Wellesley College - Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA)

 - Class of 1947

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 160 of the 1947 volume:

[[G W E L L E S L E Y COLLEGE w e I I e s I e y , m a s s a c h u s e t t s Jl W[[1[SI[! «[[l[8l[l I HIS YEARBOOK has attempted to portray the students of Wellesley as they are, at work and at play. But it can remain only an attempt, for the complexities of life at college cannot be recorded in one short book. Each student will have different memories of life at Wellesley, but the 1947 Legenda is dedicated to all the students in the hope that each one can find within these pages some small reminder of her college years. If no two students complete their college careers having acquired, consciously or unconsciously, quite the same benefits, it is nonetheless certain that every graduate has learned one thing: the mysterious answer to all things which, in secondary school, seemed to lie just beyond the threshold of these four college years, is not to be found in the pursuit of a Bachelor ' s degree, nor — in all likelihood — any- where else. This disillusionment, which might be expected as early as Freshman year, almost never presents itself then. For it is thought that beyond the confines of required English Comp., in the realm of the upper classmen, the vital answer will be found. With Sophomore year comes the usual slump, and an intuition — hardly recognizable — of the dis- illusionment to come. But the fact that one has not yet entered her major field induces the belief that the answer lies somehow in the work that follows. At the beginning of Junior year the eager antici- pation of becoming an authority in the field of one ' s choice forestalls the disillusionment. But with the Senior year, as graduation draws nearer and nearer, and the field one had thought to conquer grows wider and more beyond reach, there is, quite suddenly it seems, an awakening to the knowledge that the answer is not here, that in all probability the final answer is not anywhere, but always to be sought after. However much more may be learned from college, that is enough. PHOTOGRAPH BTY BACHRACH R S. MILDRED M c A F E E H R T N I, HE President of a woman ' s college is required to have one attribute not perhaps considered essential in other College Presidents. She must have implicit faith that the college work will, sooner or later, manifest itself in the lives of the women students who undertake it. President Norton, in the example she has set, in the influence she has exerted, has richly proved this faith. It is easier to tally the results of men ' s education. But women, particularly those who undertake no profession, may appear to have slipped through college largely unchanged by anything they learned there. But for Wellesley ' s President, the value of college education to women, if hard to calculate, is no less rich. Some come to college in full awareness of what they seek there. Others find it somewhere in the course of the four years. But most often it is manifested, much later, in women who are producing something noteworthy, holding down important jobs, or running happy and successful homes. These women are putting into practice, in a way hard to tally, something they gained, perhaps in unawareness, from their years at college. In addition to her belief in them, President Horton has set for her students an example of how an educated woman may make herself felt in the world. As head of the WAVES, as a member of an educational mission to Japan, she has served her country well. And the University of Buffalo, which this year awarded Mrs. Horton an LL.D. degree, echoes the college ' s pride in her accom- plishments. 1 rfc jr . .Wfj M!m !:. y!J 12 i ' : Mf. i f -Jr. . Wellesley is, and will remain, a college of liberal arts. Never before, perhaps, has the liberal education been so challenged, so forced to reexamine its values, to defend it- self against the demands of a practical and particularized curriculum whose aim is to familiarize the student with the social, scientific and political aspects of the world in which she lives. But it is the considered belief of the liberal arts college that mere knowledge of the world about us is not enough. Education should not — indeed must not — cease when the four years of study are concluded. We cannot in so short a time learn enough about the modern world to last us all our life. But we can in four years of a liberal education learn to know with reasonable thoroughness one subject, learn the desire and the method to pursue knowledge fur- ther, learn in fact to be vitally interested in life itself. The major field of concentration which each student under- takes at Wellesley fulfills two purposes implicit in the aim of a liberal arts education: it teaches her the nature of knowledge, how vast is the field before her, and it leads her into the presence of greatness, where true education must take place. u-rf ' a,- ; i [ [ 14 Science is a vital part of the liberal education, and each person today should have a sense of its tremendous import- ance and potentialities. We have tapped the power of atomic energy, and for this if for no other reason, science has attained almost immeasurable significance. But it is the fervent belief of the liberal arts college that scientific skill is not sufficient to meet the ever-increasing problems of humanity. At the core of each man — and par- ticularly of each scientist — there must be a strong inner devotion, not only to power and law, but to goodness and beauty and truth in the highest sense. Without underestimating science, we must realize that while it wages war it cannot teach us peace, nor can it tell us of the nature of man — his concepts, his art, his poetry, his music — of all that gives him greatness. Many at Wellesley concentrate on science, planning to continue in scientific pursuits. It is hoped that their liberal education will enable them, not only to be capable scientists, but to envision science in the large perspective of man ' s destiny. 15 16 A liberal education brings us in contact with the outstanding works that men have produced through the ages. The beauty, the wisdom, the intrinsic value of these works is too great for them to remain unappreciated. But in addition to cherishing them for themselves, we must learn from them all we can of the past to use in the molding of the future, and from a common basis of man ' s great achievements, all men must arrive at a truer understanding of each other. These are, indeed, great aims. But if the aims of our edu- cation are not visionary, what hopes can we hold for the future? The present is, of necessity, concerned with specific, divergent issues. But the past — studied with the perspective that time gives — reveals to us, not the variety of issues, but the similarity, not the individuality of men, but their oneness. It is only the present seen with the past, in the light of man ' s reason, that can give us a hint to the meaning of things, and teach us the way to a better life. 17 MISS ELIA KEATS WHITING Deon of Initruclion MISS E. ELIZABETH JONES Dean of the Class of 1947 MISS ELIZABETH EISELEN Deon of Ihe Clos ' , of 1949 AAISS RUTH H. LINDSAY Dean of Residence MISS LUCY WILSON Deon of Students, Deon of the Gloss of 1948 MISS JEANETTE McPHERRIN Deon of Freshmen 18 J I I ART Sirarpie Der Nersess!an ASTRONOMY John Charles Duncan BIBLICAL HISTORY Koty Boyd George 19 BOTANY Harriet Baldwin Creighton CHEMISTRY Helen Thayer Jones ECONOMICS Lawrence Smith EDUCATION Isabella McLaughlin Stephens ENGLISH COMPOSITION Elizabeth Wheeler Manwaring ENGLISH LITERATURE Grace Ethel Howk 20 FRENCH Ruth Elvira Clark GEOLOGY and GEOGRAPHY Louise Kingsley GERMAN Barbara Salditt GREEK Barbara Philippe McCarthy HISTORY Judith Blow Williams HYGIENE and PHYSICAL EDUCATION Ruth Elliott 21 ITALIAN Gabriella Bosano LATIN Dorothy Mae Robathan MATHEMATICS Marion Elizabeth Stork MUSIC Hubert Weldon Lamb PHILOSOPHY Thomas Hayes Proctor PHYSICS Alice Hall Armstrong 22 POLITICAL SCIENCE M. Morgarel Ball PSYCHOLOGY Michael Jacob Zigler SOCIOLOGY Leiand Hamilton Jenks SPANISH Justina Ruiz-De-Conde SPEECH Jeannette Barry Lane ZOOLOGY and PHYSIOLOGY Harriet Cutler Waterman 23 1 ] ' r; ' ? ' . .. ?. n -K is 5 « - , ?x ' ' . ' Mi. t;;.:-. ■■■ J-3 Of MARY ALICE ROSS, President Wellesley College Government Association The College Government Association of Wellesley was organized by the students, who desired to assume individually and collectively a responsibility for the conduct of Wellesley students in their college life, and thus to promote loyalty and self-control. All Wellesley students are members of the Association. Its officers, elected by the members, ore a Presi- dent, a Chief Justice, a Chairman of the House Presidents ' Council, who are Seniors; a Junior Vice-President and a Treasurer, who are Juniors; a Secretary, and a Recorder of Points, who are Sophomores. The executive and legislative work of the Association is centralized in a Senate, made up of the Presi- dent of the College, four members of the faculty and administration, and the Dean of Residence (non- voting) as well as the President, Senior Vice-President, Chief Justice and Junior Vice-President of the Association, the Editor-in-Chief of News, and one Jjnior, two Sophomores and one Freshman acting as Treasurer, Secretary, Recorder of Points and Clerk respectively. The President presides. 26 . ia Hz. ' i_- tic:wu:. ' The iudicial work of the Asso- ciation Is centralized in the Supe- rior Court mode up of four faculty and administration members, one student member from each class, as well as the President, Vice- President, Chairman of the House Presidents ' Council and Junior Vice-President of the Association, who have the right of discussion but not of vote. There are also District Courts: Upper class courts composed of the House Presidents, and Freshman Courts composed of Village Juniors. The Chief Jus- tice presides over all courts. As a source of responsible ad- vice, the Association has a Cab- inet composed of the Heads of the Major College Organizations. As a means of coordinating the administration of the houses to the central government, and for the consideration of general house problems, there Is a House Presidents ' Council, composed of the Presidents of the Upper-class houses, and presided over by the Chairman of the House Presidents ' Council. As a medium of determining all-college opinion on matters of all-college Importance, there Is a College Council made up of the President of the College, the Dean of Students, the Dean of Residence, four members of the faculty and administration, the members of the Cabinet, and one representative from each class from each house. The President of the Association presides. JEAN KIXMILLER Chief Justice of Superior Court SUSAN PALMER Cliairman of House Presidents ' Council JEAN PHILBRICK Senior Vice-President NANCY BARTRAM Junior Vice-President MOLLY BISHOP Secretary MARIE TIFFT Treasurer NANCY EVANS Recorder of Points DOROTHY SCHOENFUSS Fire Chief 27 FIRST ROW: Saily Maier, Jane Lum, Jane Parker, Jean Abrams, Dorothy Honiss, SECOND ROW: Ann Robinson, Valerie Roemer, Barbara Butterfield, Nancy Bertram, Muriel Pfaelzer, Constance Anderson, Barbara Hunt. THIRD ROW: Mary Alice Cary, Mary Jean McCally, Solly Powell, Annabelle Cook, Layne Davis, Marian Roth, Georgia Ray, Holly Mann, Jane Coffey. [ u 28 innn 1 1 J J FIRST ROW: Nelle Sanders, BEEBE; Anne Lummis, SHAFER; lyn Rogers, TOWER COURT. SECOND ROW: Marilyn Clarke, NON- RESIDENTS; Susan Palmer, Chairman of House Presidents ' Council; Betty Bremer, SEVERANCE. THIRD ROW; Mary Wilber, POMEROY; Katharine Krebs, CA2ENOVE; Jane Pate, MUNGER; Elizabeth Sullivan, OLIVE DAVIS; Nancy Mueller, CLAFLIN. GENE FERRIS, President MARILYN MacGREGOR, Secretary JEAN BEAVERSON, Vice-President ANDREA SANFORD, Treasurer C [ 30 . Jf -A ' •ti ' i Ci.-. A:li, MARION ORD, Vice-President ANNE KELLOGG, Secretary BETSY ROMIG, President NANCY STEEPENS, Treasurer C [ 3Z=) 31 BARBARA BARNES, President LINDSLEY CLARK, Secretary MARY ELLEN DANDY, Vice-President BETSY ANCKER, Treasurer 32 JEAN ARCHIBALD, Vice-President ELIZABETH GRAY, Secretary MARY WITCHER, President BARBARA BUSCHMEYER, Treasurer czc U-.-— L 33 - ,f i r ' f r .- ' « 1 V ' v Service Fund, which placed Its emphasis this year on informing students where their money was going, adopted as Its slogan: Act Now to Build for the Future . Student contributions are made to 41 recipients in the United States, the Near East (Including Wellesley ' s sister college, Yenching University), Spain, Turkey, India, Palestine and Greece. Through a variety of campus publicity (posters, a special issue of News edited by Polly Piatt and Joan Wickwire, radio programs, and a stilt figure on the chapel lawn). Service Fund gathered money for organizations which depend upon private contributions for their support. The 1947 Service Fund drive consolidated all relief drives formerly conducted by separate organizations into one joint effort and went $600 over their $15,000 goal. SERVICE FUND BOARD: First Row: Joan Danner, Woodard Wiley, Elizabeth Crev . Second Row: Marie Vallance, Kathy Thayer, Judith TIngley-Foor, Virginia Zerega. i - 36 n yK ut Nl ' ,50Vi. Vie Christian Association ' s annual Religious Forum was conducted this year by Dr. Howard Thurman, formerly the Dean of Howard University, now the co-pastor of an inter-racial, inter-denominational church in San Francisco. In addition to receptions and private consultations with the students. Dr. Thurman led Sunday morning chapel and delivered a series of lectures during his four days at Wellesley. The organization ' s activities also include a Forum-C.A. Conference; Candlelight Vespers; Freshman Week, which orients new students through Ask-Me ' s, handbooks, campus suppers, big sisters, and a vaudeville; Christmas Bazaar, which handles the sale of gifts for such organization s as Yugoslavian Relief, British Relief, and French Relief as well as various commercial concerns represented by students; panel discussions on the meaning of religion; a Social Service Com- mittee which works in settlement houses, girl scout troops, hospitals, and recreational centers for under-privileged children. CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION BOARD: First Row: Betty Rice, Mary Zeller, Robin Jones. Second Row: Barbara Britton, Peggy Barns, Myrt Atkin- son, Hope Freeman, Betsy Ancker, Cubby Lyons. 37 •,rien V R ,e o v,P Fororn age ard, y Vic op - ' lo. - ° - Cp- ' rv ' - TsTv--- V A 38 AOCE toV M ' O ' ChoWf 0 VPS oi  ,u„ United stories a worked dou y-Fi U a h et °rt .o ' ' It BO- ' rt: — ' ° : ' =.-.o- ' PRESS BOARD 39 News is a weekly publication covering the social, edu- cational, political, psychological, philosophical, voca- tional, and matrimonial aspects of life at Wellesley College. The outside world of culture is covered by the Campus Critic page, which includes drama, art, and book reviews. The Peregrinating Press lists the latest laugh-provoking blunders and bon-mots of current stu- dent-body members. Dear Family parodies letters from the typical student to the typical dear family. A. A. Notes feature the most recent developments in the physical education field. The Editorial page acquaints readers with important problems in the local, national, and international news scenes. This year the Wellesley College News was host for the second annual meeting of the Northeastern Inter- Collegiate Press Conference, the purpose of which was to bring together college n ewspapers in the New Eng- land area for discussion of common problems, for exchange of information, and for the promotion of cooperation among the various publications. MARY ELIZABETH HURFF, Editor-in-Chief Growing from pamphlet to standard magazine size in four years. We has at the same time grown in prestige. Originally We functioned purely as a literary magazine in printing the work of both students and faculty at Wellesley. This year, however, in addition to the short stories, poetry, essays, and articles by members of the college community, We has widened its field of con- tributors to include such people as Mrs. Anna Eleanor Roosevelt; Mr. t-loword C. Lewis, President of the Dodd- Mead Publishing Company; Leighton Rollins, Director of the Rollins Theatrical School. In addition to enlarging the size of the magazine and obtaining more national advertising, the 1946-1947 staff has added more cartoons, illustrations, and short humorous articles. And in extending the range of its material, We has obtained a wider audience. Appear- ing four times annually, each issue has six-hundred to eight-hundred subscribers. GLORIA MILLER, Editor-in-Chief 40 NEWS STAFF: First Row: Judy Sly, Associate Editor; Bea Alfke; Ruth Kulakofsky; Ruth Ferguson. Sec- ond Row: Syl Crane, News Editor Angie Mills, Managing Editor Mary Lib Hurff, Editor-in-Chief Evelyn Burr, Circulation Manager B. J. Olson, Make-up Editor; Dotty Nessler, Feature Editor; Ellen Wat- son, Literary Editor. Third Row: Ann Richard; Jane Paul, File Edi- tor; Dot Oerting; Carol Remmer; Elizabeth Buchanan; Emily Fen- sterwald. Collegiate Editor; Mar- cia Vickery, Associate Editor. WE STAFF: First Row: B.J.Olson, Advertising Manager; Sidney Smith, Art Editor; Amy Reed, Man- aging Editor. Second Row: Becky Thatcher, Circulation Manager, Gloria Miller, Editor; June Water- ous. Business Editor. 41 ELIZABETH ALIEN, President ci[siy The members of the Wellesley Orchestra, under the direction of Mr. Harry Covialka, meet twice weekly in Billings to rehearse for their three annual concerts. In November they performed Bach ' s Brandenberg Concerfo No. 4, Edward Elgar ' s Serenade for Strings, two Pierrot pieces by Cyril Scott, and Alexander Tansman ' s Varia- tions on a Theme by Frescowaldi. The March concert with the Harvard orchestra included Beethoven ' s Coriolanus Overture, Mo- zart ' s Sympliony No. 28, and three dances from The Bartered Bride by Smetana. The orchestra Is composed of students, faculty, and Wellesley townspeople. In addition to working with full orchestral selections, some of the group organize string quartets, and others volunteer to play between the acts of Barnswoliow productions. Orchestra officers this year were Elizabeth Allen, president; Marilyn Hoops, vice-president; Mildred Nickel, treasurer; Louise Carroll, li brarian; Ruth May, secretary. I I ) J- V, In addition to singing in chapel every morning even during harassed, chaotic examination periods, the Wellesley College Choir, under the direction of Mrs. Margaret Macdonald Winkler, presents Fall, Christmas, and Baccalaureate vesper services each year. Although Choir ' s major function is to sing religious music — such as the per- formance of Handel ' s Messiah with the Harvard Glee Club and Faure ' s Requiem with the Bowdoin College Glee Club — it branched into the secular field this year with concerts at the Wellesley Country Club and Amherst College. In addition to the two one-and- one-half-hour rehearsals each week, Choir ' s two-hundred members rotate their appearances in chapel, each girl singing two morning services per week as well as participating in the Sunday services every other week. Choir officers this year were Nancy Weiser, chorister; Dorothy Rose, assistant chorister; Nancy Guilford and Nancy Farr, associate choristers; Dorothy Pritchett, business manager; and Barbara Loucks, assistant business manager. u NANCY WEISER, Chorister 42 43 JOAN BARKER, President Barn productions during 1946-1947 included Thornton Wilder ' s Skin of Our Teeth and A. Eldon Winkler ' s adaptation for the stage of Charles Dickens ' Cricket on the Hearth. Between major produc- tions. Barn actresses appear in the one-act plays presented by Theatre Workshop, a course based on the theoretical and practical study of the theatre. This year, Theatre Workshop, in conjunction with Barn, produced scenes from the plays written by students majoring in English Composition at Wellesley. During the Christmas season, when Cricket on the Hearth was produced, Barn presented a Saturday afternoon matinee for chil- dren and donated the proceeds to Children ' s Welfare. Barn also sends various one-act plays to the Children ' s Convalescent Home in Framingham and to the Cushing Hospital for world-war veterans. WBS, the Wellesley Broadcasting Station, broadcasts four programs every weekday. Its daily features include the morning Music Box and the evening Easy Listening (selections of popular music), classical music as a background for studying, and regular roundups of campus news. Forum debates, dramas. Town Topics (a com- mentary on bargains in the Village), quiz shows (with the faculty participating), and student-talent musical shows appear on the variable five-thirty to six o ' clock spot. All announcing, directing, script-writing and acting is done by the 1 20 members of WBS, which has quadrupled its original membership of three years ago. Now a member of the Intercollegiate Broadcasting System, Welles- ley exchanges dramatic talent with Harvard. RUTH JACOBY, Prcjident 44 BARN BOARD: First Row: Ann Arenberg, Joan Twaddle, Jo Ingalls. Second Row: Pat Taylor, Sue Fink, Joan Barker, Toddy Melvoin, Kitty Helm. Third Row: Connie Kruger, Marta Harper, Ann Pond, Barbara Auer, Martha Barton, Pat Michaels, Sarai Golomb. RADIO BOARD: First Row: Nancy Dubois, Ruth Jacoby, Lee Emery, Joan Tomajan. Second Row: Nancy StefFens, Marie Russell, Corinne Heurich, Joanne Lundholm, Jackie Johnston. 45 vV ' ' Wader ' s ' ° „.d V e ' T.te o n bV « « ' progression- J ° 7d ff co P° ' ,,co do '  tor SU ° K vrobos, ' ' vAenrV- , Perrybing ' Diane bir g ' raid e ' f,e d r 9- ' av Wvnan- 46 47 J I n AGORA: First Row: L. Rickel, F. Clarke, B. Botterfield, J. Tarcher, S. Ferris, M. Beidler, G. Garlick, E. Remick, M. Falconer, J. Doern, J. Young. Second Row: S. Kemp, J. O ' Neil, D. Dunn, E. Van Deusen, B. Rutherford, D. Getsinger, M. Piatt, J. Knoche. Third Row: M. Anderson, M. Sydnor, D. Daughodoy, J. Coffey, J. Griswold, E. Fensterwald, P. Fisher, D. Hundley, D. Mumford, A. Didriksen, M. Horner, J. Barker, S. Stetson, V. Miller, M. Stone, K. Williams, N. Holsey, M. Wash, M. Gustofson. ALPHA KAPPA CHI: First Row: E. Maxon, M. Rutherford, P. Auger, M. Kulsar, A. Bishop, J. Sly, J. Gabler, B. Schaefer, E. Hodgkiss. Second Row: R, Roper, S. Robinson, M. Cotter, R. Goldman, M, Hyman, C. Yarwood, R. Davis, A. Baker, A. Blind. Third Row: T. Holly, N. Lewis, M. LeBedoff, M. Ennor, P. Barry, M. Meurk, M. Hoon, N. Robertson, S. Babineau, L. Spengler, F. Gayer. Fourth Row: D. Oerting, E. Bond, M. Winer, L. Field, P. Lang, D. Rothschild. l 49 p I c I! PHI SIGMA: First Row: N. Sherman, D. Duricanson, M. Root, M. Brady, P. Strickland, B, Loy, E. P. Wood, G. Keehn. Second Row: M. St. Germoine, J. lundholm, S. Pillsbury, J. Miller, A. Parry, N. Baker, A. Reed. Third Row: E. B. Stevenson, B. Olson, R. Lowitr, V. Vernoy, C. Glesmann, V. V. Carlin, R. Wanomoker, N. Edwards. J. Hodgkins, N. Mueller, F. Peterson, I. Childerhose, M. de Sherbinin, L. Rogers, B. Andrew, A. Richard, D. Willioms, Tibbels, M. Vickery, J. Grindley, Babcock, J, Reindel, R. Thatcher, Alfke, J. Macdonald, D. Miner, SHAKESPEARE: First Row: M. Hurff, M. Nolon, M. Wilber, J. Sherwood, B. von Thurn, A. Ahlgren, B. Ferris, A. Arenberg. Second Row: J. Ingolls, A. Sontord, L. Vondersmith, N. Forsylhe, J. Branoman, M. Mac Gregor, J. Tomojon, B, Bell. Third Row: C. Boniol, N. Sleffens, M, Ord, C. Toshach, B. Horl, A. Cleland, A. Robinson, J. Bowen, E. Buchanan, A, Uebelacker, G. Puccia, S. Nouen. Fourth Row: U. Taylor, P. Kennedy, H, Spencer, C. Nelson, N. Kent, J. Woterous, B. Bremer, E, Countryman. I 50 I y [ [ TAU ZETA EPSILON; First Row: N. Wrenn, P. Bride, V. Farnham, M. Cleckley, B. Gray, W. Angenent, K. Thayer, M. Feder, A. Norton, J. Parker. Second Row: A. Kellogg, J. Thompson, S. Gonshow, J. Lukins, J. Hannon, P. Owen, L. Briggs, P. Headland, S. Kuehn, E. Young, R. Morgan, E. Moore, D, Pritchett, A. Cook. Third Row: J. Patterson, J. Lum, M. Tifft, M. Pfaelzer, J. Philbrick, B. Barker, D. Peterson, H. Green, C. Chandler, J. Rowland, M. McCally, D. Turnbull, H. Kuehn, I. Kachler, S, Palmer, M. Manny. ZETA ALPHA: First Row: D. Thompson, N. Pollock, M. Black, J. Pettis, G. Crawley, M. Johnston, B. Auer. Second Row: J. Krusen, A. Davison, H. Mann, A. Pond, A. Butz, C. Rushton, L. Cobb, G. McWhorter, J. Beaverson, M. Hoover. I 51 CLASSICAL CLUB M. PHYLLIS WENDOVER, President SARA SMITH, Vice-President CAROLINE WARNER, Secretary-Treasurer MISS CHARLOTTE GOODFELLOW, Faculty Adviser COSMOPOLITAN CLUB JUNE PARKER, President TERESA ELEJALDE, Vice-President PHYLLIS V ONG, Treasurer BETTY BLUE, Secretary SLAVIC SOCIETY JOAN BRAILEY, President FLORENCE BILLINGS, Senior Member OLGA LAWES, Secretary CYNTHIA SMITH, Treasurer NANCY GILLETT, Sophomore Member MR. HENRY F. SCHWARZ, Faculty Adviser MATHEMATICS CLUB DOROTHY SCHOENFUSS, President MILDRED KELTON, Vice-President LOIS WOOD, Treasurer M. DAWN O ' DAY, Junior Executive MAY FIELD MANNY, Secretary MARY ANN BERRY, Sophomore Executive MISS HELEN G. RUSSELL, Faculty Adviser 52 LA TERTULIA FRANCIS CLARKE, President MARTHA RUTHERFORD, Vice-President and Treosurer DOROTHY HUNDLEY, Secretary MISS MARY-ELEANOR MAULE, Faculty Adviser HELEN MILROY, Executive Board BARBARA BELL, Executive Board JUDITH WOLPERT, Executive Board DEUTSCHER VEREIN RENATE HALLEY, President MARIANNE HALLEY, Vice-President MARY MEAD, Secretary VIRGINIA GROVER, Treasurer NANCY PATTERSON, Entertainment Chairman MISS MARIANNE THALMANN, Faculty Adviser ALLIANCE FRANCAISE CHARMIENNE YARWOOD, President MARY ST. GERMAIN, Vice-President GERDA LEWIS, Secretary JOYCE SOKEL, Treasurer MISS EDITH MELCHER, Faculty Adviser CIRCOLO ITALIANO GERTRUDE PUCCIA, President ANN UEBELACKER, Vice-President ALMA MASTRANGELO, Secretary-Treasurer MISS GABRIELLA BOSANO, Faculty Adviser 53 It is possible for a girl to graduate from Welle- sley never having read a play of Strindberg or conducted a physics experiment, but if she has a diploma from the college she has participated in some team sport, chased some sort of ball on some sort of playing field, or has shot an arrow into the air v hlch fell to earth, it was fervently hoped, in the vicinity of the target. Wellesley ' s campus is a paradise of athletic opportunities and every stu- dent, under her own volition or otherwise, takes full advantage of it. The large number of upper- classmen who participate in volunteer sports is a tribute to Wellesley ' s exceptional athletic facilities. CAMILLA CHANDLER, President ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION BOARD: Prudence Brewer, Treasurer; Dorothy Molt, Second Vice-President; Camilla Chandler, Preiidenf; June Brundoge, First Vice-President and Chairman Outing Club; Alice Newberry, Custodian; Gretchen Keehn, Head of House Managers; Betty Bowles, Secretary. 56 i I u Nancy Myers, Head of Winter Sports; Beverly Ayres, Secretary-Treasurer; Nancy Blair, Member of the Board; Alice-Eliza- beth Main, Head of Publicity; Mary Lou Kelly, Member of the Board; Nancy Plow- man, Head of Trips; Elizabeth Bowles, Head of Equipment; June Brundage, Chairman; Julie Emerson, I.O.C.A. Sec- retary; Elaine Siegler, Head of Food. Betty Weis, President; Anne Kellogg, Vice-President; Tyler Robinson, Secretary- Treasurer; Margaret Mize, Publicity Chair- man; Deborah Kassor, Social Chairman; Jean MacKinnon, Pageant Chairman; Ann Sprague, Evelyn K, Dillon, Advisors. [ 57 FLYI NG CLUB: Sigrid Nauen, Tr easurer, Ann Snow, President; Gretchen Keehn, Vice-President; Anne Tliompson, Secretary. ■S.TT ' F™ ■ , TVi All Freshmen and Sophomores take part in some sort of supervised physical education two periods a week, fall, winter, spring. The work undertaken is varyingly strenuous and in- tense, but it is designed to equip students to meet the demands of daily living. The goals of the department of physical education are skill and lasting interest in some wholesome form of recreation, improvement in carriage, rhythm, coordination, motor judgment, and participation in group activity. These goals are quite often achieved, but every student can at least serve on a squash court, row in a crew of eight, or get a volley-ball over the net. .1 „ 59 60 For those who have, after the first two years, formed the habit of regular exercise, the student ath- letic association sponsors an extensive program of inter-dormitory competitions and other activities. The Outing Club promotes canoe trips, hiking expeditions, and the annual Winter Carnival. Whatever your favorite sport, from riding to swimming or golf, there will be others eager to join you in it. A number of students have formed a Flying Club and explore the atmospheric conditions above Fram- ingham. The Swimming Club can be watched through the underwater window, and the work of the Wellesley College Dance Group can be seen in Tree Day. The Recreation Building is the center for those of athletic or social interests. The opportunities for squash, ping-pong, and shuffle-board are tempting to those who wish to indulge in extra-curricular, co-educational activity, and for those less competitively inclined, popular or classical music may be heard at practically any time of the day or evening. In short, a West-pointer is no more likely to emerge from the Academy with good posture, than a Wellesley girl is to emerge from her alma-mater with the strength and vitality to meet the normal demands of daily living. 61 J Wi ' W4 m f. mi The Well is the Wellesley equivalent of New York ' s Stork Club, Hollywood ' s Trocadero, New Orlean ' s Antoine ' s, San Francisco ' s Top of the Mark, Minneapolis ' Charlie ' s Cafe Exceptionale, Boston ' s Locke Ober ' s, and Wellesley Hills ' Milky Way. It is crowded from early morning to rather-late-in-the-evening with students, professors, visiting celebrities, relatives of students, relatives of professors, and relatives of visiting celebrities. The menu at the Well consists of a collection of concoctions designed to satisfy: the piece de resistance is the Wellesley Special, a tower of ice-cream with a brownie foundation, drown- ing in a puddle of chocolate sauce. In addition to providing food for the starving, wafer for the parched, atmosphere for the cosmopolite, and talk-talk-talk for the raconteur, the Well supplies music for everyone with normally constructed ears. From the Chromium-plated nickleodeon in the rear of the room, from early morning to rather- late-in-the-evening. Well-habitues are bombarded with tangos, rhumbas, fox-trots, sambas, waltzes, and upon occasion, Spike Jones. 64 I [ 65 66 e 5 e , pW aV sV e ee : sa sv) dde ' te Aeose o V esso e, svJ ddet te ' ' ' o V e ' Se( ® o JO os o 9 ,V ,d ? ' P aVx - Vie vno5 V N a vje o iV 5 v V o kpov ' Vaov ' •,r cfe to i- ■ Ao DO t ro ou de . one e- ,-. M. , op DO V ee xf 0 VJ - V VAe ' V e iO ff o5• Aas ben anV- iW n9 v 05 ' Via 67 68 Step-singing is actually not very difficult to explain: all the college students sit on the chapel steps and sing songs. The seniors wear their black mortar boards, that is, square hats with long black tassels. The underclassmen wear small colored class caps with class numerals sewed above the brim. This makes it easy to distinguish one class from another. When the members of the classes want the members of the faculty to join them on the steps, they all chant in a loud tone of voice: We want Mr. (or Mrs. or Miss as the case may be) on OUR steps! Each class has a democratically elected song-leader. It is her duty to lead all the songs. All kinds of songs are popular at step-singing, a fact which is just one more striking bit of evidence of the broad interests of the college girl. At the first step-singing of the year, the four classes arrive at the chapel, carrying their individual class banners and several Japanese lanterns. At the last step-singing, banners and lanterns are omitted and forget-me-nots are presented to the departing seniors. 69 70 Dances at Wellesley are very much like dances at any other college. A long line of males, suffering silently in tuxedos, are presented to a long line of chaperones by a long line of starry-eyed young ladies wearing volumes of satin, net, sequins, feathers, ribbons, flowers, and so on and on. A limited group of union musicians imported from Boston produce the necessary accompaniment. A singular number of intermissions are sprinkled through the evening. A cluster of chairs is set aside for the weary. A table of punch and cookies is attacked at midnight. A good time is generally had by all. 71 72 1 u Snow seems to be more or less basic to Winter Carnivals. Without snow, there is no skiing, no ice-skating, no sculping of snowmen, no throwing of snowballs ... in short, no excuse for a carnival. During the 1 947 Winter Season at Wellesley, there was a depressing lack of snow. The Winter Carnival Committee was in a tizzy. They hod nightmares about hordes of slim young athletic men, arriving with skis, ice skates, snow shoes, looking forward to schussing, slaloming, stem-christying, being confronted by a campus with ... no snow. Fearing the combined wrath of the Dartmouth, Amherst, Yale, Prince- ton, Harvard, Williams, M.I.T., Tufts, Boston U., Cornell, and Iowa State men summoned to the Carnival, they awoke from their night- mares and stumbled to their windows . . . still no snow. The whole thing was getting oppressive. The Winter Carnival Committee was becoming neurotic. But they rose above it and planned a weekend sans snow: hay rides instead of sleigh rides, barn dances instead of figure eights, squash matches instead of down- hill races. (There would still be a formal dance Saturday night.) The nightmares stopped. The committee announced the new schedule of events to the college. Everyone wrote to their dates and told them not to bring skis, skates, or snowshoes. Hordes of slim young athletic men from Dartmouth, Amherst, Yale, Princeton, Harvard, Williams, M.I.T., Tufts, Boston U., Cornell, and Iowa State arrived with no skis, skates, or snowshoes, and were confronted by a campus with . . . SNOW. During the night a blizzard had come to Wellesley. m a iVi :f •. . ..• ' -t U M 74 NV £ R i I M t Snow melts. Rain stops. Sun appears. Skies turn blue. Tulips blossom. Daffodils blossom. Chinese lilies blossom. Frogs croak. Birds sing. It is summer. And it is good. Students relax. Students sunbathe. Students go canoeing. Students picnic. Students daydream. Students return to nature. Roll calls continue. Papers multiply. Quizzies horrify. The General approaches. Pressure increases. Schedules jam up. And yet it is summertime and it is good. 75 On May Day the Senior class rallies its last vestiges of vigor and turns out for the hoop race, Wellesley ' s equivalent to the Kentucky Derby. The big event is pre- ceded by a harrowing training period: seniors, aging fast, appear on the local highways at twilight, laboriously pushing their wooden O ' s, clocking their racing speed, dreaming of victory . . . photogra- phers exploding flash bulbs, friends shout- ing congratulations about the wedding (Ed. Note: According to tradition, the winner is the first bride), undergraduates begging for autographs. . . . Tension runs high on the day of the big race. Little Sisters perch on Sever- ance Hill in the chill air of dawn, reserv- ing places in the line-up for their Big Sisters. Suddenly the air is clouded with dust as approximately 300 Seniors, robed sedately in caps and gowns, gallop off propelling their hoops Chapelward. Now and then an ambitious Harvard man, with visions of immortality, enters the race in female disguise (invariably, a blond wig). The consequence s of his daring are for- midable; outraged Wellesleyites, acting according to the custom established by their forerunners in the racing game, toss the interloper into the waters of Lake Waban. The last male contestant came prepared for the inevitable. He wore a bathing suit. 76 77 4 According to Webster, a tree is A woody perennial plant having a single main axis or stem (trunk), commonly exceeding 10 feet in height. People from all over the world are impressed by the great number of interesting trees on the Wellesley campus. There are birches, white oaks, red oaks, junipers, firs, tupelos, Canadian maples, silver maples, red maples. There is even one ghinko tree. People look for it on scavenger hunts. Each year Wellesley acquires one more tree. It belongs to the Freshman class. Someday it will TREE DAY COURT: Jane Thompson, Jane Miller, Jo Lundholm, Bar- bara Franket. TREE DAY QUEEN: Susan Palmer. I U[ n be as beautiful as the rest of the trees; but at the time of planting, it is under ten feet. The acquisi- tion of the new tree is solemnized by a big celebration. There is a dance pageant preceded by the presentation of the trowel by the Sophomore Giver of the Spade to the Freshman Receiver of the Spade. The outcome of the Fresh- man-Sophomore race to the Fresh- man class tree determines whether or not the Freshmen may give their class cheer. It is the most exciting day of the year. 79 1 I T n i- Zf S ' T ' fj[ [l I 82 i[||[|IDIIII[S In August, 1943, the 478 members of the class of 1947 got off trains, busses, motorcycles, out of taxis, cars, airplanes . . . the 478 members of the class of 1947 were carrying trunks, suitcases, shoe racks, duffle bags, sleeping bags, hat boxes, skis, tennis rackets, golf clubs, bathing caps, small over- stuffed animals, picture frames, pictures, tea pots, and stocking stretchers. They moved into a lot of very small rooms in the village. The next day they bought paper, pens, notebooks, cards, stationery, thirsty blotters, maps, lamp shades, curtain rods, waste baskets, understuffed chairs, moth balls, soap chips, padlocks, banners from Dartmouth, Amher st, Yale, Princeton, Harvard, Williams, M.I.T., Tufts, Boston U., Cornell, and Iowa State. These were moved into a lot of very small rooms in the village. In the days that followed they attended meetings, met deans, stood in lines, modelled angel robes, went to classes, read Gray Books, ate pink pills, yearned for pink slips. Complications set in. Two of the 478 were lost for two weeks somewhere between Green and Founders Hall. Three of the 478 gave up classes permanently to wait on tables. Four of the 478 gave up waiting on tables permanently to sit on bells. Five of the 478 were caught in a blizzard on Lake Waban. In June, 1944, the 478 members of the class of 1947 got into trains, busses, motorcycles, taxis, cars, airplanes . . . the 478 members of the class of 1947 were carrying dictionaries, reading lists. The Works of Plato, The Works of Shakespeare, The Complete Works of Tennyson, Animals Without Backbones, Personal and Community Hygiene, Basic Spanish, Basic French, Basic German. Freshman year was over. Under the eyes of the 478 were delicate blue circles. But the class of 1947 had learned how to make a footnote and of what stuff the lobster is made. Official U. S. Navy Photograph D y I [ ![fl The United States was still at war, and during Sophomore Year the 452 members of the Class of 1947, along with the rest of the students in the college, did nurses ' aid work, hospital volunteer jobs, sewing for the Red Cross, bandage-rolling and knitting for the Wellesley War Activities Committee . . . some students held part-time jobs in nearby war plants and some did social service work in the Boston area. Cazenove and Pomeroy Halls were reconverted into dormitories for several hundred midshipmen who attended Navy supply school classes in Alumnae Hall. Wellesley ' s president continued her position as Captain of 86,000 WAVES. 85 Official U. S. Navy Photograph u I[l ll[ ! PIIIIIC 86 Junior Year means Junior Show. On November 17, 1945 the 395 members of the class of 1947 presented The Body Politic in Alumnae Hall. Everyone was ecstatic about the flawless acting, flawless sets, flawless songs. It was the most flawless Junior Show ever produced. It was all about Leslie Carlton, an alumna from the Class of 1947, who ran for the presidency of the United States, was opposed by Bill Smith, was eventually intrigued by Bill Smith, was eventually married to Bill Smith, was eventually installed in the White House as the power behind President Smith. (Ed. Note: Never underestimate the power of a mem- ber of the Gloss of 1947.) Nan Weiser v os Head of Junior Show; Miggs Ignatius, Head of Script; Jean Rowland, Head of Music; Ann Farley, Head of Production; Dotty Schoenfuss, Head of Business; Jackie Cummings, Head of Choreography; Maxine Bublitz, Director. The songs v ere written by Michal Ernst, Jean Lazarus, Nancy Guilford, Connie Kruger, Jane Miller, Jane Pate, Jan Young, Phil Clark, Ruth Jacoby, Puss Ov en. The role of Leslie Carlton was played by Dorothy de Lutio; the ingenue lead was played by Barbara Gormley. Junior Year means Junior Prom. On May 4, 1945, tlie 395 members of the Class of 1947 held a prom in Alumnae Hal Everyone was ecstatic about the flawless orchestra, flawless dance floor, flawless decorations. It was the most flawless Junior Prom ever produced. Secret of its success: yellow decorations, Lew Tobin ' s band, Lyn Rogers ' management, punch and cookies at midnight, songs from The Body Politic, and men from Dartmouth, Yale, Princeton, Harvard, Amherst, Williams, M.I.T., Tufts, Boston U., Cornell, and the California Institute of Technology. (Ed. Note: Never underestimate the power of the Class of 1947.) 87 .r  U uu t In September, 1946, the 378 members of the class of 1947 stepped out of airplanes into taxis, were whisked swiftly to Wellesley. They were carrying small cosmetic coses, small chi-chi handbags, sleek baum-mortins. They hallooed to their friends, yawned impercep- tibly, escaped to their dimly lighted rooms, and there . . . collapsed. The next day they slept late, toyed with tall glasses of orange juice. They bought vitamin pills, aspirin, and cold tablets, a few choice Picassos, the Quartets of T. S. Eliot, and the Quintets of Beethoven. They shuddered to think of tomorrow ... all those tomorrows . . . four courses to contend with, and then that bother- some General looming up in June . . . They escaped to their dimly lighted rooms to meditate. In the days that followed they attended classes, seminars, con- ferences. They knitted scarves, stockings, little booties. They dashed off novels, plays, honors theses, small choice poems in iambic pentameter (some of the more daring chose the anapest). They dropped into the Well . . . alone, or accompanied by one sympathetic friend . . . and sipped afternoon tea and generalized about the state of the world and smiled with tender violence at all interlopers. Weekends were reserved for tea dances, formal dances, con- certs, plays, the opera, the ballet, with men from Harvard Gradu- ate School . . . skiing and barn dances with men from Dartmouth . . . football games with men from Yale, Princeton, Amherst, M.I.T., Tufts, Boston U., Cornell, and Iowa State. And like a recurrent refrain . . . the Placement Offrce. Do you want to write for Time, Fortune, Vogue or the Atlantic Monthly? (Well, no, I had the Theatre Guild in mind . . . ) Do you want to work abroad in France, England, Russia, Italy, or Bulgaria? (Well, no, I had New York in mind . . . ) Do you want to do research at Yale, Harvard, Princeton, or Dartmouth? (Well, no, I had Iowa State in mind . . . ) Do you want to work? (Well, no . . ) 89 u 90 aM 91 PHI BETA KAPPA ELECTED JUNIOR YEAR (=C Elizabeth H. Backus Virginia Beach Florence Billings Jane D. Bowen Flora Gillies Mary Elizabeth HurfF Helen Mary Ignatius Nancy Myers Thelma J. Peskoe Polly Pride Lois Wiley Carmel Zupa ELECTED SENIOR YEAR Barbara Ashe Jean Beaverson Jean Carpenter Frances Clarke Alberta Epstein Phyllis Fisher Janet Hannon Carolyn Gold Heilbrun Marilyn Hoopes Mildred R. Kelton Jean KixMiller Charlotte McConnell Josephine Ott Jocelyn Rogers Mary Alice Ross Jane Watkins Mary M. Wilber Lois Wood Flora Gillies Nancy Myers SIGMA XI ELECTED JUNIOR YEAR Lois Wiley Lois Wood ELECTED SENIOR YEAR Elizabeth H. Backus Jane D. Bowen Mildred R. Kelton Charlotte McConnell Thelma J. Peskoe Dorothy W. Schoenfu s Sally H. Stetson Mary M. Wilber 92 DURANT SCHOLARS Elizabeth H. Backus Virginia Beach Jean Beaverson Florence Billings Jane D. Bowen Frances Clarl e ELECTED JUNIOR YEAR Alberta Epstein Flora Gillies Carolyn Gold Heilbrun Mary Elizabeth Hurff Helen Mary Ignatius Mildred Kelton Charlotte McConnell Nancy Myers Thelma Peskoe Lois Wiley Lois Wood Carmel Zupa Elizabeth H. Dackus Virginia Beach Jean Beaverson Florence Billings Jane D. Bowen Frances Clarke ELECTED SENIOR YEAR Alberta Epstein Flora Gillies Mildred Kelton Charlotte McConnell Nancy Myers Josephine Ott Thelma Peskoe Mary Alice Piatt Polly Pride Jocelyn Rogers Jane Watkins Lois Wiley Carmel Zupa Constance Ailing Elizabeth Ball Joan Brailey Marilyn Caplan Jean Carpenter Alice Edwards Phyllis Fisher Margaret Gilbert Barbara Gormley Jean Grindley Janet Hannon Marilyn Hoopes WELLESLEY SCHOLARS ELECTED JUNIOR YEAR Marilyn Hyman Ruth Jacoby Barbara Jones Enid Kastor Betty Kligerman Susan Kuehn Jean Lamb Marilyn MacGregor Josephine L. Ott Jean Parsons Mary Alice Piatt Elisabeth Pratt Polly Pride Elizabeth Remick Jocelyn Rogers Mary Alice Ross Anne Sangree Helen Schwartz Susan Shonds Jane Swartz Ellen C. Van Deusen Jane Watkins Phyllis Wendover Cay S. Williams Margaret Wilson Constance Ailing Molly Anderson Barbara Ashe Joan Brailey Barbara Britton Jean Carpenter Alice Edwards Michal Ernst Feder Suzanne Fink Phyllis Fisher Hope Freeman Margaret Gilbert Jean Grindley Janet Hannon ELECTED SENIOR YEAR Carolyn Gold Heilbrun Marilyn Hoopes Marilyn Hyman Ruth Jacoby Jean KixMiller Betty Kligerman Barbara Gormley Koslow Susan Kuehn Jean Lamb Margery Myers June Palladino Jean Parsons Elisabeth Pratt Elizabeth Remick Mary Robertson Mary Alice Ross Anne Sangree Helen Schwartz Mary Louise Shriver Florence Shulman Elizabeth Sullivan Dorothy Thompson Ellen C. Van Deusen Phyllis Wendover Pricilla Whitcomb Mary Wilber Cay S. Williams Margaret Wilson Lois Wood 93 RUTH M. ADAMS C Psychology PHYLLIS RIKER AINSWORTH English Literature DOROTHEA ALEXANDER Art ELIZABETH CHANDLER ALLEN Music CONSTANCE ALLING cvV, Art MOLLY MARTIN ANDERSON Psychology ANN ARENBERG Psychology MARJORIE G. ARNOLD Geology BARBARA ASHE Zoology MYRTLE E. ATKINSON Zoology BARBARA AUER Psychology MARJORIE BABCOCK English Literature 94 SHIRLEY JEAN BABINEAU Spanish BETTY BACKUS 5 Psychology ELIZABETH BALL History JOAN BARKER Zoology PATRICIA ANNE BARRY French BARBARA ANN BASYE History VIRGINIA LOUISE BEACH Philosophy JEAN ANN BEAVERSON Music ELIZABETH NORWOOD BECK Art BARBARA BELL Spanish ELIZABETH GRAHAM BELL History FLORENCE MARIE BILLINGS History 95 KATHLEEN ANNE BISHOP Art MARGUERITE A. BLACK French BETSY L. BLAISDELL Psychology JANE DIVINE BOWEN Philosophy JEAN CAROL BOWN Art MIRIAM BRADY Zoology JOAN BRAILEY Political Science JEAN BRANAMAN Zoology SYLVIA M. BREED English Composition EMILY ELIZABETH BREMER Psychology LEE BRIGGS Psychology BARBARA JEAN BRITTON Sociology f a.in ieid ' .  -I :J i ' - ' aSJ ' • ■ . i • .- 2 96 ALICE CAROLYN BROWN ■ English Literature ELIZABETH ELAINE BROWN English Composition ANNE FRANCES BRUMM Zoology JUNE BRUNDAGE History MARGARET M. BRUNSDALE History FRANCES JOAN BRYAN Political Science MAXINE ADELE BUBLITZ 3 Art KATHARINE B. BUCHANAN Zoology JANE OGIER BURGER Psychology BARBARA ANN BURNETT English Literature EVELYN ANNE BURR Economics JANE H. BURTON English Literature 97 CAROLYN CAMPBELL Psychology MARILYN B. CAPLAN Psychology VIRGINIA CLAIRE CARLIN Art JEAN LOUISE CARPENTER Chemistry SARA ANNE CAVEN Economics CAMILLA CHANDLER Zoology CONSTANCE HARTLEY CHICK ANNE CALDWELL CHILDS Psychology SK(x j;- Greek MARGARET CHILDS Political Science JANICE CHRISFIELD Sociology PHYLLIS CLARK Music FRANCES W. CLARKE Spanish 98 MARILYN CLARKE Zoology MARY FLEMING CLECKLEY Psychology ANNE F. CLELAND Political Science BETTY COBEY English Composition PATRICIA ELIZABETH COE Psychology MARGARET PRICE COGSWELL LORRAINE HERRIET COHEN SV a 50 Sociology History ANN ELIZABETH COIT English Composition CYNTHIA COLBY English Composition and Literature BERYL FRANCES COSGROVE Psychology MILLICENT COTTER Geography 99 ETHLYN COUNTRYMAN Zoology JOANNA CREIGHTON Sociology JANE NORMAN COX Political Science PHYLLIS CREIGHTON Geography SYLVIA BURTON CRANE English Composition ELIZABETH MARIE CREW v Economics GLENN CRAWLEY English Literature JANE ALLEN CUMMINGS Spanish MARGERY DALLWIG Psychology C. DEBORAH DAUGHADAY Sociology ANN KATHERINE DAVISON Art JEAN de BEER English Literature 100 KATHLEEN NORRIS DEPUE JEAN MARIE DOERN MARGARET DOWNING ALYSON DUDLEY Art English Literature 2l Biblical History Biblical History C i2 DOROTHY JEAN DUNCANSON DOROTHY DUNN ELIZABETH MARIE EDDY ALICE CORNELIA EDWARD Geography Psychology History Biblical History JULIE EMERSON EMILY ANN EMERY MURIEL M. EMLEY ALBERTA EPSTEIN Zoology Philosophy History Political Science 101 ELIZABETH EMILY EVANS Biblical History MARTHA P. FALCONER Biblical History ANN ELLEN FARLEY History VIRGINIA FARNHAM Philosophy 8V NANCY HARTONG FARR Geology MICHAL ERNST FEDER History HARRIET M. FENN Art EMILY FENSTERV ALD Chemistry LYNN KARP FENTON Political Science GERALDINE FEREND Wj x- History GENE HAMILTON FERRIS Psychology SUZANNE ELIZABETH FERRIS French 102 LAURETTE FIELD SUZANNE FINK PHYLLIS ANN FISHER Sociology Mathematics Psychology PATRICIA D. FLANNAGAN JEANNE LOUISE FLEMING BARBARA KELLER FLINT English Composition Political Science Zoology MARY VAIL FORD NANCY LEWIS FORSYTHE JANICE FOSTER English Literature English Composition S Psychology DOROTHY M. FITZPATRICK English Composition MARY PATRICIA FOLEY Political Science JACQUELINE LOEWE FOWLER Art  v..,,.rtv 103 BARBARA JEANNE FRANKET HOPE MINA FREEMAN KATHARINE L. FRIEDMANN MARY JANE GABLETSA English Composition ' b History Zoology Political Science SHIRLEY A. GANSHOW GLORIA BOOTH GARLICK DORIS GETSINGER MARGARET LOUISE GILBERT SWl -c- History Mathematics History Chemistry FLORA ETHEL GILLIES MARY CAROLYN GLESMANN RUTH ELLEN GOLDMAN SARAI GOLOMB Mathematics Chemistry Political Science Psychology 104 LOUISE GOODHUE Chemistry MARGARET F. GOODWILLIE Art BARBARA ELLEN GORMLEY DOROTHY HAMILTON GRANT Political Science History ROBERTA S. GREENSERG Economics JEAN ELIZABETH GRINDLEY Economics JANET GRISWOLD Sociology NANCY ELIZABETH GUILFORD ' Mathematics MADLIN F. GULICK Psychology GENEVIEVE LOUISE GUSHEE French LOIS E. HALDIMAND Economics GERTRUDE HAMPER Political Science 105 T JANET CDiTtI HANNON Economics MARY A. HARDIMAN Mathematics ANNE RANSDELL HARMAN MARTA LOUISE HARPER English Literature SVio-V -f Chemistry DIANA F. HARRISS Psychology L. ANN HARTMAN Philosophy REBECCA HAYS Drama PATRICIA ANN HEADLAND Psychology CAROLYN GOLD HEILBRUN English Composition ■ BETH HIETT Zoology JEAN LAZARUS HOFFMAN •- S History HELENE MARJORIE HOGAN Political Science 106 MARILYN S. HOOPES Physics MARGARET ANN HOOVER Psychology MARJORIE HOSKINS Economics BEVERLY HOWE English Literature MARIAN HUGHES h Geology MARY ELIZABETH HURFF English Composition MARILYN BLANCHE HYMAN Political Science HELEN MARY IGNATIUS English Composition «) JOYCE REID INGALLS Drama RUTH L. JACOBY Psychology MARGARET L. JOHNSON Political Science MARY CAROL JOHNSTON English Composition -t Aj tj«_£j„ ,jU il, — jA J £ 107 ELIZABETH B. JONES RACHAEL MARIE JONES SALLY LOU JONES IDA BETH KACHLER Mathematics English Composition Economics 5 4 History ESTHER A. KAPLAN Chemistry JOYCE WEISMAN KARP Psychology JUDITH KARP English Literature GLORIA HAMILTON KEE Economics CAROLINE ELLEN KEITH RUTH HELEN KELLEY MILDRED RUTH KELTON M. SUSANNE KEMP Art Greek Mathematics English Composition 108 PATRICIA KENNEDY Psychology CARLOTTA KERWIN Political Science JEAN PRATT KixMILLER SVvi v History BETTY MARJORIE KLIGERMAN English Literature KATHARINE B. KREBS - English Literature CONSTANCE ANNE KRUGER JOANNE ELIZABETH KRUSEN Music English Literature SUSAN E. KUEHN English Composition oW s an JEAN DARLING LAMB French ALICE LEE LANE Art PATRICIA JANE LANG English Literature MARIAN ELEANOR LATHROP Biblical History 109 CLARINDA ALLYN LAWSON Botany NANCY LENHART Psychology ELIZABETH McL. LOVETT   f- Zoology JEAN LUKINS Political Science ' r ANNETTE G. LUMMIS iV)oJ- . ' Chemistry CAROLE JOANNE LUNDHOLM English Composition ANN G. MacCOLLOM English Composition MARY JEAN MacFETRIDGE History MARILYN MacGREGOR Botany NANCY JEAN MacKINNON Philosophy CATHARINE MACLARY Chemistry MARGARET VIRGINIA MAJOR Biblical History 110 POLLY MALLOY Philosophy ELISABETH GRAHAM MASON History BETTY EDNA McARTHUR SWmAit History BARBARA LEE McBRIDE Spanish CAROLYN McCANDLISS History CHARLOTTE McCONNELL MARY ELIZABETH McDONNELL MAY D. McREYNOLDS Zoology English Composition wa ui- - i ■SWo ZoologV MARJORIE A. McWHORTER English Literature MARGARET LUCY MEADER French JEAN ELIZABETH METZGER Sociology 111 PATRICIA M. MICHAELS Political Science WINONA MILEHAM English Composition GLORIA EDYTHE MILLER English Composition L. JANE MILLER Music ANGIE MILLS Art OLGA HENRIQUE MINDLIN Political Science DOROTHY MINER Psychology ANN MOORE Psychology ELLEN MOORE Zoology PAMELA ROSS MOORE Chemistry GWENDOLYN G. MORGAN ROSALIND HOLLOW MORGAN English Literature CV Political Science BERNICE MOROWITZ SWa jr- Political Science JANET LEE MORRIS t Art SUSAN KATE MORSE Economics ROBIN MUCHMORE Physics DORIS GROVER MUDGETT Cm.-)) Philosophy NANCY L. MUELLER Psychology MARGERY ELLYN MYERS Art NANCY PICKERING MYERS Physics tfa.2- ILAH DALES NEILL Psychology NANCY NELMS History CHARLOHE NELSON Zoology DOROTHY ANN NESSLER English Composition 113 MARTHA DASHA NOLAN History ALICE LEE NORTON Cow -j History MARY ELIZABETH O ' DONNELL Chemistry BARBARA JANE OLSON English Literature BETTY ANN O ' NEIL History JOAN WALTERS O ' NEIL ' i r. Aj Sociology JOSEPHINE LOUISE OH French PERSIS OWEN Music %V x HARRIET OXENHAM Sociology MARGARET PAIGE Botany JUNE ANGELA PALLADINO Zoology SUSAN ARCHER PALMER Sociology tx ' ' J) 114 NAYANTARA PANDIT History MARIE-JEANNE PASQUIER History K. JUNE PARKER English Composition and Literature JANE SAXON PATE Psychology ANN PARRY Zoology JANE COLBURN PAUL Chemistry JEAN CANFIELD PARSONS History PATRICIA PEARE Economics ' -2) TERRY PESKOE Psychology DOROTHY de LUTIO PETERSON ELIZABETH ANNE PETERSON Zoology English Composition JEAN PETTIS Economics 115 JOAN MARILYN PFIZER Political Science JEAN PHILBRICK Sociology ' SUSAN PILLSBURY Political Science MARY ALICE PLATT Psychology NANCY POLLOCK Sociology ELISABETH OILMAN PRATT Economics POLLY PRIDE English Composition DOROTHY FAE PRITCHETT Art GERTRUDE PUCCIA Italian Literature MARY PURINGTON English Literature VIRGINIA LEE RAAD Art RUTH POWELL RAMSDELL Spanish 116 BARBARA LAWRENCE READE Psychology AMY REED English Composition SARAH ELIZABETH REMICK Chemistry ELIZABETH LEE REZNER Spanish GLORIA LEE RHODENIZER Art MARILYN RINGER Zoology PATRICIA ANN RIPLE History MARY LOUISE ROBERTSON English Literature S NARICE ROBERTSON Spanish LOIS ANNE ROBINSON English Composition ' ' - z- MARY ROBINSON Botany SIGRID ROBINSON History 117 CORAJANE BAXTER ROGERS r_ History JEAN JOCELYN ROGERS History ADELE ROGERSON Economics MARY MARSHALL ROOT Sociology JOAN E. ROSENCRANZ tft f- Philosophy MARY ALICE ROSS English Literature ' a-Aj- JEAN ROWLAND Music ' VmhW CAMILLA RUSHTON Botany ISABELLE RUSSEK Political Science BETTYE RUTHERFORD ' l, Chemistry CONSTANCE SHARON RYDER Chemistry MARY ANN ST. GERMAIN French 118 ELVIA JANE SAMUELSON English Composition NELLE STRUBLE SANDERS Biblical History MARY LAWRENCE SANDS Biblical History ANDREA SANFORD Sociology ANNE COATES SANGREE Geology PHYLLIS ANNE SCHEER English Composition HELEN MARGARET SCHMID Latin MARY ELLEN SCHMITZ Biblical History LOUISE SCHNAUFER Zoology DOROTHY W. SCHOENFUSS Mathematics HELEN BARNEY SCHWARTZ SUSAN COURTNEY SHANDS Biblical History Political Science ' h 119 NANCY G. SHERMAN Mathematics BARBARA ANN SHOUP G-c - Philosophy MARY LOUISE SHRIVER English Composition FLORENCE SHULMAN Political Science JUDITH MARY SLY Political Science BARBARA ANN SMILLIE Botany BARBARA SNELL Psychology MIMI SPECTOR Psychology S vt HESTER DuPUY SPENCER History LUCILLE MARIE SPENGLER Economics LOUISE SPIEGEL Sociology OLGA STEKIONIS Botany 120 ii, . - - SALLY HEWES STETSON Botany ELIZABETH ANN STEVENSON RUTH DOUGHERTY STODDARD BARBARA JANE STRATMEYER Zoology English Literature History PHYLLIS STRICKLAND Psychology ELIZABETH BEACH SULLIVAN Biblical History ANNE GOULD SUTTIE y Psychology FANNY JOSEPHINE TAYLOR Ski |tM. History FLO-HARRIET TAYLOR English Literature KATHARINE M. THAYER French ShtJrt ANN JANE THEILER Political Science JEAN THOMAS Philosophy 121 DOROTHY THOMPSON Zoology GERTRUDE J. THOMPSON Psychology JANE PEASLEY THOMPSON MARTHA JANE THOMPSON History Wcxlye-Y- History SARAH JEAN THOMSON History FRANCES RUTH TIBBETTS Chemistry HILDA JOAN TOLMACH History JOAN TOMAJAN Art BETTY LEE TUCKER English Literature JOAN BOTHAM TWADDLE English Literature MARIE ANNE VALLANCE Philosophy ELLEN CAROL VAN DEUSEN Economics 122 MARCIA CUTLER VICKERY English Composition JANE ELIZABETH VILETT Sociology HARRIET VOGELBAUM VnjiJUa Chemistry JEAN von DEESTEN History LOTTCHEN VONDERSMITH Sociology SVicJ-ev ' HARRIET WALD Spanish ELIZABETH R. WALKER Political Science JANICE WALKER English Literature RUTH WANAMAKER History JUNE MARIE WATEROUS Sociology JANE SMITH WATKINS S Mj Economics ELLEN BRASHEARS WATSON English Composition 123 KATHARINE KURR WAHLES Philosophy ALMA RAYNES WEISBERG NANCY SHARPLESS WEISER French Clo v Philosophy PHYLLIS WENDOVER Drama PRISCILLA WHITCOMB Zoology MARY MARGARET WILBER Zoology LOIS WILEY Chemistry (lo.-i CAY STEWART WILLIAMS History POLLY McE. WILLIAMS I ( ■ v on ' ) English Literature rn 124 J ' MARGARET GARDNER WILSON LELA FAITH WINOGRAD Political Science Psychology LOIS WOOD Mathematics PATRICIA C. YARWOOD French EMILY RAMSAY YOUNG Art JANET YOUNG Political Science ANN ZENGERLE Biblical History CARMEL R. ZUPA History 125 SENIOR DIRECTORY ADAMS, RUTH M. AINSWORTH, PHYLLIS R. ALEXANDER, DOROTHEA ALLEN, ELIZABETH C. ALLING, CONSTANCE H. ANDERSON, MOLLY M. ARENBERG, ANN ARNOLD, MARJORIE G. ASHE, BARBARA S. . ATKINSON, MYRTLE E. AUER, BARBARA BABCOCK, MARJORIE A. BABINEAU, SHIRLEY J. BACKUS, BETTY H, . BALL, ELIZABETH BARKER, JOAN BARRY, PATRICIA A. BASYE, BARBARA A. . BEACH, VIRGINIA L. BEAVERSON, JEAN A. BECK, ELIZABETH N. BELL, BARBARA BELL, ELIZABETH G. . BILLINGS, FLORENCE M. BISHOP, K. ANN. BLACK, MARGUERITE A. BLAISDELL, BETSY LOU BOWEN, JANE D. BOWN, JEAN C. BRADY, MIRIAM BRAILEY, JOAN BRANAMAN, JEAN . BREED, SYLVIA M. BREMER, BETTY BRIGGS, D. LEE BRITTON, BARBARA J. BROWN, ALICE C. BROVVN, ELIZABETH E. BRUMM, ANNE F. BRUNDAGE, JUNE BRUNSDALE, MARGARET M BRYAN, F. JOAN BUBLITZ, MAXINE A. BUCHANAN, KATHARINE B BURGER, JANE O. BURNETT, BARBARA A. BURR, EVELYN A. BURTON, JANE H. CAMPBELL, CAROLYN M. CAPLAN, MARILYN B. CARLIN, VIRGINIA C. CARPENTER, JEAN L. CAVEN, SARA A. CHANDLER, CAMILLA CHICK, CONSTANCE H. CHILDS, ANNE C. CHILDS, MARGARET F. CHRISTFIELD, JANICE R. CLARK, PHYLLIS CLARKE, FRANCES W. CLARKE, MARILYN CLECKLEY, MARY F. . CLELAND, ANN F. COBEY, BETTY B. COE, PATRICIE E. COGSWELL, MARGARET P. COHEN, LORRAINE H. COIT, ANN E. COLBY, CYNTHIA COLEMAN, J. WARRENE (Mrs. Loguzzo COSGROVE, BERYL F. COTTER, A ILLICENT . COUNTRYMAN, ETHLYN COX, JANE N. . CRANE, SYLVIA B. CRAWLEY, N, GLENN CREIGHTON, JOANNA J. CREIGHTON, PHYLLIS CREV , ELIZABETH M. CUMMINGS, JANE A. DALLWIG, MARGERY A. DAUGHADAY, C. DEBORAH DAVISON, ANN K. . de BEER, JEAhJ DEPUE, KATHLEEN N. DOERN, JEAN M. DOWNING, MARGARET I. DUDLEY, ALYSON DUNCANSON, DOROTHY J DUNN, DOROTHY M. ' Ro mand 7406 Monticello St., Pittsburgh 8, Pa. Old Post Rd., Fairfield, Conn. 618 Beacon St., Newton Centre, Mass. . 1 1 Hillside Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. c o American Legation, Tangier, Morocco 250 Nassau Ave., Manhasset, N. Y. 730 S. Green Bay Rd., Highland Park, III. Oakwood PI., Eou Claire, Wis. 340 E. 66th St., New York 21, N. Y. 1011 Buckingham Rd., Grosse Pointe 30, Mich. 78 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. . 340 Linden St., Wellesley Hills, Mass. 333 Wakeman Rd., Fairfield, Conn. 1461 Waterbury Rd., Lakewood 7, O. 357 Ashmont St., Dorchester, Mass. 1839 Kenwood Pkwy., Minneapolis, Minn. 102 Palm St., Nashua, N. H. 24 Rope Ferry Rd., Hanover, N. H. 2065 Los Robles Ave., Son Marino 9, Calif. 5160 Luverne Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Old Roman Rd., Upper Bassett, Southampton, England 805 Ave. B., Sterling, III. King ' s Highway, Rosslyn Farms, Carnegie, Pa. 502 Monroe St., Glencoe, III. . 375 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. . 202 Hawthorn Rd., Springfield, O. 2 Canterbury Rd., Jamestown, N. Y. 894 Beaumont Ave., Harrodsburg, Ky. 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Tianderah Gilbertsville, N. Y. 52 Roberts Rd., West Medford 55, Mass. Locust Crest, Clinton, lowo. 46 Randlett Pork, West Newton 65, Mass. 3025 Bransford Rd., Augusta, Ga. American University at Cairo, Cairo, Egypt 3201 33rd PL, N. W., Washington, D. C. 222 Conewango Ave., Warren, Pa. 1053 Skokie Ridge Dr., Glencoe, III. 1 24 Blackstone Blvd., Providence, R. I. The Lord ' s Bounty , Lothian, Md. 16 Rockland St., Concord, N. H. 17 Joy St., Boston, Mass. 1727 Beacon St., Waban, Mass. 31 Clark Rd., Lowell, Mass. 213 S. Avon St., St. Paul 5, Minn. 813 University Ave., S. E., Minneapolis 14, Minn, c o Mrs. R. F. Moss, 724 Salem Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. . 800 Pork Ave., New York, N. Y. 191 Highland Ave., Hamburg, N. Y. 156 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 615 E. 26th St., Peterson 4, N. J, 12 E. Central St., Notick, Moss. 3259 N. Hackett Ave., Milwaukee 11, Wis. Longmeadow Farm, Winnetka, III. 73 Church St., Newton, Mass. 64 Euclid Ave., Albony, N. Y. 421 Poplar Dr., Falls Church, Vo. 320 N. 22nd St., Allcntown, Pa. 210 Fisher Rd., Grosse Pointe Farms 30, Mich. Old Wyomissing Rd., Wyomissing, Pa. 925 Delaware Ave., Buffolo 9, N. Y. 4515 Brov ndalo Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. EDDY, ELIZABETH M. EDWARDS, ALICE C. EMERSON, JULIE R. . EMERY, EMILY A. EMLEY, MURIEL M. . EPSTEIN, ALBERTA . EVANS, ELIZABETH E. FALCONER, MARTHA P. FARLEY, ANN E. FARNHAM, VIRGINIA H. FARR, NANCY H. FEDER, MICHAL ERNST (Mrs. Ric: FENN, HARRIET M. . FENSTERWALD, EMILY FENTON, MARILYN KARP (Mrs FEREND, GERALDINE . FERRIS, GENE H, nrxvss .. Cc l FERRIS, SUZANNE E. FIELD, LAURETTE R. . FINK, SUZANNE R. . FISHER, PHYLLIS A. . FITZPATRICK, DOROTHY FLANNAGAN, PATRICIA FLEMING, JEANNE L. FLINT, BARBARA K. . FOLEY, M. PATRICIA . FORD, MARY V. FORSYTHE, NANCY L. FOSTER, JANICE V. . FOWLER, JACQUELINE LOEWE, ( FRANKET, BARBARA J. FREEMAN, HOPE M, . FRIEDMANN, K. LOUISE GABLETSA, MARY JANE GANSHOW, SHIRLEY A. GARLICK, GLORIA B. . GETSINGER, DORIS . GILBERT, MARGARET L. GILLIES, FLORA E. GLESMANN, M. CAROLYN GOLDMAN, RUTH E. GOLOMB, SARAI GOODHUE, M. LOUISE GOODWILLIE, MARGARET F, GORMLEY, BARBARA E. GRANT, DOROTHY H. GREENBERG, ROBERTA SOLOMA GRINDLEY, JEAN E. . GRISWOLD, JANET . GUILFORD, NANCY E. GULICK, MADLIN F. GUSHEE, GENEVIEVE L. HALDIMAND, LOIS E. HAMPER, GERTRUDE E. HANNON, JANET E. HARDIMAN, MARY A. HARMAN, ANNE R. . HARPER, M. LOUISE . HARRISS, DIANA F. . HARTMAN, L. ANNE HAYS, REBECCA D. . HEADLAND, PATRICIA A. HEILBRUN, CAROLYN G. ( HIETT, BETH HOFFMAN, JEAN LAZARUS, (Mrs HOGAN, HELENE M. HOOPES, MARILYN S. HOOVER, MARGARET A. HOSKINS, MARJORIE HOWE, BEVERLY HUGHES, MARIAN . HURFF, MARY ELIZABETH HYMAN, MARILYN B. IGNATIUS, HELEN M. INGALLS, JOYCE R. . JACOBY, RUTH L. JOHNSON, MARGARET L. JOHNSTON, MARY CAROL JONES, ELIZABETH B. JONES, RACHAEL M. JONES, SALLY LOU . KACHLER, IDA BETH KAPLAN, ESTHER A. . KARP, JOYCE WEISMAN, ( KARP, JUDITH . KEE, GLORIA H. KEITH, C. ELLEN KELLEY, RUTH H. KELTON, MILDRED R. KEMP, M. SUSANNE KENNEDY, PATRICIA KERWIN, CARLOTTA . KixMILLER, JEAN P. . KLIGERMAN, BETTY M. KREBS, KATHARINE B. ard W.) V S ,yvc Jun S.) oyd M.) s. Le cli ' c.1- 27 N. Main Ave., Albany 5, N. Y. 5407 Garfield Ave., Kansas City 4, Mo. 85 Kensington Rd., Bronxville 8, N. Y. 1110 Cherokee Ave., Bartlesville, Okla. Via Liberia 25, Palermo, Sicily 322 Holcomb St., Hartford 5, Conn. St. Andrew ' s School, West Barrington, R. I. South Dr., Huntington Station, N. Y. Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York, N. Y. 131 Fornhom Ave., New Haven, Conn. 207 Clarke St., Syracuse 10, N. Y. 3590 Alaska Ave., Cincinnati, O. 37 Orchard Dr., Milbrook, Greenwich, Conn. 402 Elmington PI., Nashville, Tenn. 41 Eastern Pkwy., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 737 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 5810 Cedar Pkwy., Chevy Chase 15, Md. 624 Judson Ave., Evanston, III. 473 Senaca Pkwy., Rochester 13, N. Y. 1273 Bellerock St., Pittsburgh 17, Pa. 326 Despord St., Clarksburg, W. 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Y. 1777 LeRoy Ave., Berkeley 4, Calif. 190 Oakridge Ave., Summit, N. J. Box 411, Ortega Station, Jacksonville 5, Fla. Nookside Lone, Bradford, Pa. 4624 West Broadway, Louisville, Ky. 291 Pond St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. 1617 Campus Drive, Dayton, O. 295 Clinton Rd., Brookline, Mass. 110 Hillcrest Ave., Morristown, N. J. The Scallop Shell, Peace Dole, R. I. 424 Middlesex Ave., North Wilmington, Mass. 122 Arundel Ave., West Hartford 7, Conn. 1113 Harvard Rd., Gross Pointe, Mich. 59 Locust Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 36 Gramercy Pk., New York 3, N. Y. . 789 Michigan Ave., Wilmette, III. 174 Linden St., New Haven 11, Conn. . 300 E. Middle St., Hanover, Po. KRUGER, CONSTANCE A. KRUSEN, JOANNE E. KUEHN, SUSAN E. LAMB, JEAN D. LANE, ALICE L. LANG, PATRICIA J. . LATHROP, MARIAN E. LAWSON, CLARINDA A. LENHART, NANCY J. LOVETT, ELIZABETH M. LUKINS, JEAN F. LUMMIS, ANNETTE G. LUNDHOLM, CAROLE JOANNE MacCOLLOM, ANN G. MacFETRIDGE, MARY JEAN MacGREGOR, MARILYN MacKINNON, NANCY J. MACLARY, CATHARINE L. MAJOR, M. VIRGINIA MALLOY, PAULINE E. MASON, ELISABETH G. McARTHUR, BETTY E, McBRIDE, BARBARA L. mccandliss, carolyn n mcconnell, charlotte McDonnell, mary e. mcreynolds, may donaldson (m mcwhorter, marjorie abigail meader, margaret l. metzger, jean elizabeth michaels, patricia m. mileham, winona miller, gloria e. . miller, l. jane mills, angie . mindlin, olga h. . miner, dorothy g. moore, ann e. moore, ellen l. moore, pamela r. morgan, gwendolyn gunter, (m morgan, rosalind h. morowitz, bernice f. morris, janet lee . morse, susan k. . muchmore, robin mudgett, doris g. mueller, nancy l. myers, margery e. myers, nancy p. . neill, ilah d. nelms, nancy nelson, charlotte nessler, dorothy a. nolan, martha d. norton, alice l. . o ' donnell, mary e. olson, barbara j. o ' neil, betty ann o ' neil, joan w. ott, josephine l. . owen, persis oxenham, ernestine h. paige, margaret . palladino, june a. palmer, susan a. . pandit, nayantara parker, k. june parry, ann . parsons, jean c. . pasquier, marie-jeanne pate, jane s. paul, jane c. peare, patricia pe5koe, thelma j. . PETERSON, DOROTHY de LUTIO, PETERSON, E. ANNE PETTIS, JEAN PFIZER, JOAN M. PHILBRICK, JEAN PILLSBURY, SUSAN PIATT, MARY A. POLLOCK, NANCY L. PRATT, ELISABETH G. PRIDE, POLLY PRITCHETT, DOROTHY F, PUCCIA, GERTRUDE M. PURINGTON, MARY . RAAD, VIRGINIA L. . RAMSDELL, RUTH P. . READE, B iRBAPA L, . REED, AMY REMICK, S. ELIZABETH REZNER, ELIZABETH L. RHODENIZER, GLORIA L RINGER, MARILYN L. A. S ney nry M.) 21 Rod 2121 Newbold Ave., Bronx 61, N. Y. 820 Third St., S. W,, Rochester, Minn, 224 Lakeview Ave., S ., Minneapolis 5, Minn, 129 Marvel Rd., New Haven, Conn. 66 Hawthorne Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. 1022 Fronklin Ave., River Forest, III. 369 Woodbridge Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 351 Elm St., Lokeport, N. H. . 22 Soybrook PI., Buffalo 9, N. Y. P. O. Box 60, Vicksburg, Miss. 550 Harding Dr., South Orange, N. J. 3921 Yoakum Blvd., Houston 6, Tex. Country Club Beach, Rockford, III. 2091 Grand Blvd., Schenectady, N. Y. 173 Parksido Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. 342 Oak Knoll Ave., N. E., Warren, O. 333 Wyoming Ave., Maplewood, N. J. 21 Plymouth Ave., Milton 86, Mass. 6105 High Dr., Kansas City 2, Mo. Pitts Boy Rd., Pembroke, Bermuda 20 Thorn St., Sewickley, Pa. 1615 S. Ninth St., Alhambra, Calif. 18 Barber Rd., Fromingham Center, Mass. 26 Union Ave., S. E., Grand Rapids, Mich. . 909 Central Ave., Wilmette, III. 106 Larkspur St., Springfield 8, Mass. 56 Pocono Ave., Yonkers 2, N. Y. 3516 Redmont Rd., Birmingham 5, Ala. 17 Colonial Ave., Moorestown, N. J. 76 Cottage St., New Bedford, Mass. Manursing Island, Rye, N. Y. 51 Harvard Rd., Audubon, N. J. 144-40 37th Ave., Flushing, N. Y. 1111 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 435 W. 1 19th St., New York 27, N. Y. 1 Manhaltan Ave., New York 25, N. Y. 10 Allen PI., Collinsville, Conn. 1615 North Boulevard, Houston, Tex. 671 E. State St., Mason City, Iowa Lewisburg, W. Va. 204 Oak Grove Rd., Norfolk, Va. 1315 E. 19th St., Tulsa 5, Okla. 7 Oak Crescent St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Figueroa Hotel, Los Angeles, Calif. 666 Richmond Rd., South Euclid, O. 5930 Belmont Ave., Cincinnati 24, O. 417 E. River Rd., Minneapolis 14, Minn. 2323 Lincolnwood Drive, Evanston, III. 217 Hopkins PI., Longmeadow, Mass. Springwater, N. Y. . 11 Harcourt Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 399 State St., Albany, N. Y. 613 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul 2, Minn. 412 Broadway, Cedarhurst, N. Y. 21 Presidents Lane, Quincy, Mass. 2658 Bryden Rd., Columbus 9, O. 163 West St., Weymouth 88, Mass. . 7 Inness PI., Glen Ridge, N. J. 36 Overlook Ave., Brockton, Mass. 7206 Quick Ave., River Forest, III. Creek Church Rd., N. W., Washington, D. C. 3000 Rivermont Ave., Lynchburg, Va. Amagonsett, N. Y. Main St., West Townsend, Mass. 42 Eldredge St., Newton 58, Mass. 1819 Goodwin St., Jacksonville, Fla. 1 Butler Rd., Lucknow, India 69 Appleton Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. 408 Windermere Ave., Interlaken, N. J. 27 Seventh St., New Bedford, Mass. 427 N. Main St., Butler, Pa. 6617 Revere Ave., Wauwatosa 13, Wis. 330 Hickory Lane, Haddonfleld, N. J. 284 Contrell Rd., Ridgewood, N. J. 13 Norwood St., Long Branch, N. J. 17 Pork Ave., New York, N. Y. Cornwall, Lebanon Co., Pa. 302 N. 54th St., Omaha 3, Neb. 7 N. Crane Rd., Mountain Lakes, N. J. 21 Oakhurst Rd., Cape Elizabeth, Me. 220 Alvarado Rd., Berkeley, Calif. 21 Maple St., Milford, Conn. 4028 N. Richland Ct., Milwaukee 11, Wis. 2328 20th St., N. Y., Washington 9, D. C. 832 Brookridge Ave., Ames, Iowa 1 2 Highland Ave., Maplewood, N. J. 46 Moplewood St., Watertown 72, Mass. 5 Malba Dr., Whitestone, N. Y. 60 Terrace Ave., Salem, W. Vo. Balmville Rd., Newburgh, N. Y. 315 Poplar St., Winnetka, III. 6 Reed Tcr., Lowville, N. Y. 632 Hinman Ave., Evanston, III. 511 Mangum St., Durham, N. C. 28th St., Riviera Beach, Fla. 2 Midland Gordons, Bronxville, N. Y. Arth RTY RIPLE, PATRICIA A. ROBERTSON, MARY L ROBERTSON, NARICE ROBINSON, LOIS A, ROBINSON, MARY ROBINSON, SIGRID . ROGERS, CORAJANE BAXTER, ROGERS, J. JOCEIYN ROGERSON, J. ADELE ROOT, MARY M. ROSENCRANZ, JOAN E. ROSS, MARY ALICE . ROWLAND, JEAN RUSHTON, CAMILLA RUSSEK, ISABELLE RUTHERFORD, BETTYE RYDER, CONSTANCE S. ST. GERMAIN, MARY A. SAMUELSON, ElVIA J. SANDERS, NELLE S. . SANDS, MARY LAWRENCE, (Mrs SANFORD, ANDREA . SANGREE, ANNE C. . SCHEER, PHYLLIS A. . SCHMID, HELEN M. . SCHMITZ, MARY ELLEN SCHNAUFER, LOUISE SCHOENFUSS, DOROTHY W SCHWARTZ, HELEN B. SHANDS, SUSAN C. . SHERMAN, NANCY G. SHOUP, BARBARA A. 5HRIVER, MARY L. . SHULMAN, FLORENCE SLY, JUDITH M. SMILLIE, BARBARA A. SNELL, BARBARA A. . SPECTOR, MIMI SPENCER, HESTER D. SPENGLER, LUCILLE M. SPIEGEL, LOUISE W. (Mrs STEKIONIS, OLGA E. STETSON, SALLY H. . STEVENSON, ELIZABETH A STODDARD, RUTH DOUGHI STRATMEYER, BARBARA J. STRICKLAND, PHYLLIS SULLIVAN, ELIZABETH B. SUTTIE, ANNE G. TAYLOR, FANNY JOSEPHIN TAYLOR, FLO-HARRIET THAYER, KATHARINE M. THEILER, ANN JANE THOMAS, JEAN THOMPSON, DOROTHY M THOMPSON, GERTRUDE J. THOMPSON, JANE P. THOMPSON, MARTHA J. THOMSON, SARAH J. TIBBETTS, FRANCES R. TOLMACH, HILDA J. TOMAJAN, JOAN TUCKER, BETTY LEE . TWADDLE, JOAN B. . VALLANCE, MARIE A. VAN DEUSEN, ELLEN C. VICKERY, MARCIA C. VILETT, JANE E. VOGELBAUM, HARRIET von DEESTEN, JEAN . VONDERSMITH, LOTTCHEN WALD, HARRIET WALKER, ELIZABETH R. WALKER, JANICE WANAMAKER, RUTH WATEROUS, JUNE M. WATKINS, JANE S. . WATSON, ELLEN B. . WATTLES, KATHARINE KURR, (Mr: WEISBERG, ALMA R. WEISER, NANCY WENDOVER, M. PHYLLIS WHITCOMB, PRISCILLA WILBER, MARY M. WILEY, LOIS WILLIAMS, CAY STEWART WILLIAMS, POLLY McELDOWNEY WILSON, MARGARET G. . WINOGRAD, LELA F. WOOD, LOIS . YARWOOD, P. CHARMIENNE YOUNG, EMILY R. YOUNG, JANET ZENGERLE, ANNE F. ZUPA, CARMEL R. David Jos ph S, Geor Low IVA-M, e C. U. S 1697 Tibbitts Ave., Troy, N, Y. 6388 Overbrook Ave., Philadelphia 31, Pa. 49 Vernon St., Abington, Mass. addle Meadows , Fox Run Rd., Norwalk, Conn. 38 Edson St., Longmeadow 6, Mass. 80 Berkeley St., West Newton, Mass. 2300 Tremont Rd., Columbus, Ohio B. M. C, Ground Section, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 164 Buffalo St., Jamestown, N. Y. Yorkshire, R. D. No. 7, York, Pa. 844 E. Powell Ave., Evonsville 13, Ind. 716 Carrolton Blvd., West Lafayette, Ind. 291 Lincoln St., New Britain, Conn. 22 Moreland Rd., Montgomery, Ala. 21 Earlwood Dr., While Plains, N. Y. 174 Pennsylvania Ave., Crestwood, N. Y. 1 Grand View Ave., Rye, N. Y. 12 Garden St., Montcloir, N. J. 2106 Harrison St., Evanston, III. . 498 Linwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 94 Merry Mount Rd., Quincy, Mass. Rd., R. D. No. 1, Coraopolis Heights, Pa. 201 Lansdowne Ave., Wayne, Pa. 73 Brockton St., Manchester, N. H. 45 Elston Rd., Upper Montcloir, N. J. 90 Shore Ave., Quincy, Mass. Ellenhom Rd., Ruxlon, Md. 261 Palm St., Hartford 5, Conn. . 85 Pleasant St., Franklin, N. H. 1917 Montgomery PI., Jacksonville, Fla. 60 Pitman St., Providence 6, R. I. BaycresI Ave., Bellport, Long Island, N. Y. 2225 Elm St., Denver 7, Colo. 620 Walk Hill St., Mattapan, Mass, 1405 W. Sunset Ave., Decatur 33, III. Old Chester Rd., Essex Fells, N. J. 66 Pork Ave., New York 16, N. Y. 101 Central Park, W., New York, N. Y. 300 Hilltop Rd., Erie, Pa. 2 New St., Sidney, N. Y. 2305 Salutaris Ave., Cincinnati 6, O. Little ' s Lane, Newburyport, Mass. .14 Elm St., Houlton, Me. . 216 Euclid Ave., Albany 3, N. Y. 21 ' A W. Wheelock St., Hanover, N. H. 1913 Steuben Rd., Reading, Pa. 20 Lockwood Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 1616 N. Abingdon, Arlington, Va. 35 Mill Rock Rd., New Haven, Conn. 4 Plutarch St., Athens, Greece 264 Winchester St., Brookline, Moss. 270 Park Ave., New York 17, N. Y. 3621 Victoria Lane, Cincinnati 8, O. Springbrook Farm, Fayetteville, Ark. 505 E. Wisconsin Ave., Neenah, Wis. 356 Melrose PI., South Orange, N. J. 43 Fremont Ave., Dubuque, Iowa 64 Palmerston Rd., Rochester, N. Y. . 115 High St., Middletown, Conn. 10 Norman Rd., Melrose 76, Mass. 419 E. 57th St., New York 22, N. Y. 100 Highland St., Holden, Mass. 605 Edgevale Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. . 568 Maple St., Fall River, Mass. 3016 43rd St., N. W., Washington 16, D. C. North Main St., R. D. No. 2, Boonton, N. J. 16 Forest Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. 91 Whitney Rd., Short Hills, N. J. 524 Summit Ave., Maplewood, N. J. 63 Sherman PI., Jersey City 7, N. J. 344 Resor Ave., Cincinnati, O. . 4 Otsego Rd., Worcester 5, Mass. . 4104 Exeter Rd., Richmond, Va. 9 Magoun Ave., Medford, Mass. 1150 Harvard Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. 693 Montcalm PI,, St. Paul 5, Minn. . Far Hills, N. J. 1 Merryman Ct., Baltimore 10, Md. Belgrade Lakes, Me. 545 West End Ave., New York 24, N. Y. 31 Amherst St., Holyoke, Moss. 1 1 1 Hillcrest Ter., Meriden, Conn. Church Rectory, Hostings-on-Hudson, N. Y. 56 Greenocres Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. 9 Clinton Ave., Ossining, N. Y. 2206 Locust St., Philadelphia 3, Pa. 42 Fenimore Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 157 Boulevard, Passaic, N. J. 45 Jonathan St., New Bedford, Mass. 37 Oak St., Middleboro, Mass. 8311 Collins Ave., Miami Beach, Flo. 15 Althea Lane, Larchmont, N. Y. 734 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn 26, N. Y. 10 Oakley PI., Stolen Island 6, N. Y. 158 Esplanade, Mount Vernon, N. Y. A. Gan, Wellesley, Mass Agora, Wellesley College . . . . Alpha Kappa Chi, Wellesley College . Andrew J. Lloyd Co., Boston, Mass. Baker, Jones, Hausouer, Inc., Buffalo, New York Bermorr ' s, Wellesley, Mass. Boston Pipe and Fittings Co., Cambridge, Mass. Campus Drug, Wellesley, Mass. C. Crawford Hollidge, Wellesley, Mass. Class of 1948 and 1950, Wellesley College Class of 1949, Wellesley College . . Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. Dieges and Clust, Boston, Mass. Don ' s Mattress Service, Boston, Mass. Durgin Park, Boston, Mass Exiner ' s, Wellesley, Mass. . . Filene ' s, Wellesley, Mass Fredley ' s, Wellesley, Mass F. Winston Hamilton ' s, Wellesley, Mass Grace Ober, Wellesley, Mass. . Granville Leatherwood, Wellesley, Mass. . . . ; ' — r Grossman Moody, Honolulu, Hawaii Gross Strauss, Wellesley, Mass. Hathaway House, Wellesley, Mass. Hill and Dale, Wellesley, Mass. Hinckley and Woods, Boston, Mass. Page 137 137 138 132 147 139 132 134 134 135 140 133 135 141 137 139 137 143 140 142 134 135 144 138 136 140 Homer ' s, Boston, Mass. H. P. Hood and Sons John and Oilier Engraving Company, Chicago, III Jennings Linen Co., Boston, Mass. . Laura Stevens, Wellesley, Mass. LeBlanc Taxi Co., Wellesley, Mass. Marathon Corporation, Menasha, Wisconsin Morris Tailor Shop, Wellesley, Mass Pathescope Co., Boston, Mass. . Penthouse Salon, Wellesley, Mass Peruzzi Jewel Shop, Boston, Mass Phi Sigma, Wellesley College Pieper and Wilder, Providence, R. I Prince-Cotter Jewelers, Lowell, Mass Sargent Studio, Boston, Mass. Shakespeare, Wellesley, Mass. . Sheraton Hotels, Boston, Mass. . Sigrid ' s, Wellesley, Mass. S. S. Pierce Co., Boston, Mass. . Statler Hoiel, Boston, Mass. . T.Z.E., Wellesley College We, Wellesley College Wellesley Fruit Company, Wellesley, Mass. Wellesley Inn, Wellesley, Mass. Wellesley News, Wellesley College Wilbar ' s, Wellesley, Mass Wright and Ditson, Boston, Mass. . Z.A., Wellesley College Page 139 132 146 142 136 134 135 141 140 141 142 141 138 142 145 136 134 136 132 139 142 144 137 141 143 138 136 139 131 BOSTON ' S DISTINCTIVE STORE - Ssramoud Throughout the Natioi FOR Kjooa oods at J (sDelica cieS s. s. PIERCE BOSTON Stores in CD. Boston, Belmont, Brookline Newton Mail and Telephone Or( ers Andrew J. Lloyd Company Opticians Executire Offices 300 Washington Street BOSTON GOOD and GOOD for YOU HOOD ' S CE CREAM Boston Pipe Fittings Co., Inc. 149 Sidney Street CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Trowbridge 7800 l ' i[)e,Jillin(i,s, lalves, boilers andrudiuturs 1.32 w. : ' ANY VACATION PLANS? The expenses of an accident could wreck them! But not if you have Connecticut Gen- eral Students ' Reimbursement insurance. Most Wellesley undergraduates have this valuable protection. Graduates can continue their protection with individual contracts obtained through Connecticut General representatives in their commun- ities. Don ' t let the costs of an accident make you give up your vacation plans! CONNECTICUT GENERAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Hartford, Connecticut 133 Wellesley s Favorite! CAMPUS DRUG Luncheonette - Prescriptions Cosmetics - Films - News Stand 33 Central St. Wel. 2333 {Opposite Filene ' s) Complinicnls of SHERATON IKJTELS in Boston The Cf)Pi.EY Pi.AZA The Sheraton I ' m-, 1 1 r.Es Standish ' Iiii. [{evconsfiei.d nirookline) LeBLANC TAXI Wei. 1600 Ellen Carol VanDeusen, ' 47 c. CRAWFORD HDLLIDGE Boston and Welle?ley Fashion Authority L ranuille cJLealhcrwooa GIFTS 573 WASrillVGTON STREET WELLESLEY, MASSACHUSETTS 131 Marathon Corporation Manufacturers of Protective Packaging for Foods Offices: Rothschild, Menasha, Wis. Plants in Wisconsin and Michigan ♦ Sales Offices and Representatives in Principal Cities Wellesley Class Jeweler 1947 - 1948 - 1949 - 1950 We believe that there is more involved in the sale of our jewelry than just the mere transfer of material things — Honor, Courtesy, Satisfaction also play their part in the service of DIEGES CLUST 73 Tremoint St. Boston, Mass. Best Wishes to Our B ig Sisters ' 49 HAWAIIANA Tropical fish brooches Enamel on Sterling Silver The Paopao and THE Pa Kui Kui GROSSMAN — MOODY Honolulu 4, Hawaii 135 Compliments uf SHAKESPEARE SOCIETY Valma Vernoy ' 48 Fashion Center For Your Date Dresses WEUUESLEY Tel. W ' ellesley 3696 HILL and DALE Ltd. Sportswfar. llosiciN and Accessories Juniors and Misses 37-39 Centh i. St.. X f;i.i,i;.si,i:y, M as.s. LAURA STEVENS Town and Country Clothes Accessories 63 Central St. Wellesley, Mass. W ' ellesk ' Y 3277 Wear llie ])0|)ular SPALDING SADDLES Small Iwo-lone slylc saddle shoe willi leather iippcTs. I ' hun lot;. KiiM)er soles. WRIGHT DITSON ]-. ' ,(, WELLESLEY FRUIT CO. Seriiiig the Girls of W eltesley Since 1912 Fancy Fruits and Groceries Telephone Wei. 0138-0139 Helen and Mary Runyeon, ' 50 model favorite campus sportswear from the Junior Deb Shop AT FILEIVES in Wellesley Convenient branch of the World ' s largest Specialty Store Telephone Wei 7547 Established 1913 | A. GAN CO. Cleaners _ Tailors Furriers Pressing Fur Storage Dyeing Tkomi ' t C ALL AND Delivery Service 14 Church St. Wellesley Mass.  ht hek ' SL DURGIN-PARK Market Dining Rooms In the Shadow of Faneuil HalV Real Yankee Cooking Open 10:30 A.M. to 7:30 P.M. Closed Sundays and Holidays Established Before You Were Born Best Wishes ' 47 Agora Society 137 Compliments of A. K. X. SOCIETY -v eUej-lev Whether you are in Wellesley or lost in the wide, wide world, we hope you will turn to us for A our hooks. The Hathaway habit is a good one to cultivate. PIEPER WILDER General Insurance Agents 87 WEYPOSSET ST. PROVIDENCE, R. I. Marilyn Cook ' 49, tries on a pair of nationally famous FRENCHIES ' hand-sewn moccasins . . . 5.95 at the Frenchies college shop. WIL BAR ' S, Wellesley MriY the inspiralion of your years al I! I ' lli ' slcy rcinriin ivilli you through a scrviceful contented fulurr. A FATHER 1.38 As a slar sets off the beauty of the darkened night, so a Hoiner s diamond brings to her beaittv an enchanting light. HOMER ' S ' The Home of Diamonds Since 1882 44 Winter Street Boston EXINER ' S IT omen ' s Swart Attire 53 Central St. Wellesley, Mass. 600 Main St. Hyannis, Mass. Wellesley Alumni and Parents HOTEL STATLER BOSTON . . . Welcomes Yon . . . Largest in New England . . . 1300 Rooms Five Dining Rooms . . . Floor Clerks Home of the Nationally Famed TERRACE ROOM Cyoort oLuch, 47 Z. A. SOCIETY 139 Compliments of The Class of 1948 AND The Class of 1950 Motion Picture and Photographic Supplies Cameras and Projectors Eastman Kodak, Ampro, Bell and Howell Film Rental Library Developing and Printing PATHESCpPE COMPANY 438 Stuart Street Boston fa I ' I Villi tv Place) HINCKLEY WOODS Insurance Fire, Liability, Automobile, Burglary and every description of insurance at lowest rates. BUSINESS established 1868 40 BROAD ST. BOSTON F. Winston Hamilton ' s Mens Shop Complete Line of Men s Furnishings 562 Washington St. Under the Stop and Shop Wellesley 81, Mass. 10 Eed W ' JieS PHI SIGMA SOCIETY DON ' S MATTRESS SERVICE Manufacturers of MATTRESSES, BOX SPRINGS AND PILLOWS Also Renovating Equal to New 203 Portland St. Boston, Mass. Don s Mattresses are usetl at WeUesley College Jean Beaverson, ' 47 For that natural look . . . The PENTHOUSE SALON 30 Church Street Wellesley, Mass. GOOD LUCK ' 47 oLeaendci taff Wel. 3427 MORRIS ' TAILORS CLEANERS 62 Central St. Wellesley, Mass. Compliments of the WELLESLEY INN Wellesley, Mass. 141 GRACE OBER Unusual Gifts Greeting C RDS 101 Central Street Wellesley 81, Mass. W ' el. 3754 Phone: Liberty 4267-4268 JENNINGS LINEN COMPANY For Fine Quality Bed and Table Linens 76 Essex Street Boston w mS ' ' - IHI B ' i ' ' - I - ' ' K ' - Jean Pettis, ' 47 r r u 2 2 1 3Jpmr I i ' h n p il)ounl]tB ma c inlD aifiufla © 252 BoyUlon Street , BOSTON, MASS. Gino M. Periizzi Oriilinal Florentine Hand • MuLers of: Established in „ Florence, Italy PLATINUM— GOLD and 1880 SILVER JEWELS • RESTYLING Boston 1915 SUGGESTIONS WITHOUT • OBLIGATIONS Telephone Kenmore 2822 Expert Repairs LjoocI cJLiich, 7 T. Z. E. SOCIETY PRINCE-COTTER JEWELERS 104 Merrimack St. Lowell, Mass. • Diamond and (iifl Specialists 11: Pat Anthony, ' 48 a oo6e6 ci k pecitlon f-y roni Fredley ' s Complete Coverage of Campus Activities The WELLESLEY COLLEGE NEWS Circulation 3000 143 GROSS STRMSS WELLESLEY Mary Carol Johnston, ' 47 Models (I RENBROOK FASHION in a MIRON Imperial Gabardine 100% Virgin Wool WE IS YOUR COLLEGE MAGAZINE .. . WATCH IT GROW SEND YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO: Circulalion Manager, WE of Welles ley, Wellesley College Wellesley 81, Mass. ONE DOl.l . A K 1 OR (J N E Y E A R — F LI R ISSUES 1 1 ONCE AGAIN cU eaencict refic cts the life and spirit of WELLESLEY COLLEGE Complete photographic service by CLPaeni S tuClio 154 Boylston St., Boston PHOTOGRAPHY DESIGN TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE I4S JAHN § OLLIER AGAIN ' ' Tne slogan tnat ' s LacRed ty genuine goodness in quality and service, tne result of 43 years successful experience in tne yearnook lield. We find real satisfaction in pleasing you, tne year- took putlisner, as well as your pnotograpner and your printer. JAHN g OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. Makers of Fine Printing Plates for Black or Color Commercial Artists - Photographers 817 W.WASHINGTON BLVD.. CHICAGO 7. ILL I ( y COORDINATION ... a word that can mean a lot to you, even more than it does to us. It embodies a principle upon which our success depends. It means the proper economy of Money. Mate- rials, and Time, but always bearing in mind the kind of a yearbook you wish to have produced and of which you will be proud. BJFI learned to appreciate that principle a long time ago. It is for this reason that we have consistently advocated the coordination of all factors of yearbook production. We are indeed glad to have been selected to furnish the art work, engravings, printing and binding for this year ' s book. B A K E R JONES, H A U S A U E R , IN Producers of Fine College Annuals Buffalo, New York I I I I I 148 ' r In attempling to portray the many facets of life at college, editors of yearbooks frequently run into the same bottle- neck: small budgets lead to small books, and small books lead to far too many faces on the cutting room floor. Within the limited scope of the 152 pages in the 1947 Legenda, for example, it was impossible to adequately portray all the students, all the events, all the experiences which constitute college life. A thoroughgoing condensa- tion of material was the only possibility. Although the 1947 Legenda is rather analogous to a bouillon cube, the time and effort of a great number of people were expended in its production. Mr. George I. Heffernan and Mrs. G. McKenna of Baker, Jones, and Hausauer, Inc. provided answers to the seemingly endless problems about color blocks, type rules, layout books, master dummies. Mr. Peter Gurwit and Miss Carolyn Zadek of the John and Oilier Engraving Company clarified the meaning of bleeds, silhouettes, zincs, cut zincs, halftones, tracings. Mr. Irving Green and Mr. Michael Dashoyan of Sargent Studio carried out a picture schedule that enabled Legenda to meet all its deadlines with the right kind of glossies in all the right proportions. Miss Jean Glasscock of the Wellesley Publicity Office gave the editors free use of the picture filfes and provided such prints as the U. 5. Navy Photographs of Mrs. Horton and the Navy Registra- tion in the senior section. Mr. John Brook photographed the liberal arts, student government, sports, playtime, and senior section pages. Bachrach Studio supplied the formal portrait of Mrs. Horton. Mr. A. C. Boecker took the Junior Show pictures in the senior section. Mr. Bubert of Bubert ' s Photo Supplies produced last-minute prints in time for deadlines. Miss Barbara Maynard of the Wellesley In- formation Bureau answered countless questions on such matters as schedules for dances, lectures, elections. Jane Watkins balanced the budget and made the book pay for itself. Louise Schnaufer figured out schedules, handled the senior pictures, took candid shots for the play- time and student government sections, checked and re- checked order slips. Betty Alden photographed the class officers, organization heads, Tree Day Court, song leaders, and A. A. officers. Patty Michaels aided the photography staff during rushed schedules by taking pictures with the News flash-bulb camera. Carolyn Gold Heilbrun wrote the features on Mrs. Horton, classes, liberal arts, student government. Barn plays, and sports. Lois Wood typed and proofed the manuscript copy. Miriam Looney did the re- search for the activities section. Susan Kuehn collaborated with the editor on the copy for the activities, playtime, and senior sections. Dorothy de Lutio Peterson did the draw- ings in the opening pages of the book and aided in the photography for the section pages. Maxine Bublitz drew the cartoons for the activities section and the special print for the playtime section. Jane Vilett and Betty Remick, through their large sale of advertising, and Lee Briggs, through obtaining 1060 subscriptions, provided a bank account for yearbook expenses. Betty Cobey designed posters and carried through the publicity campaign. Without all of these people — and particularly George Heffernan, Peter Gurwit, Louise Schnaufer, and Jane Wat- kins, who patiently worked on the 1947 Legenda since May, 1946 — this annual would never have progressed beyond the stage of a collection of layouts in the hands of the editor. To everyone who worked on the book, many thanks. — H. M. Ignatius, March 1, 1947. I— L ADVERTISING COMMITTEE Shirley Babineau Lynn Beidler Nancy Bishop Betty Bond Elizabeth Buchanon Joyce Clarke Nancy Evans Jane Frieder Barbara Gray Nancy Halsey Libby Hodgkiss Dorothy Hundley Ruth Hunt Ruth Mary Hunter Jean Knoche Marilyn Lamb Bobbin Lowitz Alma Mastrangelo Ann Means Betty Morse Bonnie Mumford Priscilla Partridge Marilyn Pearson Marjorie Pennell Gretchen Phillips Sue Pillsbury Rose Pizzimenti Marty Redfield Betty Rezner B. J. Selverstone Joan Sherwood Ann Snow Phyllis Strickland Nancy Taylor Ann Von Thurn Nancy Wrenn CIRCULATION COMMITTEE Joan Pfizer, Assistant Circulation Manager Beatrice Alfke Elizabeth Andrew Ellen Beardslee Myra Bloch Olive Bramhall Elizabeth Burroughs Sally Chandler Marlbel Cochran Helen Cooke Elizabeth Crane Cyra Duff Margaret Edgar Teresa Elejalde Nancy Evans Nancy E. Evans Jessie Godfrey Winifred Hadden Mary Inghram Deborah Killip Helen Kuehn Jean Looney Ruth Lyons May Manny Leslie Nunn Marilyn Pearson Marjory Pennell Claire Pfaelzer Claudia Reid Carol Rogers Suzette Ryan Mary Shepard Rebecca Thatcher Jeanne Tinsley Joan Wood Joan Youmans PUBLICITY COMMITTEE Jon Young Peg Goodwillie Jane Paul Ann Coit Emily Fensterwald Gloria Rhodenizer MIRIAM LOONEY, JUNIOR LITERARY EDITOR CAROL BONSAL, JUNIOR BUSINESS MANAGER 149 lnna7C. we Bio ; V-i F y-V Ed -V v I 9t C TC ' CT(


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

Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

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Wellesley College -  Legenda Yearbook (Wellesley, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

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