass. Siventy-four Elizabeth Louise Dorsey 243 Maple St. New Britain, Conn. Emilie Dreyfus 312 Dartmouth St. Boston, Mass. Margaret Sidney Eaton 819 Cleveland Ave. Bridgeport, Conn. Estelle Viola Edelmann 10 Peck Ave. Newark, N. J. Olga Victoria Edmond 88 W. Town St. Norwichtown, Conn. Elizabeth Stafford Edrop 46 Edwards St. Springfield, Mass. Seventy-five Esther Pastene Edwards Reedsdale Rd. Milton, Mass. Suzanne Berenice Edwards 7 N. Park Dr. Gloversville, N. Y. Ruth Ehrlich 444 Sumner Ave. Springfield, Mass. Janet Louise Eigenbrot 120 Kathmere Rd. Brookline, Pa. Frances Glenn Emery 302 Meadow Lane Sewicklev, Pa. Christine Engelke 74 Buckingham St. Waterbury, Conn. Seventy-six Alice Louise Erdman 850 N. 11th St. Reading, Pa. Lena Everett 308 Danforth St. Portland, Me. Linda Chestnut Eynon 1757 Frankford Ave. Philadelphia, Pa. Elizabeth Fairbanks 29 Spruce St. Brattleboro, Vt. Margaret Lee Ferguson 3815 Huntington St. N.W Washington, D. C. Dorothv Fillis 29 Brookside PL New Rochelle, N. Y. Seventy-seven Elsa Mignon Finch Upper Marker Hill Amsrerdam, N. Y. Margaret Fitz 20 Park Ave. Wakefield, Mass. Elizabeth Ann Fitzpatrick 30 Morton St. North Abington, Mass. Mary Catherine Fitzpatrick 6 Abbott St. Welleslev, Mass. Annette Loeb Florence 3528 Beverly Dr. Dallas, Tex. Frances Harriette Forsdick Royal York Aprs. Pittsburgh, Pa. Seventy-eight Margaret Forsyth 155 Irwin Ave. Ben Avon, Pa. Ruth Haynes Fowler 671 Sheridan Ave. Plainfield, N. J. Wynfred Vultee Fox 12 Clubway Hartsdale, N. Y. ypr- Jane Phare Fraser 117 Wahiut St. Boise, Idaho Hannah Fuller 1041 Summer St. Stamford, Conn. Ellen Schell Garber 733 W. Main St. Madison, Ind. Seve itj-nine Molly Jane Geismer 15800 S. Woodland Rd. Cleveland, Ohio Janet Gibso n Governor ' s Island New York, N. Y. Doris Keene Gilbert 166 Fisher Ave. Brookline, Mass. Eleanor Gillespie 80 Cherokee Rd. Pontiac, Mich. Barbara Matheson Glidden 145 N. Main St. Natick, Mass. Elizabeth Glidden 142 Hunnewell Ave. Newton, Mass. Eighty Selma Evelyn Goldman 19 Mayflower Rd. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Marguerite Goodrich 493 Middle St. East Wevmouth, Mass. Dorothy ' irginia Gorrell Kenilworth Apt. Germantown, Pa. Irene Gotthelf 12 Keithstrasse Berlin, Germany Margaret Louise Gould 322 Forest Ave. Winnetka, 111. Hester Gray 7 Oxford St. Montclair, N. J. Eighty-one Jean Gregory 189 N. Manor Ave. Kingston, N. Y. Rhoda Frances Grosberg 37 Arborway Jamaica Plain, Mass. Daphne Gulick 178 Depew Ave. Buffalo, N. Y. Margaret Gunn Skiff Mountam Kent, Conn. Pauline Louisa Gunsser 7201 N. 20th St. Philadelphia, Pa. Mary Jo Halley 2116 E. 4th Ave. Denver, Colo. Eighty-two Elizabeth Ker Handy 161 Prospect Ave. New Brighton, N. Y. Phyllis Lucille Hanson 35 Melville St. Augusta, Me. Jane Virginia Harner 36 W. Church St. Xenia, Ohio msL: Ellen Elizabeth Harney 160 Ocean St. Lynn, Mass. Ruth Harris 322 Bacon St. Waltham, Mass. Dorothy Harrison 23475 Stanford Rd. Shaker Heights, Ohio Eighty-three Elizabeth Harrisson 157 State St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Elizabeth de Windt Hays 28 Summit Ave. Amsterdam, N. Y. Margret Hegeman 1675 Longfellow Ave. Detroit, Mich. Betty Livezey Hcizer 31 Orchard Rd. Covington, Ky. Martha Ann Henderson 7425 Ben Hur Rd. Pittsburgh, Pa. Eighty-four Helen Seymour Hine 1561 Mistletoe Dr. Cleveland, Ohio Miye-ko Hirooka Mori Motoyamamura Mokogun, Hyogoken, Japan Elizabeth Pratt Holmes 105 Holland Rd. Brookline, Mass. Nancy Hopkins 264 E. Kings Highway Haddonfield, N. 1. Margaret Clark Huggins 8309 Stenton Ave. Chestnut Hill, Pa. Olive Marion Hughes 9 Duryea Rd. Upper Montclair, N. J. Elizabeth Scott Hurst 416 Ocean Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. Eighty-five Janet Thorns IngersoU 26 Cottage St. Wellesley, Mass. Helen-Alma Ingraham 173 Crafts St. Newtonville, Mass. Anne Jennings 3 Linden PI. Sewicklev, Pa. Mary Elizabeth Johndroe Lowell Rd. Concord, Mass. Margaret Helen Johnston 8 Brookline Rd. Scarsdale, N. Y. Elizabeth Jones 180 Fern St. West Hartford, Conn. Eighty-six :i, I Mary Elizabeth Jones 15 Aberdeen Rd. W elleslev, Mass. Ethelmay Kennedy 33 Chapin Pkwy, Buffalo, N. Y. ' Mary Elizabeth Kennedy 6 Hitchcock Rd. Worcester, Mass. Ruth Emma Keown Wilkinsonville, Mass. Margaret Kilbon 8 Raymond Ave. Lvnbrook, N. Y. Patricia Louise Killam 810 Guadalupe St. Laredo, Tex. hty-seven Virginia Dean King 2920 Copper St. El Paso, Tex. Margaret Bates Knapp Valeria Arms Apts. Forest Hills, N. Y. Eleanor Ann Knight 1681 Huntington Tpk. Bridgeport, Conn. Barbara Allyn Knox 561 W ' ethersheld Ave. Hartford, Conn. Margaret Kohn 3415 Claries Lane Baltimore, Md. Muriel Koithan 46 Linden PI. Summit, N. J. Eighty-eight Carol May Kulp Storrs, Conn. Rachel Lacy 1640 Main St. Dubuque, Iowa Dorothea Lakson 15 Avon St. Cambridge, Mass. Beatrice Elizabeth Lamb 29 Park PI. New Britain, Conn. Lucy Ellen Lamb Highwood Mount Vernon, Ohio Marie Lassen 36 Brace Rd. West Hartford, Conn. Eighty- Emily Lawton 31 North Dr. Malba, N. Y. Mary Lee 170 Park Ave. Mount ernon, N. Y. Elizabeth Roby Leighton 215 W. Palm St. San Diego, Calif. Eleanor Irene Lentz Casilla 130 V Valparaiso, Chile Marjorie Leo 60 E. 191st St. New York, N. Y. Jane Rose Levin 2631 Lake of Isles Blvd. Minneapolis, Minn. Ninety Florence Anne Levitan 74 S. Broadway Tarry town, N. Y. Kathryn Ernestine Lewis 24 W. Sellars Ave. Ridlev Park, Pa. Pauline Lewis Roslyn, N. Y. t Susan Gregory Lewis 1630 Tyler Pkwy. Louisville, Kv. Berenice Libman 17 Gibbs St. Brookline, Mass. Jeannette Virginia Lincoln 7 Lovewell Rd. Wellesley, Mass. ' Ninety-one Jane Crary Lundahl 224 Raleigh Rd. Kenilworch, 111. Marjorie McAfee 5325 Reno Rd. N.W. Washington, D. C. Madeline Fischer MacConnell 9734 220th St. Queens Village, N. Y. Rosamond Mackenzie 134 Otter Rock Dr. Greenwich, Conn. Janet McKinney 9Crofton Rd. Waban, Mass. Frances McLester 2401 Lexington Ave. Ashland, Ky. N inety-tivo Miriam MacMurray West Barringron, R. I. Marjorie McWilliams 1190 Shakespeare Ave. New York, N. Y. CharlotteEngland Magruder Jamestown, R. I. Jane Marquardt 26 Norman Rd. Upper Montclair, N. J. Mary Louise Marshall 37 Bear St. Lyons, N. Y. Elizabeth May 21 W. Emerson St. Melrose, Mass. Ninety-three 1 . V i gH| H||| L w Mg M 1 J mru-r ] m i- 1 m -- J j| 1 Natalie Mayer 5816 Wyandotte St. Kansas Citv, Mo. Charlotte Laram)- Meaker 713 N. New St. Bethlehem, Pa. Nancy Mellor 5 Cushman St. Plymouth, Mass. Katharine Elizabeth Menton 22 Carteret St. Upper Montclair, N. J. Priscilla Metcalf 932 S. Oakland Ave. Pasadena, Calif. Berenice Roslyn Meyer 101 Central Pk. W. New York, N. Y. Nhuty-four Dorothy Miles Elba, N. Y. Muriel Millar 14 Olive PI. Forest Hills, N. Y. Evelyn Jean Mills 21 Kerr St. Onancock, Va. Jane Faulkner Mills 762 Olive St. Denver, Colo. Miriam Millman 126 Westminster Rd. Brooklyn, N. Y. Dorothy Marietta Morehouse 913 E. Broadway Stratford, Conn. Ninety-five Miriam Ruth Mottsman 225 Central Pk. W. New York, N. Y. Priscilla Moustakis 11 Winter St. Salem, Mass. Jane Addams Mull 36 Orlin Ave. S.E. Minneapolis, Minn. Mary Elizabeth Mulroy 38 Leonard St. Portland, Me. Caroline Ncidlinger Neill 49 Park St. Manchester, Conn. Martha Nichols 31 Hayes Ave. Lexington, Mass. Ninety-six Helen Pond Niebrugge 945 Eastern Pkwy. Brooklyn, N. Y. Cora Nielsen 438 4th St. Manistee, Mich. Elizabeth Brown Nipps 18 Overlook Rd. White Plains, N. Y. Eleanor North Olin 227 Stone St. Watertown, N. Y. Harriett Steele Olzendam 56 Park Ave. Manchester, N. H. Rosemond O ' Reilly 83 Boulevard Summit, N. J. Ninety-seven Doris Louise Orr 85 Rockland Ave. Yonkers, N, Y. Edith Babette Ostermann 234 Warwick Rd. Kenilworth, 111. Dorothy Charlotte Pareskv 93 Fuller St. Brookline, Mass. Barbara Baen Patterson The Kenesaw Washington, D. C. Gladys Pearlman 2160 81st St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Betty Ann Pepis 1424 S. Boulder Ave. Tulsa, Okla. Ninety-eight Martha Perrin 3008 Claremonc Rd. Shaker Heights, Ohio Susan Moore Peterson 3003 Wheeling St. El Paso, Tex. Virginia Mallory Peyton Ohehvahtah Danbury, Conn. Ella Elizabeth Pfeiffenberger 463 BlufF St. Alton, 111. Constance Harrison Pike Pike, N. H. Adaline Jane Plank 246 Taylor Ave. Easton, Pa. Ninety-nine Grace Frances Potter 8 Appleby Rd. Welleslev, Mass. Margaret Ruth Powell 250 Booth Ave. Englewood, N. J. Gwendolyn Pratt Knob Hill Great Barrington, Mass. „ Katherine Farnham Prentice Wygenwood Terre Haute, Ind. Rosalene Morss Preston 23 Pearl St. Kingston, N. Y. Ellen Eustis Pugh 1661 Glenwood Rd. Brooklyn, N. Y. One Hundred Harriet Tuxbury Qua 141 Holyrood Ave. Lowell, Mass. Edith Quinlaa 38 Fenimore Rd. Scarsdale, N. Y. Eleanor Dietz Radding 321 Elmora Ave. Elizabeth, N. J. Marie Ragonetti 200 N. Columbus Ave. Mount Vernon, N. Y. Jane Catherine Rauch 3050 N. Meridian St. Indianapolis, Ind. Janeth Muriel Ravner 101 Walworth Ave. Scarsdale, N. Y. One Hundred One Dorothy Raymond 300 Pleasant St. Brockton, Mass. Mary Campbell Raymond 21 Rand St. Pittsford, N. Y. Caroline Prince Riley 6 Boody St. Brunswick, Me. Barbara Rodman 103 Locust St. Garden City, N. Y. Kathryn Elizabeth Ruff 612 N. McKean St. Butler, Pa. Martha Elizabeth Rumbough 50 Sunset Pkwy. Asheville, N. C. One Hundred Tii Ruth Paxton Russell 370 Park Hill Ave. Yonkers, N. Y. Barbara Aurore Ryerson 36 Monterey Rd. Worcester, Mass. Helen Page SafFord 13 Eastman Circle Welleslev, Mass. Virginia SafFord 13 Eastman Circle Wellesley, Mass. Eleanor Woodward Sandford 5 Spring St, Ware, Mass. Janet Koontz Sanford 121 Grove St. Wellesley, Mass. One Hundred Three Thelma Lorraine Sartwell Peru, N. Y. Elizabeth Scarritt 1215 W. 57th St. Kansas Citv, Mo. Louise Claire Schlosberg 35 Rose Hill Ave. New Rochelle, N. Y. Dorothy Bertha Schneider 155 Lewis St. Bridgeport, Conn. Marion Blake Schoenfuss 63 North St. Saco, Me. Ruth Mabel Seaman Hartsdale and Cushman Rds. White Plains, N. Y. One Hundred Four Helen Abbort Sceley Washington, Conn. Pauline Ruth Seidel 16 Chilton St. Brookline, Mass. Martha Seymour Sunset Dr. Ithaca, N. Y. Kathryn French Shaner 103 N. Reading Ave. Boyertown, Pa. Beatrice Cornelia Short 630 Pine Lane Winnetka, 111. Marian Ruth Sigler 835 W. 57th St. Kansas Citv, Mo. One Hundred Five Elizabeth Gay Simmons 11 Garden Rd. Brockton, Mass. Jeanne Rose SincofF 1120 Park Ave. New York, N. Y. Marion Sittenfeld 801 Westover Rd, Kansas City, Mo. Maxine Sittenfeld 801 Westover Rd. Kansas City, Mo. Carol Sleicher 760 Madison Ave. Albany, N. Y. Eleanor Hill Smith 620 McNaughton Rd. Reynoldsburg, Ohio Ove Hundred Siy Marjorie Gordon Smith 86 Westford Ave. Springfield, Mass. Cecilia Berg Stein 60 E. 67th St. New York, N. Y. Bernice Steinberg 718 Hastings St. Pittsburgh, Pa. Margaret Alberta Steiner 123 North Pkwy. East Orange, N.J. Sara Ross Stewart 416 Woodlawn Rd. Roland Park, Md. Ottilie Stoehr 109-64 Park Lane S. Kew Gardens, N. Y. One Hundred Seven Virginia Tate 84 Webcowet Rd. Arlington, Mass. Elizabeth Adamson Thatcher Lookout Mountain Tenn. Mary Elliott Thompson 79 Douglas Rd. Glen Ridge, N. J. Elinor Louise Thomsen 2939 Attleboro Rd. Shaker Heights, Ohio Georgia Knapp Thomson 10 Forest St. New Britain, Conn. Alison Thorogood 25 Ridge Rd. Waban, Mass. One Hundred Eight KS Helen Lee Thurston 56 Morris St. Yonkers, N. Y. Anna Mary Torrance 4332 Fremont Ave. S. Minneapolis, Minn. Harriet Nash Towle 49 High St. Exeter, N. H. irginia Trask 30 Gardner St. Peabody, Mass. Margaretta Traver 899 Bellevue Ave. Trenton, N.J. Eleanor Louise Trezevant 1915 Harbcrt Ave. Memphis, Tenn. One Hundred Nine Elma Van Artsdalen 5750 N. Lambert St. Philadelphia, Pa. Nancy Walker 24 Weston St. Pittsfield, Mass. Alma de Forest Warner 381 Highland St. Newtonville, Mass. Jean Parker Waterbury Christie Hill Rd. Darien, Conn. • Mary Welsh 765 E. 18th St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Mary Sue Wescott 639 English Village Wynnewood, Pa. One Hundred Ten Janet Gracey West 1889 Portland Ave. Rochester, N. Y. Betsy Gerry Weston 48 Cameron St. Wellesley, Mass. Edith White 12 Maplewood Terr. Springfield, Mass. ' ' W ' Vvi [•«►« ?1 K s,- •«   ► Florence Fennimore Whitehead 150 E, 49th St. New York, N. Y. Helen Whiting Wilton, N. H. Selma Wiener 4321 Overhill Dr. Dallas, Tex. One Hundred Eleven Helen Isabel Wile 3333 16th St. N.W. Washington, D. C. Joan Wilkinson 67 Mayo Ave. Needham, Mass. Marion Willard 5 Bytield Rd. Waban, Mass. Martha Crocker Williams 329 Elmwood Ave. Oshkosh, Wis. Winifred Williams 45 Everett Ave. Winchester, Mass. Elizabeth Katharine Williamson 127 Walker Rd. West Orange, N. J. One Hundred Twelve Anita Mane Wilson 23 Yale St. Winchester, Mass. Caroline Wilson 13610 Larchmere Blvd. Cleveland, Ohio Virginia Wood 15 Hampden Terr. Newton Center, Mass. Louise ' eed Yawger 37 Lenox Rd. Summit, N. J. Mary Margaret Yost Box 104 North East, Pa. ■ One Hundred Thirteen MARIAN S. MONIE IN MEMORIAM Ex -1936 Elizabeth H. Adams Mary H. Agnew Mary T. Allen Patricia E. Alliger Louise Amerman Janet Atkins Julia B. Bachelder Mary L. Baker Elizabeth M. Balhatchet Frances V. Barrett Dorothy E. Bergen Matilda Bicknell Barbara W. Bliss Betsy F. Boese Doris Bernstein June C. Brackett Georgiana Brewer i Natalie Brigham Rachel Brio Anne R. Brown Emma-Ellen Brown Elizabeth Bryant Janet M. Burbank Ruth H. Butler Mary-Leigh Call Emily J. Cameron Margaret E. Chapman Eleanor Christie Mary M. Clark Polly L. Clough Jane A. Cobb Mary S. Coburn Anne M. Coleman Margaret Collingwood Janet Colson Jane Coventry Eleanor H. Crosby Elizabeth Cutler Mary D. Dale Priscilla Denison Katherine Desmond Bethene M. Deyo Elizabeth L. Dickey Marcia Dielhenn Dorothy C. Dinner Lucille Dobson Elizabeth Doig Elizabeth L. Dorsey Regina Dow Beatrice Driver Madeline Dunne Elizabeth Dunnington Nancy Dyer Miriam R. Endicott Ruth L. Excelsen Helen E. Fagan Dorothy A. Floyd Jeanne E. Friedman Aileen L. Fry Adele Goldfine Virginia S. Goldman Suzanne Goodlatte Miriam G. Gottesman Janice Gregory Eleanor W. Guild Eleanor R. Gunthel Miriam E. Hall Elizabeth Haller Helen H. Hanley Elizabeth T. Harbeson Harriette M. Harding Marianna Hatch Joyce C. Henry Emily Z. Herr Barbara Hill Louise B. Hobbs Jean E. Hogenauer Mary Abbie Hollands Amy L. Hopkins Ruth B. Horbilt Jean C. Hoyt Alice S. Ireys One Hundred Sixteen Ruth Jacobstein Janice James Veronica A. Johnson Margaret S. Joy Elizabeth M. Karcher Alice-Ann Kessler Ellen M. Knower Olive V. Krauthoff Mary V. Kurtz Miriam Laurie Eleanor Leavens Grace Lepie Marie P. Lewinsohn Jean L. Lowenburg Betty Ann Luther Mary L. McCarthy Barbara G. McEvoy Louise E, Mack Phyllis E. MacKay Jane Marquardt Catherine S. Martin Elizabeth Marvin Marion E. Maynard Anne H. Milward Emma Moadinger Dorothy Monie Marian S. Monie Faith Morrison Marguerite M. Neylan Clare M. O ' Connell Janet M. Orr Edith R. Ottosen Virginia W. Page Mary S. Patterson Eleanor P. Pelt Elizabeth H. Perkins Martha L. Perrin Vergenia Phelps Louise Philipson M. Elizabeth Phillips Nancy Pickering Mary Eleanor Pierce Janet Pocock Katherine F. Prentice Rosamond Prince Marjorie I. Rahmann Naneen Rehori Frothingham Janet A. Roger Dorothy Rosenbaum Mary E. Rowley Antoinette Sartori Margaret A. Schaeffer Carol D. Schleicher Carolyn M. Schwed Jane Seydell Frances I. Shepard Marjorie C. Shetland Katharine Smith Nancy Smythe Gertrude V. Southworth Orra Spinks Jill L. Stern Mary L. Stern Dorothy J. Summerfield Janet Taylor Paula Thibaut Virginia L. Turner Dorothy H. Van Deusen Anita A. Vogel Helen Wadsworth Emeline Walker Fatherley Elizabeth A. Wesley Barbara H. West Emma G. Wheeler Carolyn White Esther C. Wildes Margaret E. Williams Mary F. Williams Elizabeth B. Wiswall Priscilla E. Woodley Elizabeth A. Zaner Deceased One Hundred Seventeen Anne Brown Peggy ColliTigwooa Te 5chaeifer Ex 193G Lib Harbeson Su-key l — - ' iTIIen Brown The Class of 1936 ANNOUNCES THE ENGAGEMENTS OF Lexie Beverlm to John Francis FitzGerald Katrine Colvocorresses to Peter Laben Elizabetli Covkendall to William Howard Chase Jane Decker to Henry C. Kohring Alice L. Erdman to Frank R. Elliott Elizabeth Fitzpatrick to Arch C. Kennel Miriam Elizabeth Hall to Cabell Preston Handv Elizabeth Ker Handy to George L. Hankinson Nancy Hine to Thomas Wilson Dunn Beatrice Lamb to Ernest Stillman Davis, Jr. Berenice Mever to Jack Weprin Rosemond O ' Reilly to Herbert Lippincott, Jr. Virginia Peyton to Charles V. Wynne Constance H. Pike to Ensign George A. Hill, Jr., U.S.N. Dorothv Raymond to Bryce Henry McLellan Kathrvn Ruft to William Shaffer Oite Hundred Nineteen H onors SENIOR DURANT SCHOLARS Marjorie H. Appelgate Margaret B. Bailey Esther Brezner Jean Brownell Muriel E. Coffin M. Elizabeth Coykendall Elizabeth Edrop Esther Edwards Lena Everett Annette L. Florence Dorothy V. Gorrell Hester Gray Olive M. Hughes Margaret B. Knapp Jane R. Levin Bernice Libman Frances McLester Charlotte L. Meaker Katharine E. Menton Muriel Millar Miriam Mottsman Elizabeth B. Nipps Barbara A. Ryerson Janet K. Sanford Marian R. Sigler Elma Van Artsdalen Nancy Walker Marion Willard SENIOR WELLESLEY COLLEGE SCHOLARS Doris M. Babbidge Elaine R. Bassier Dorothy Bidwell Sylvia M. Bieber Dorothy A, Blaesing Dorothea Boorn Katherine L. Bryan Jane Burgess Margaret L. Butsch Anne D. Coyle Irma Deitz Teresa M. D ' Esopo Margaret S. Eaton Estelle V. Edelmann Olga V. Edmond Ruth Ehrlich Frances G. Emery Margaret L. Ferguson Elizabeth Glidden Jean Gregory Pauline Gunsser Ethelmay Kennedy Mary E. Kennedy Margaret Kilbon ' irginia Kmg Dorothea Lakson Florence A. Levi tan Pauline Lewis J. Virginia Lincoln Janet McKinney Jane Marquardt D. Marietta Morehouse Jane A. Mull Eleanor N. Olin Dorothy C. Paresky Barbara B. Patterson Gladys Pearlman Gwendolyn Pratt Janeth Ravner Ruth P. Russell Louise C. Schlosberg Elizabeth G. Simmons Carol D. Sleicher Marjorie G. Smith Harriet N. Towle Jean P. Waterbury Martha C. Williams Elizabeth Williamson One Hundred Twenty Phi Beta Kappd ELECTED IN OCTOBER Margaret Bailey Esther Brezner Muriel Coffin Esther Edwards Annette Florence Olive Hughes Margaret Knapp Jane Levin Berenice Libman Janet Sanford ELECTED IN MARCH Marjorie Applegate Jean Brownell Jane Burgess Elizabeth Coykendall Elizabeth Edrop Lena Everett Hester Gray Frances McLester Charlotte Meaker Katharine Menton Miriam Mottsman Elizabeth Nipps Marian Sigler Elma Van Artsdalen ..Nancy Walker Martha Williams One Hundred Tiventy-one Past is 1936 is Past (With apologies to Gertrude Stein) kJOME girls on a train goes slow and at a time the place changes and is W ' ellesley. More than four of four score stop at Wellesley and time goes not slow time goes fast. All that there is is composition and time and time is in and of composition which is a thing seen. What the four four score have made with time is a thing seen is a thing w orth seeing in time. They were seen when the train stopped to begin to begin in Wellesley. It was busy to begin with teas and big sisters and getting lost in place but time was not lost is present. At this time they learned to be seen not in Green with their best shoes on asking where is Green Hall. They learned the Library and that college on Flower Sunday is Lo ve and is friendly on all Sundays in all time presently, and they sat in their transept in the freshman transept and the faculty awed them. There are bicycles and bicycles but the orange and black, the black and orange bicycle is mine. Vil Juniors are nice to have and a Gray Book quizz finds how we need Vil. Juniors. Friends of mothers call up are we all right? and we are homesick not very homesick any more. We come home from a tea and sit with our shoes in the middle of the floor sleepy stocking slippery slidey sloppy shower 3:40 gym is late is a cold shower sheet. Sophomores serenade and it is campus supper outdoors. Red lanterns are Fresh- men lanterns too red and green two and one one and two twenty but it is not Christ- mas that is in time presently. They are under interest tests and were in physical examinations we could not do the monkey climb — sh — we are untheoretic religious. We elect Hoover president but he is not though we take our new dates to Fall In- formals. What a big place is Alumnae is beautiful. One political rally is really rally indeed yellow posts. Plant your vote with the farmers hoopee for Hoover Hoover is like a Hoover simply is our vote is Hoover. (But Roosevelt is President.) In the meantime for all time is in time is present we are knitting Millville sweaters sweaters for Millville. Upperclassmen descend — there is a Freshman sing for us little green ribbon. Ribbon sings weak does not sing and it is trial by many big Sophomores a trial like a trial without hope till we wear sandwich boards. Night and day day and night there are pink elephants now I ' m through making hoopee. We come home to bare rooms which were not bare when the pillows came all is not bare with pink elephants. We like football when A. A. foots Major Officers. Time out to powder noses but One Hundred Tiventy-three time is not out time is in and hot dogs are in us in time. T. S. Eliot S. T. and the boards of Billings creak. Horses ' hoofs. And we hear Robert Frost, V. Sackville West, William Butler Yeats and a Soviet him Old and New new and old all is the same in time presently. It is merely simply a matter of composition differently. Nothing changes except the thing seen and the Cherry Orchard is simply a different thmg seen in the same time. There are classes and classes and 101 Zo worms and 101 Comp themes and class meetings where we have a president a senate member a member of superior court. One does not know how it happened till it is simply naturally done. The milk bottle fund is fund enough for some time but some go to children ' s hospital sometime and some sometimes dress dolls. There is snow on the ground on the golf course we ski in colors we are young and make snow men. But there is a little frost on my plant wilting. We go home happy homesick holiday. The world has been all along fast speeding presently. They say how you ' ve put on weight but don ' t mind it becomes you and Brother is taller and we put stars on the tops of our Christmas trees. And time goes fast and we are hack again presently did vou have a nice vacation? Oh grand. Munger and Masefield and money. The banks are really closed when will they open I have only forty-nine cents. We slide down Tower Court Hill on tin trays and Harvard comes to sing and it is strange to hear Harvard singing on the campus. Sign in the late book we just got home by one minute after ten. And it is the bluest kind of a composition a composition in ultramarine a com- position of exams. What was the date of the battle of Bouvines a date is the product of a spermatophyte or is it a bryophyte why did I ever take botany? Freshmen have panics and if it were not true that everyone had to be sure that they were everyone would be persuaded that they had been persuaded that they had been persuaded that they would get a B was not true. Presently everything is simply different and crocuses come out by Norumbega where it is warm in the sunshine. The Seniors show us how to jump rope but we may not roll hoops when we are all in white May Day we must wait for that we are waiting for that in time. We sing on the chapel steps no bv the chapel steps I cannot see over the tall girl who stands in front of me and I wish she would not step on my toe. There is Float Night where a knight floats and is Joan of Arc and the wind blows but my float does not float ashore in the wind but one float thought it would like to see the Hunnewells and not Wellesley. And there is Tree Day and I was a black fury but I am sure 1 do not look like a black fury usually and Jet Sayre gave us our spade now we have a tree I wonder if it will grow or will it wilt? At the end we keep on being simply different. By intention canoes and water are One Hundred Twenty-four cool and cucumber in salad is cool and I would swim in the lake if I could swim. Clap the professors we will not listen to them any more and we clap the professors for different causes reasonably. Success sleep around exam time and my it is hot and Freshmen are still gaining weight. No one sees the connection between tennis and crew but I do. SOPHOMORE YEAR There was a train and some smoke. The girls were girls of all sizes new girls class of ' 37 we went to look for to look at to be looked upon. A newer class a fresher class than the class of ' 36 but we have blue triangular signs to wear we are Ask Mes — sh — is it three right turns or two rights and a left before you get to Green? And we feel old very old not young and silly like Seniors but old like Sophomores and important and time goes fast. We go to the vaudeville we laugh at the vaudeville and the News is Extra to welcome an extra class and we are ' 36 we are Sophomores. And a Gray Book quiz another Gray Book quiz only Freshmen take a Gray Book quiz but now all classes and we learn new rules halfheartedly we try to learn new rules. We outgrew rules last year we are Sophomores but wc go sulkily to Billings. A quiz is a quiz is a lot of trouble. The Wellesley Club is gone we have a longer apron string the Pioneer Hotel. An apron string is permission from your housemother is one one o ' clock a week is smoking in your room but you must have a tin wastebasket is the Pioneer Hotel. The Princess Marries the Pa e. If I were a princess I would marry a page far rather a page than a prince a prince is so usual if you are a princess. But I am not a princess and I must dance with my Little Sister mv Little Sister not so little not small at all but very large in pink taffeta. And time moves on for all time is the same time but sameness is not without motion I have a theory that there is more motion in sameness than in motion and there is a Sophomore serenade we see the other side of the serenade warble warble chant from the Quad to the Vil. Fall Informals formal Informals one play two plays three plays and they like the Man Who Married A Dumb Wife until she talk. They like soft silent sisters they are sophisticated thev are Sophomores a Sophomore is a smooth swirl is a girl with a soul. (But not Mondays at 8:40). But there are academic appointments Wellesley is no country club (did you think that was news to us?) and they go to class. Why is a Sophomore always sleepy in class? When I was a Freshman sleepy in class I did not sleep I kept awake but I was not so sleepy then perhaps it is J E and P notice to all afflicted with insomnia trv Bible especially Leviticus. From Olympus the powers say no more blue slips except for One Himdred Twenty-fve quizzes and we sigh for our votive offerings they used to propitiate but not now. I wish it would rain every Tuesday afternoon I have Chemistry lab. and I feel like rain like sleet and slush especially when we make chlorine. And presently we simply see that our cultural life goes on. The Volga Boatmen is black river sweeping is a vibration of sound is the Don Cossacks is a tiny tinv man who is an electric spark. We watch the Avon players Tame the Shrew at Alumnae if I had been the music master I would have hit back with my own lure. And they go to hear poets unless they have 4:40 gym they hear poets Hillyer and Berenice Kenyon and Archibald MacLeish: Around, around the sun we go The Moon goes round the Earth; We do not die of death : We die of vertigo. Modern modern modern maidens who ' s dizzy? And suddenly there are not so many days till Christmas not so many blanks on my calendar not so many paper dolls on my wall. The railroad men are in room 30 and Arizona and Pensacola seem suddenly close and a train is an exciting thing but I must go home on the bus. The Christmas play in the chapel and after it the bells ring through the snow and I am full of Christmas spirit and I go the bazaar and buv more than I can afford. What do you want for Christmas what in the world can I get for Father he has everything and I have only thirty-five cents? Winter is cold is a red nose and a great desire for ear muffs do you suppose he would like ear muffs I know would. Christmas vespers and we are exalted. Holly. Carols. Snow. Plum pudding and turkey and our next-best evening dresses. Carols. Carols. But I have to stay up all night to write a paper on Deutero-Isaiah. Vacation is sleeping for a week is doing nothing and everything is just being home. But Annie doesn ' t live here any more Annie is due back at 12:30 P.M. what a way to start the New Year why is packing such fun and unpacking not? And time goes entirely not fast time goes completely slow and time is a composition in gray in gray wet slush and I have three papers to write and three of mv friends have mumps. Do you think the kings of Israel are really important? A Sophomore is a Sophomore is a gloomy gloomy girl. I have an exam the last day and an exam the first day and I hate Midyears anyway and milk and crackers at 9:30 P.M. is no consolation. Mr. Proctor makes a better saint than I would have suspected from my 102 Phil, mark I suppose it is the study of Plato that induces that ideal expression. We wish the faculty would stick to acting we like them so well as actors for instance Mr. Haroutun- ian is such a serene bishop but that is the only time (and I have not done mv Bible One Hundred Twenty-seven : Mr. Phair ancL his Art 3aildi-ng STT r FdTTiilidr Tfimgs and. Peof le again) and Mr. Jenks should be a professional Henry VIII but I guess I will not take Ec. I would be far more aggravating than any egg and also I am fond of my head was it not because his wives could not cook him a proper egg that thev lost theirs? Jonquils are yellow no ice on the lake a flute is a flute is Lily Pons. And presently for all time is in the present we press we pin we prink our elders our not-so-much-the- elders ' 35 Junior Prom. Can we get you anything in the vil.? We peer from windows we peer into windows at those but lately pinned now leagues removed but next year will be w rProm. Roll roll roll not waters of Waban but hoops on May Day. We sew Seniors ' gowns and we cheer on Tower Court Hill 1-9-3-4 our Big Sisters. Which design is this do I have a pink card this time or a blue one once I am supposed to be the Senior ' s face and it would be too bad if this were the time and I held up my blue card. Float Night and calm waters not calm with crew races on Waban but calm after- wards with a moon in the dark and floats. Grimm ' s Fairy Tales. Dragons. Witches. Dwarfs. Giants. Hansel and Gretel. Popcorn and ice cream and Japanese lanterns. Rapunzel Rapunzel let down your golden hair. Tree Day is dancing is music is color is the Young King and we race for ' 37 ' s tree. Handle that spade carefully we only remembered half an hour ago we hadn ' t painted our numerals on it and the paint isn ' t dry. Last step singing last step singing again they ' ve gone out from the kings of Israel (yes but can I keep Mark Luke and Matthew straight till next week?) And we take a place a Junior ' s place an important place on the steps we will not stand up any more. Can I learn my Geology while sunning myself on the fire escape? If you want a real sunburn the best place is the dock and a towel but I have three exams in two days and a paper how can you tell modern sculpture from Romanesque as far as I can see they are equally ugly and that is about all? I mean to do nothing all summer but swim and sleep (but there is that Reading Exam I still haven ' t passed). JUNIOR YEAR And the fall comes a new beginning to begin a Junior. We are less but we suggest that we begin in the same time for all time is more and more different was everything alike. The thing that makes a difference in the beginning and in the middle and in ending at which they are all looking is composition. Now this means simply nothing changes from year to year except the thing seen. When we were Juniors we are not ahead of our time but we see the thing seen is a difl erence. Freshmen are femininity are unauthentic not being classic. All this means this. We are classic and therefore beauti- ful and we are all accepted in time suddenly. We are what we are because we are so we live our third composition all in one time. One Himdred Twenty-nine And so there was a natural phenomenon that was Fall Informals The Little Man Anatol the Artist and by all means. Sleeping today sleeping is nearly a necessity. And when do they sleep again. A Junior is a busy girl is a social girl is Harvard Boston why were the Irish players ' faces sea green? A ring around the moon is seen to follow the moon and the moon is in the center of the ring and the ring follows the moon. But some nights are cloudy. When you are a Junior you know what the night is like it takes lots of one o ' clocks to teach you what the moon is like I could nearly be a weather-man. Hampton Quartet sings All God ' s Chillun Got Shoes Siving Low Siveet Chariot. When a college is in depression F.E.R. A. can share expenses in seven. But can he be an overcoat to us? If I could add figures I could earn thirty cents an hour adding figures for the Math, department I can add all right but I never did understand the decimal point and long division was too much for me. How many Christmas presents could I buy at thirty cents an hour? Christmas again. How much I like Christmas Christmas Vespers Christmas plays Christmas dinners peppermint sticks more Christ- mas carols. This year it is our Vil. Juniors who have to get up in the dark to sing. Breakfast in pajamas scrambled eggs and bacon I won ' t get home till 2 A.M. have a grand vacation. The thing seen we thought would never be not seen would never change it would be a continuous composition but wc find change. A half century of service to Wellesley and President Pendleton will leave Wellesley we are amazed the solid hills shake but she will be in Wellesley till we leave Wellesley she will not go till we do. Will she take Ariel with her? What will Wellesley do without Ariel? It will be her graduation next year more than ours and we go to chapel we are so surprised we go to chapel for once because it is a tradition merely that. But again we think of natural phenomena like Dartmouth Carnival. There was a groping for going and a groping for a continuous present and there was an inevitable beginning of beginning again and again and again. We did not begin again afterwards we just began. There was then study with a straight back and a pencil in your mouth I have a theory that if you ski all day and sleep twelve hours a night you will know much more for your exams than if you try to study if you try to study you will do nothing but fix your fingernails and learn nothing at all but if you ski you will at least do that. (But I found in my music exam my theory did not work perhaps I would have done better if I could have told Beethoven from Mozart?) When we are sitting in chapel the faculty procession they keep coming with pink faces above red and black blue and black mostly black and the procession goes on endlessly and the aisle goes on under the procession goes on but was still regressing there. In days and nights beside days and after more days when nothing happens but One Hundred Thirty Before and Aiter Otiov h lui - rain time passes. If a measle grows best in the dormitory category we acknowledge the infirmatory is sanity but-you-never-get-out. If I feel my glands often enough I will make myself believe I have the measles. It comes out first on your elbows no on your cheeks the way to tell is to take a hot shower and then you know. The measle always pays and pays. A measle in the new Chemistry building is just a fancy building Chem- istry. A new contour-fittmg hall and all things presently are a composition simplv and what was seen to be merely a cellar to be merely a hole in the ground is walls is brick walls and cement is red-orange girders and workmen whose wives come for them at 5 P.M. in Model T Fords (but I wish I had a Model T). In days and nights beside days when nothing happens there are daisies. Did you have a nice vacation? yes but did you hear mine was nothing beside yours was nothing beside . . . What? Bermuda is the place. Oh. And they sav it happened between dinner and dawn. Who gave Mr. Greene the lobster he threw at midnight into Longfellow what a place to throw a lobster at midnight. Mighty maiden Ida Princess Ida Ida PreciosiUa. But Mr. Haroutunian steals the show. May Day. Only three more days. But a chill May Day (will it be as cold as this on Friday?) and hoops and our oificers in a coach and four getting off of that thing must feel very much like leaping from a second story wi ndow but such a nice young man in a red coat to help catch you. And Friday comes. Friday at last rain and excitement and telegrams and our Junior Prom. Fraser ' s must be doing a big business we have to eat at Claflin and the tables aren ' t wide enough for our flowers and us too beside the four white elephants we have for ash trays. Do you suppose they will notice that there are fewer daffodils than usual on the campus the third of May we are almost Seniors and Seniors can pick flowers so why not Juniors when they are impecunious and in need of decorations preferably daffodils? Help me snap that last snap does my hair look all right I liked it this morning but it is terrible now why doesn ' t he cornel I told him to wear a Tux. and now everyone else will have tails I know the roads are slippery but that ' s no reason why he should be as late as this ivhy doesn ' t he cornel It isn ' t over already is it even if my feet are what they are I wish we could dance all night it ' s been such fun. Spring fever is a cut class is a sunburn is movies and iced tea and mail. Why when I want to be outdoors do I have to write papers do I have to read books in the Library in the Librarv on Saturday afternoon with a circus on the green and children who are not reading books at all and when I walk home popcorn crunches as I walk and punc- tured balloons hang limp on the trees. But I must study. Float Night is classical is a hurry and flurry of wet paint in Dower loft is night and Ulysses is merely simply Float Night. And we pray for sun on Tree Day and the sun shines on Orpheus and Eurydice and on the hillfull of people on the just and the unjust alike but there are no One Hundred Thirty-three unjust here so merely on the just. Spring is a cut class is a sunburn is movies and picnics is papers and exams exams and papers is procrastination is a last-minute-dash. And finally simply it is all over all but holding white batons with little blue bows and ushering people who know anyway where they ought to go or else where they want to go that is not always the same thing but it always amounts to the same thing they go. This is not our graduation this is ' 35 ' s graduation next year ' s will be ours. But we are ushers. To be an usher is more important than being graduated but it is hot very hot too hot we sit on piles of programs in the back of Alumnae and drowse through interminable speeches. Next year we will listen. SENIOR YEAR Hello hello how docs it feel . . . subscribe to the Times subscribe to the Tribune . . . and my dear they were married before she left college last year ... a grand summer . . . she ' s working at Macy ' s . . . how can I ever get this mess straightened out and as for takmg it home again . . . Caps and gowns caps and gowns. The tassel on the left. The formal collar. A formal collar a long line of formal collars think of all the unhappiness in the class of ' 36 if evervone ' s collar hurts as much as mine does head up is neck saved. We are marching we are Seniors we are the thing seen the thing worth seeing is my cap straight it ' s straight all right but it ' s backwards. President Pendleton sends her greetings to the class of 1936. We are Seniors we look beyond Wellcslev will the world please us is the world trving as it should to please us? Italv is sending she is determined to be sending divi- sions into Ethiopia equilibration. But war could not come when we are civilized by Coughlin and Mussolini are we civilized the mass is the intelligence of twelve years and we are of the mass not in the mass massy. The world worries us we are worried by the world and we go to lectures we cram Billings to hear about Ethiopia sit three on a seat suppose it should tumble down? (But it didn ' t) A seminar is a long class is a hard class is mentallv a hard class and physically a hard class next time I ' ll bring a pillow is a lot of work. We learn scholarly methods we write dramas we write novels we interpret statistics we murder by degrees scientifically white mice nice little white little mice and their private lives a museum is a museum is a blister on mv right heel. And it is a composition in blue and gold in scarlet leaves and sunshine we never had a lovelier fall who would study such days this is our fall. This is our fourth Barn Reception this is our turn to welcome this is our Silver Hilt I can remember when . . . This is our fourth Fall Informals and we remember the blue gray terrible wail of Riders to the Sea. We remember and we are to be remembered pictures Legenda pictures don ' t forget your appointment. We are draped in white gold black we smile we smile One Hundred Thirty-jour for posterity smile! Head just a little lower please my back aches my shoulder is cold smile you will get vour proofs in two weeks smile. The Faculty takes a patriotic oath we are not to be corrupted Wellesley students piire as the snow and not the faintest tinge of pink. And time stays the same time stays a composition in gold we never had such weather let ' s play tennis let ' s walk around the lake it is our moral duty to walk around the lake. Did 1 tell vou about Lawrence Tibbett and myself and he said . . . Autographs autographs encores and autographs when an audience that is appreciative is appreciat- ing it suffocates it stampedes it overcomes the appreciated. (But I listened to the con- cert through a locked door being impecunious and without a ticket L. T. has an excellent volume of voice it travels verv well through locked doors) Music and drama The Doll ' s House the sound of a door shutting is heard from below. The traditions of Barn are carried on we carry on the traditions of Barn and presently at Pay Day we carry on more traditions the woman pays and pays we are members of Barn A. A. we subscribe to News we promote college activities we buy a Legenda or else we do not anyway we are much poorer. Miss Pendleton Miss Whiting Miss Coolidge at home the President ' s house four- thirty to six we are decorous some decorous in hats some decorous without hats any- way decorous we imbibe tea we imbibe hot chocolate we are Seniors a tea at the Presi- dent ' s house. What does the future hold for vou? Look into a crystal or register with the Personnel Bureau a job some kind of a job how in the world can I remember what courses I took Freshman year it will take all dav to fill out these blanks lost lost in the wide wide world. Christmas is Christmas is our fourth Christmas here is our last Christmas here is being wakened up when it is dark and we are so sleepy by singing Sophomores with peppermint canes. Why wake me up when all I want to do is to sleep and sleep. A train is a train is much too slow they say the bus drivers all hate Wellesley. And then presentlv it is all simply over it is all simply finished and done with no festivity two weeks till Midyears. A furrowed brow is a Senior ' s brow is a sign that a midyear is one thing too much. I could paper a house with my brain children black pages of words with footnotes for color and as for writing exams I am tired of writing exams when we were Freshmen we were scared now we are simply bored simply merelv completely bored how many days off do you get at the end? It was such fun better than Christmas vacation nothing to worry about or at least nothing that worrying could help but wait till Friday perhaps we will worry then the college is one tense hush that shivers into shouts into footsteps in the hall when the marks come. What did I ever do to deserve that A it ' s beyond me and as for getting C in Math, why I worked twice as hard at that as anything else life isn ' t just but then I One Hundred Thirty-five The brook t.nrou jh ihe golf links thought I ' d do much worse. Winter is snow is blizzards on top of snow is getting up in the morning in a cold room before sunrise it takes Spartan courage ever to get dressed at all. The fountain in Longfellow is a volcano of ice a miniature Fujiyama vrhh frosty mist drifting out of it and green lights when the sun shines I sit on the windowsill of the Library and stare at it I would much rather look at it than study. Senior Prom. Leap Year. February 29. Thev all propose to the girl in pink but after all why wear pink this time the tables are turned do you suppose the powers remembered about Leap Year when they chose the date? Be careful young lady . . . Ice cream at midnight chocolate ice cream with mint on the bottom it was so nice having you you must come again Spring Informals are soon . . . March is mud is grimy snow with soot on it why is the end of winter always so messy? but March in New Hampshire is not mud. March in New Hampshire is snow trains and snow is people skiing we spend the day falling down. If we chose to merely slide we could do as well as anyone but no we stem we telemark we christie we fall down. A snow train is a train without the primness of a train is a not purely transport- ing train is the daring young man on the flying trapeze is lots of fun. But Wellesley is quizzes and papers is rain and sudden knowledge of Van Gogh. We go to Boston w e peer at pictures of cornfields and women done in a color scheme of orange and green of the Bridge at Aries around the backs of all the other people who are peering at pictures around the backs of other people. We exclaim we are thrilled or if we are not we hope we are thrilled or if we are not we say we are for it is the thing to be thrilled what would Van Gogh think of us not much probably. March is mud is rain is new green shoots is the Opera if we are lucky we go or if we are not we do not but I am lucky I stood in line three hours between a B. U. student who read Les Miserables out loud and a Polish violin teacher and I am going to hear Tristan. And time flies on on our last year speeding away nothing is different everything is different a composition in radium changing changing. Spring vacation I ' m going to try to study for the General why mention that this is spring vacation last year I went to Bermuda. Speed speed a streamline world lectures now Major Officers wait for me wait a golf game is fun but some like tennis let ' s study outdoors crocuses daffodils the Judas tree by the Art building is purple again I mustn ' t have spring fever this year it isn ' t dignified to w alk through spring puddles on purpose. Academic Council. We are the faculty the faculty is us but they are still faculty. May Day is gone we rolled hoops could have won perhaps I could have won if I ' d wanted to get up at 5 A.M. to stand in line. Don ' t the Freshmen look young our fourth May Day it ' s us they ' re singing to that Sophomore certainly sewed up my gown with a vengeance what if I never can break the threads I ' d have to be graduated in absentium — ah — there it comes. Singing we march to hail thee Wellesley and Float Night crew songs floats lights and Tree One Hundred Thirty-seven Day gone gone. The last step singing ' 37 is on our steps we have no steps any more we are an echo W-E-L-L-E-S-L-E-Y. Time voii old gypsy why hasten away? But the General is a hushed corridor a palpitation a pile of papers books weak knees and writer ' s cramps. But at the departmental tea they said . . . The only thing to do is to be calm systematic business-like . . . W ' ho ' s afraid of the big bad wolf . . . Flunk flunk flunk did everybody flunk no class of ' 36 only honorary members could two honorary members have a banquet without a class there would be no standing on chairs at that banquet. And suddenly there is no more motion m time time is complete a composition complete without underclassmen only Seniors it is our June our June play our parents our graduation. I lived in Freeman Freshman year they ' ve torn that down. Ed like you to meet my mother. Receptions sunshine vespers B.A.s change the tassel on your cap the thing that has been has been seen now new things begin new things are to be seen but we will not forget the things that have been seen our friends the Hole-in-the- Wall Bill-the-Policeman dawn over my source theme things th at were not always good to see but are good to have seen. To Alma Mater Wellesley ' s daughters all to- gether rise and sine. One Hundred TInrty-nme m M ' Class of 1937 Marian Taylor Mary Ann Dilley . Marion E. Wolff Elizabeth R. Brodie Priscilla W. Porter Jean Patricia Kelly Mary O. Prentice Marjorie G. Quigley J Winnifred D. King Wilhelmina R. Schuerman Elizabeth Chapin . i President Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer . Executive Committee Pactotums Song Leader One Hundred Forty-three Class of 1938 Mary Bruce Taylor Katherine H. Forsyth Frances S. Skinner . Edar von L. Fleming Marie L. Hinrichs . Elizabeth M. Lincoln Catherine V. Parker Miriam N. Swaffield Barbara Badet Gwendolyn E. Wilder Virginia I. Spangler President Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer . Executive Committee . Pactotums Song Leader One Hundred Forty-jour ' f Class of 1939 Mary Elizabeth Wunderle Louise M. Bennett Dorothy C. Voss Martha A. Parkhurst . Cornelia Harrison . Helen E. Baldwin 1 Ann Wemple Carol P. Doty Priscilla Davis Nancy F. Sargent J Margaret I. Anderson I President Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer . Executive Committee Pactotums Song header One Hmidred Forty-five College Government OFFICERS M. Blake Schoenfuss, 1936 Fresident Priscilla Metcalf, 1936 Vice-President Helen A. Seeley, 1936 Chief Justice Superior Court Phyllis M. Baker, 1936 Chairman House Presidents ' Council Nancy J. Miller, 1937 Chairman o1 Village Juniors Katherine H. Forsyth, 1938 Recording Secretary Marie L. Hinrichs, 1938 Corresponding Secretary Carolvn W. Parker, 1937 Treasurer One Hundred Forty-nine College Government c COLLEGE GOVERNMENT exists to promote an ideal college life. Through opportunities given bv College Government, Welleslev students have gained remarkable liberty; and bv their realization of its importance and their carrying out of its responsibilities, thev have learned to contribute voluntarily to a better college community. College Government strives to be as much government bv the student body as by the officers whom they have elected. In keeping with this ideal, special emphasis has been placed this year on the spirit rather than on the letter of the law; and pains have been taken to increase the interest and cooperation of all Wellesley students. At the beginning of the year, a mass meeting of all College Government officers. House Presidents, and ' iilage Juniors, was held, to explain the regulations and their interpretation, and to encourage suggestions and constructive criticism. Throughout the year, the officers have kept to the policv of welcoming contributions of ideas, criticisms, and comments from all College Government members — that is, all members of the student body. Freshmen teas in the Quadrangle have been started, to form a binding link between the Freshmen off campus and on campus. A Ground Com- mittee , with a representative in each house, has gone far toward saving the grass. And this year has seen the reduction of the Student Activity Fee! The College Government officers of 1936 firmly believe that College Government is an instrument through which all members of the College may work for the im- provement and the happiness of their community. They lay down their robes of office, content in the conviction that cooperation toward its ideals makes for a success- ful life together and a serene Wellesley. Cue Hundred Fifty Su perior Court FACULTY MEMBERS Miss Ellen F. Pendleton Miss Marv C. Bliss Miss Mary A. Griggs Miss Lilian H. Lincoln STUDENT MEMBERS Helen A. Seeley, 1936, Chief justice Elizabeth L. Anderson, 1936 Marjorie G. Quigley, 1937 Catherine V. Parker, 1938 Camilla G. Davis, 1939 Marion Blake Schoenfuss, 1936, ex-officio Priscilla Metcalf, 1936, ex-officio Phyllis M. Baker, 1936, ex-officio Nancy Jane Miller, 1937, ex-officio One Hundred Fifty-one Senate Miss Barnette Miller Miss Laetitia M. Snow FACULTY MEMBERS Miss Grace E. Hawk Mrs. Martha H. Wheelwright Miss Ellen F. Pendleton STUDENT MEMBERS Marion Blake Schoenfuss, 1936, Chairmati Priscilla Metcalf, 1936 Helen A. Seeley, 1936 Phyllis M. Baker, 1936 Nancy Jane Miller, 1937 Carolyn V. Parker, 1937 Katherine H. Forsyth, 1938 Marie-Luise Hinrichs, 1938 Margaret I. Anderson, 1939 Vil Idge Juni lors Nancy Jane Miller, 1937, Chairman Marion E. Wolff, 1937 . Elizabeth N. Hitchcock, 1937 Nancy C. Uebelmesser, 1937 Hope A. Buckner, 1937 Barbara M. Hyde, 1937 Ann Louise Edwards, 1937 Margaret McAdam, 1937 J. Lee Wilson, 1937 Mary A. Frayer, 1937 Jane C. Dahl, 1937 Nancy J. Miller, 1937 - Marjorie G. Quigley, 1937 Alice Lee Massey, 1937 Mary Ann Dilley, 1937 Jean P. Kelly, 1937 Dorothy J. Pickett, 1937 Beebe Caxenove Doiver Eliot Elms Homestead Little Noanett . Norumbega Pomeroy Washington Non-Residents Transfers . Alternates One Hundred Fifty-twi House Presidents Counci PhvUis M. Baker, 1936, Chairman Dorothy B. Andrews, 1937 . Gwendolyn Pratt, 1936 Susan M. Peterson, 1936 Dorothea E. Lakson, 1936 Elizabeth C. Fairbanks, 1936 Frederica C. Billard, 1936 . Alma de F. Warner, 1936 Louise W. Yawger, 1936 Phyllis M. Baker, 1936 Mar|orie H. Applegate, 1936 Mary Coverdale, 1936 . Estelle V. Edelmann, 1936 . Beebe Caxenove Claflin Crawford Aiunger Norumbega Olive Davis Pomeroy Severance Shafer Stone Tower Court One Hundred Fifty-three STUDENT ENTERTAINMENTS COMMITTEE Priscilla Metcalf, 1936, Chairman Mary O. Luqueer, 1937 Katherine H. Forsyth, 1938, ex-ojficio FACULTY MEMBERS Miss Charlotte G. MacEwan Dr. Mary F. DcKruif Miss Sally Landers, ex-offido FIRE CHIEF Helen Whiting, 1936 CHAIRMAN CURRICULUM COMMITTEE Eleanor N. Olin, 1936 CHAIRMAN DANCE COMMITTEE Margaret L. Gould, 1936 CHAIRMAN ELECTIONS COMMITTEE Mary O. Prentice, 1937 CHAIRMAN POSTER COMMITTEE Margaret Gunn, 1936 GENERAL SECRETARY Sally Landers One Hundred Fifty-foi r Christian Association OFFICERS Eleanor A. DeVilbiss, 1936 Nancy Mellor, 1936 Margaret McAdam, 1937 Frances W. McGarry, 1937 . Miriam N. Swaffield, 1938 . A. Eunice Avery, 1936 . H. Jean Davenport, 1936 Elizabeth Scarritt, 1936 Edith A. Quinlan, 1936 Wynfred V. Fox, 1936 Mary L. Fletcher, 1938 Ruth E. Keown, 1936 . Mrs. Lucy W. Killough Mr. Joseph G. Haroutunian Miss Stella F. Brewster Cb President Vke-Presuient Junior Vice-President Secretary Treasurer an, Commtmity Service Chairman, Conference Chairman, Religious Council Chairman, Social Service Chairman, Student Industrial Chairman, Student Volunteer Chairman, World Felloivship Facility }Aemhers General Secretary One Hundred Fifty-five The Christian Association J. T is the purpose of the Christian Association to provide, for the members of the student body, a mode of expression for social ideals of service and fellowship; and to present them with an opportunity for the discussion of religious thought and problems. As regards the work within the College itself, the fellowship of Freshman week With Its Ask Mes, C. A. tea, and Big Sisters, has been continued throughout the vear by means of the Thursday teas where members of all classes are privileged to meet and hear talks by people prominent in the fields of Industry, Education, Social Service, and Missionary work, as well as to join in discussions by members of our own faculty and student body. The Community Service Committee provides for tutoring and supplying with books members of the College domestic staff; while at Christmas time, the organization sponsors the dressing of dolls and the making of scrapbooks to be sent to various charitable institutions. The spiritual life of ' ellesley is enriched by the morning chapel services and the Sunday night vespers which are held informally in the society houses. At Christmas time the Nativity Play is given — this year particularly effective as a medieval pageant. Christian Association also promotes a Religious Forum, and encourages groups to discuss problems vital in the religion of the day. As regards its activities off-campus , particular effort has been made this year to place volunteers in congenial work in Natick and in the hospitals and agencies of Boston. The Conference Committee has arranged for a Wcllesley delegation to con- ferences such as those at Northheld and at Silver Bay, where the problems of present day living are discussed. Of especial interest this year is the delegation sent by the World Fellowship Committee to the Quadrennial Conference of Student Volunteers, held at Christmas time in Indianapolis. Thus through many and varied activities, Christian Association is fulh ' ling its expressed purpose, We unite in the desire to realize a full and creative life through a growing knowledge of God. We determine to have a part in making this life possible for all people. In this task we seek to understand the ideals of Jesus and to follow them . One Hundred Fifty-six Wellesley Students Aid Society, Inc. Abbie L. Paige, 53-55 Greenough Street, Brooklme President Alice Campbell Wilson (Mrs. Fred A.), Valley Road, Nahant Vice-President Margaret Haddock Wing (Mrs. Forrest B.), Shirley Centre Secretary Ruby Willis, ' alnut Hill School, Natick Treasurer Marv Crane Cameron (Mrs. Gordon W.), 46 Collins Road, Waban Auditor Mary Cross Ewing (Mrs. G. Justice) Director Mildred Hunter Brown (Mrs. George E.) Director Sophie Tillinghast Crolius (Mrs. William C.) ... Director Carolyn James Russell (Mrs. Gardner W.) Director Marie W. Fitch (Mrs. Hugh W.) . . . . , , Office Secretary Laura C. Barnard Ojfce Secretary STUDENT COMMITTEE Jane H. Decker, 1936, Chairman Frances W. McGarrv, 1937 Mary L. Chandler, 1937 Elizabeth M. Lincoln, 1938 Service Fund Committee Miss Essie M. V. Decker Frances W. McGarrv, 1937 Treasurer Chief Canvasser MEMBERS OF THE CABINET Miss Marion E. Stark Marguerite Goodrich, 1936 Polly A. Smith, 1938 . Miss Agnes A. Abbot Miss Vireinia Onderdonk o Norma S. Stern, 1937 . Eunice Usher, 1937 Faculty Chairman Student Chairman Secretary Chairman, Education Committee Chairman, World Service Committee Director of Publicity Business Manager One Hundred Fifty-seven Barnswdllows Association Marian C. Chapman, 1936 President Janet E. Prate, 1937 Vice-Presideiit Virginia I. Spangler, 1938 Secretary CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Berenice Libman, 1935 . Jean E. Mailey, 1937 Anita M. Wilson, 1935 Alice H. Burton, 1937 . Sara R. Stewart, 1935 Rosemond O ' Reilly, 1935 E. Anne Jennings, 1935 Muriel Millar, 1935 Drama Costumes Design periinental Plays Lighting . Make Up Properties Scenery One Hundred Fifty-sight Barnswdllows Association BUSINESS BOARD Elizabeth K. Williamson, 1936 Mary L. Chandler, 1937 Business M.anager Treasurer CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Patty Dyar, 1938 Julia Brown, 1936 Publicity Service One Hundred Fifty-nine THE LAND OF HEART ' S DESIRE 1936 Barn Dance E jVENIN ' , class of ' 36, and welcome ro the countrv ' s most elegant and high-falutin Barn. This night the capers on these creakin ' boards, all lit up with a sight o ' new-fangled lanterns, is markin ' for you the beginnin ' o ' the world ' s prize Barn Dance, calculated to last four years. Listen for the figures! Number one — Barn Reception — The Birthday of the Infanta, by Oscar Wilde — a hunchback, a gay young maid, a looking glass. This is the Wellesley Barn rcceivin ' the class of ' 36. ' 36 will be on those boards ' fore long. Fall Informals — an intricate figure if ever I saw one, folks, three combinations in one performance — The Lord ' s Prayer by Frangois Coppee, Yeats ' The Land of Heart s Desire, and A Seat in the Park by Sir Arthur Pinero. Can ' t say the class of ' 36 is slow on the uptake. Look at Ellen Pugh, Mary Abbie Hollands, and Caroline Wilson in The Lord ' s Prayer; and there ' re Fran Emery and Mary Louise Beebe doin ' their bit for A Seat in the Park; with Jill Stern followin ' through in The Land o Heart s Desire. You want to watch right spry for these youngsters, folks; it looks as though they ' re goin ' far. One Hundred Sixty PRINCESS IDA Fall Formals — choose your partners; with the Harvard Dramatic Club to pick from, and the Cherry Orchard to be danced. Forward all, and a click o ' the boots. ' 36 is watchin ' , this round. Ladies change! Spring Informals — a new figure, Yeats ' Deirdre, led an ' directed by Berenice Libman, and danced by Marion Chapman, Mary Louise Beebe, Beatrice Lamb, Jean Brownell, Jane Burgess, Rachel Brin, Eleanor Christie, Emilie Dreyfus, Fran Emery, and Caroline Wilson. A bit o ' the Irish steppin ' out in this old Barn; ' 36 is nimble on its toes already — watch them step, keepin ' time right along beside Maeterlink ' s Interior and The Anniversary by Chekhov. One more figure before the first round ' s done — The Importance of BeingEarnest, -with Caroline Wilson out in front; a June play with ' 36 dancin ' as well as any. Time out to catch your breath! The next round ' ll be better yet! Forward all! The second round! Strike up, fiddler, and they ' re off again, with The Princess Marries the Page. Caroline Wilson stands by on guard; courtly music, this, and an old time step — puts me in mind o ' the Sir Roger de Coverley and the towers and castles and kings Eve heard tell on. Look at those dancers go! Form three circles for the next step; lively now, an ' your wits about you. A new formation, this — The Office, by Elizabeth Smith ' 34, with Caroline Wilson again at the One Hundred Sixty-one THE SILVER HILT switchboard; and The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife, with Nancy Walker trippin ' the light fantastic; and Henny Davidson in ' Op o ' Me Thumb dancin ' as well as you could wish for. Seems to me as each round ' s better than the last. All out on the boards for Fall Formals; last call for Fall Formals! And look at them come — dream characters, pedestrians, soldiers, engineers, priests, even to unem- bodied voices — ' 36 is there, Bunny Libman, Miggy Knapp, Henny Davidson, Peggy Collingwood, Betty Williamson, Polly Clough, Naneen Rebori, Helen Wile, Do Boorn, Bunny Carroll, Mary Welsh, and Ruth Russell — followin ' out their proper steps in The Dragon ' s Teeth. An ' now up on your toes, folks; spry and merry does it, with the gayest figure o ' them all a ' comin ' — Holiday, with Emilie Dreyfus sparklm ' in it, purty as a picture. Strike up the music! Some Spring Informals, this! The fifth and last, the fifth and last figure of the round, folks; Dear Brutus by Barrie, with Nancy Walker as Lady Caroline holdin ' up the reputation o ' the class; an ' noble she does it, too. A mighty fine step, this, full o ' enchantments; there ' s strange shadows lurkin ' in the corners o ' the Barn, an ' strange stars bright outside the open door. Fiddler, let them catch a breath o ' air, an ' rest a spell. All in place for the third round; keep time to the music, and forward all. A morris One Hundred Sixty-two THE FARAWAY PRINCESS dance, this — The Flight of the Queen, directed by Marion Chapman (thev know their steps); and danced by Caroline Wilson and Fran Emery. New dancers are comin ' in; but ' 36 is seasoned now, and watch them go — so light on their toes, thev look to be fair flying, like a swarm o ' bees in summer time. Fall Informals adds to the numbers — Ellen Pugh, as the American, and Nancy Walker, as the waiter, in The Little Mini — fancy steps, these, and needin ' skill to dance well. Left! right! left! Turn a screw and they march into the dance — robots — they ' re new in this Barn, new as the smokestacks and chromium they bring with ' em, new as R. U . R. — but watch ' em dance! Left! right! and ' 36 among ' em, keepin ' time with the best, Eleanor Olin and Grace Potter the finest robots I ever did see. Forward all, for the Ladies ' Chain — plenty o ' dancers for the Ladies ' Chain, with a whole Female Seminary to pick from, an ' Princess Ida at the head. No need for the fiddler, now; there ' s the whole choir makin ' music, and Mr. Haroutunian steppin ' out — see him step! All Wellesley dancin ' , singing ' — a rollickin ' good time for all — Princess Ida! An ' again to the end o ' the third round — the evenin ' s slippin ' awav — dance all the harder for the lessenin ' time! Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary — a gay step, this, an ' a One Hundred Sixty-three DOLL ' S HOUSE speedy one, with Mary Welsh keepin ' time for ' 36. Faster, faster — they ' ll be needin ' a bit o ' quiet when this round ' s done. Last round for ' 36! With Marion Chapman and Betty Williamson leadin ' on the dance, and the first figures formin ' quick an ' proper. Let ' er go! An ' we watch Ellen Pugh, as Count Scarlet, and Bunny Libman, as Maestro Conrad Superpolingeriamus, and Martha Nichols, as a Lady in Waiting, carry on for ' 36 in the first figure, Molnar ' s The Silver Hilt — a magical step, this, and mighty difficult to dance. The second figure — all out on the boards — three circles again, an ' speedy at it! The Faratvay Princess, Kiders to the Sea, Bird in Hand — with Emilie Dreyfus, Berenice Libman, and Nancy Walker directin ' (and a good job they make of it, too); an ' Eleanor Trezevant in The Faratvay Princess, Doris Gilbert as Cathleen in Riders to the Sea, and Caroline Wilson as the storming father in Bird in Hand keepin ' time for ' 36. Three powerful fine figures in one formation; an ' the dancin ' s all the Barn could wish for, the best ever, dancin ' we ' ll not be forgettin ' . Final figure for ' 36! Eleanor Olin, as Nora in Ibsen ' s Doll ' s House, leads out the dance — and what a dance it is — the best stepo ' the evening ' ; ' 36 has done itself proud. One Hundred Sixty-jour DOLLS HOUSE A final flourish o ' the fiddle. The Barn dance is over for ' 36 — done, but in no manner o ' means forgot. It was as pretty steppin ' as ever I did sec. One Hundred Sixty-five Wellesley College News EDITORIAL BOARD Jean Brownell, 1936 Dorothy V. Gorrell, 1936 Sylvia Bieber, 1936 Editor-in-Chief M.anaging Editor News Editor Associate Editors Dorothy Bidwell, 1936 Olga V. Edmond, 1936 Miriam R. Mottsman, 1936 Assistant Editors Mary Louise Bartlett, 1937 Lucrece W. Hudgins, 1937 Elizabeth P. Sickler, 1937 Virginia I. Cocalis, 1937 Elizabeth L. Robinson, 1937 Norma Uttal, 1937 One Hundred Sixty-six Managing Editor Busmess Manager Wellesley College News Maude Fannin, 1938 Elaine M. Graf, 1938 Faith Nelson, 1938 Reporters Harriet M. Fleisher, 1938 Frances E. Nearing, 1938 J. Sidney Rectanus, 1938 Assistant Reporters Priscilla Goodwin, 1938 Dons Herold, 1939 Elizabeth Lobeck, 1938 Alta Maloney, 1939 Miriam Meyer, 1939 Musk Critic Art Critic Jane S. Burgess, 1936 Elizabeth M. Smith, 1937 BUSINESS BOARD Georgia K. Thomson, 1936 Eleanor I. Lentz, 1936 Wynfred V. Fox, 1936 Miriam Barwood, 1937 Ruth Frankel, 1938 Marjorie Sottmann, 1938 Business Maiiager Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Business Editors Barbara Bredin, 1937 Kathryn Ruff, 1936 Norma Stern, 1937 One Hundred Sixty-seven The News and the News Mascot The pup Blinks a little winkily Winks a little blinkily Sighs a little thinkily And almost snores . . . What ' s up He asks a little hazily Stretching a little lazily . . . Why here ' s the ed. — and the v.g.r. The d.d.s. — and our roving star . . . And all the little cubs — I swear The whole darned news board ' s there . . . What ' s up? And who ' s that man w. the silly box Making funny motions at the ed.? And pulling curtains on his head? The camerman? Ho hum! the pup retorts With a few bass snorts Now ' s the time to get a nap Taking picture ' s such a snap . . . One Hundred Sixty-eight Wellesley Athletic Association Margaret L. Butsch, 1936 Sara R, Stewart, 1936 Mary E. Redman, 1937 Eleanor H. Crosby, 1937 . Mary P. Ganoe, 1938 Gwendolyn E. Wilder, 1938 OFFICERS President First Vice-President and Chairman of Outing Club Second Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Citstodian HEADS OF SPORTS Marguerite F. Crolius, 1937 Ruth M. Fisher, 1937 Margaret Kilbon, 1936 Outdo Caroline N. Neill, 1936 . Alice-Ann Kessler, 1937 Ruth M, Seaman, 1936 Harriet T. Qua, 1936 Archery Baseball ■ Basketball Creiv Dancing . Golf Hockey One Hundred Sixty-nine E. Anne Jennings, 193S Indoor Basketball Edna H. Dempewolff, 1936 Indoor Activities Barbara E. Phinney, 1937 Lacrosse Margaret Kohn, 1936 Hiding Florence F. Whitehead, 1936 . Tennis F. Mary Alden, 1937 . Volleyball Wellesley Athletic Association J- HE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION has taken strides ahead in spirit and program in our time; and ' 36 is modestly proud of its achievements. We have a grand hockey team. Our basketball demons — including Wowie Whitehead, Peggy Kilburn, and Anne Jennings — have never been defeated. We always play on held day, and have won a majority of games. Lake Waban fascinates us too, but with the record of our second crew , sophomore and junior years, our scoring ends. Inter- house races our senior year prove Munger-Norumbega crewites supreme, with ninety- three out of a possible score of a hu ndred. Our latest swimming-pool carnival, with its wave-edged dance tank , and irresistible attractions — Have your fortune told — ten cents, one dime! See the baby pictures of the faculty — for only a dime! — went over big . Crowds were delighted by the A. A. — Major Officers (Harvard — Princeton) football game, on fall field day. Twenty-five girls went to Mount Holyoke Play Day, and joined in the fun with Wheaton and Holyoke. In more ways than one, Wellesley athletes are no longer stay-at-homes. Our woodsman ' s cabin in Ashland, sports, in the hands of the Outing Club, grand new improvements. And we journey afield, up Monadnock, through the Blue Hills, down the river in canoes. Individually, we have just as many reasons to be proud of ourselves. Wowie Whitehead won the singles tennis tournament last fall. Close at her heels were Peggy Steiner and Steeple Chase. Peggy Kohn and Eleanor Knight grace our riding lists. Joan Wilkinson pierces the bull ' s eye in archery. Neill, stroke, Brownell, Burnes, Miller, and Yawger do great things with oars. Dempy and Ginny Saff ord excel in indoor gym; and Peggy Kilburn, they sav, is Olympic material in fencing. Last year we swelled with pride when Stewie won a junior blazer, and have watched Butsch, Ginny Safford, and Anne Jennings come forth in theirs this fall. A. A. ' s policies have changed a little, in the past year. The indoor gym meet is now a demonstration. Fencing has been added to our list of sports. Crew, which, although it was informal in the fall, drew disastrous numbers of people away from hockey, no longer has interclass races. In turn, inter-house races were held this year, in which only those who took no other sport might row. We are out to have more good times — for example. Riding Club under Mary Yost adds scavenger hunts and an uproarious circus to its program. And we note with pleasure that field day this fall was the most successful Miss Elliott has ever seen. All in all we feel we are, and have been, an up-and-coming class on field and lake and mountain trail. One Hundred Seventy Wellesfey Outmq Club Fran Jones Haih Wmaor Gab LafUmmc Mar; L i ' j , Bcfe rhoTOgooi ITIeonor Giile | ie CaatKil ■M hf Winter S fi Canoeing Xvd WdllC Miss Wells Idni Dembewo jJ Befty5mifl) 5ard Sfcwari Mary osi Miss Clarke Advisor Sec rhr Tf ojur Stvijntnino Head if ing A yijnr B r e a K a s at ine Ca t r VO.C. Cabm Adirondack Outing Club o, UTING CLUB belongs to all who enjoy activities out of doors, — to seasoned veteran and innocent novice alike. Its purpose is to give evervone an opportunity for outdoor sports and trips, in the spirit of good fellowship peculiar to organizations of its kind. A week in the Marcy-Maclntyre region of the Adirondacks with representatives from Outing Clubs of many other colleges was an adventurous beginning for the vear. The Wellesley group camped in stvle in Calamity Lean-to (which did not get its name from them), and ventured forth for the excursions planned each day, and for the camp fire and singing each evening. With such a start, the year ' s program of trips from Wellesley was carried on enthusiasticallv, with breakfast hikes and bicycle trips and canoe trips down the Charles to Cathedral Pines. The first long trip took place on October 13 with the top of Mount Monadnock as the goal; and was followed the next week by an excursion to the Blue Hills, when the group set out imbedded in hay in a college truck and spent the day roaming about the hills to the heart ' s content. Exploration hikes, a new idea, added a thrill of uncertainty to some of the shorter trips. A Barn dance introduced the W. O. C. to Freshmen and Transfers. Astonishing potato puppets illustrated the activities of the Club, and old time dances went on to the tunes of a fiddle and a piano, amid a harvest setting of corn stalks. The W. O. C. cabin, near Ashland, was the objective of many trips. A roaring fire in the outdoor fireplace, hand made with that personal touch, was the at home signal on more than one week-end. Thanksgiving Day was spent there, too, with a genuine Thanksgiving dinner in a back-to-the-Pilgrims-style, although steak was sub- stituted for wild turkey. Building a lean-to is the present project, so that larger groups may stay overnight. Riding Club sponsors one of the most popular of outdoor sports. During the year there were moonlight rides and early morning rides, the riders often meeting the hikers for breakfast. The big event in the fall was the Horse Show, while Riding Circus came appropriately in the spring, recalling shades of Barnum and Bailev. But there was first the winter, when the winds were chill and snow covered the campus. Outing Club got out the skis and snowshoes, and at the Snow Carnival skiing technique was a major feature. Skaters had their chance at the Ice Carnival, while sleigh rides provided fun for the less energetic. Snow Train trips and week-ends in New Hampshire made the winter season one of particular enjoyment. Be it winter, fall, or spring. Outing Club offers sports for all, and for all a jolly good time. One Hundred Seventy-two 5cra,Tnble up MonadTiock 5nov ira.m weckcncL m New Hamtshire k, he ' . On ihc oki trail Ad. iron clacks WO.C. Pdck lior c ' ' ■■ ' Archery Marguerite Crolius Head of Sport VARSITY TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Marguerite Crolius, 1937 Frances Martin, 1937 June Tienken, 1937 Beatrice Weaver, 1937 1936 CLASS TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Margaret Butsch Anne Jennings One Hundred Seventy-jour Margaret Kilbon Basketball Head of Sport Margaret Butsch, 1936 Martha Curtiss, 1936 Anne Jennings, 1936 VARSITY TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Margaret Kilbon, 1936 Florence Whitehead, 1936 Gwendolyn Wilder, 1938 SUBSTITUTES Virginia Childs, 1936 Marion Schoenfuss, 1936 1936 CLAS S TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Margaret Butsch Anne Jennings Virginia Childs Martha Curtiss Margaret Kilbon Florence Whitehead SUBSTITUTES Virginia Catherine Marion Schoenfuss Selma Wiener One Yiundred Seventy-five c rew Caroline Neill Head of Sport VARSITY CREW, SPRING OF 1935 Mildred Burnes, 1936 Mary Henderson, 1935 Lucille Lesch, 1937 Elaine Meakins, 1935 Caroline Neill, 1936 Lena Ready, 1935 Virginia Veeder, 1935 Mildred Waterhouse, 1935 Louise Yawger, 1936 1936 CREW, SPRING OF 1935 Jean Brownell Mildred Burnes Dorothy Chinnock Estelle Edelmann Margaret Huggins Muriel Millar Caroline Neill Harriett Olzendam Louise Yawger One Hundred Seventy-six D dncing Alice-Ann Kessler Head of Sport ORCHESIS Alice-Ann Kessler, 1937 Mary Ann Dilley, 1937 Ruby Murdock, 1937 Beulah Levin, 1937 Wilhelmina Schucrman, 1937 JUNIOR DANCE GROUP Barbara Badet, 1938 Alice K. Baker, 1937 Alice Burton, 1937 Gertrude Clarke, 1936 Mary Crowley, G. Hyg. Celena Dean, 1938 Lucille Lesch, 1937 Harriet Frank, 1937 Arvilla Nolan, G. Hyg. Martha Parkhurst, 1939 Elizabeth Parsons, 1939 Lucretia Pearson, 1937 Leonore Perlstein, 1938 Mary Redman, 1937 Virginia Safford, 1936 Norma Stern, 1937 07ie Hundred Seventy-seven F encing Muriel Millar Head of Sport Frederica Billard, 1936 Margaret Kilbon, 1936 Gabrielle Laflamme, 1937 Muncl Millar, 1936 Marion Wolff, 1937 One Hundred Seventy-eight Golf Ruth Seaman Head of Sport Marjorie Andres, 1936 Phyllis Hanson, 1936 Ruth Seaman, 1935 Elizabeth Thatcher, 1936 1936 CLASS TEAM, FALL OF 1934 Jane Burgess Lucille Dobson Margorie Leo Ruth Seaman SUBSTITUTES Phyllis Baker Eleanor DeVilbiss One Hundred Seventy-nine Harriet T. Qua Hockey Head of Sport ' ARSITY TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Mary Louise Bass, 1937 Frederica Billard, 1936 Edna DempewolfF, 1936 Dora Walton, 1938 Marion Emlen, 1939 Marie-Luise Hinrichs, 1938 Betty Lincoln, 1938 Nancy Jane Miller, 1937 Marjory Morgan, 1938 Helen Park, 1939 Caroline Strater, 1938 SUBSTITUTES Kathcrine Sloss, 1937 Betty Smith, 1937 Eunice Usher, 1937 Marion Wolff, 1937 Eunice Avery Frederica Billard Julia Brown Mary Yost Margaret Butsch 1936 CLASS TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Edna Dempewolff Katherine Mcnton Lena Everett Harriet Qua Margaret Huggins (Captain ' ) Barbara Rodman Virginia Saftord SUBSTITUTES Irene Gotthelf Oi7e Hundred Eighty ndoor Activities Edna Dempewolff Head of Sport Margaret Butsch, 1936 Edna DempewolfF, 1936 Virginia SafFord, 1936 One Hundred Eighty-one L dcrosse Barbara Phinney Head of Sport Margaret Butsch, 1936 Edna Dempewolff, 1936 Mane-Luise Hinrichs, 1938 Anne Jennings, 1936 Betty Lincoln, 1938 Barbara Phinnev, 1937 Virginia Safford, 1936 Betty Smith, 1937 Caroline Strater, 1938 Sara Stewart, 1936 Elizabeth Wurst, 1938 Mary Yost, 1936 One hundred Eighty-tivo Rid ing Margaret Kohn Head of Sport VARSITY TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Eleanor Knight, 1936 Joyce Knoedler, 1938 Margaret Kohn, 1936 Frances Nearing, 1938 SUBSTITUTE Helen Tarns, 1939 1936 CLASS TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Elizabeth Glidden Janet Ingersoll Eleanor Knight Margaret Kohn One Hundred Eighty-three Tennis Florence Whitehead Head of Sport VARSITY TEAM, SPRING OF 1935 Helen Chase, 1936 Winnifred King, 1937 Margaret Lancaster, 1935 Margaret Mellor, 1935 Mary Redman, 1937 Margaret Steiner, 1936 Marian Taylor, 1937 Florence Whitehead, 1936 SUBSTITUTES Nancy Ellen, 1935 Olga Tomec, 1935 Mary Van Loan, 1935 1936 CLASS TEAM, SPRING OF 1935 Helen Chase Mary Delmarsh Wynfred Fox Margaret Kilbon Marion Schoenfuss Margaret Steiner Mary Thompson Florence Whitehead SUBSTITUTES Margaret Butsch Louise Schlosberg One Hundred Eighty-four Volley Ball F. Marv Alden Head of Sport VARSITY TEAM, FALL OF 1935 Rurh Adams, 1939 Mary Alden, 1937 Dorothy Gardner, 1938 Barbara Hale, 1939 Charlotte Paul, 1937 Helen Pfeifer, 1937 Ann Wilson, 1939 Lillian Youns;, 1937 SUBSTITUTES Catherine Hascall, 1938 Helen Prentice, 1938 Pollv Smith, 1938 One Hi ndred Eighty-fiv T Float Nisht M -OTHER GOOSE is the subject chosen for Float Night this year, a whimsical theme wiiich will offer possibilities for charming floats. Calm waters and a starry sky should form a quiet background for Little Miss Muffet ' s adventures with the spider, or Jack and Jill ' s tumble, or Peter Pumpkin-Eater and his elusive wife. Float Night, to us, means a week of sawing and hammering and painting in Dower loft, of sewing costumes that tvill not fit, and repainting landscapes that will look like anything in the world but what they are meant to look like. It means days of scanning the sky for a possible cloud, of hoping that the wind will not blow. And it means a sudden enchantment that comes on, with the dusk, when the lighted floats move gracefully across the lake, and the watchers on the shore wait silently, listening to the music whose rhythm seems to give the pageant life. Carolme Neill, 1936 . Betty Nipps, 1936 Margaret Breen, 1938 . Edith Karasick, 1937 . Ruth Winsor, 1937 Frances Nearing, 1938 Margaret E. Miller, 1938 Alice Carnnck, 1937 . Mariatta Tower, 1937 Katherine Sloss, 1937 . Margaret Strasmer, 1937 Kathleen Kiley, 1938 . Mary Louise Bass, 1937 Chairman of Float Night Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Chairman of Fageant Chairman of Grounds Chairman of Publicity Chairman of Decoration Chairman of Signals Chairman of Food . Chairman of Fighting Chairman of Music Chairman of Programs Chairman of Paddlers One Hundred Fighty-sev Tree Day ' r J. REE DAY in 1936 carries on the custom of the past three vears in presenting a pageant on the green, without the aid of a stage. A romantic episode in Spanish History, the search of Ponce de Leon for the Fountain of Youth, is the subject. In the year 1514, Ponce de Leon comes to the court of Charles, the boy king of Spain, to ask a grant to explore a new land to the west. He has heard that on the island of Bimini there is a miraculous fountain which has the power of imparting eternal youth. Not only does Ponce wish to add this land to the Spanish Empire, but also he longs to regain his own youth, that he may win the love of his beautiful young ward. An entertainment is presented for the king, then Ponce accepts the royal grant and departs on his journev. After long weeks of searching, he lands on a pleasant tropical shore and there plants the banner of Castile and Leon. It is Eastertide, the season of flowers, so he names the place Florida. As they are celebrating their dis- covery, Indian warriors approach, planning an attack, but seeing that they are out- numbered, make peace with the white invaders. The Indian women admit that their moon goddess knows of the mysterious fountain, and they are persuaded to invoke her aid, by bribes of beads and cloth. As the Spaniards sleep upon the shore, the silver Moonbeams, wrapped in morning clouds, come to tell of their Fountain of physical youth. Just as Ponce awake ns, the Spirits depart, but an even greater spirit then appears, one who is the embodiment of the Youthful Mind, perosnilied by the Tree Day Mistress, who summons him on forever to greater love and service. COMMITTEES Eleanor Smith, 1936 Alice-Ann Kessler, 1937 Elizabeth Smith, 1937 Beatrice Short, 1936 Barbara Babcock, 1937 Ruth Collins, 1937 Jean Davenport, 1936 Carol Sleicher, 1936 Mary Ann Dilley, 1937 Mary Lee, 1936 Anita Wilson, 1936 Ruth Harris, 1936 Elizabeth Fetzer, 1937 Helen Wigglesworth, 1938 Chairman Dancing Costumes Music Properties Seiving Programs General Arrangements Finance Schedules Cover Design Plans One Hundred Eighty-eight ■ Elizabeth Brazee, Aide Jane Decker, Aide Marian Chapman, Tree Day Mistre. Nancy Hine, y Eleanor Smith, Aide One Hundred Eighty-nine s o c I E T I E S M U S I C L E T T E R S Society Activities 1934-5 and 1935-6 AGORA 1934-5- Tableaux Showing Labor Conditions in the United States. 1935-6: The Veil; Three Pictures from Ohara Goko, a Noh Libretto by Seami, (1363- 1444), Transhued and Adapted by Frank A. Lombard. Tempatton; The Mibu Version of Dojoji, a Pantomimic Kyogen. ALPHA KAPPA CHI 1934-5: The Alcestis of Euripides. 1935-6: The Iphigenia in Aulis of Euripides. PHI SIGMA 1934-5: Nativity Play. 1935-6: Murder in the Cathedral by T. S. Eliot. SHAKESPEARE 1934-5: The Merchant of Venice. 1935-6: The Winter ' s Tale; an Elizabethan Production. T AU ZETA EPSILON 1934-5: Studio Reception; Italian Painting of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries. 1935-6: Studio Reception; A Study of Paintings, the Originals of Which Are in the Vicinity of Boston. ZETA ALPHA 1934-5: Hay Fever, by Noel Coward. 1935-6: The Dover Kiad, by A. A. Milne. One Hundred Ninety-three Barbara A. Caton, 1936 E. Robv Leighton, 1936 Martha C. Williams, 1936 Alison Thorogood, 1936 Janet McKinney, 1936 Mary E. Thompson, 1936 PrisciUa Donnell, 1936 Agora OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Central Committee Me??iber Housekeeper Purveyor IN FACULTATE Alice H. Armstrong Stella F. Brewster Mary L. Coolidge Mrs. George J. Ewing Helen S. French Jessamine R. Goerner Celia H. Hersey Florence Jackson Frances L. Knapp Mary J. Lanier Ruth H. Lindsay Julia S. Orvis Alice M. Ottley Eleanor Phillips Marion D. Russell Seal Thompson Barbara G. Trask Lilla Weed Judith B. Williams Katherine Williams One Hundred Ninety-four HONORARY MEMBERS Mr. and Mrs. Phillips Bradley Edwin A. Cottrell Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Greene Edna F. Heidbreder Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Proctor Alice V. Waite 1936 Leah-Althea Andrews Jane Beyer Margaret Butsch Barbara Caton Dorothy Chinnock Anne Covle Edna DempewolfF Priscilla Donnell Lena Everett Jane Eraser Mive-ko Hirooka Anne Jennings Robv Leigh ton Janet McKmney Katherine Menton Harriet Olzendam Constance Pike Barbara Rodman Ruth Russell Ottilie Stoehr Mary Thompson Alison Thorogood Martha Williams Alice Carnrick Ruth Collins Helene Gerber Elizabeth Gregg 1937 Betty van Roosen Alice-Ann Kessler Lucretia Pearson Elizabeth Robinson Mariatta Tower One Hundred Ninety-five Alpha Kdppd Chi OFFICERS Jane C. Rauch, 1936 . . ■ President Nancy Walker, 1936 Vice-President Margaret A. Sreiner, 1936 Secretary Elma P. Van Artsdalen, 1936 . Treasurer Martha J. Curtiss, 1936 Custodian Marjorie R. Andres, 1936 Chef Nancy Mellor, 1936 Central Committee Member IN FACULTATE Mary L. Austin Katharine C. Balderston Mrs. E. E. Curtis Dorothy W. Dennis Caroline R. Fletcher Joseph G. Haroutunian Mrs. Harriet B. Hawes Antoinette Metcalf Agnes F. Perkins Doris E. Rich Florence Rislev Helen V. Sleeper One Hundred Ninety-six HONORARY MEMBERS Margaret Anglin Baker Mrs. Stella Balderston Mrs. Clarence G. Hamilton 1936 Marjone R. Andres Margaret B. Bailey Mary Louise Beebe Dorothy Bidwell Phyllis M. Bieberbach Julia B. Brown Katherine E. Buchanan Martha J. Curtiss Janet L. Eigenbrot Ellen S. Garber Molly J. Geismer Dorothy V. Gorrell Ruth Harris Elizabeth D. Hays Nancv Mellor D. Marietta Morehouse Rosemond O ' Reilly Jane C. Rauch Margaret A. Steiner Margaretta Traver Elma P. Van Artsdalen Nancv Walker E. Miriam Barwood Eleanor F. Clark Lillian A. Francis Theda M. Goodman 1937 Mary N. Murray Janet E. Pratt Elizabeth P. Sickler Eunice Usher One Hundred Ninety-seven Phi Si gmd OFFICERS Christine Diener, 1936 Jean Mills, 1936 . Elizabeth Simmons, 1936 Frances Emery, 1936 Miriam MacMurray, 1936 Eleanor Gillespie, 1936 Louise Yawger, 1936 . President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Head of Work Housekeeper Central Committee Member IN FACULTATE Josephine Batchelder Kathleen Elliot Mrs. Katharine Paton Elizabeth W. Manwaring Marguerite Raymond lean Louise Williams One Hundred Ninety-eight Vida Durron Scudder HONORARY MEMBERS Mr. and Mrs. Galen Stone Albert B. Hart 1936 Frederica Billard Jean Clarkson Mary Coverdale Helen Dolan Frances Emery Alice Erdman Linda Eynon Eleanor Gillespie Elizabeth Glidden Elizabeth Harrisson Margaret Huggins Kathryn Lewis Jane Lundahl Miriam MacMurray Jean Mills Jane Plank Janeth Ravner Dorothy Raymond Elizabeth Simmons Louise Yawger Helen Bonnell Margaret Crolius Virginia Cocalis Patricia Lochridge 1937 Charlotte Stern Frances Martin Louise McCarthy Eleanor McCormick Eleanor Pierce One Hundred Ninety- Shakespeare OFFICERS Ellen E. Pugh, 1936 Helen Hine, 1936 Lucy Lamb, 1936 . Eunice Avery, 1936 Cecilia Stein, 1936 Muriel Koithan, 1936 Elizabeth Jones, 1936 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Central Committee Member Housekeeper Chef Sophie C. Hart Edith B. Mallory Louise McDowell IN FACULTATE Mabel Young Ellen Fitz Pendleton Margaret Sherwood Evelvn Welles Tu)o Himdred HONORARY MEMBERS Edith Wynne Marheson Kennedy Constance M. Kin? Harold King Julia Marlowe Sothern 1936 Eunice Avery Elizabeth Brazee Marion Chapman Virginia Childs Jean Davenport Jane Decker Helen Hine Nancy Hopkins Elizabeth Jones Muriel Koithan Lucy Lamb Rosamond Mackenzie Natalie Mayer Cora Neilsen Doris Orr Ellen Pugh Marion Schoenfuss Eleanor Smith Cecilia Stein Edith White Marion Willard Caroline Wilson 1937 Hope Buckner Margaret Clippinger Jane Dahl Elizabeth Entrekin Dorothy Fogg Winifred King Dorothy Pickett Marjorie Quigley Dorothy Sands Marian Taylor Nancy Uebelmesser Jane Weissinger Marion WolfF Tiro Hundred One Tdu Zetd Epsilon OFFICERS Helen Page Safford, 1936 Eleanor N. Olin, 1936 Beatrice C. Short, 1936 Virginia Safford, 1936 Ethelmay Kennedy, 1936 Jane Burgess, 1936 Anita M. Wilson, 1936 Harriet T. Qua, 1936 . Mary Lee, 1936 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Housekeeper Head of Music Head of Work Editor of Iris Central Committee Member IN FACULTATE Agnes A. Abbot Laurine M. Bongiorno Alice V. V. Brown Helen Davis Mabel Hodder Alice I. Perry Wood Margaret C. Jackson Laura Loomis Carol Terry Sue P. Vilter Jean Wilder Two Hundred Tti HONORARY MEMBER Ralph Adams Cram ASSOCIATE MEMBERS W. Alexander Campbell Edward B. Greene Jane Burgess Ruth Conkling Estelle Edelmann Esther Edwards Mignon Finch Margaret Fitz Margaret Forsvth Margaret Gould Dorothy Harrison Ethelmay Kennedy Mary Lee Harriet Badenoch Barbara Bredin Elizabeth Brodie Eleanor Crosby Edith Karasick Frances McGarry 1936 1937 Howard Hinners H. C. MacDougall Eleanor Olin Susan Peterson Harriet Qua Mary Raymond Helen Safford Virginia SafFord Eleanor Sandford Beatrice Short Georgia Thomson Alma Warner Anita Wilson Margaret Mowry Elizabeth Page Sara Sargent Mary Simpson Margaret Strasmer Viviane Swaine June Tienkin Tivo Hundred Three Zeta Alpha OFFICERS Virginia Tate, 1936 Marian Card, 1936 Emilie Drevfus, 1936 Margaret Johnston, 1936 Carol Kulp, 1936 . Beatrice Lamb, 1936 Dorothy Grimes, 1937 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Custodian Central Committee }Aemher Head of Work Myrtilla Avery Grace G. Crocker Virginia Onderdonk IN FACULTATE Dorothy M. Robathon Eliza N. Rogers Martha Hale Shackford Ttvo Hundred Four 1936 Janet Becton Marian Card Eleanor DcVilbiss Emilie Dreyfus Margaret Eaton Frances Forsdick Wynfred Fox Elizabeth Johndroe Margaret Johnston Margaret Kilbon Virginia King Carol Kulp Beatrice Lamb Marjorie McWilliams Pauline Lewis Priscilla Metcalf Jane Mills Martha Pernn Helen Seeley Carol Sleicher Virginia Tate 1937 Anne Athy Barbara Babcock Margaret Benson Frances Brown Marv Frayer Ruth Grant Dorothy Grimes Carol Horriean Barbara Hyde Elinor Jaminet Betty Kirkendall Rubv Murdock Sidney Rcctanus Wilhelmina Schuermann Two Hundred Fiv ALLIANCE FRANCAISE Barbara A. Ryerson, 1936 Charlotte L. Paul, 1937 Frances B. Taggart, 1938 Margaret A. Clippinger, 1937 Mile. Nicolette 1. Pernor President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Faculty Adviser CIRCOLO ITALIANO Emilie Dreyfus, 1936 Barbara J. Eckhart, 1938 Edith C. Pratt, 1938 . Barbara C. Witman, 1938 Miss Angeline La Plana Presidetit Secretary Treasurer Executive Committee Member Faculty Adviser Pauline Lewis, 1936 Barbara A. Rverson, 1936 Rae Key, 1937 Miss Ada M. Coe CIRCULO CASTELLANO President Vice-President Secretary Faculty Adviser DEUTSCHER EREIN Pauline L. Gunsser, 1936 Caroline P. Riley, 1936 Charlotte A. Stern, 1937 Audrey M. Sluman, 1937 Dr. Marianne Thalmann President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Faculty Adviser Two Hundred Six CLASSICAL CLUB Priscilla Doniiell, 1936 President Frances A. McGrath, 1937 Vice-President Elma Van Nest, 1937 Secretary-Treasurer Miss Dorothy M. Robathan Faculty Executive Member MATHEMATICS CLUB Frances G. Emery, 1936 President Elma P. Van Artsdalen, 1936 Vice-President Mary Luqueer, 1937 Junior Executive Mariatta Tower, 1937 Secretary Marjorie R. Andres, 1936 Treasurer Miss Mabel M. Young . , . , . . . . . . Faculty Adviser COSMOPOLITAN CLUB Dzoe-ts Woo, 1938 President Elizabeth L. Robinson, 1937 . Vice-President Mary E. Scott, 1938 Secretary Amy S. Hamburger, 1937 Treasurer Two Hundred Seven The F orum Betty Nipps, 1936 President of the Form?!; Chairman of the International Relations Club Ruth Fowler, 1936 Chairman of Debating Emily Marks, 1937 Chairman of the League of Women Voters Marie Ragonetti, 1936 .... Chairman oi the tAodel League of Nations Tti ' o Hundred Eight I The F orum T, HE Forum is a federation of the various undergraduate organiza- tions interested in national and international affairs. It is committed to no one party or philosophy, but is a meeting place for those interested in our political and economic life; and it grows with the growing interest of students in world events and trends of the day. The International Relations Club holds meetings led bv outside speakers and by student groups. Special emphasis this year is placed on student leadership. The Club has sent delegates to the New England Conference of International Relations Clubs at Colbv College in Maine, and plans to be represented at the Student Model League of Nations. Closely connected with the work of the International Relations Club is the activ- ity of the Peace Group, which sponsored the Armistice Dav Meeting, and the all- college Mass meeting last April on the anniversary of America ' s entry into the War. This group has worked with Peace organizations on other campuses, and especially with the Boston Peace Commisssion. In addition, it has sent out speakers to churches and clubs in neighboring towns. The Debating Club has held a series of informal debates on the campus, and participated in several intercollegiate debates on affairs of current interest. The League of Women Voters has been especially interested in workers ' education and the labor movement. Members have been active in this work in Boston. The club also sends delegates to the Model Senate at ' ' assar. Tuo Hundred Ni Wellesley College Choir Edward B. Greene Conductor Margaret R. Forsyth, 1936 . . . . . . . ' . . . . Chorister jane Burgess, 1936 1 ■ , ■ ;,,„,,. , , . . . - Associate Choristers Helen S. Hine, 1936 J Carolyn W. Parker, 1937 Assistant Chorister Eleanor W. Sandford, 1936 Business Manager Harriet J. Woodbury, 1937 Assistant Business Manager FIRST SOPRANOS Choir A Mary E. Bennett, 1939 Ruth B. Coleman, 1939 Jane C. Dahl, 1937 Jessie A. Fitzgerald, 1938 Mary E. Gehring, 1938 Dorothy Harris, 1939 Martha A. Henderson, 1937 Natalie Henry, 1938 Nancv Hopkins, 1936 Claire L. Hustead, 1939 Elizabeth T. Johnson, 1939 Jane McClure, 1939 E. Elizabeth McNally, 1938 Margaret C. Mowry, 1937 Jane Norton, 1938 Carolyn W. Parker, 1937 May Spencer, 1938 Eleanor Thresher, 1938 Elizabeth T. Wakefield, 1937 Cboir B Margaret R. Forsyth, 1936 Margaret H. Horton, 1939 Helen V. Hughes, 1939 Elizabeth S. Hurst, 1936 Alice C. Jantzen, 1939 M. Elizabeth Johnson, 1937 Betty R. Kolt ' er, 1939 Marv Lieurance, 1939 Florence Lovell, 1939 Katherine E. Menton, Harriett S. Olzendam, Helen Prentice, 1938 Pauline Ritchie, 1938 Robbie Lou Schneider, Adelaide T. Spicer, 1939 Nancy A. Whiton, 1938 Martha C. Williams, 1936 Marie L. Wolfs, 1939 1936 1936 1937 Two Hundred Ten Choir A Helen E. B.ildwin, 1939 Harriei Chamberlain, 1938 Barbara]. Eckhart, 1938 Elizabeth Entrekin, 1937 Phyllis V. Finkelstein, 1939 Janette B. Foster, 1937 Ruth H. Fowler, 1936 Charlotte J. Eraser, 1938 M. Jeanne Hubbard, 1937 Shirley R.Jones, 1938 Jean E. Marchant, 1939 Julia W. Martin, 1938 Marion Martin, 1937 D. Marietta Morehouse, 1936 Ruth C. Ostermann, 1938 Marjorie P. Owen, 1937 Katherine K. Sanford, 1937 SECOND SOPRANOS Miriam N. Swaffield, 1938 Mary B. Taylor, 1938 Marion C. Thomson, 1939 Alice H Tremain, 1938 Nancy C. Uebelmesser, 1937 Ellen R. Wilding, 1939 Alice S. Wilson, l937 Harriet J Woodbury, 1937 Clwtr B Susan C. Barrett, 1939 Mary L. Bircher, 1939 Mary A. Cameron, 1938 Florence E. Chapman, 1937 Anne D. Covle, 1936 Ethel B. Doe, 1938 Eleanor M. Eddy, 1939 Marjorie R. Fehse, 1939 Mary B. Gunn, 1938 Helen S. Hine, 1936 Margaret M. Hull, 1938 Christine H. Hunter, 1939 Lillian G. Jameson, 1937 Marian K. Leighton, 1938 Mary Orr Luqueer, 1937 Carmen H. McKell, 1938 Marion L. Middleton, 1939 Catherine V. Parker, 1938 Martha A. Parkhurst, 1939 Nancy F. Reynolds, 1939 M. Louise Schaffner, 1938 Jane A. Shedden, 1939 Margaret E. Strasmer, 1937 Kate C. Supplee, 1937 Nancy Walker, 1936 Gene S. White, 1938 Anita M. Wilson, 1936 Choir A Mary L, Dougherty, 1938 Mary A. Dunbar, 1939 Mary R. Guernsey, 1938 Margaret H. Habermeyer, G. Harriet Harrison, 1938 Frances Harvey, 1939 Marv E. Kister, 1938 Rachel Lacy, 1936 Emilie R. Little, 1939 Miriam L. MacWilliams, 1938 Harriet F. Metzger, G. Marjorie J. Northrup, 1939 Rita Rafferty, 1939 Eleanor W. Sandford, 1936 FIRST ALTOS Lucy L. W. Shen, 1939 Barbara Shenstone, 1938 Mary S. Simpson, 1937 Hannah Thomas, 1938 Eva B. Wallen, 1938 Janet Waters, 1939 Virginia A. West. 1938 Helen S. Wiley, 1938 Marjorie J. Willits, 1939 Chmr B Elizabeth L. Anderson, 1936 Harriet F. Badenoch, 1937 Dorothy Barrow, 1939 Jane Burgess, 1936 M. Elizabeth Carter, 1936 Eleanor H. Crosby, 1937 Ann Louise Edwards, 1937 Katherine H. Forsyth, 1938 Jean E Fox, 1939 Lilian A. Francis, 1937 Dorothy T. Gardner, 1938 Marv Jane Gilkey, 1938 Barbara J. Lieberman, 1937 Miriam A. Meyer, 1939 Betty van Roosen, 1937 Lucetta M. Sharp, 1939 R. Doris Stewart, 1939 Dorothea J. White, 1939 Marv C. Whitman, 1937 Edith L. Weir, 1937 Choir A M. Sage Adams, 1937 Leora C. Aultman, 1939 Louise M. Bennett, 1939 Marion L. Brown, 1937 Elizabeth H. Burnquist, 1939 Jane B. Camp, 1937 E. Harriet Doane, 1938 Frances G. Emery, 1936 Charlotte Fehlman, 1939 Ruth T. Goodale, 1938 Marguerite Goodrich, 1936 Katherine M. Hack, 1939 Mary J. Hamilton, 1938 Marv Lee, 1936 SECOND ALTOS Barbara Murchie, 1938 Elizabeth B. Nicelv, 1939 Charlotte Nickell, ' l939 Marv E. Parks, 1939 Edith C. Pratt, 1938 S. Ellen Purvis, 1938 Virginia J. Stearns, 1939 Choir B Mary L. Beebe, 1936 Lucie E. Brown, 1939 Martha J. Curtiss, 1936 Louise E. Golding, 1939 Natalie Gordon, 1938 Mary W. Hutchinson, 1939 Mary E. Hutton, 1938 Margaret Kenerson, 1938 Ellen B. Libby, 1939 Hui Ching Lu, G. Elizabeth D. Mav, 1936 Marv L. Miller, 1938 Charlotte Paul, 1938 Margaret D. Platner, 1938 Janet E. Pratt, 1937 Mary F. Randall, 1939 Jane S. Rectanus, 1937 Dorothv G. Russ, 1937 Dorothy L. Sebbens, 1939 Barbara G. Trask, G. Martha B. Webb, 1938 ACCOMPANISTS Eleanor W. Sandford, 1936 Barbara G. Trask, G. Tii ' o Hundred Elev Wellesley College Symphony Orchestra Malcolm H. Holmes Jane Burgess, 1936 . Frances N. Jones, 1937 . Eleanor P. Brown, 1938 Beatrice A. Weaver, 1938 Conductor President Business Manager Secretary-Treasurer Librarian First Violin Margaret C. Mowry, 1937, Concertmistrsss Barbara A. Caton. 1936 Olga V. Edmond, 1936 Florence E. Chapman, 1937 Priscilla Davis, 1939 Phyllis Sweetser, 1939 Helen H. Tower, 1939 Second Violin Katherine K. Sanford, 1937, Leader Elizabeth D. May, 1936 Eleanor P. Brown, 1938 Ruth C. Over, 1938 Frances A.MacRobbie, 1938 Marion Emien, 1939 Margaret H. Horton, 1939 Agnes F. Kolb, 1939 Viola Stella Brewster, G. Lois K. Linn, 1938 Deborah H. Pike, 1939 Violoncello Frances N. Jones, 1937 Ellen E. Kerl, 1939 Esther C. Parshlev, 1939 Miriam E. Wise, 1939 Henry R. Mussey Bass Beatrice A Marjorie J Flute Eleanor W. Sandford, 1936 Mary H. Jones, 1938 Barbara Hale, 1939 Jean S. Hussey, 1939 Weaver, 1938 Northrup, 1939 Clarinet Jane Burgess, 1936 Louise Matthews, 1938 Mary B. Young, 1938 Trumpet Katharine R. Anderson, 1938 Natalie Gordon, 1938 Jane L. Hayden, 1938 Trombone Virginia H. Sargent, 1937 Percussion Frances H. Postel, 1939 Piano Selma B. Edinburg, 1937 Harp Ella E. Pfeiffenberger, 1936 Two Hundred Tivelv Choir T, HE Wellesley College Choir has been in existence for many years, but the class of 1936 feels especially attached to it because we came in with Mr. Greene, and have been looking forward for four years, with him, to the Choir of ' 36 . We have trudged faithfully to choir rehearsals every Tuesday and Thursday evening, and added one hundred determined singers to the eighty in choir at the beginning of our Freshman year. The Choir ' s real role is to sing in Chapel weekdays and Sundays, and to give four vespers a vear — November, Christmas, Easter, and Baccalaureate. After the Christmas vespers, in which the Harvard Glee Club assists, the Choir becomes a gay throng of caroUers. In 1934, the spring concert was given in the courtyard of Tower Court, and last year at Alumnae, in the form of an operetta. The Princess Ida. This year the Choir, with the Orchestra, is giving a concert at the Guest Day in May, and plans to sing in New York during spring vacation. The Wellesley Choir has been favored in its choice of music by several arrange- ments of American Folk Songs by Mr. Robert Delaney, Pulitzer Prize Winner in 1931- He dedicated a group to us in 1934, and added six more this year. Orchestra OiNCE the fall of 1933, when Mr. Holmes assumed direction of the orchestra, it has improved amazingly, both in musical ability and in popularity. From a half-hearted attempt at an orchestra, it has become a real and increasingly important factor in the music of Wellesley. The concert given at Christmas time in the chapel, in conjunction with the Harvard orchestra, has become, in this its second year, one of the high points of the season. This year the program was especially inter- esting, as it consisted of music of the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth centuries, played for the first time on modern instruments. Mr. Holmes obtained the music for this concert from old manuscripts in Leipzig, Berlin, Munich, and London, and was allowed to copy it only with the promise never to publish it. Harmonically very primitive, this music is surprisingly modern in rhythm. A wider scope than that afforded by Welleslev itself was given it when the orchestra had the exciting exper- ience of broadcasting over WBZ on a coast-to-coast hookup. Tivo Hundred Thirteeti Press Board Elizabeth B. U ' alsh Director of Publicity and Advisor to the Press Board; New York Times Edda Kreiner ... Assistant to the Director; New York Herald-Tribune Hester Gray, 1936, Chairman Boston Globe Mary Louise Bartlett, 1937 Boston Post, Rhode Island Barbara Bryan, 1937 Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin Margaret Sidney Eaton, 1936 .... Boston Record, American, Advertiser Harriet Frank, 1937 Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New York World-Telegram Jean Heath, 1938 Long Island, Westchester, New York Sun Jeanne Hubbard, 1937 Patricia Lochridge, 1937 Joan Lockart, 1937 Jane Lundquist, 1939 Eleanor Merrill, 1939 . Miriam Meyer, 1939 Harriet Ann Fribble, 1937 Albertine Reichle, 1939 Mary Simpson, 1937 . Betsey Weston, 1936 Martha Williams, 1936 The South, North Carolina to Arizona Pennsylvania Boston Transcript Delaivare, Maryland , The Virginias, Kentucky, D. C. The Far West New York State Massachusetts exclusive of Boston Ohio, Michigan New Jersey Connecticut Boston Herald Two Hundred Fourteen Wellesley Review Esther Edwards, 1936 Elaine Graf, 1938 Jane Griswold, 1937 EDITORIAL BOARD Editor-in-Chief Margaret Sidney Eaton, 1936 Contributing Editors Martha Nichols, 1936 Betty Flanders, 1938 Mary Louise Bartlett, 1937 Literary Editor Eleanor M. Gillespie, 1936 Editorial Staff Jane Kohn, 1938 Elizabeth Sickler, 1937 Jean Mailey, 1937 Mary S. Simpson, 1937 Margaret E. Miller, 1938 Mary B. Young, 1938 BUSINESS BOARD Business Manager Jane Mills, 1936 Celena Dean, 1938 Berty Devine, 1937 Business Board Dorothy Fagg, 1937 Adrienne Lande, 1938 Advertising Manager Louise Kellner, 1937 Eleanor Meyer, 1937 Jane Waterman, 1937 Tivo Hundred Fifteen Legend( EDITORIAL BOARD Esther Edwards, 1936 Margaret Gunn, 1936 Susan Lewis, 1936 Helen Lee Thurston, 1936 Lena Everett, 1936 Nancy Hopkins, 1936 Sarah E. CampbeiL 1939 Editor-in-Chief Art Editor Literary Editors Photographic Editor Assistatit Photographic Editor Secretary Tuo Hundred Sixteen Legendd BUSINESS BOARD Edith White, 1936 Natalie Mayer, 1936 Lucy Lamb, 1936 Muriel Koithan, 1936 Elinor Thomsen, 1936 Frances Emery, 1936 Dorothy Fagg, 1937 Betty Lincoln, 1938 Business Manager . Advertising Manager Assistant Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Assistant Circulation Manager Fuhlicity Manager Secretaries Two Hundred Seventeen F E A T U R E S J3est ExeciL+ive Hairdressing AND Permanent Waving are still a fine art at all Charles oi the Ritz Salons. For busy persons whose hair must look well on all occasions, we suggest a good, basic permanent wave ... a smart cut . . . and a becomingly styled coiffure. Then with a minimum of care, your hair will remain well groomed, will stay in place and look its best whether on campus or gala evenings. ritz-carlton hotel BOSTO N TELEPHONE KENMORE 516S FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT RITZ TOWER AND RITZ-CARLTON HOTEL • NEW YORK H. IRDRESSER TO HER MAJESTY: THE SMART AMERICAN WOMAN Accurate Time by TELECHRON,- self-starting electric clocks of rare beauty. Many models, priced from $3.50 upwards. Luxor Model. S9.9. WARREN TELECHRON COMPANY ASHLAND, MASS. rMjl When drearie without ' Tis cheerie within ' The W E L L E S L E Y I N N Compliments of CAPE COD FARMS WEST BARNSTABLE, MASS. 1936 Class Song Gleams the sun upon the lake, And drifting clouds are mirrored there, Birches clustered on the shore With waters clear their image share. Thus may we of thirty-six As clear and true reflections be Of the beauty and the love O Welleslev, that we see in thee. Tiro Hundred Tirenty- COMPLIMENTS OF 1937 • 1938 • 1939 Two Hundred Twenty-two My Personal Assortment From our scores of chocolates, bon bons, jellies, caramels, mints, crystallized fruits, glaces and brittles, select your favorite pieces and ask us to register them. Thereafter, when ordering for your- self or for gifts, you simply ask for My personal assortment. You have 409 candies to choose from. The choco- lates especially are masterpieces of flavor! Superb centers coated with a rare blend of chocolate. Many discriminating candy lovers in all parts of the country send to us for their personal assort- ments — or for our famous regular assortment. S. S. P. Assorted Chocolates, .$1 pound S. S. P. Assorted Candies, 90c pound Other S. S. P. Candies, 50c pound and up S. S. PIERCE CO. BOSTON Buy The Quality Loaf WARD ' S SOFT BUN BREAD Stays Fresh Longer THE DAINTY SHOP 17 CENTRAL STREET Telephone; Wellesley 1076 LUNCHES CANDY FOUNTAIN PRODUCTS WHEN IN NEED OF . . . GOWNS • HOODS • CAPS write to AMERICA ' S OLDEST AND LARGEST MANUFACTURER COTRELL and LEONARD Est. 1832 Inc. 1935 Albany, N. Y. PURE MARMALADE A delightful part of the Sunday Night Lunch NATICK. MASS. WALKER-GORDON CERTIFIED MILK is served exclusively in the dining rooms of Wellesley College. A cordial invitation is extended to visit the Walker-Gordon Farm, at Charles River Village, three miles from Wellesley. Distributed by WHITING MILK CO. Tivo Hundred Twenty-three Class Ballot Most Popular Blake Schoenfuss Most Typical of Wellesley Blake Schoenfuss Prettiest . Eleanor Smith Best Executive Helen Seeley Best Actress Ellen Pugh Best Dancer . . Alice-Ann Kessler, ex- ' 36 Best Athlete Margaret Butsch Best Scholar Esther Edwards Most Sophisticated ... Virginia Peyton Most Naive Lee Thurston Most Surprising Sidney Eaton Most Collegiate .... Betsv Anderson Most Uncollegiate Mary Walden Bell Most Energetic .... Sally Stewart Most Earnest Janet Sanford Most Dignified Gwendolyn Pratt Most Individual Jack Applegate Busiest Jean Brownell Funniest Anne Jennings Neatest Martha Nichols Most Feminine Eleanor Olin Most Chaotic . . Helen Wile Laziest . . . ■ Daphne Gulick Best Wife and Mother Betty Johndroe Most Likely to Succeed . . President Pendleton (or else Christopher Morley) Tuo Hundred Ttventy-four STURTEVANT HALEY BEEF AND SUPPLY COMPANY Sldughtenrs of Fancy Corn Fed Cattle Abattoir: 52 Somerville Avenue, Somerville, Massachusetts WHOLESALE MARKET 38-40 FANEUIL HALL MARKET BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS MISS STEVENSON ' S SHOP 32 CENTRAL STREET WELLESLEY - MASS. ART OBJECTS OF VALUE Thibetan Scrolls C ' hinese Antiques Persian Coppers and Weavings Choice bits from afar SHATTUCK JONES incorporati:d ' ' Dealer in all kinds of Fish BOSTON, MASS. Q ualiiy protected by handling Where Food and Tradition Combine To Ptease ON THE Worcester HiGnwA at Framingh m Centre Mass. —OPEN ALL YEAR- 812 HOUSE Restaurant WELLESLEY .SOU.VRE WELLESLEY VISIT . . . 63 CcNTRAL yTReer WSLLE LEY, AAA y. ortf for season ' s smartest APPAREL Two Hundred Twenty-five 1936 Marching Song Singing we march to hail thee, Wellesley, Hearts attuned to thy praise, In purpose as in step united. Loving the name we raise. Worlds lie ahead for us to conquer. As lesser worlds before Were faced with strength from thy sup- porting. We ' ll face them evermore. Singing we march to hail thee, Wellesley, Hearts attuned to thy praise. In purpose as in step united. Loving the name we raise. We bring now the pledge of thirty-six. Singing we offer thee Our promise of love outlasting song For rhA- dear name, X ' elleslev. THE HOUSE OF LIEDERMAN I (;ORPOR. TEI) Quality Cleansers and Dyers Wellesley Store 37 CENTRAL STREET Wellesley 1904 52 Neighborhood Stores Centrallv Located Jax femitiine footwear s MART HOES COMPLIMENTS OF THE SIX SOCIETIES WELLESLEY COLLEGE Two Hundred Tu ' enty-s x  «■ w •• ' ■« ' THE FAY SCHOOL, Inc. of Boston AT ELEVEN BEACON STREET A Select Secretarial School for loiiiig W ' nineii One- and Two-year Courses Summer Course Special Course for College Women Helen hontrini, Registrar FOR OVERNIGHT FOR A WEEK-END FOR A DELICIOUS MEAL THE PIONEER Boston s •Smart Residence Jor Wotnen Adraclive Dining Room and Cafeteria for Men and Women TRANSIENT RATES FROM S2.00 PER DAY Permanent rates for women actively engaged in business or professions 410 STUART STREET, BOSTON, MASS. Telephone Kenmore 7940 Compliments of Lewis -Mears Company WHOLESALE BUTTER AND EGGS BOSTON, MASS. Compliments of the Informal Dance Committee Tivo Hundred Tiventy-seven 7£ ilbar ' s i nc. FAMOUS FOR ' Frenchy foot iv ear 61h CENTRAL STREET WELLESLEY Complii? eHts oj The Wellesley National Bank FRATERNITY, COLLEGE AND CLASS JEWELRY Commencement Announcements Invitations Diplomas Official Jeweler to Wellesley College and the Alumnae Association L. G. Balfour Company Manufacturing Jewelers Stationers ATTLEBORO, MASS. Telep wnes ClAPITOL 6422-6423 H. L. LAWRENCE COMPANY Established 1844 Poultry and Provisions 42-48 FANEUIL HALL MARKET BOSTON, MASS. COMPLIMENTS OF THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Ttvo Hundred Twenty-ei ht After You Graduate . . . [amrm iiathaiJ M 8ooI«fiop : 6 Ul l l il li mill t l K l lt ll iT illLl fl vou may land in a town without a good book store. Don ' t stagnate for lack of new books! Let us come to your rescue. Mail Orders Filled Promptly BOSTON ' S PREMIER POULTRY HOUSE SAMUEL HOLMES, INC. FANEUIL HALL MARKET BOSTON MASS. Con?pliments of BARNSWALLOWS ASSOCIATION ALWAYS SMART CLOTHES AT EXINER ' S WELLESLEY HYANNIS Coii?plt e}its of The Wellesley College News iWELRY Gifts Ernest Forsberg Central Street, Wellesley, Mass. Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing Optical Work Teleplwne Wei. 1345M ' The Shop of Smart Fasnions GROSS STRAUSS CO. 19 and 21 Central Street Wellesley, Mass. Telephone Welles. 0334 Two Hundred Twenty-nine Qompliments of AiME DupoNT Studio To the oflicial photographers for the 1936 Legenda the Board wishes to extend its thanks, for their prompt and ready service, and their truly artistic work. We recommend as master craftsmen in photography The Aime Dupont Studio 509 Fifth Avenue New York City Two Hundred Thirty 817 West Washington Blvd., - Chicsso, lllinoit In the foreground ' Ft. Dearborn re-erected in Grant Park on Chicago ' s lake front Illustration by Jahn 6- Oilier Art Studios. Two Hundred Thirty-one Good Yearbooks Don ' t Just Happen ' M. HEY may vary tremendously in size, design, and cost, but all successful yearbooks have one thing in common . . . they represent hours of careful planning and painstaking •workmanship. The 1936 Legenda is no exception. The staff has worked long and liligently in order to make it an interesting and accurate record of ihe college year. It has been our privilege to assist in the pub- licati on of the book, working in close association with the members of the board. We wish to take this opportunity to thank them for their co-operation and to congratulate them on the results of their labors. THE ANDOVER PRESS A N D O V E R MASSACHUSETTS Tiuo HiDich ' ed Th:rty-tivo


Suggestions in the Wellesley College - Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) collection:

Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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