Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) - Class of 1937 Page 1 of 154
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1937 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 154 of the 1937 volume: “
ai” ie en) ee H ca a ry i ‘ z r ; V2 fi ' “ fi : ’ a Ny, iN es 8% brit qh) H- 1-9+3+7 IN| le Ia 18 JANET IASON fi JANE WOODMAN , WEE AG ONC OREEGE Norton, Massachusetts FOREWORD Wea each successive year we pass new milestones, each marking greater accomplishments and fulfilled desires. As we pass this last milestone, satisfied with what has been done, we can look ahead, confident in the guidance of Nike, winged goddess of Victory. C-ON-TEN-T’S President’s Message Dedication Views Administration Faculty Senior Officers Seniors Senior History Senior Will Juniors Sophomores Freshmen Organizations and Clubs Snapshots Directory and Advertisements FAGE 13 16 27 28 54 7 59 68 70 73 110 114 PRESIDENT'S PCESSAGE In THE rare book catalogues of 1996 or thereabouts I can see in my mind’s eye an entry “Nike 1937, the annual yearbook of Wheaton College, Norton, Massachusetts.” It will be priced at a very high figure because in it is the life history up to date of several of the most distinguished women of the age. For this reason I am much flattered in having my name perpetuated also as the obscure person who wrote the introduction to this valuable yearbook. The experience of four years of college life cannot be caught within the covers of any book, but Nike 1937 does contain the traces and indications and echoes of the manifold and interesting things which happened in those manifold and interesting years. The perfect alumna always says to me after an address in some distant city, “What you say about Wheaton today makes me wish that I were just starting in there as a fresh- man again. I hope this may be the experience of all of those whose doings, sayings and lookings are included in this volume, and as they see the growth and development of Wheaton they will continually be haunted with the desire to return and recapture the days of youth. a. (ae, DEDICATION incerity, and s ing, Go EDGAR PARK | , understand If interest h has guided Wheaton for ten years. 1t who, w Vel: Bees TAMWMOOIIS GXOINGD. RRS LENE SES HEBE WALK GHE @HAPEL ©HE LIBRARY ADMINISTRATION AND FACULTY 5S 4j tye Reeds te No oe Sel Reiayes ee SEV EN: 7 NIKE MIRIAM FERONIA CARPENTER Jatd 6}. 184 Oy Dean EEMA DOROTHY LITTLEFIELD A.M. Adviser of Freshmen Page Thirteen N-I-K7E 7 NINETEEN (© THUR Gs er SARAH BELLE YOUNG Ferd ote, Able D) Registrar; Secretary of the Faculty. ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS Je EDG ARSE ARK AUD: President A.B., Royal University, Dublin; D.D., Tufts College; LL.D., Wesleyan University, Phi Beta Kappa. Pastor of West Parish Church, Andover, Massachusetts; Pastor of The Second Church in West Newton, Massachusetts. Author of “The Keen Joy of Living,” “The Sermon on the Mount,” “The Wonder of His Gracious Deeds,” “The Man Who Missed Christmas,” “Parables of Life,” “How I Spent My Million,” “The Rejuvenation of Father Christmas,” “The Disadvantages of Being Good,” “Children’s Bread,” “The Results of Good Habits,” “The Christmas Heretic,” “New Ho- rizons,” “The Miracle of Preaching.” MIRIAM FERONIA CARPENTER, A.B., L.H.D. Dean A.B., Mt. Holyoke College; L.H.D., Colorado College; Litt. D., Mt. Holyoke College; Uni- versity of California; Harvard University. Assistant to the Dean, Mt. Holyoke College; Registrar, Adviser of Women, Secretary of Appointments, Graduate School of Education, Harvard University; Dean of Spelman College, Atlanta, Georgia. Member of the National Association of Deans of Women; Harv ard Teachers’ Association; American Association of University Women. Page Fourteen NENE TEEN + ‘THIRTY “ SEVEN + N-I7K-EF Pen bE LLEoYOUNG, A.B 12H.D: Registrar; Secretary of the Faculty A.B., L.H.D., Colby College. Member of the American Association of College Registrars; American Association of Uni- versity Women; Trustee of Colby College. BARBARA ZIEGLER, A.M. Secretary of the Board of Admission A.B., Mt. Holyoke College; A.M., Radcliffe College. Assistant in Athletics, Santa Barbara Girls’ School, California; Instructor in History, St. Mary’s Hall, Burlington, N. J. Peni DOROTHY LITTLEFIELD; A.M: Adviser of Freshmen A.B., A.M., Radcliffe College; Graduate Study at the Sorbonne. Instructor at the High Schools in Franklin and Brookline, Massachusetts; Assistant Professor of French, Wheaton College; Directrice of Delaware Group in France. JOSEPH HENRY SOLIDAY MARY ELIZABETH DUNKLE Treasurer Bursar TRUSTEES J. EDGAR PARK, A.B., D.D., LL.D., President of the Board Norton HERBERT M. PLIMPTON, Vice-President Norwood SYLVIA MEADOWS, A.B., Secretary Waban JOSEPH AH, SOLIDAY, Treasurer Dedham JAMES JACKSON, A.B. Winchester FREDERICK H. PAGE, A.M., D.D. Waltham HENRY oH. CRAPO, A.B, : New Bedford FRANCES VOSE EMERSON Boston ROBERT SENECA SMITH, B.D., Ph.D. New Haven GHANNING H. COX; A.B., 5.T.B. Framingham Center GEORGE A. MIRICK, A.M. Boston fee WOOLLEY, A:M., LITT.D., L.H.D., LL.D. South Hadley JOHN KIRKLAND CLARK, A.B., LL.B. New York, N.Y: HARRIET HUGHES, A.B. New York, N.Y WILLIAM F. CHASE, A.B. West Newton Emeritus Page Fifteen ING Kea NIENE TEEN 7 “[EUDRS TY ee Sb ete HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS Page Sixteen ESTHER ISABEL SEAVER, Ph.D. Professor of Art A.B., Beloit College; A.M., Radcliffe College; Ph.D., Radcliffe College, Phi Beta Kappa. Carnegie Fellow, two years; University of Stockholm, 1928-29. Member of the Mediaeval Academy of America; College Art Association; American Association of University Professors; American Archaeological Association; American Association of University Women; American Federation of Arts; Konst Historiska Sellskapet of Sweden. MABEL AGNES RICE, Ph.D. Professor of Botany A.B., Smith College; A.M., Columbia University; Ph.D., Columbia University. Phi Beta Kappa. Assistant in Biology Department, Teachers College, Columbia University. Member of Boston Society of Natural History; American Association of University Professors; Botanical Society of America; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Contributor to Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club; The Botanical Review. MILDRED WILLIAMS EVANS, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Chemistry A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Radcliffe College; Henry Clemenston Fellowship (twice); James and Augusta Barnard Fellowship, Radcliffe College; Research Fellow, Radcliffe College, 1937. Phi Beta Kappa. Analytical and chemical research: Dupont; Gillette; Lehn and Fink. Member of the American Chemical Society; American Association of University Professors; American Association for Advancement of Science. Contributor to: American Pharmaceutical Journal; Journal of American Chemical Society. HENRIETTA COOPER JENNINGS, Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Sociology A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College; Study at Sorbonne, Paris; School of Eco- nomics and Political Science; University of London; Resident Fellowship in Economics and Politics, Bryn Mawr; European Fellowship in Economics and Political Science, Bryn Mawr. Instructor in Economics and Political Science, Bryn Mawr; Professor of Economics and Sociology, Wilson College. Member of the American Economic Association; American Political Science Associ- ation; American Association of University Professors. Author of The Political Theory of State-Supported Elementary Education in England; 1750-1833. NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-[-K-E RALPH PHILIP BOAS, A.M. Professor of English A.B., A.M., Brown University; A.M., Harvard University. Fellow in English, University of Chicago; Austin Scholar in English, Harvard University. Phi Beta Kappa. Assistant in English, Brown University; Associate Professor of English, Whitman College; Professor of English, Reed College, Mount Holyoke College; Professor of Edu- cation, Summer Sessions at Ohio State University; Associate Principal, the Fieldston School, Ethical Culture Schools, New York. Member of the Commission on English, the College Entrance Examination Board Commission on Uniform Entrance Requirements in English; Modern Language Associ- ation; American Association of University Professors; New England Association of Teachers of English; School and College Conference in English. Author of Youth and the New World; The Study and Appreciation of English Literature; Collaborator: Introduction to the Study of Literature; Social Backgrounds of English Litera- ture; Short Stories; Leading Facts for New Americans; Cotton Mather; Social Backgrounds of American Literature; Enjoyment of Literature. PRISCILLA MANTON KRAMER, Ph.D. Instructor in German A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Radcliffe College. Phi Beta Kappa. Graduate Work at University of Berlin; University of Bonn; University of Zurich. CLIFFORD CHESLEY HUBBARD, Ph.D. Professor of History and Political Science A.B., Brown University; A.M., Harvard University; Ph.D., Brown University. Instructor in History, Eastern Illinois State Teachers’ College; Instructor in Govern- ment, Williams College; Instructor in Political Science, Brown University. Member of the American Historical Association; American Political Science Associ- ation; New England History Teachers’ Association (President, 1931); American Society of International Law. ; eS a EUNICE WORK, Ph.D. Professor of Latin and Greek A.B., Tarkio College; A.M., Ph.D., Cornell University. American School of Classical Studies, Athens; Charles Edwin Bennett Scholar at Cornell; Graduate Fellow in Greek and Latin at Cornell; Phi Beta Kappa. Professor of Latin, Tarkio College; Acting Associate Professor of Latin, Converse College. American Philological Association; Archaeological Institute of America; American Association of University Professors; Classical Association of New England; American Numismatic Society. Page Seventeen NOUNCED EEN, “97 2) EUR gy Sees ee MARTHA WILBUR WATT, A.M. Associate Professor of Mathematics A.M., Columbia University; Brown University. Phi Beta Kappa. Sigma Xi. Instructor at Catherine Aiken School, Stanford, Connecticut; Instructor at Feilden- Chase School, Providence, Rhode Island. Member of the Rhode Island Mathematical Teachers’ Association; The Mathematical Association of America. FRANK WELLS RAMSEYER, Jr., A.M. Assistant Professor of Music A.B., A.M., Harvard University. Ecole Normale de Musique, Paris. Assistant and tutor in Music, Harvard University. WALTER OSCAR McINTIRE, Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy A.B., Wooster College; A.M., Johns Hopkins University; Ph.D., Harvard University; University of London; Phi Beta Kappa. Assistant in Philosophy, Harvard University; Silliman Institute; Missionary i n the Philippines. Member of the American Philosophical Association. MIRIAM FARIES, A.M. Assistant Professor of Physical Education A.B., Bryn Mawr College; A.M., Teachers College, Columbia University. Instructor in Psychology and Sociology, Holton Arms School, Washington, D.C.; Assistant Professor of Physical Education, State Teachers’ College, Harrisonburg, Va. Member of American Physical Education Association; The Eastern Society of Directors of Physical Education for College Women. Page Eighteen plete IN 7 welala Rey 7 ESE OV EN GLENN ALFRED SHOOK, Ph.D. Professor of Physics and Director of the Observatory A.B., University of Wisconsin; Ph.D., University of Illinois; Williams College. Member of the American Astronomical Association; Optical Society of America; Variable Star Association; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Collaborator: Practical Pyrometry, Contributor to Physical Review; Physikalische Zeitschrift; Metallurgical and Chemical Engineering; Astro-Physical Journal; Journal of the Optical Society of America; Journal of Industrial and Engineering and Chemistry; Scientific American; Zeitschrift fiir Rein Mathematik und Physik; Transaction of the Illuminating Engineering Society. Inventor of the Color Organ (first successful synchronization of color and music). ELISABETH WHEELER AMEN, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology and Education A.B., A.M., Vassar College; Ph.D., Radcliffe College; Lydia Pratt Babbott Fellow, Vassar; Adolph Sutro Fellow, Vassar. Phi Beta Kappa. Associate Warden at Vassar College. Member of American Psychological Association; Harvard Teachers’ Association; American Association of University Professors. Author of An Experimental Study of the Self in Psychology, in the Psychological Mono- graph, whole number 165. PAUL W. SPRAGUE, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religion A.B., Pomona College; B.C., Yale University; Ph.D., Yale University. Assistant in Astronomy, Pomona College; Instructor in Mathematics and Latin, Glenacres. Pastor of Congregational Church of Roxbury, Connecticut; Pastor of First Congre- gational Church of Colfax, Washington. Member of American Philosophical Association. AGNES RUTHERFORD RIDDELL, Ph.D. ; Professor of Romance Languages A.B., A.M., University of Toronto; Ph.D., University of Chicago; French Summer School, McGill University, Montreal; Oxford University. Fellowship, University of Chicago; Phi Beta Kappa. Reader in English, University of Toronto; Professor of Romance Languages, College of Emporia, Kansas; Instructor in French and Spanish, Bryn Mawr College; Assistant Professor of Italian, Bryn Mawr College; Corresponding and Organizing Secretary National Council of Women of Canada; Dean of Women, College of Emporia; Acting Dean of Wheaton College, 1923-25. Study at University of Siena, Italy; La Sorbonne, Paris; University of Rome. Member of Modern Language Association of America; New England Modern Lan- guage Association; American Association of University Professors; American Associa- tion of Teachers of Italian. Author of Flaubert and Maupassant: A Literary Relationship. Contributor to Books Abroad. Page Nineteen Niele Keae Page Twenty NUNE TEEN 7 9D HER@USYS ees be Velen MATHILDE MARGARETHE LANGE, Ph.D. Professor of Zoology Ph.D., University of Zurich; American Universities: Columbia, Harvard, New York, Cornell. Foreign Universities: Leipzig, Freiburg, Jena. Biological Research Stations: Naples, Musée Océanographique, Monace, Woods Hole, Bermuda. Phi Beta Kappa. Confidential Interpreter attached to the office of Military Attache of the United States Legation in Berne, Switzerland. Micro-analyst of the United States Department of Agriculture; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. NPE EN or PHIRI co SEVEN 7 IN@ lo KR LANCICHEADYE GRACE FLORENCE SHEPARD, A.M. Professor of English A.B., A.M., Radcliffe College; Four Years at State Teachers’ College at Framingham Center. Phi Beta Kappa. Instructor in History, State Teachers’ College at Framingham Center. Member of Modern Language Association of America; Harvard Teachers’ Association; American Association of University Professors. Author of unpublished Wheaton College Hissory; Contributor to The English Journal; The Catholic World; Education; The New England Quarterly. CARO LYNN, Ph.D. Professor of Latin A.B., Tarkio College; A.M., Colorado College; Ph.D., Cornell University; Diploma de Suficiencia, Centro de Estudios Historicos, University of Madrid; University of Mexico; School of Classical Studies, Rome. Phi Beta Kappa. Fellowship in Classics, Cornell University; Heckscher Research Grant, Cornell University. Professor of Latin, Tarkio College; Dean of Women, Tarkio College. Member of American Philological Society; Mediaeval Academy; Classical Association of New England. Author of Natales Sortes Vergilianae. BiolbeebiZABEi rn GULLEY, Ph.D: Professor of History Ph.B., A.M., Syracuse University; Ph.D., Columbia University; Study at British Museum; Royal Colonial Institute. Phi Beta Kappa. Member of American Historical Association; New England History Association. Author of Josebh Chamberlain and English Social Politics. HEDDA KORSCH, Ph.D. Associate Professor of German Ph.D., University of Berlin. Studied at Universities of Jena and London Instructor of upper grades at the Freie Schulgemeinde, Wickersdorf, Thuringia; also at Viggbyholmsskolan, Stockholm, Sweden; Studienratin at the Kaiser Friedrich Realgymnasium, Berlin; professor at the Teachers’ Training College, Berlin. Author of: Chaucer als Kritikerr, Kurs i Individualpsykologi. Contributor to German and Swedish pedagogical journals, especially Der Aufbau, Berlin and Pedagogiska Spérsmal, Stockholm. MARGUERITE METIVIER, A.M. Associate Professor of French A.B., A.M., Radcliffe College; University of Grenoble, France; University of Pennsylvania; McGill University; Brown University. Member of Modern Language Association; Salon Frangais de Boston. LOUISE SCHUTZ BOAS, A.M. Associate Professor of English A.B., A.M., Brown University. Phi Beta Kappa. Instructor in English, Whitman College, Walla Walla, Washington; Mount Holyoke College. Munitions Worker Remington-Arms-U.M.C., Bridgeport, Connecticut, 1918. Author of A Great Rich Man, The Romance of Sir Walter Scott, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Woman’s Education Begins. Collaborator: Leading Facts for New Americans, Cotton Mather. Page Twenty-one N-I]-K-E 7 NINETEEN 7 “THIRTY ease yee HELEN RAY PARKER, A.M. Assistant Professor of French A.B., Radcliffe College; A.M., Middlebury; Franco-American Exchange Fellowship. Graduate Werk: Sorbonne, Grenoble, Radcliffe, University of California, University of Wisconsin. Phi Beta Kappa. Assistante en Anglais, Ecole Normale de Laval, France. Member of Alliance Frangaise; American Association of Teachers of French; Massachusetts Iota and Kappa Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa. ELEANOR ELIZABETH RANDALL, A.B. Assistant Professor of Art A.B., Wheaton College; Graduate of School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Original work publicly exhibited at Boston, Rockport, Springfield, Attleboro. Member of American Federation of Arts; Springfield Ar t League; Boston Art Club; American Associaticn of Uni- versity Professors. ELLEN BARTLETT BALLOU, A.M. Assistant Professor of Spoken English A.B., Wellesley College; A.M., Northwestern University. Director of Play House at Little Compton, Rhode Island, Summer, 1931. HEINRICH SCHNEIDER, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of German Ph.D., Universities of Tuebingen, Leipzig, Giessen. University of Giessen, Germany. Studies and research work in Switzerland, Austria, France, Denmark, Sweden. Instructor in German, History, and Religion, Real gymnasium Darm- stadt. Instructor in History, University of Giessen. Director States Libraries Wolfenbuettel and Lubeck. Director and Professor of German, Volkshoschule Luebeck. Professor and head of the German Department, The American College in Sofia, Bulgaria. Author of Das Beiwort Schillers und Goethes; Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand von Braunschweig und der Fiirstenbund 1784-86; Geschichte der Universitaets-Bibliothek Helmstedt; Lessing und Wolfenbuettel; Das Bildnis Eva Lessings; Das Buch Lessings; Lessing; Joachim Morsius und sein Kreis; Klaus Groth und Emanual Geibel; Beitrage zur Lebensgeschichte Lessings; Buchge- schichtliche Aufsaetze. Editor of Zuendel, Johann Christoph Blumhardt; Johann Arndt, Die Heimkehr der Seele; Milchsack, Was heisst Fraktur?; Franckenberg, Raphael oder Arzt-Engel; Karl Wilhelm Jerusalem, Aufsatze und Briefe. Collaborator . of numerous German periodicals and newspapers. Member of: Vereingung der Lektoren der Deutchen Akademie in Muenchen; Modern Language Association. MARIE-ROSE BUCHLER, A.M. Assistant Professor of French A.B., Wells College; A.M., Brown University; University of Paris. Wells College French Scholarship, 1923-1924. Member of Société des Professeurs Francais aux Etats-Unis. PAUL FREDERICK CRESSEY, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Sociology Ph.D., Denison University, Granville, Ohio; Ph.D., University of Chicago. Instructor in English and History at the Junior College and Academy, Swatow, China; Assistant Professor of Soci- ology at Reed College, Portland, Oregon; Instructor in Sociology at the University of Chicago; Research Sociologist for the Fact Finding Commission of the Institute of Social and Religious Research with Investigation in India; Assistant Professor of Sociology at McGill University, Montreal, Canada. Page Twenty-two MENEEEEN: 7 @VHIRTYeo SEVEN N-[7K-F ERNEST JOHN KNAPTON, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History A.B., University of British Columbia; A.B., Oxford University; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard University. Rhodes Scholar at Oxford from British Columbia; Francis Parkman Fellow, Harvard. Member of American Historical Association; American Association of University Professors. ROBERT JORDAN CARNER, A.M. Assistant Professor of Spanish A.B., A.M., University of Virginia; A.M., Harvard University; Graduate Study at the School for Foreign Students and the Universidad Central in Spain, and at the University of California. Instructor in Spanish, Smith College; Instructor in Spanish, Harvard University. KATHERINE ALICE BURTON, A.M. Assistant Professor of English A.B., Mt. Holyoke College; A.M., Radcliffe College. Phi Beta Kappa. Bardwell Memorial Fellowship, Mt. Holyoke College. Instructor in English, Carnegie Institute of Technology. Collaborator: Social Backgrounds of American Literature. MARIA A. RICKERS-OVSIANKINA, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Psychology Ph.D., University of Giessen, Germany. Assistant at the Psychological Clinic at the University of Berlin; Research Work at the Worcester State Hospital, Massachusetts. KATHARINE BISHOP NEILSON, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Art A.B., Bryn Mawr College; A.M., Ph.D., Radcliffe College. Carnegie Fellow, 1928-29, Radcliffe College. Member of the Archaeological Institute of America; College Art Association; American Association of University Professors. ELIZABETH CORNELIA EVANS, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Greek and Latin A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Radcliffe College. Phi Beta Kappa. Fellow of the American Academy in Rome. Member of American Philological Association; Archaeological Institute of America; Classical Association of New England; Mediaeval Academy of America. Contributor to Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Vol. XLVI. HELEN TURNBULL GILROY, Ph.D. ; Assistant Professor of Physics A.B., M.A., Bryn Mawr College; Ph.D., Cornell University. Sigma Xi. Helen Schafer Huff Fellowship from Bryn Mawr. Research in Spectroscopy. Instructor in Physics, Assistant Professor of Physics, Vassar College; Instructor in Physics, Mount Holyoke College; Associate Professor of Physics, Lingnan University, Canton, China. Member of American Physical Society; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Sigma Delta Epsilon; Phi Tau Phi. Contributor to The Physical Review. RALPH WILLARD HIDY, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History A.B., Miami University, Oxford, Ohio; A.M., Clark University; Ph.D., Harvard University. Phi Beta Kappa. Instructor in History, Norwich University, Northfield, Vermont. Page Twenty-three N-I-K-E 7 NINETEEN 7 THIRDY 7s Sevieey CARL ARSHAG GARABEDIAN, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics; Organist and Choir Director : B.S., M.S., Tufts College; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard University. Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi. Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of New Hampshire; Instructor, Harvard University; Assistant Professor, Northwestern University; Associate Professor, University of Cincinnati; Associate Professor, Stephen's College of Columbia University. Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; American Mathematical Society; Mathematical Association of America; National Council of Teachers of Mathematics; American Association of University Professors. Author of textbooks; Contributor to various mathematical journals at home and abroad. LOUISA BURT WOOD Instructor in Vocal Music and Violoncello Instructor at Kendall Hall, Pride’s Crossing, Massachusetts; Dana Hall, Wellesley, Massachusetts. Studied with various teachers in the United States and France. Sang at Temple Israel and Temple Ohabei Sholon, Boston, Massachusetts. ANNA FORWARD FAULL, Ph.D. Instructor in Botany and Zoology A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Radcliffe College. Research assistant to Dr. I]. W. Bailey, Harvard. Contributor to Mycologia; Carnegie Institution Year Book; Arnold Arboretum. LOUISE BARR MACKENZIE, A.M. Instructor in English; Director of Publicity A.B., Wheaton College; A.M., Radcliffe College. Feature Writer of New Brunswick Times, New Brunswick, New Jersey, Summer, 1930-1931. Member of American College Publicity Association. YVONNE JULIETTE TUZED Instructor in French Certificat Aptitudes Lettre, University of Paris; Eléve de l’Ecole Superieure de Sevres. Professeur de lettres in Libourne, France; Lecturer in French at Innesbruck, Austria; Instructor in French at Wellesley College. Contributor to Revue de France; Revue Hebdomandaire; Revue Monde et Voyages; Mercure de France. JUS, IML, ILIAC, Jel I8}. Instructor in Zoology A.B., Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa. Assistant in Biology, Temple University. WILFRID PRYOR veMILLE, A.M. Instructor in English A.B., A.M., Harvard University. ELIZABETH K. NOTTINGHAM, M.A. Instructor in Economics and Sociology B.A., M.A., Cambridge University; Graduate Work at Columbia University. Instructor at Southlands Schools and Dartington Hall School, England, Brearley School and Manumit School in New York; Assistant in Sociology, Barnard College. DOROTHY DEWHURST THOMPSON, Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry A.B., A.M., Mount Holyoke College; Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Skinner Fellow, Mount Holyoke College. Page Twenty-four SEEN eV HIRT Yer © SEVEN 7 No lek B JANNETTE ELTHINA NEWHALL, Ph.D. Instructor in Philosophy and Religion B.SS., A.M., Ph.D., Boston University; University of Berlin. Borden P. Brown Fellow in Philosophy, Boston University; Fellow of National Ccuncil cf Religicn. Instructor in Philosophy, Boston University. Member of Kant-Gesellschaft; American Philosophical Association; American Asscciaticn cf University Prcfessors. MURIEL EMMIE HIDY, A.M. Instructor in Economics A.B., University of British Columbia; A.M., Clark University. American Antiquarian Fellow, Clark University, 1927. HILDRED BROHAUGH, A.M. Instructor in Music A.B., University of Minnesota; A.M., Smith College. MAUD ALICE MARSHALL, D.Phil. Instructor in Chemistry B.A., Radcliffe College; D.Phil., Oxford University. Research Assistant, Thorndike Memorial, Boston City Hospital; Chemist, Robert Brigham Hospital; Research Assistant to Dr. Roscoe Thatcher, Massachusetts Experiment Station. Joint Contributor to Journal of Chemical Society. FRANCES CATHERINE CUTUJIAN, A.M. Instructor in Psychology A.B., A.M., Vassar Coliege; Louise Hart Van Loon Fellowship, Vassar College. Instructor in Psychology, Vassar College. Research at Yale Psycho-Clinic. Member of American Psychological Association. ROBERT LATHRUP SHARP, Ph.D. Instructor in English A.B., Dartmouth College; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard University. Instructor in English, University of Wisconsin; Instructor in English, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Member of the Modern Language Association of America; American Association of University Professors. Contributor to Studies in Philology; Modern Language Notes; Sewanee Review. Collaborator: A Mapbook of English Literature. WILHELMINA VAN INGEN, Ph.D. Instructor in Art A.B., Vassar College; A.M., Ph.D., Radcliffe College; graduate study at Johns Hopkins University and American School of Classical Studies, Athens; Carnegie Fellow, 1927—28—1929-30. Phi Beta Kappa. Research Assistant and Associate, Institute of Archaeological Research, University of Michigan. Member of the American Association of University Professors; American Oriental Society; Archaeological Institute of America; Classical Association of New England; College Art Association. Publications: Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, University of Michigan, Fascicule 1; ‘The Kylix by the Foundry Painter in the Fogg Museum,” Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, Vol. 46; book reviews in American Journal of Archaeology. VIRGINIA HAPGOOD GALLAGHER Instructor in Physical Education Certificate of Teaching from the Bouve-Boston School of Physical Education. Instructor, Hygiene and Physical Education, Radcliffe College. HELEN BOEHM Instructor in Physical Education Graduate of Bouve-Boston School of Physical Education. Taught at Brimmer Private School; Choate Private School. Page Twenty-five N-I-K:- EB + NINETEEN 7 THIR Tye aes ey ce RUTH ADELAIDE FAULK, B.S. Assistant in Botany B.S., Massachusetts State College, Amherst. DRUCILLE BEVIN, BS. Assistant Instructor in Physical Education Graduate of the Bouve-Boston School of Physical Education; Simmons College. KATHRYN L. HOWARD Assistant in the Department of Spoken English A.B., Mount Holyoke College. DOROTHY NORTON POND, A.B. Assistant in Spanish A.B., Wheaton College. MONAWEE ALLEN, A.B. Assistant in Art A.B., Wheaton College. MARTHA HERRICK CHANDLER, Ed.M. Director of the Nursery School A.B., Smith College; Ed.M., Harvard Graduate School of Education. Phi Beta Kappa. Director of Cambridge Nursery School; Children’s Social Worker, South End Settlement House. Member of the National Association of Nursery Education. JULIA JACOBY, MSS. Associate Director of Nursery School B.S., University of Nebraska; M.S., Cornell University. Director of Nursery Schools at the University of Nebraska, University of Texas, North Carolina College for Women; Assistant Professor of Euthenics, Elmira College. Page Twenty-six a Ee Lo Cee S WiK EB P 3 j | ‘ p GR ey berms Fh tb) OOS. ALS, 8 aac ouse ttt Saute Ae COE PEE, ORS (arate on the BRS Niele KeTHRYM §, HOWARIY he Rye le hee PATA TAA NUR ER rey Pr aT Aloette llores yee Ws ones ah a ANB. Sevens Cnn i Haake 2 ee fh ba “Ws ne aie oe netong a eae WN Per me ce nM RON Tish BEL heosery St bile pechiations' Faves 2) Lda ariatt y Fay vasa Dhar aiee od alae Netipaes Asoc aig an ‘os a anion ¢ if Aish SACIRS. ba ES), i Fs Pate oY Rey wi ‘ ine AS f7 mi es: ms a wits ie ae if he Tier ) pS SENIOR OFFICERS JANE GAGE, President MILDRED ROBERTS Vice-President mliCh CUT TER Secretary BARBARA McEVOY Treasurer HELENE McCALLUM Song Leader Page Twenty-seven N-I-K-E: NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN GER TRUDESATE Y, Centennial, 2; International Relations Club, 3; La Maison Blanche, 3, 4; Romance Languages Club, 3, 4: Assistant House Chairman, 3; House Chairman, 4; Student Auditor, 4; Norton Night School, 4; Der Deutsche Verein, 4. PRISCILLA ARNOLD Music Club, 1, 2; Romance Languages Club, 2, 3, 4; Mummers’ Play, 2; Der Deutsche Verein, 3, 4; President, 4; International Relations Club, 3, 4. SILVIA BREYER Mummers’ Play, 2; International Relations Club, 2, 3, 4; Music Club, 4; Norton Children’s Drama Group, 4. Page Twenty-eight NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN’ N’I-K-E ELIZABETH BROWN Choir, 1, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Centennial, 2; Art Club, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Nativity Play Choir, 4. ELIZABETH BRUNET The Intruder, 4; Class Hockey Team, 4; Class Swim- ming, 4; Chairman Senior Prom Committee, 4. VIRGINIA BUGBEE Music Club, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Centenrial, 2; Nativity Choir, 4; Scenery Com- mittee, 2. Page Twenty-nine N-I-K°E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN ISABELA GAB ALANE “Flay Fever,” 1; Choir, 1, 2; Class Song Leadermas “Princess Marries the Page,” 2; “Doctor Faustus,” 2; Centennial, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Vaudeville, 3; “Riders to the Sea,” 3; Prom Committee, 3; Nativity Play, 3, 4; Vaudeville, 4. RUTH CHITTICK Choir, 1, 2, 3; Wardrobe Mistress, 3; Class Soccer Team, 1, 2, 3; 1870 Costume Committee, Centennial, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Class Lacrosse Team, 3; Class- ical Club, 2, 3, 4; President, 4; Der Deutsche Verein, 3, 4; Nativity Choir, 4. ERAGE AEE (Transferred 2) Centennial, 2; Ensemble, 2; Y.W.C.A., 2, 3, 4; Freshman Reczption Committee, 3, 4; Class Archery, 3; International Relations Club, 4; Music Club; 4; Nativity Choir, 4; Carol Service Choir, 4; Choir: Page Thirty NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN N-J[-K-EF DUGIEEES GEAR Classical ‘Club; 3; Music Club, 3: Soccer Team, 1, 2; Chairman of Bulletin Boards, 4. MARY COOK Orchestra, 1; Ensemble, 2, 3, 4; Centennial Music Committee, 2; Music Club, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 3; Class Archery, 3; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Nativity Choir, 4; Carol Service Choir, 4. CAROLYN COONS Class Tennis Team, 1, 2, 3; Varsity Tennis Team, 3; Mummers’ Play, 2; Art Club, 3, 4. Page Thirty-one N-I-K-E: NINETEEN + THIRTY SEVEN FRANCES CROSBY Riding Team, 2; Soph Hop Committee, 2; Centennial, 2; Soccer, 2, 3; Junior Prom Committee, 3; Basketball, 3, 4. JEAN CUMMINGS International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Librarian, 3; Mummers’ Play, 2; Tennis Team, 2, 3, 4; Dean’s List, 2, 3, 4; Assistant House Chairman, 3; Head of Tennis, 3, 4; Chairman of Practical Aid Committee, 3; Der Deutsche Verein, 3, 4; Romance Languages Club, 3, 4; Agora, 3, 4;, House Chairman, 4; Art Club, 4; Head of Model League Committee, 4. ALIGE CUTTER Mummers’ Play, 2; Student Chairman of Centennial Hairdressing Committee, 2; Assistant House Chair- man, 3; Secretary-Treasurer of Classical Club, 3; Secretary of Class, 4; Art Club, 4. Page Thirty-two NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + NvI-K-EF GERTRUDE DAVIS News 12.37 Art. Glub, 3, 4: Centennial, 2: ARLENE EGGER ews, 4; Psyche, 3, 4; Art Club, 2, 3, 4; Der Deutsche Verein, 3, 4; Make-up for Centennial, 2. JEAN EWING © Cast of Centennial Plays, 2; “Riders‘to the Sea,” 3; “The Intruder,” 4. Page Thirty-three N-I- K’E NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN RUTH FENWICK Centennial, 2; French House, 3, 4; Dean’s List, 3, 4; Romance Languages Club, 3, 4; Secretary-Treasurer, 4; Der Deutsche Verein, 3, 4. MELEN; BISHERK Class Secretary, 1; Soccer, 1, 2, 3; Captain, 1; Soph Hop Committee, 2; “Doctor Faustus,” 2; Centennial, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Dancing, 3, 4; Head, 4; Junior Prom Committee, 3; Hockey, 4; Costume Committee, 4, BARBARA FOLLANSBEE Choir, 1, 2; International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Centennial, 2; Junior Prom Committee, 3; Der Deutsche Verein, 3, 4; Founders’ Day Plays, 4; German Christmas Play, 4. Page Thirty-four NINETEEN + THIRTY 7 SEVEN Nv’ I-K-E JANE GAGE Class Vice-President, 1, 2; Orchestra, 1, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Assistant Head of Lighting, 2; May Queen’s Woutt,.2, 3; Riding Team, 2; 3,.4;Class’ President, 3, 4; Dance Group, 3, 4; Head of Lighting, 3; Library Committee, 4; International Relations Club, 4. KATHARINE GAMMONS Class Tennis, 1, 3, 4; Varsity 3; Class Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Secretary, 2; Athletic Association Secre- tary, 2; Vocational Committee, 2, 3; May Queen’s Court, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Class Vice-President, 3; Athletic Association Vice-President, 3; Class Lacrosse, 3; German Club, 3, 4; Secretary-Treasurer, 4; President Athletic Association, 4. JEANSGUAVIERY, News, 1, 2; Assistant Editor, 3; Associate Editor, 4; Literary Editor Rushlight, 2; Founders’ Day Play, Memos Viummers Play, 2; Vaudeville, 2, 3: “Dr. Faustus,” 2; Literary Editor Nike, 3; Psyche, 3, 4; Class Hockey, 4; Social Chairman, 4. Page Thirty-five N-I-K°E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN BARBARA HATCH International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Agora Club, 3, 4: President, 4; Class Soccer, 3; Classical Club, 4; Geneva Committee, 4. LOIS HEAD. Circulation Department News, 1, 2; Reporter, 3, 4; Class $.A.B. Committee, 2; Class Chairman $.A.B., 3; Assistant Head of Properties, Dramatic Association, 3; Teacher of French at Night School, 3; Nativity Play, 3; Vaudeville, 3; Romance Languages Club, 3, 4: President, 4; “Two Gentlemen of Verona,” 4. FREDERICKA HERZOG Choir, 1; German Club, 1, 2, 3; Costumes, Mummers’ Play, 2; News Staff, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Costume Committee, 4. Page Thirty-six NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-[-K-E MARY HILL Choir, 1; May Day, 1, 2; Vaudeville, 1, 2; Centennial, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Founders’ Day Plays, 3; Class Soccer Team, 3; “The Importance of Being Earnest,” 3; Assistant House Chairman, 3; German Club, 3, 4; Vice-President Dramatic Association, 3; President, 4; “Two Gentlemen of Verona,” 4; Nativity Play, 4. MARGARET HITCHCOCK News Reporter, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Centennial, 2; Rushlight Staff, 2, 3, 4; Editor-in-Chief, 3;Science Club, 3, 4; Agora, 3, 4; Psyche, 3, 4; President, 4; Nativity Play, 3; Class Hockey, 3, 4; Class Swimming, 3; Assistant House Chairman, 3; Student Speaker at New England Association of Teachers of English, 3; Student Representative to Alumnae Council, 3; House Chairman, 4. JANET HOFFMAN Freshman Honor Roll, 1; Dean’s List, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basketball, 1; Class Hockey, 1, 2, 3; Class Basketball, peor Glass) Lennis, 2, 3; 4; Mummers Play, 2; Art Club, 2, 3, 4; Secretary-Treasurer, 4; News, 2, 4; Art Editor, Nike, 3; Secretary C.G.A., 2; Vice-President, 3; Y.W.C.A. Membership Chairman, 3; Psyche, 4. Page Thirty-seven N-I-K’ E NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN Page Thirty-eight BARBARA HOWARD Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Nativity Play Choir, 4; Music Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Vice-President, 4; Class Swimming, 1, 2, 4; Varsity, 1, 4; Class Hockey, 1, 2; Soph Hop Decora- tion Committee, 2; Centennial Poster Committee, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Art Club, 3, 4. BARBARA HOYT “The Princess Marries the Page,” 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Centennial, 2; Centennial Make-up Committee, 2; Head of Green Room, 3, 4; News, 3, 4; Managing Editor, 4; Director, “Riders to the Sea,” 3; Director, ‘The Intruder,” 4; “Cradle Song,” 3; Nativity Play, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Y.W.C.A., 3. GAILSBUEL News, 1, 2; Soph Hop Committee, 2; Student Head of Make-up, Centennial, 2; Centennial Pageant, 2; Nike, 2; Associate Editor, 3; Founders’ Day Play, 3; Class. Hockey, 3; Assistant House Chairman, 3; Dean’s List, 3, 4; Dance Recital, 3; Press Board, 3, 4; Rushlight, 4; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Art Club, 3, 4; Psyche, 3, 4; Vice-President, 4. NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN « N-[-K’-E MADELINE HUNTER Choir, 1, 2; Vice-President Y.W.C.A., 3; Inter- national Relations Club, 3, 4; Nativity Choir, 4; House Chairman, 4. MARJORIE HUTCHINGS Class Soccer, 1; Mummers’ Play, 2; Art Club, 3, 4. MARJORIE KOPF (Transferred, 3) Class Lacrosse, 3; Class Hockey, 3; W atsity, 9; Class’ Basketball, 3; Varsity, 3; Junior Prom Committee, 3; Y.W.C.A., 3, 4; International Relations Club, 3; News, Assistant Managing Editor, 4. Page Thirty-nine N-I-K’E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN KATHARINE LAHEE International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Music Club, 2, 3, 4; “Pantomime,” 2; Psyche, 3, 4; “Cradle Song,” 3; Founders’ Day Play, 4. ELIZABETH LAKIN Choir, 1, 2; Nativity Choir, 4; Centennial, 2; Music Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Speedball, 3. . CAROLYN LEWIS News, 2, 3; Centennial, 2; Norton Night School, 3; Vocational Committee, 3; Junior Prom Committee, 3; Assistant $.A.B. Junior Chairman, 3; International Relations Club, 4; Chairman World Fellowship Committee, 4; Senior Prom Committee, 4; House Chairman, 4. Page Forty NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN N-I-K-E RUTH LEWIS Mummers’ Play, 2; Vaudeville, 2; Assistant Business Manager of Dramatic Association, 2; Chairman of Properties for Vaudeville and Founders’ Day Play, 2; Business Manager of Dramatic Association, 3, 4; Soccer Team, 3; Wheaton News, 3, 4; Chairman of Class Floor Committee, 4. PANEL LE Art Club, 1. DORIS LARENTZEN Orchestra, 1; Ensemble, 2; Centennial Music Com- mittee, 2: Class Lacrosse, 2, 3; Class Hockey, 3; Varsity Lacrosse, 3; Art Club, 3, 4; Der Deutsche Verein, 3, 4; Nativity Choir, 4. Page Forty-one N-I-K’E-’ NINETEEN THIRTY + SEVEN DOROTHY LOdisL Hockey Squad, 1; Basketball Squad, 1, 2, 3; Varsity, 2, 33 Class Lacrosse, 2+ Choir,’ 25 News) 2 saeas Advertising Manager, 4; May Queen’s Court, 2, 3; Vaudeville, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Assistant House Chairman, 3. JANET MacKAY Choir, 1; Centennial, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Dance Group, 3, 4; Class Soccer, 3; Waudeville, 3; News, 4; Senior Prom Committee, 4. ANNE MAGILL Der Deutsche Verein, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3; Junior Class Play, 3. Page Forty-two NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN « N’I[-K’°E MARGARET MANCHESTER Riding Team, 1; Class Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Swimming, 1, 2, 3, 4; Mummers’ Play, 2; Vaudeville, 2; Romance Languages Club, 3, 4. HILDEGARDE MARBURG Geneva, Switzerland, 3. Class Hockey, 1, 2; German Club, 1, 2, 4; Sec. 2; International Relations Club, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Art Club, 4; Rushlight, 4. HANNAH MARKS Centennial; 2; Art Club, 2, 3, 4. Page Forty-three N-I-K-E: NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN HELENE McCALLUM Vaudeville, 1, 2, 3, 4; Music Club, 2, 3; “Riders to the Sea,” 3; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Class Song Leader, 3, 4; College Song Leader, 4; Romance Languages Club, 4; “The Intruder,” 4; House Chair- man, 4; Chairman of Class Music Committee, 4; Undergraduate Representative of Boston Wheaton Club, 4. BARBARA McEVOY Soccer, 1, 2, 3; Capt. 2, 3; Romeo ands Jokers: Centennial Committee, 2; International Relations Club, 2, 3, 4; Soph Hop Committee, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Wheaton News, 2, 3, 4; Headline Editor, 4; Class Basketball, 3, 4; Capt. 4; Art Club, 4; Class Hockey, 4; Senior Prom Committee, 4; Nativity Play, 4; Geneva Scholarship Committee, 4; Class Treasurer, 4, MARY McINTIRE Orchestra, 1; Choir, 1, 2, 3; President, 3; Music Club, 2, 3, 4; Class Soccer, 3; College Fire Chief, 4; Nativity Choir 4. Page Forty-four NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN N-I[-K-E MARIE MEYER International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Red Cross Committee, 2; Wheaton News, 3, 4; Costume Com- mittee, 4; Lighting Committee, 4; Centennial Pageant. RUTH MILES Class Soccer, 2, 3; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Science Club, 3, 4; President Science Club, 4. ADELE MILLS Soccer Team, 1; Scenery Head for Sophomore Found- ers’ Day Play, 2; $.A.B. representative, 2; Centennial Pageant, 2; Literary Editor Rushlight, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; May Day Page, 2; Associate Editor News, 3; Vaudeville, 3; Associate Editor Rushlight, 3; Asso- Pitesehatiman9.A.B., 3; Deans List, 3; Psyche, 3, 4; Editor News, 4; Advisory Board Rushlight, 4; International Relations Club, 4. Page Forty-five N-I K’E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN Page Forty-six DOROTHY MOUNTAIN Choir, 1; Centennial Pageant, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; “Doctor Faustus,” 2; Vaudeville, 2, 3; News Business Manager, 2, 3, 4; Founders’ Day Play, 2, 3; Social Room Chairman, 3; Junior Prom Committee, 3; Business Manager, Nike, 3; “Importance of Being Earnest,” 3; Varsity Lacrosse, 3; International Re- lations Club, 3, 4; Nativity Play, 3, 4; Chairman of Entertainment, 4. PUIZABE LHR EEC News, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Swimming Team, 1; Class Soccer Team, 1, 2, 3; Class Basketball Team® 23.3% International Relations Club, 3, 4; Mummers’ Play, 2. BET TYP OLA Riding Team, 1, 2, 3, 4; Wheaton News, 1, 2, 3; Class Hockey, 1, 2; Rushlight Business Manager, 3; Art Club, 3, 4; Cole Memorial Prize, 3; Captain Riding Team, 4; President Art Club, 4; Editor of Rushlight, 4; Psyche, 4. Pim sree EP aN abd pole yes. BV EN. 0 NIKE DOROTHY RIST Costume Committee, 1; Librarian-Treasurer of Orches- toasts Class; Soccer Team, 1, 2) 3; Choir, 71, 2, 3; Y.W.C.A. Social Committee, 1, 2, 3; Music Club, 1, pe, 4- International Relations’ Club, 1,72, 3, 4; Centennial Pageant, 2; Soph. Hop Decoration Com- mittee, 2:5 Doctor Faustus, 2s.Orchestra, 1, 2, 3; Student Industrial Committee, 2, 3; Y.W.C.A. Christ- meee bazecr 2.) Glassical Club, 2.3) 43 Secretaty- Treasurer of Music Club, 3; Class Lacrosse Team, 3; Choir Librarian, 3; Dean’s List, 3, 4; Night School Work, 3, 4; President Music Club, 4; Calendar Com- mittee, 4; Nativity Play Choir, 4. MILDRED ROBERTS Class President, 1; “Pygmalion and Galatea,” 1; May Court, 1, 3; Class Hockey, 1, 2, 3, 4; May Queen, 2; “Romeo and Juliet,” 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Secretary of Dramatic Association, 2; Centennial Pageant, 2; Costumes for Centennial, 2; “Doctor Faustus,” 2; Treasurer of Dramatic Association, 3; Founders’ Day Play, 3; “Importance of Being Earnest,” 3; Nativity Play, 3; Varsity Hockey, 3; Head of Costumes, 4; Vice- President of Class, 4; Art Club, 4. MILDRED RODGERS Class Song Leader, 1; Choir, 1; Freshman Tennis Cup, 1; Tennis Captain, 1, 2;Class Hockey, 1, 2, 4; Captain Class’ Basketball, 1; Class Basketball, 1, 2, 4; Class President, 2; Y.W.C.A. Secretary, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; “Doctor Faustus,” 2; Centennial Pageant, 2; Varsity Tennis, 2, 4; International Relations Club, 4; 5.A.B. Chairman, 4; Dance Group, 4. Page Forty-seven N-I-K-E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN ELISABETH ROGERS Class Swimming, 1; Class Hockey, 4; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, 3; Science Club, 4. ELEANOR ROSENTHAL Rushlight, 4; Dean’s List, 4. CHARLOTTE SANDERS Class Treasurer, 1; Wheaton News, 2; Class Hockey, 1; 2:.3,-43 Class Lacrosse, 2,°3: science Club: 2am Rushlight, 3; Treasurer C.G.A., 3; President C.G.A., 4, Page Forty-eight NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-[-K-E ROSAMOND SHURTLEFF Soccer, 1; Orchestra, 1; International Relations Club, 3; Science Club, 4; Marine Biological Laboratory, 3. RUTH STERNBERG News, 1, 2; Centennial, 2; Vaudeville, 2; International Relations Club, 3. LOISSSWE GI May Queen’s Court, 2; Centennial Pageant, 2; Class Lacrosse, 2, 3; Varsity Lacrosse, 2, 3; Class Hockey, 2, 3, 4; May Day Pageant, 3; Assistant Head La- crosse, 3; Class Secretary, 3; Vocational Committee, 3; Geneva Committee, 3; Y.W.C.A. Treasurer, 3; Assistant Business Manager Nike, 3; Financial Chair- man of Prom, 3; Dance Group, 3, 4; Science Club, 3, 4; Y.W.C.A. President, 4; Art Club, 4; International Relations Club, 4. Page Forty-nine N-I-K-E- NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN Page Fifty KATE LAURSEIELD Choir, 1, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Soph Hop Decoration Committee, 2; Chairman Costumes Founders’ Day, 3; Assistant House Chairman, 3; Y.W.C.A. Chairman Community Welfare Committee, 3; May Day Cos- tume Committee, 3; Y.W.C.A. Chairman of Night School Committee, 4; Head of Hiking, 4. ALICE TURNER Class Hockey, 1, 4; Class Basketball, 1, 2; Staff of Freshman Paper, 1; Chairman of Refreshment Com- mittee for Soph Hop, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; May Court, 2; Romance Languages Club; Junior Year in France. VIRGINIA VERBURG Class Soccer, 1; Varsity Swimming, 1, 4; Mummers’ Play, 2; Captain Class Hockey, 2, 3, 4; Class Basket- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Lacrosse, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Basket- ball, 3; Class Treasurer, 3; Chairman Junior Prom Decorations, 3; House Chairman, 4. NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN « Nv I-K-E NORMA VICTORIUS International Relations Club, 1, 4; Centennial Pageant, 2. MILDRED VON DER SUMP Varsity Archery, 3, 4; Head of Archery, 4; Class Basketball, 3; Vaudeville, 3, 4; Geneva Committee, 4; Senior Chairman, $.A.B., 4; Senior Prom Finance Committee, 4. MURIEL VOTER (Entered Junior Year); Art Club, 4; Music Club, 4; Science Club, 4; Nativity Choir, 4; Choir, 4. Page Fifty-one N-I-K’E- NINETEEN + THIRTY SEVEN Page Fifty-two MARJORIE WARREN Centennial Committee, 2; Mummers’ Play, 2; Art Club, 4; International Relations Club, 4; Class Hockey, 4; Y.W.C.A., 4; 5.A.B. Committee, 4. MARY WHEELER Choir; 1; Class Basketball, 1; Class Hockey saiems Class Soccer, 1, 3; Centennial Pageant, 2; Vaudeville, 3; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Model League, 3, 4; Assistant House Chairman, 3; Vice-President Republican Club, 4; Agora, 4; Geneva Committee, 4. JESSICA WHITE Soccer, 1; Lacrosse, 3; Hockey, 2; Swimming, 3, 4; Basketball, 1, 2, 3; Mummers’ Play, 2; Riding Team, 1, 3; Treasurer of A.A., 3; Vaudeville, 2; “Cradle Song,” 3; Choir, 1; Nativity Play, 4, May Day, 2; Dance Group, 4. NINETEEN 7 THUR Y 7 SEVEN @ N-I-K-E To the memory of E.izABETH WRIGHT SHIPPEE member of the class of 1937 Page Fifty-three N-I-K-E « NINETEEN THIRTY + SEVEN SENIOR HISTORY Four long years has the class of 1937 consistently borne the stigma of the least distin- guished group in every field. The superlatives applied to us have always been cn the nether side with one exception—our spirit. Endowed with a superior amount of gccd sportsmanship, we have entered every competition with a resolution almest pathetic in its enthusiasm but admirable in its good-humored defeat. It is well to remember that we are a transition class, having spent two years on either side of the centennial mark, and like all periods of change, we are characterized by a rather vague personality with fleshes of distinction here and there which signify to the prophetic eye the reigning stars of the future. We entered a scene which was to alter greatly during our career at Wheaton and enjoyed a peaceful supremacy in a bright and sunny haze. Then came reality, composed of awe-inspiring titans of the first magnitude who relegated us to the sphere of the lowly worm. For one week we squirmed to the tunes which the sophomores whistled, but at the Freshman-Sophomore Party we provided our own musical score and libretto featuring Julie Afong, who brought from Hawaii a new and delightfully exotic note. The whole performance was unanimously recognized as containing seeds of talent and originality. It was not long before these seeds began to grow and attract attention. From our ranks came the first freshman ever to have the lead in the Fall Play when Lee Roberts offered a fine portrayal of Galatea. Later in the year Mary Hill completely captivated the Vaude- ville audience, and Jane Ault claimed second place as Mae West in the same production. The event of the year was the announcement of class ofhcers: Lee Roberts, Jane Gage, Helen Fisher, Charlotte Sanders, Mildred Rodgers. We had planned a rather mediocre presentation when, by divine intervention (otherwise known as the vindictive sophomores) our president was kidnapped, making the announcement a tensely dramatic affair. As a group we broke all low records; we fought our way to fourth place in interclass competitions, and we struggled through our first mid-year examinations to place only two of our members on the Freshman Honor Roll. Since life seemed to offer nothing but frus- tration to our united front, we turned to individuals even for our amusement. Without a few farcical misdemeanors we had not deserved the name of freshmen. The very first week Jean Guttery and Joanne Sargent earned three reprimands in one night. Between ten and ten-thirty they were washing dishes midst hilarious laughter which brought the house chairman to the scene with grave threats. Thinking she was a fellow freshman they grew more boisterous, and upon discovery of their blunder tried to appease her by offering their religion notes for use any time she wished to cut (noble gesture!). Carolyn Coons fared little better when she politely took her escort into the parlor at one o'clock, while the stupid upperclassmen (among them the president of C. G. A.) said goodnight outside. The discipline brought to bear upon us was not without its repercussions. Omniscient and omnipotent we returned our sophomore year. The campus seemed cognizant of our importance. Old Metcalf, which had been dismal and inconvenient to us and not a treasure-house of memories, no longer gave the official welcome to the entering class. We saw its demise without a tear of sorrow. In its place stood a new brick building with an adequate post office and bookstore, beautiful administrative ofhces whose floors did not creak ominously beneath our timid tread. Chapin, the least desirable of dorms, was completely renovated (for our benefit we had no doubt). The task in hand was to give the freshmen a really memorable initiation, but our discipline was so rigorous, it turned into a hazing to end all hazings. In a hushed and dimly lighted room we con- ducted more solemnly than a trial for life our inquisition for recalcitrant individuals and succeeded too well in frightening the strong personalities among our successors. To the dignity of Lohengrin we announced our class officers, Mildred Rodgers, Jane Gage, Katherine Gammons, Gretchen Kanter, Isabel Cahalane, with a wedding in the Dimple where flower Page Fifty-four NINETEEN 7 THIRTY + SEVEN « Nv’ I-K-F girls scattered their petals amid a shower of confetti. In the light of subsequent events this was symbolic. No one foresaw then that Lee Roberts would be our May Queen nor that a young man by the same name would be hailed as King in the spirit of romance as he bestowed a kiss of congratulations upon her fair brow. How could we know that this sealed their destiny and the sequel was foreordained thereby! Excitement was high all year. Although we improved not a bit in athletics and added only two to the Dean’s List and lost in the Founders’ Day Play competition, we were not grieved. The Muirthful Minds of Fourth Floor Everett provided unrestrained gaiety over which we continue to chuckle. They often slept in a line along the corridors and bounced tennis balls back and forth all night. On one occasion Mew Wheeler was kept vainly trying to stifle each alarm clock that went off unexpectedly from hidden parts of the room. No sooner was one punched than another rang forth; this kept up for endless minutes whereupon Miss Burton approached and asked why no one was answering the door. From her window on fourth floor to Sandy’s on third flcor Fran Crosby installed a pulley system by which she could keep Sandy well supplied with home-made snacks. Sophomore Hop was literally a circus. Elephants, tigers, monkeys leered from barred windows, and clowns performed their queerest antics while we danced under the big top. If our sense of importance was enhanced by a dance of our own, we fairly burst with su- periority during Christmas festivities. Being Mummers and in the limelight we quite overstepped the bounds of our license as fun-makers in irrepressible outbursts of excitement. With the exception of Hop our combined efforts were unsuccessful; but from our own point of view we would add the inquisition and Christmas banquet. To individuals we again turned for popular acclaim. When Gretchen Kanter made such a lovely Juliet and Dot Mountain foreshadowed her future realm of overwhelming success by her memorable impersonation and the Héléne-Cahalane team provided many of the songs, we felt a keen pride in the abili ty of our single members. We had an elopement to boast also, and no one knew till she left in June (just before finals) that Bambie had been married since Easter! The glorious climax to the events of the year came with the Centennial celebration. To be just a tiny part of the concentrated activity and unified purpose . . . nota finger idle, nota moment wasted . . . and to feela surging emotion and unspeakable pride in the venerable history of Wheaton so skillfully molded into its present dignity and beauty was an experience that knitted us closely together and produced on each an indelible effect. As we joined in the elaborate preparations and as we watched the recaptured picture of past generations unfold, we realized how well we summed up the old era and heralded the new. Serenely we accepted the authority of tradition as a class while individuals stubbornly stirred the sered leaves thickly covering them and slowly began to raise new shoots. Junior year came with our numbers so diminished, we each had a family of freshman sisters. At first it seemed as if our mightiest members had departed, but we managed to prosper without them, even to make our presence strongly felt. While the year was yet young we manifested true originality and a keen appreciation of the turn of affairs outside our cloistered halls by raking from the seedy depths of a haywagon into the field of observa- tion our rustically attired officers: Jane Gage, Katherine Gammons, Lois Sweet, Virginia Verburg, and Héléne McCallum. We were beginning to realize our potentialities. A victorious season in speedball demonstrated our mettle, but unfortunately it provided a too potent fuel for our newly kindled ambition when we set our hopes on first honors in dramatics with the presentation of Riders to the Sea. Needless to say we were deeply disappointed in our failure to fulfill our ideal but undaunted by the blow. Moved by a fomenting spirit of change, the lively progressives among us looked for other lands to cultivate. Reformers, clamoring for drastic innovations, supplied News with conflicting opinions on the elimination of formal seating, a five-day week, a four-course curriculum, and an examination review period. None of these proposals was adopted at the time, but agitation was rife, and we scored several points by securing more social freedom for our Page Fifty-five N-I-K-E’ NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN successors, namely, two late permissions a month for juniors and for everyone a late per- mission till one-thirty on the occasion of a dance—these took effect the next fall. The reform tendency was put to a more constructive use in the rejuvenation of Rushlight by Margaret Hitchcock and Adele Mills in offering a workshop production for literary aspirants. There were fields outside our own small world to which we could apply our dissenting energies. Against the Teachers’ Oath Bill we vociferously protested along with every other college in the state, and we rallied to the support cf the shortlived satiric peace campaign, the Veterans of Future Wars, by organi:ing a Home Fire Division under the vigorous leadership of Jean Guttery. Whether cless or college, state or naticnal affair, we championed ecch progressive measure by the sheer foice of a few, and then to show how very youthful we really were we romped one whole afterncon in the Dimple with equal vitality end abendon, protected in our kiddish undzess by the tradition of Junior Frolic. An example of stateliness and decorum, we made our next public appearance a paradox by contrast. We assumed dignity in our caps and gowns with a pride born of the hard- earned title of seniors as in the customary fashion we announced our ofhcers for the last time: Jane Gage, Lee Roberts, Alice Cutter, Barbara McEvoy, and Heléne McCallum. The year started auspiciously with the pre-opening gathering at Birchmont made memo- rable by a spirit of warm-hearted co-operation and Miss Littlefield’s enthusiastic interest and understanding, which lasted throughout the semester, and made entertaining by Madeline Hunter’s birch swinging. This harmony within the ranks persisted. Follow- ing the advice of Dot Mountain we appeared en masse in Dr. Hubbard’s American Politics class bedecked in sunflowers—with one notable exception. How inconsistent with the previous year’s tendency we proved ourselves is witnessed by our enormously conserva- tive vote after the faculty campaign speeches . . . and this in the face of Mr. Cressey’s red necktie! Ours was a vacillating nature, however, for we were soon on a progressive trail again, achieving this time a review period and the unprecedented privilege of holding Prom in Emerson. This and the most cleverly conceived and performed of Vaudevilles, appropriately entitled Left Swing, reached a high water mark in our successes through our master in the field, Dot Mountain, and the Héléne-Cahalane team scoring once again. Life moved swiftly, forming a checkered pattern of lightsand darks . . . colored by a gay round of dinners at the President’s house, of coffees, of swimming meets in the new pool and of basketball games (in both of which we laughingly competed with our usual limitations), of riding meets with Betty Pollack leading our team to victory, of romance in the form of engagements (one of which was so dramatically foreshadowed), and of senior picnics and step-singing, so lively and yet so filled with sentiment darkened only by menacing generals, by vexing restrictions for thoughtless infringements, and by fruit salad. There was no dampening of our glowing spirits as we caroled our way in the drizzling rain the morning of vacation, and there was no limit to our pride when Dr. Park presented Midge with a tiny French virgin at Christmas banquet for being ““one of the loveliest madonnas Wheaton has ever seen.” In these years, unbelievably short in retrospect, we have maintained our early tend- ency of cheerful acceptance, spanning the gap between the old and the new eras, but more important than that, we have demonstrated the power of individuals to transcend the temporary lull by taking the initial step in new directions. If our successes have been few, they have been brilliant and significant, and though we either laugh at the glaring errors of many made in the fever of desire for reform or belittle our general apathy, we shall not be merely considered as a transitional class, but long remembered as the pioneers Ofe 75 Ke elt Page Fifty-six NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + NvI-K-E CLASS WILL We, the Class of 1937, making the initial assumption that in June there is still enough left in us to justify a class will, do hereby bequeath the most notable of our superfluous qualities for the welfare and improvement of the college. Gertrude Arey leaves the French House to incoming freshmen with one last injunction of “Fermez’’. Sally Arnold leaves her quiet efficiency to Al Warner to counteract her country club existence. Sylvia Breyer leaves an assortment of hats to the Emily Shop. Libby Brown and Virginia Bugbee leave their simple girlishness to Gwillim. Betty Brunet leaves Mr. Cressey doubled, redoubled, and vulnerable. Iggy leaves Information to a drab future with no more interesting telegrams to decipher. Ruth Chittick, Dolly Lorentzen, and Mary Cook leave their bouncing frivolity to Bets Bien. Leah Clapp leaves with a silver spoon in her mouth and a ring on her finger. Lucille Clapp leaves as the outstanding example of Wheaton’s rosy-cheeked appellation. Deet Coons turns over her horde of Brown men to Evie Tregoning. Fran Crosby leaves a sophistication that can be turned off and on to Norma Shearer. Jean Cummings dedicates her Phi Bet brains to Janet Smock. Alice Cutter parts to compete with Elizabeth Arden. Trudy Davis leaves an ability to look smooth on campus to Page. Arlene Egger entrusts her gentle qualities to future Free Speech correspondents. Jean Ewing leaves an ever dependable memory to the Broderick scatter brain trust. Ruth Fenwick whispers the gift of a loquacious and argumentative nature to Phyllis Ambler. Skipper dances merrily off to pick ““Taisies”’. Follansbee sails away on summary breezes. Gagey leaves her guppies for observation to the Family Course. Katie Gammons leaves to reorganize athletic associations in Germany. Minnie and Mew embark to insure amicable international relations by feeding the League Geneva sandwiches. Bobby Hatch deposits her fur coat and history notes in cold storage. Neither would be handy for a bride in South Carolina. Heady leaves in “Christopher” for a Happy Journey. Herzog, Meyer, and many others emerge from Dr. Hubbard’s course in Political Science assured that there is no such thing as dirty politics. Mary Hill leaves dramatics and beauty to the very good keeping of Cynie Putnam. Midge Hitchcock leaves the picture of the most perfect Madonna memorable to Wheaton. Janet Hoffman hastens to establish the pun as a legitimate form of wit. Barbara Howard leaves her poster publicity to the verbal publicity of Edith Feinberg. Hoytie leaves the make-up room to Nancy Warren. Gail leaves an example of a model student for the English Department to hold up to future undergraduates. Mad Hunter remains a constant reminder of the beauties of the perfectly manicured hand. Page Fifty-seven N-I-K-E: NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN Maggie Hutchings appoints Ellen LeSure to carry on the swing campaign in the infirmary. Midge Kopf leaves with the record of being the only student who has attempted to pilot a man safely through the “Puritan” crowd. Kay Lahee endorses Pat Smith’s as a training school preparatory to foreign bicycle tours. Lakin and McIntire dedicate their long, steady hours in the Libe to Lovin’ Bloom. Carol Lewis takes a map of Peoria tucked under her arm. Ruth Lewis leaves the college convinced that life is so complicated. Little and Magill leave the Sem without bridge instructors. Dottie Lott, after careful consideration (and consultation with the authors) has decided to keep her captivating smile. MacKay leaves to be head of Harmon Hall. Manchester leaves an ability to appreciate faculty witticisms most audibly to Dot Wetherell. Hannah Marks leaves a blank. McCallum long ago left the Sem piano to the punishment of the Grifhth-Crosby “Chop- sticks”. Mac leaves her artistic class note decorations to Nat Macan. Ruth Miles leaves her placid nature to Dot Tucker. Adele and Gutsy leave with the senior year having taken a lot out of them. Dot Mountain puts swing on a definite footing at Wheaton. Pecky leaves, still waiting for a good bridge hand. Pollak takes with her the union of the athletic and the artistic. Claire Reese leaves with her Knight in shining amour. Dottie Rist takes her troubled treble to keener places. Lee Roberts leaves to become Lee Roberts (and that right soon). Millie Rodgers leaves her tennis ability to Betty Conant. Betty Rogers leaves Hanover heels in love. Rosenthal leaves her daily crossword puzzle for Ellie Lane to work in class. Sandy leaves for more Pug-nacious activities. Shurtleff leaves the arboretum to Miss Rice. Sternie has taken all her leaves. Swett leaves “her organization” to Becky Taylor. Kate Thursfield leaves the college would-be’s and will-be’s because she has Ben. ‘“House-Mother” Verburg leaves Everett to Stubby and the House Mother Superior. Norma Victorious leaves as her name implies. Von leaves a note on her door. Jess White speeds away on two wheels. Marge Warren hands over her perfect posture to the ambitions of Helen Lamb. (P. S. In spite of all the leaves we’re practically all staying for the weddings.) Je D. M. Page Fifty-eight UNDERCLASSES Maggie Mypchings Shidgis Hopt Teaxcnn ay seein’) aaa aN Ky ey kag SORE Gree ‘ Lakin.dod Melange Paint Lenak bates Seas . ee Lente nee Avie heap ! Aiba the wi eRe Wa She thi tik Saints See sents Mot wah’ Hig, aye 3 a Oe ue ie , hts See ther yacnant tc § a 4 Gg Ra ein vA $3 K ee Ue, Give Tek Ba ANT oe Pech pea viet) AD aie cing Hy: 5 gas we bsial, Ctl Pollak wcisy wine doa’ Dracaena War oelne aad be pee BY Gt EK. Sane coae, alvad yaathy sue iow! fh Gini shuring tae Pert Rt, takes sit stood prety keinner plagays. Lae Roberts leaves tAllighane Lee Reto Gand thar sight. x wni'y ahilic Revigets ‘Mavey her tangs ability toe Besy Unt iia. Betty Rogers ledaegRancnter yeele toi wen!’ ; niga bahia tea ally srusierc purcle Foe, Bille Lane ' tote Sandy iiaiedior mide Pugicptons activities, . Sevartlok Meves dhe arboretuta s Mise Race, i r ig has Gini al) Her Jey ig . AN Da, | Aen y a aes) fh ae spas ties Hh vecky ‘Tia hee Ap y Saeee ieee Npurdheld Wands Uh eat ie vould: e's cle cua te ri Bion ae yhocher™” Varbaarg hee cami 0 sy Sisley oe | Necittene Moc tosegaie Wiking ak Ivnky earn ‘one ee eae Aces PREANGo Ve Oe then! ery. RUG he Jesu Oe tte itd Vira. wont, ste wheels lak Dvr Nau) net bore gener Set rot i. 8) Traine tid alt thie es. wey ae Ga: a “ ) a ee Lonigip ie tea te ie. Ye r 5 war hp. a Pa 4 i)’ i ah 4 F ‘ f 7 wos } 7 ms 1S “wan ; d ip Me a? ' ' - . r ; NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-[-K-E EONES Ne OR RTEGERS Jane Woopman, President BARBARA SPRAGUE Vice-President BARBARA STOBAEUS — Secretary ELLEN LeSURE Treasurer LINETTE MACAN Song-Leader Page Fifty-nine ING Re Ee NNN ete ALTHEA BELAND Seven Pillars of Wisdom Aice BERMAN The New Yorker BetTiInA BIEN The Good Earth Mary Bootu Theater ELEANOR BRODERICK New England Nun Rutu Brooks Modesta Page Sixty Puytus AMBLER As You Like It ALICE ANDERSON Alice in Wonderland JUNIOR 7 SEVEN MarGARET AMES I] Penseroso ELinor ANDERSEN Lady from the Sea MNP TEEN 7 THIRTY’, SEVEN N-[ K-B VIRGINIA CHACE Little Women ANNA CHICK Santa Anna Grace CuHIEppo The Dark Flower Persis CLARK Divine Comedy CLASS EstHER CLARNER Portrait of a Lady - Evetyn Coss Pair of Blue Eyes Bettina Co ie Still Waters Nancy Conners We Are Not Alone DorotHy CRAM Victory ELEANOR CRANE Fair Company Page Sixty-one N-I-K7+B 7% NINETEEN “CHIR Ye sr eee Rutu FELsENTHAL Testament of Bzauty SusANn FIsHER Gone With the Wind RutuH FLeIsHer Sound of Running Feet Ruta Fox I Am the Fox CAROLYN GREEN One-of Ours SARAH GREENE War and Peace Page Sixty-two Nancy CRAWFORD Disturber of Traffic JANET CRrosBy Great Laughter Auice DopcE Undying Fire Maryjoriz DooLan Golden Age of Dream Days JUNIOR BeENE TEEN SMR A FS NE N- LK E Moriet Gwitim Laughing Gas EvizABETH HEATH One of Our Conquerors LeurA Hewett A Modern Instance JANET [Ason Great Expectations CLASS Herten Husszy Helen SHIRLEY IDE Enjoyment of Laughter DorotHEA IssERSTEDT In the Midst of Life DorotHy JONEs With Malice Towards None ELIzABETH KELLEY Elizabeth, the Queen MarcGaret KNIGHTS Shining Scabbard Page Sixty-three N-I-K- EB « NINETEEN AucustA LEuCcHS My Antonia Heten LAMB All Star Cast Dorotuy LITTLEFIELD The Professor Nancy Locke Song of the Lark LinetttE Macan House of Mirth RutH MacCussin Sense and Sensibility Page Sixty-four Lucite LEBAIR The Tempest JUNIOR Hert Rea DorotHy LAMBERT Saturday Review 7 SE. Vee Exinor LANE Cards on the Table ELLeN LeSure Maid of Honor PONE TERN 7 “THIRTY 7 SEVEN +7 N-[ KieB Nina Macy Dance of Life Marcaret McDouca.t The Well-Beloved CATHERINE PELLEGRINI Workaday Lady ConsTANCE PoporF Dream Days PriscitLA MeEap Gentlemen Prefer Blondes “EvizABETH New Along Came Romance Mary O'NEILL College Omnibus CyntTH1A PutTNAM The Darling ELIzABETH RAYNES The Young Enchanted RutuH Ritter Autocrat of the Breakfast Table Page Sixty-five N-I-K-E « NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN BARBARA SPRAGUE House of Fame BARBARA STOBAEUS Honor Bright Nancy SuTHERLAND L’ Allegro REBECCA TAYLOR Zest for Life Epiru THOMAS Heartbreak House Mary Ann TIBBETTS Encyclopaedia Britannica Page Sixty-six VirGINIA Ross The True Heart Doris RYAN Mysteries of Paris JEANNETTE SCHEINZEIT The Light that Never Fails ELISABETH SCHOBINGER Lady of the Lake JUNIOR NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-]-K-E EvELYN TREGONING The Song of Songs Dorotuy TUCKER Golden Legend Liroyp VAUGHAN Fortitude WINIFRED WALDEN Gay Crusader CLASS Emity WALKER Youth Nancy Warren This Life I've Loved DorotHy WETHERELL Our Mutual Friend ErvinA WHITE Eternal Deeps Jane WoopMAN White Banner Loutss WyMAN My Candle Burns Page Sixty-seven N-I-K’E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN JUNIOR HISTORY With the care of one who lovingly dusts a treasure significant with meaning, we take our memories from the shelf of age, freshen them, and replace them, packed close together to make room for others. Glancing through the first group, we see ourselves as freshmen, one hundred and twenty-eight of us, glowing with enthusiasm and thinking triumphantly, “At last wearehere! NowLIFEwillbegin!” But how soon we were to be disillusioned! Only one week later saw us hopping along six steps forward and two back, up two stairs and down one—a new step created especially for us by those clever sophs. And of course, on the one sunny day of our trial-period, we peered out at the world from behind colored glasses, underneath umbrellas, and clad in the slickers and rubbers with which our well-meaning mothers had provided us. (We wouldn’t have missed the fun for anything, though, and were secretly disappointed when it was decreed that 1934 must mark the end of initiation.) Our class officers were whisked down to the Science building in the college truck and turned out to be the Dionne Quints! Centennial leaves recollections of Campus Day and its attendant buffet lunch in Emerson; of the countless tubes of grease paint; and of the scurrying to shelter in the big tent when a cloudburst threatened to stop the pageant. Sophomore year we returned to see a crowd of mere babes wandering around. “Did we ever look like that?” We have only to examine our class picture to find the answer. We recall humorously how Beck Taylor with the skill of a genius put each white mouse in the Zo lab back in his proper cage, after some mischievous spirit had mixed them up. This was the year, too, that we lost Madeline Goldthwaite, whose diploma reads “Wheaton College ex’38 C. B. (class bride).”” Now we are juniors and, surprisingly, feel ourselves closer to our freshman sisters than our erstwhile sophomoric wisdom would have deemed possible! Mary Duprey, Barbara Lerner, Peggy Abercrombie, and Molly Owen have also deserted us for the more attractive field of matrimony. We proudly boast Mary Ann Tibbetts as our junior member of Phi Beta Kappa. Thoughts of Prom—a jumble of cherry blossoms, japanese lanterns, and sunburned faces—still linger in our minds. We are looking forward expectantly and a little sadly to Junior Frolic when, after a last mad romp in the Dimple, we will don the robes of dignity which befit the awe-inspiring senior! De Acaia Page Sixty-eight MN EEN iit Raives SHVEN 7 N 7|nKeak SOPHOMORE OFFICERS NATALIE JOHNSON, President CAROL SMITH Vice-President CONSTANCE NEWTON Secretary EVELYN DANZIG Treasurer BARBARA SYMONDS Song-Leader Page Sixty-nine N-I-K’ E NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN SOPHOMORE HISTORY The second year of the second century of the history of Wheaton College was heralded with glad expectation by the Class of “39. The expectation was justified when the sophomores walked off with the honors in the competitive plays held on Founders’ Day. Elated with success, we felt the Alexandrian urge for new worlds to conquer. In early October an amateur contest was held by the world-famous Major Knots to determine the five reliable fellow-classmen who would undertake the job of managing the business side of our glorious future. We had not long to wait for an opportunity to continue our successes. Hallowe'en was approaching, and with it our first real social flng—Soph Hop. Came the mysterious eve: witches rode again, the air was filled with the musty odor of cornstalks, golden jack- o-lanterns grinned at the merry diners, apples bobbed from the eaves; and cider and dough- nuts served by farmerettes made it a grand and friendly affair. The festive atmosphere was not to disappear so soon. Christmas was upon us, and the class, led by a gay Master of Revels, carried on the tradition passed on to us in gala style. Amid rollicking songs and hearty laughter the Mummers filled the dining rooms and the gym with the old-fashioned spirit of Christmas. With such a fulfillment of the promise we gave in our first year, with our enthusiasm unbounded and our ambitions even more alive, we look with justifiable anticipation toward the future; not even the black cat that attempted to cross the photographer’s path when our class picture was being taken can blight our optimism. For you know it is often said that black cats are lucky! JN. S. NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN N’[-K-EF FRESHMAN OFFICERS Bettina Conant, President MARY CAMERON BUFORD Vice-President MARY ANN HESSENTAHLER Secretary GERTRUDE JENKS Treasurer ELIZABETH KING Song-Leader Page Seventy-one N-I-K-E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN FRESHMAN HISTORY “Tah fe: “Hi, there!” We tried to look as though we belonged, but in the face cf upperclass joviality we felt green, peagreen. That was the first week. The second week we wore signs with our names and addresses blocked out in letters two inches high and one and a half inches wide. We began to grin feebly at each other, and to recognize one or two seniors when we met them on campus. After that the weeks were more or less alike. In November we sent packages to the juniors—surprise packages containing our class oficers. We began to feel a little more important. When we discovered that we had won the interclass swimming and basketball as well as the tennis, we considered booking one hundred and forty-three passages to Japan for June 1940. Perhaps we could even have Commencement at the Olympics! We will be the first class to graduate in the °40 decade. We are the first class to have a four-year option on the new swimming pool. We are the largest class in college due to the fact that Finals are still lurking in the Future! We are, in fact, quite unusual and not at all modest about it! Perhaps modesty will come with wisdom! At least we will never again feel green, although that is our class color. Thanks to the candlelight service, singing on the Chapel Steps, Sunday breakfasts with our junior sisters, and “Hail to Britannia’ we were early initiated into Wheaton traditions. By our twenty-fifth week we were convinced that we really belonged. Ee ORGANIZATIONS AND CLUBS = x at + =i a Teer ag, ee ae Se Ta be BO ES Aa ks oro ag sie Sy decade: AYE age om oatae mi Ha: a fotrdyear opvon teh Ries swimtentg pool 2. re the danpest Faas nce jue to testi chet Birds ave SEM aking ithe Pode’ Woas wifack, qeare om 7 - ‘ Te TO Ft. ah had 78 Dre 8 “itt wert y ba saith - it a Az ieast we -will ne is War cids CO lor. I ‘ ey i indie iat COVE. ta ¥ nid Suate SF: vitrucn Alster’ and “Hail to. Britannia was. iy Hy vee MAR bans PREP a PE AOS NO gre pK ori RN oF ns CATY VEE Re that w aes ey, neo te NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN N-[-K-F flelleactons Aine Ke AN eeAy STUDENT MEMBERS of the WHEATON CHAPTER JEAN CUMMINGS KATHRYN JANET HOFFMAN MARY ANN TIBBETTS Page Seventy-three N-I-K-E NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN COLLEGE GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION CHARLOTTE SANDERS, President The spirit of revolution and change took Wheaton’s Government Association in its wind, as well as the European nations. Through council there has come a revelation of the inside workings of the college organizations, a better understanding of the work peculiar to these associations, and a revision of the point system to better equalize the burden carried by college officers. Parliamentary procedure was introduced into class meetings, records of all meetings, and accurate accounts of expenditures are all part of the efficient plan of running college affairs. As part of the campaign for the revelation of light on such matters a mass meeting was held before college elections to explain the duties of the school officers to the entire student body. For the first time a committee investigating the present system of formal seating was at least moderately successful in its undertaking. But C. G. A. was not all work and no play, for early September found it not swinging the birch rod of discipline, but swinging gaily at New Hampshire’s “Birchmont.” And the cabinet banquet is, as always, the annual feature. It is to be hoped that with the suggestions of this year’s council, particularly those of its senior members, that Wheaton will continue to try to spread this better understand- ing which is coming between the college body and its organizations. Their function is, after all, not merely a social one, but one of real creative workshops, or agencies with a real purpose, cultural or charitable. Page Seventy-four MONE TERN 7 THIRTY 7 SEVEN + N7 [7 Keap CHARLOTTE SANDERS President BARBARA SPRAGUE Vice-President MILDRED POLAND Secretary BARBARA STOBAEUS Treasurer Page Seventy-five N-I-K-E- NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN We WY Ke ZA. Lois Swett, President The Y. W. C. A. Cabinet members started the year off with their usual good turn of getting the freshmen safely to their rooms on the first day of college. Later in the fall the Social Committee conducted successfully the annual Riding Meet Dance in a truly equestrian atmosphere. The Norton Night School, directed by the chairman of the Educational Committee, carried on its work during the first semester. Three excellent speakers were presented by Y. W. during the year. Dr. Park has made it a custom to speak for Y. W. His subject this year was “Poetry of Today.” Dr. Arthur Lee Kinsolving of Trinity Church, Boston, spoke on the topic of “Conscience.” The third speaker was the Reverend Herbert Hitchen of the First Unitarian Society of West Newton. He informally addressed a large group of students on the subject of Irish Literature. One ambitious and praiseworthy project of Y. W.—the Ice Carnival—never came to pass. Anyway it was a grand idea and if the weather had not conspired against us the Carnival would have been one of the outstanding social events of the year. The Student Industrial Group had a very successful meeting at which it entertained a group of working girls from New Bedford. The Social Security Act was the topic of discussion. Mr. Converse, a member of the Social Security Board in Boston, was present to answer questions and take part in the discussion. The Conference Committee has been very active. Delegates were sent to conferences at Northfield, to the Student Christian Movement Conference at Cedar Hill, and to conferences in Boston. The work of this committee in peace has been considerable. The outstanding event of its campaign was the panel discussion, “ War Tomorrow—Can the United States Stay Out?”, which was held at Wheaton, with students from Smith, Boston University, Tufts, and Wheaton taking part. Page Seventy-six NENETEEN Y (HURT Y 7 SEVEN + N17 Kee LOIS SWETT President REBECEGASLTAY LOR Vice-President NATALIE JOHNSON Secretary ELIZABE LH RAY.NES Treasurer Page Seventy-seven N-I-K- Ev NINETEEN + THIRTY SEVEN WHEATON NEWS STAFF AvELE Mutts, Editor News has been primarily interested this year in the infusion of vigor and vitality into its columns. A continuation of the formal editorial board established last year enabled the staff to formulate certain definite policies with regard to campus problems, and to con sciously and forcibly work for the solution of these questions. Faced with the baffling problem of the proper function of a college newspaper, this staff determined to forego the proverbial fence and to carefully establish in the editorial columns the position of News on important college matters, and to deliberately attempt to mould current opinion. News has not hesitated to ally itself with either one side or the other and has tried to face issues squarely and without fear. The policy of printing articles of intercollegiate and national interest has been continued, and News has endeavored to maintain its standard of journalistic writing on the level to which it was raised by the preceding staff. One change which evinces this effort is the abolition of the Cream O° Wheaton editor and the substitution of a social one. Fortunate in the inheritance of a financially sound paper, News has, under capable and efficient management, successfully completed this year. Secure in the possession of a firm monetary basis, News turned its attention to a complete investigation of its files and to their reorganization. Records and files are now up-to-date and protected against future disruption by a new filing case. Page Seventy-eight NINETEEN + THIRTY 7 SEVEN N-I[-K-EF ADELE MILLS Editor-in-Chief PEANGCUMEERY Associate Editor JEANNE DE SCHELN ZEIT Assistant Editor LINETTE MACAN Assistant Editor BARBARA McEVOY Headline Editor DOROTHY WETHERELL Exchange Editor PAGE MATHESON Social Editor DOROTHY MOUNTAIN Business Manager MARY BOOTH Circula tion Manager DOROREYSLOTT Advertising Manager BARBARA. HOYT Managing Editor a7 1 2 EE te Ok 3 ws et N-I-K-E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN MUSIC CLUB Dorotuy Rust, President The Music Club began its year in October with an informal reception in Hebe Parlor for Mr. and Mrs. Ramseyer, Mr. and Mrs. Garabedian, Miss Brohaugh, and the freshmen members of the club. The old members were able to become better acquainted with the faculty and to welcome the new members. Mr. Ramseyer entertained with a few piano selections aft er which coffee was served. On November eleventh the club presented its first concert with Mr. Doric Alviani, baritone, as guest artist. The program consisted of both classical and semi-classical music. This first concert was well attended and proved very successful. After the spring vacation the Music Club resumed its activities by sponsoring a chamber music concert by Miss Brohaugh, Mr. Ramseyer, and a group of the students of practical music. Mr. Ramseyer opened each number with a brief account concerning the composer and a few suggestions as an aid in the appreciation of the trio. The program contained four compositions: Bach’s Trio from the Musical Offering played by flute, violin, and piano; Andante Cantabile from Mozart’s Trio IV for violin, violon- cello, and piano; Allegro moderato e grazioso from Piston’s Sonata for flute and piano; and Allegro con brio from Beethoven’s Trio op. 1 No. 3 for violin, violoncello, and piano. The Music Club closed its year with a coffee in Hebe Parlor at which time Miss Brohaugh and Mr. Ramseyer played a group of musical selections. The Wheaton Music Club aims to encourage and cultivate an appreciation of both classical and modern music in the college. This year it has helped in this objective by means of a concert, a musicale, and coffees. Page Eighty NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-I[-K-E DOROTHY, RIST President BARBARA HOWARD Vice-President MARGARET AMES Secretary-T reasurer N-I-K-E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN INURE S Tei Janet Iason, Editor JANET IASON Editor-in-Chief DORO@OTHYSUITIIEPIELD Assistant Editor LINETTE MACAN Literary Editor JANE WOODMAN Business Manager MARY BOOTH Assistant Business Manager MARGARET McDOUGAL Joke Editor ROIeFELSENGMAL Art Editor ELLEN LeSURE Photography Editor HELEN HUSSEY Advertising Manager Sophomore Representatives CLARA BOSS JANET SMOCK Page Eighty-two NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-[-K-F VOCATIONAL COMMITTEE The annual vocational conference was held February eleventh. Five fields of work open to college women were discussed with regard to personal qualifications, training necessary, duties and nature of the work, hours, salary, opportunities for advancement, and how to get a job in the particular field in which you are interested. Miss Grace Caldwell of the North Bennett Industrial School in Boston spoke on Nursery School Work. Mr. Frank Licher of the L. G. Balfour Company in Attleboro discussed Com- mercial Art. The Opportunities for College Women in the Legal Profession were de- scribed by Professor Bessie N. Page of the Portia Law School in Boston. Mr. Daniel T. Torrey of the Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company spoke on Counselors for Life Insurance. Mrs. Robert D. Sneider, formerly Hazel Wragg, Wheaton alumna of the class of 1934, now Assistant Director of the School of Business Practice and Speech, Radio City, New York, talked on the subject of What Men Want in Business. Im- mediately after the talks, small conference groups met for further discussion. The con- ference terminated with a tea at which everyone was given the opportunity to meet the speakers. Pace Eighty-three N-I-K’E° NINETEEN + THIRTY 7 SEVEN SHUDENT ALCUMNAB BUILDING COMMITTEE S. A. B. started its campaign for funds towards the long-desired and planned Student Alumnae Building in the fall of 1936 by sponsoring a fashion show. The clothes of the Emily Shops were featured very successfully. After this profitable venture, an informal bridge tournament conducted as an elimination contest was run. The student body supported this activity well, and it was followed by selling chances on meal tickets gener- ously given to the $8. A. B. Committee by Marty. Throughout the year, each class had its own special project. The freshmen sold candy at all the college plays and entertainments. Sister classes sold lunches at proms and hops. The sophomores sold an unusual assortment of flowers made of Japanese wood fibre. The juniors took orders for Christmas cards with gratifying results. Seniors continued with sales of maps, plates, books and lamps. As usual the most successful time for S. A. B. was May Day when it had charge of May Dance and the Strawberry Festival. It is hoped that the efforts of the students and alumnae this year have helped to bring nearer to completion the Student Alumnae Building. Page Eighty-four NINETEEN + THIRTY 7 SEVEN + N-I-K°-E PRESS BOARD The Press Board organization this year continued the work of college publicity in co-operation with the leading newspapers of several large cities. The staff was enlarged and the system of reporting changed. Instead of having one or two reporters appointed each week to cover all the news, as has been the custom for the past two years, each member of the Press Board was assigned to cover certain academic departments or campus organizations and is responsible for relaying the activities of her field to the other members of the staff at weekly meetings. In this way, the weekly meeting is a clearing house for all the news of the college and each member at once contri- butes and shares. The new system has proved efficient and successful and will be continued. The Photography Board, carrying on the work of photographing all the important events of the college year for newspaper publication, recently received a new impetus with the outgrowth of a Camera Club. It was the inspiration of Evelyn Danzig, a member of the Photography Board, and although still in its infancy the club has already awakened the interest of students, not otherwise concerned with newspaper work, to the great: possibilities and pleasure in the taking, developing and printing of pictures. The Camera Club may very well prove an excellent training ground for future members of the Photog- raphy Board. Page Eighty-five N-l-K-B 7: NINETEEN 7 THIRTY:7 SEVEN IONS aULIKG Ise Betty Po.iakx, Editor Rushlight’s career as a biannual magazine, which was inaugurated last year, is con- tinuing with the same success with which it started. The innovation awakened new student interest which is being evidenced by the increasing worth of the contributions. This spring finds again being offered the prose contest which elicited so much interest last year. The aim of Rushlight is to encourage creative writing among the students of the whole college, and to afford student writers the opportunity of getting spontaneous, unbiased criticism of their work in the hope that it will prove a help and an inspiration to them. Page Eizhty-six BENET EEN 7) TEUERG YY. 7 SEVEN aNr [kone AGORA BarBARA Hatcu, President CLASS OF 1937 Jean Cummings Margaret Hitchcock Janet Hoffman Barbara Hatch Mary Elizabeth Wheeler CLASS OF 1938 Althea Beland Margaret Knights Mary Ann Tibbetts Alice Berman Jane Woodman Agora membership includes students of the junior and senior classes who have done distinguished work in the departments of Economics, History, Political Science, or Sociology. Page Eighty-seven N-I-K’E- NINETEEN + THIRTY SEVEN SS CEN C Ea Gieeis RutH Mites, President In November the new members of Science Club were admitted at a coffee given in Hebe Parlor. At the first open meeting on January sixth Mr. Lincoln Theismeyer, an instructor in Geology of Harvard University, spoke on “The Everlasting Hills.” By means of well chosen slides he showed the formation and structure of our mountains. The second open meeting was held April twenty-fourth. Miss Edythe Kumin, psychologist from the Judge Baker Guidance Center of Boston, spoke on “Problems and Procedures in Child Guidance.” She explained their methods and gave several interesting case histories. Page Eighty-eight NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + Nv’ I[-K-F CLASSICAL CLUB Rutuy Currttick, President At the first open meeting of the Classical Club on October twenty-first, Dr. Eunice Work spoke in an interesting and scholarly manner upon Greek and Roman coins. On December fourteenth Professor Cecil M. Bowra of Wadham College, Oxford, spoke up- on “Homer, the Man.” At a closed meeting on March eleventh Miss E. Dorothy Littlefield gave an illustrated lecture upon “Present Day Italy.” On the fifth of May Mrs. Samuel Valentine Cole spoke on the “Lure of Islands.” Page Eighty-nine N-I-K’E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN Io Gale Marcaret Hitcucock, President Psyche, the honorary literary society, has endeavored this year to promote its cul tural aims through a series of widely diversified lectures. In the fall Mr. Alfred M. Hitchcock spoke at an open meeting, discussing “The Art of Sigrid Undset as Revealed in Kristin Lavransdatter.” The spring open meeting was in the form of a symposium, the topic under consideration being “The Value of the Modern Novel.” Mrs. William MacKenzie of the Wheaton English Department; Janet Smock, Wheaton °39; John Horne Burnes, Harvard °37; and Kenneth R. Andrews, Wesleyan °36 were the speakers, dis- cussing such topics as modern prose style fantasy, decay of form, and recent American types in relation to the modern novel. The closed meetings of Psyche this year have been three. At the fall initiation, Miss Grace Shepard spoke on the history of the Society. Mr. Robert Sharp addressed the club in March, taking as his subject “Modern Criticism.” In April Mrs. Park, honorary adviser of Psyche, entertained the members at the Homestead and discussed with them Francesca Alexander, nineteenth century author and artist. Page Ninety NINETEEN + THIRTY 7 SEVEN s N-I-K°E ANIRSIE (OILICHs: Betty Pottak, President The Art Club, proud of its escape from surrealist entanglements, has cffered a variety cf prcgrams reflecting the more significant aspects of the modern approach to art. Activities started early this fall with a t ea to wel- come new members. Miss Neilson gave a delightful presentation of the works cf the lesser known men of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries represented in the reproducticns of German painting lent to Wheaton by the Germanic Museum. At an open meeting in November, Mr. Langdon Warner of Harvard University lectured on the technique of the Japanese sculptors. The week-end of April sixteenth was devoted to a stimu lating conference on “New Horizons in Architecture.” Dr. Park opened the conference and Dean Joseph Hudnut of the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University presided at the meetings. Wheaton was fortunate in having Dr. Walter Gropius, architect and former director of the Bauhaus, Dessau, Germany, speak on the “Significance of Modern Architecture.” Dr. Walter C. Behrendt of Dartmouth College discussed “Contemporary Design.” “Recent Advances in Housing and Planning in the United States” was the topic presented by Mr. Carl Feiss of Columbia University, and Mr. Philip Youtz, Director of the Brooklyn Museum, spoke on “Housing the Arts.” An exhibition of photographs of modern architecture was on display in the studio on thisoccasion. On April thirtieth, Miss Henrietta Landell, an alumna of Wheaton at the Newark Mu- seum, instructed the members cf the club on “Opportunities for Women in the Museum Field.” The officers of the club for the coming year were announced at a final tea in May. Page Ninety-one N-I-K-E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN DER DEORSCHE WW ENEIEN PriscILLA ARNOLD, President Old and new members of the German Club gathered in October for a picnic supper behind the Hedges. After a weenie roast, songs and games ended the first meeting of the year, The Club’s first speaker was Mrs. Hedda Korsch, who told in an open meeting of ‘Educational Progress in Germany.” A meeting was held in November with refresh- ments, games, and songs. Soon after, a meeting was held to discuss the German Christ- mas Party given just before the holidays for all German-minded members of the college. At the Christmas Party club members enacted a fifteenth century German Nativity Play, organized a “langtanz’’, and concluded with refreshments and singing. The mem- bers of the Club made a créche, which they placed under the lighted Christmas tree. In January Dr. Heinrich Schneider spoke to the Club on Bulgaria and his experiences there. In March Miss Ericka Mann read “Modern German Poetry” at an open meeting. An April informal meeting was held in Miss Priscilla Kramer’s room, where plans were made for a picnic hike in the Blue Hills. Page Ninety-two NINETEEN +’ THIRTY + SEVEN + N-[-K-F ROMANCE LANGUAGES CLUB Lois Heap, President The activities of the Romance Languages Club for this year began with a tea held in La Maison Blanche parlor on November twelfth for the seven new members of the club. The first open meeting of the year took place on February twenty-fourth, when M. Vincent Guilloton of Smith College spoke on “Comment les Frangais Jugaient les An- glais au Dix-huitiéme Siécle.” The lecture was followed by a coffee in Hebe Parlor for the club members to meet M. Guilloton. On May fifth the second open meeting of the club was held in the form of a Spanish lecture. The new officers of the club were elected at a closed meeting later in the spring. Page Ninety-three N-]-K-E°« NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLU® MariANnn_e Grecory, President The International Relations Club welcomes as members all those on campus who are interested in international affairs. This year the membership of one hundred showed the active interest that the college feels in this field. Early in the fall, Evelyn Rich spoke on her summer experiences as the Wheaton scholarship student at the Zimmern School of International Studies in Geneva, Switzerland. At this same open meeting, Dr. Ernest J. Knapton of the faculty spoke on his impressions of the school as he had seen it during his summer travels. At an open meeting during the winter, Dr. Frank Edward Manuel, a former lecturer on History at Harvard University, recently returned from Spain, talked on the subject, “The Spanish Civil War—Its Origins and Implications.” Dr. Axel Serup, a graduate student from Denmark, lectured at the spring meeting on the League of Nations. The closed meetings of the club included reports of the New England International Relations Clubs Conference held at Clark University in December which three members attended, plans for the Wheaton delegation to Model League, and discussions on inter- national problems. The New England Model Assembly of the League of Nations was held at Harvard and Radcliffe universities in March and twelve Wheaton delegates attended, representing Belgium and Mexico, including Jane Woodman, who served on the Executive Committee as an Under-Secretary. Among the more active club members have been the Geneva Committee members who worked on various projects, successfully raising funds for another Geneva scholarship fors1937. NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + Nv[-K-EF CHOIR Elizabeth Adams Margaret Ames Doris Barber Miss Drucille Bevin Betty Blake Miss Hildred Brohaugh Margaret Brooks Miss Elizabeth Chamberlain Ruth Chevers June Chloupek Leah Clapp Dorothy Cram Eleanor Crane Dorothy Daley Ruth Darnell Dorothy Farnsworth Dorothy Fisher Lilian Freeman Marian Freeman Mary Grou Elizabeth Hahn ODDEST ME Edwina Handsfield Eleanor Hargan Eleanor Hodges Emily Hollander Marion Hubbell Jean Hull Dorothy Jones Ruth Kamphe Eleanor Keach Sue King Miss Priscilla Kramer Meredith Landon Barbara Lathrope Augusta Leuchs Nancy Loche Janice Lynch Janet MacPherson Constance Maheu Edna Mann Marianne McCallister Barbara Merriam Miss Laura Monnier Jane Morgan Dorothy Mylchreest Lucile Naples Elizabeth Newall Constance Popoft Doris Ryan Katherine Ryder Ruth Scherner Joan Spengler Laurie Steel Elizabeth Stettler Beverly Stevens Barbara Symonds Jeanne Walther Dorothy Wellington Claire Williams Jean Woodruff Muriel Voter Miss Zeigler socsnonregeneses ace it alga N-I-K- Ev NINETEEN + THIRTY SEVEN Page Ninety-six NINETEEN’? THIRTY + SEVEN - N-I-K-E DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION Mary Hitt, President The first production of this season under the auspices of the Dramatic Association was the group of three one-act plays given on Founders’ Day. The contest was won this year by the sophomore class with its lusty presentation of The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife, by Anatole France. Ruth Trexler as the crazed husband and Helen Wann with her high-speed chattering were notable for the spirit with which they attacked their parts and the finished technique evident in their performance. The play was directed by Janet Smock. The juniors, under the direction of Mary Booth, presented a light comedy abcut early New England by Marjorie Carleton, and the seniors, directed by Barbara Hoyt created a beautiful and stirring mood with their production of The Intruder, by Maeter- linck. In accordance with the tradition which dictates that the fall production in alternate years must be Shakespearean, The Two Gentlemen of Verona was presented on November thirteenth. The play, one of Shakespeare’s earliest and least known, was selected for its sig- nificance as the progenitor of some of Shakespeare's greatest characters and plot situations, its occasional beautiful poetry, and its value as good, rollicking entertainment. Five of the major parts this year were awarded to freshmen, an unusual and promising occurrence. The bright new stars were Marion Hubbell in the part of Julia, Claire Williams as Lucetta, Alison Kimpton as Launce, Betsey Schadt as Speed and Barbara Merriam as the Duke of Milan. Mary Hill was cast as Silvia, and the two gentlemen were Priscilla Mead as the Machiavellian Proteus and Parker McCormick as his simple, love-sick friend, Valentine. For the first time the costumes for a Shakespearean production were designed and executed by the students, working under the direction of Lee Roberts who was responsible for their design. The costumes, gay and luxurious, are now proudly at rest in the wardrobe room, for use in future Elizabethan plays. The set this year was an adaptation for our stage of the Elizabethan theater, a reproduction of the spirit of the era rather than an attempt at authenticity. Mrs. Ballou designed the set and its execution was supervised by Margaret Leaf. The Christmas festivities this year culminated in the Nativity Play, with Margaret Hitchcock as the gentle and lovely Madonna and Barbara McEvoy as Joseph. The Page Ninety-seven N-I-K:-E- NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN sophomores, with Betty Ann Baker as the Master of Revels, romped merrily through their production of Saint George and the Dragon. The Harvard—Wheaton play this year was the charming and witty farce by Leslie Howard, Murray Hill. Nancy Lea Conners was the twenty-six year old ingenue, Muriel Gwillim her clever Aunt Elizabeth, Betty Blake her staid old Aunt May, and Jessica White the stolid and ancient nurse. The freshmen who took men’s parts were Barbara Merriam, Katherine Ryder, Geraldine Kane and Barbara Howe. The set was designed and executed by Margaret Leaf. May Day, under the combined auspices of the Dramatic Association and Athletic Association, was a repetition of last year’s festival, The Tale of the Sleeping Beauty, arranged for dance pantomime. | The Dramatic Association wishes to thank Mrs. Ballou for her patience and inspira- tion, and the unsung heroines of the Coal Hole and Everett basement for their co-operation. MARYSEIvE President CYNTHIA PUTNAM Vice-President PARKER McCORMICK Secretary PRISCILLA MEAD Treasurer RUTH LEWIS Business Manager MARY BOOTH Stage Manager Page Ninety-eight AMT: Hit BHE-1,.6-S han i ' Kk Seay Os i, BAe Bers preys hion OAS sile v 9 Whey Phew Howied, Miveny Pit Cyne bus ere fon BGs hed dy Whe Kudu ae eae ea bry iy a a. Ledy = j whi Moe Day, unter Aapocaiont, way 3 fepet for dagry the aye igen Fiigb inh ad ‘ Aisha Pe Naki ed tee mass SHAR CYNDRTA BST PARAM Nia) PR han ae KU KA Pa Mae Ninety ht ae ds AA: ee ; i 5 a ene ROOTH ae. | ot i x, 1 v +- . ¥ Y fr bla. yy 4 bs 4 Me . ? Sh it Mud see Van OE eC aR r; ists rien on naa te ne Hfitialt sneer ipa eas e, ny aity ca PY me rantey os Ema, ropppe ¥ oe a neat wligig ¢ ‘yout ole Pg a itt Mahe, Radke wore Bien N THR aay i’ as cada cd ae “ avcaion and etna Baars, am ent eumatigs ra te ined Wane eh bat fr chil TN UcUE Ht. hit 7 Clatjeat NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN « Nv [-K-E ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION KATHARINE GAMMons, President KATHARINE GAMMONS President REBECCA TAYLOR Vice-President BARBARA KENDALL Secretary PiAGABET Hee A TE Treasurer Page Ninety-nine N-I-K’E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN BLOODY Ruth Fleisher as head and varsity captain led the hockey team through its sixth undefeated season in collegiate competition. Wheaton defeated Jackson 3-1, Pembroke 3-0, and Radcliffe 4-1. Ina practice game with the Commonwealth Club Wheaton was defeated 4-3. The interclass competition was won by the juniors, under the captaincy TENNIS With Jean Cummings as head of tennis, the fall season began with the freshman tournament. The winner of the cup was Mary Cameron Buford who defeated Bettina Conant in the finals. Interclass matches were played off in the fall this year to allow more time in the spring for varsity tennis, headed by Mildred Rodgers. The freshman team ranked first in the interclass competition. RIDING In the fall the riding team with Elizabeth Pollak as head defeated House-in-the-Pines in the annual riding meet. Individual honors went to Persis Clark, who won the cham- pionship, Jane Gage, the winner of the senior riding event, Marjorie Munkenbeck, the victor in the intermediate event, and Alison Kimpton, the winner in the jumping. An- other informal riding meet in the spring is planned. BASKETBALL The varsity basketball team with Margaret McDougal as head and captain won the game with Pembroke 24-23, and lost to Jackson 36-20, and to Radcliffe 37-31. The second team, captained by Marjorie Kopf, remained undefeated. Wheaton won from Jackson 45-23, Pembroke 35-22, and Radcliffe 37-32. In the interclass games the fresh- man team, captained by Bettina Conant, was the undefeated victor. SWIMMING The varsity swimming team with Elizabeth Schobinger as head and captain competed in two triangular meets this year with Radcliffe and Pembroke. Wheaton won the first meet with 40 points, Radcliffe was second with 39.5 and Pembroke was third with 24.5. In the second triangular meet Radcliffe ranked first with 51.6 points, Wheaton second with 41.8, and Pembroke third with 15.5. This year two interclass meets were held, the freshman being the victors each time. Ruth Haslam won the individual cup and Juliet Spangler took second place. Page One Hundred NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-I[-K-E MODERN DANCING This year the modern dance group with Helen Fisher as head sponsored three dance recitals. The first was a dance symposium in which Wheaton, Radcliffe, Jackson, and Pembroke participated. Each of these groups demonstrated its fundamental techniques and presented an original dance composition. The purpose of this symposium was to stimulate interest in the modern dance and to serve as a basis for an exchange of ideas. The Wheaton dance group and the understudy group gave a recital on March 18th Besides demonstrating some fundamental techniques, they also did several exhibition dances based chiefly on the techniques of the Humphrey—Weidman school. Largely due to the efforts of Mrs. Gallagher, the Humphrey-Weidman dance group gave a recital in the gymnasium on April 15th. This celebrated group demonstrated studies in technique and gave several very skillful and beautiful dance compositions. BASEBALL AND BICYCLING This spring, owing to the enthusiastic demand, baseball was again placed on the list of spring sports with Margaretta Staats as head. It is hoped that interclass competition may be arranged. Bicycling, too, has been added as a spring sport with Ervina White, head. A cycling club planning on suppers and week-end rides has been formed. This year instead of the freshman-sophomore gym meet a swimming exhibition was given in the new pool. Members of the varsity swimming squad as well as members of the advanced classes took part in this informal event. The presentation of Vaudeville this year ably upheld the precedent set in previous years. Written by Dorothy Mountain, Shirley Ide, and Katharine Gammons, “Left Swing” with its theme of “syncopation in studying” and its humorous interpretations of the faculty greatly amused the capacity audience which attended. The Athletic Association revised the point system again. It is as follows: 2 points for a major sport varsity team 1 point for a major sport class team 1 point for a minor sport varsity team 4 point for a minor sport class team 4 points for the modern dance group The athletic blazers are to be awarded to the two juniors who have accumulated the greatest number of points above 15 by the end of the third year. One Hundred One N-I-K’E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN Bad fant ew peck : Tennis Page One Hundred Two NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN + N-I-K’E rleeds of Sports Ridins Anchery Hk ns Tennrs Page One Hundred Three VARSITY HOCKEY A ERE @s JUNIOR HOCKEY z ea F o Z = pe ATHLETICS Au S © a © ca O Z q ja VARSIEY SWIMMING | JMIMGULIDTECIS FRESHMAN SWIMMING VARSITY BASKETBALL ATHLETICS FRESHMAN BASKETBALL ALHLETICS VARSITY TENNIS NIKE. 1937 SNAPS HO-TS ee NINETEEN + THIRTY 7 SEVEN + Nv I-K-E DE OND Mere es CE NES After much consideration the Editors have decided that the usual yearbook really gives no indication of what goes on behind the scenes, of how people look when they are not posing. In every yearbook there appear posed pictures of the faculty, posed pictures of the seniors, and posed pictures of clubs and classes. This method was suitable in past years, but the new fad for candid camera snapshots has reached such heights this year that no one can afford to overlook it. We have two motives, then, in presenting this new feature. The first is to keep abreast of the times, and the second is to reveal what goes on when we are relaxed and informal. We have tried to secure a cross section of life at Wheaton by means of snap- shots of various people and scenes. See if you can find one of yourself! Tue Epirors. Page One Hundred Nine Ww AUTOS -NOT ALLOWED ON C AMPUS 10. Billb oard Here It Is! Home Economics Herr Schneider Out of Class! Ha, ho, ho Once a year Going Someplace? Hold it! C’m on Team! LL 12. 13. 14. | ey 16. Ey Iter 19. 20. 21. 22: Hungry? Shake Mid-years Faculty Baby Janey Off to Boston Watch the Birdie May Day Working hard? The Sem Peg and Mickey Three little maids from school 2. 24. 2: 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. on Baker and Fisky The Inn Crazy over horses Cowboy Senior hockey players Founders’ Day May Queen Looks a bit chilly. Choir Girl 32. ey 34. 30% 36: 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. Clara and Hebe Riding Meet Quiet evening at home The Thinker Click Tiny Going home Truckin’! Don’t fall! The Champ Sun Bathing INI Arey, GERTRUDE Marston ARNOLD, PriscitLA BLODGETT . BREYER, SYLVIA : Brown, ExizapetH Huse Brunet, ELIzABETH Bucspee, VirGINIA WARE CaHaLaneg, IsABEL JEPSON . Cuirtick, Ruta WoopwortH Crapp, LEAH . Crapr, Lucitte ANN Coox, Mary IsaBEL Coons, CArotyN BELDEN Crossy, Frances WILMA Cummincs, JEAN Cutter, Atice Emity Davis, GerTRUDE ELIZABETH Eccrr, DorotrHy ARLENE Ewinc, JEAN STEWART . Fenwick, Rutu . FisHer, HeLen FoLtiANsBEE, BARBARA Tope Gacez, JANE GaAMMONS, KATHARINE he : Grecory, Marianne McNEILL Gurrery, JEAN MINTON Hatcu, BARBARA HuME Heap, Lois Hancock Herzoc, Dorotuy FReDERICKA Hirt, Mary BriGHAM . : Hircucocx, Marcaret Louise HorrMan, KATHRYN JANET Howarp, BARBARA ESTELLE Hoyt, BarparA ELEANORA Hutt, Gat EizasetH . Hunter, Arice MaApEgLIne . Hutcuincs, Marjoriz . Koprr, Marjorie . ae Lange, KATHARINE LIVERMORE Lakin, ExizABeTH ReED Lewis, Carotyn BuckELEW Lewis, RutuH . : Lirrte, JANE Husparp . LoreNTzEN, Doris GERTRUDE Lort, Dorotuy ELzANOR MacKay, JANeT ELIzABETH Macitt, ANNE SHIRLEY Mancuester, MARGARET FULLER MarsurG, HirpeEGARDE Page One Hundred Fourteen IN ANG eels rN e, DIRECTORY TEL ReISYs 2 aS. EV bas Seniors 141 Brookside Avenue, Brockton j Southwick 7 Hiehiend Place. Yonkers, N. Y. 12 Toppan’s Lane, Newburyport 184 President Avenue, Providence, R. I. 24 Elton Street, Providence, R. I. 40 Harrington Street, Hillsdale, N. J. . 77 Arlington Street, Hyde Park 42 Salcombe Street, Dorchester : . Clapp Street, Norton 150 North Main Street, Mansfield 39 The Crescent, Montclair, N. J. 376 Brush Hill Road, Milton 268 Ridge Road, Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. . 195 Park Avenue, Arlineren 5614 Northumberland Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. 61 Pearl Street, Middleboro Washineton Lane aad Sullivan Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 45 Nichols Street, Chelsea 17 Marlborough Street, Lowell 232 High Street, Newburyport 133 Princeton Boulevard, Lowell 65 Newton Street, Weston 42 Mountain Avenue, Maplewood, N. J. 70 Morningside Drive, New York, N. Y. High Street, Dexter, Maine 20 Lloyd Road, Montclair, N. J. . 130 Clove Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. 298 Waltham Street, West Newton 41 Woodrow Street, West Hartford, Conn. 142 Four Mile Road, West Hartford, Conn. 10 Elm Street, Concord . 6 Park Street, Newburyport 30 West Street, Portland, Maine 254 South Fourth Street, Fulton, N. Y. Quaker Road, Chappaqua, N. Y. 1115 Martine Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. 72 High Street, Glen Ridge, N. J. 17 Tremont Street, South Braintree a= 82 Roosevelt Avenue, Flushing, L. I, N. Y. 858 Ocean Avenue, New Loaceen Conn. 2507 Stratford Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio 51 Hemlock Street, Arlington 1411 Inverness Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. 1279 Main Street, Athol “649 Capitol Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn. 2 Elmwood Road, New Haven, Conn. 10 Prospect Avenue, Montclair, N. J. COMPLIMENTS OF Wheaton News Page One Hundred Fifteen INZIBKGE Marks, HANNAH LevIsoN . McCattum, Herene Hurisurt McEvoy, BarBarA Doris . McIntire, Mary BraGpon Meyer, Marie CaroLyn Mies, RutH Exinor Mus, Apete Wie . Mountain, Dorotuy Mariz . Peck, ExvizABetH MARGARET Potiaxk, Betty : Reese, CLARA JAFFRAY . Rist, DorotHy Newton Roserts, Mitprep LiveRMORE Ropcers, Mitprep LIAN Rocers, ELisABETH RoseNTHAL, ELEANOR SANDERS, CHARLOTTE SHURTLEFF, ROosAMOND LARNED STERNBERG, RuTH Swett, Lois CrawrorpD THuRSFIELD, Kate FAYERWEATHER Turner, Atice Moore VERBURG, VIRGINIA CAROL Victrorius, NorMaA . Von pvER Sump, Mitprep rae : Voter, Muriet ANNE . Warren, Marjoriz CusHMAN Wueeter, Mary ELizABetu Wuirte, JessicA Lee . AMBLER, PHYLLIS Ames, MARGARET ELOISE ANDERSEN, ELINOR Cox ANbeERSON, ALiczE Marion BeLANp, ELEANOR ALTHEA . BERMAN, ALICE Bren, Bettina Hersert Bootu, Mary Warez Cuacez, VIRGINIA Cuicx, ANNA Harriet Ciark, Pzrsis } CLARNER, EsTHER Fieuierd Coss, Evetyn Corer, Berrina Conners, Nancy Lza Cram, Dororuy JEAN . Crane, ErzANOR WINSLOW Crawrorp, Nancy JANE Dopce, Atice HoucHTon . DooLan, Maryjorig Lots FeLseNTHAL, RutuH Lots Page One Hundred Sixteen NeLN Ee EEN) @ 7 De ROWRe Vege tee Ve . 175 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. 217 Whiting Avenue, East Dedham : . South Barre , York Wilisees Maine 179-28 Croydon Road, Jamaica Estates, N. Y. 72 Westland Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. 2414 Kensington Place, Nashville, Tenn. 1194 Phoenix Avenue, Schenectady, N. Y. 218 Richards Road, Ridgewood, N. J. 927 Redway Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 718 Palisade Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. 89 South Lincoln Street, Keene, N. H. 38 Adams Street, Lexington 342 Prospect Street, Norwood 18 Fox Point Road, Dorchester 148 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston 5 Cummings Avenue, Concord, N. H. 83 South Main Street, Randolph 135 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. 21 Linden Street, Bath, Maine 67 Montgomery Street, Waterbury, Conn. : 700 Linwood Place, St. Paul, Minn. 35-44 166th Street, Flushing, L. I., N. Y. . 441 West End Avenue, New York, N. Y. : Center Harbor, N. H. 20 College Street, Middlebury, Vt. 147 Central Street, Auburn 2841 Scarborough Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio 275 Maine Street, Brunswick, Maine Juniors 67 Pond Street, Natick Wilton, N. H. 82 Soret Avenue, Riverside, R. I. 40 Clifford Street, Melrose 143 Central Street, Auburn 1192 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Cedar Lane, near Burdette Road, Bethesda, Md. 42 High Street, Orange, N. J. 109 Brown Street, Providence, R. I. 72 Harvard Street, Chelsea 149 Bacon Street, Natick 120 School Street, Concord, N. H. 8 Wyman Terrace, Arlington . . 4 Dale Street, Taunton B Highland Avenue, Bangor, Maine ; Newington, Conn. “Morning Face”, Richmond West Main Street, Webster 6 Plum Court, Lanesville, Gloucester : 76 Traverse Street, Athol 250 Mortimer Road, Glencoe, Ill. AUTOMATIC HEAT WITH COAL Is the Finest Automatic Heat in the World ENJOY AUTOMATIC HEAT with MOTOR STOKOR At |-3 to 1-2 the cost of any other fuel. We have the right size for all heaters Every Kind and Size to Suit Your Needs STAPLES COAL COMPANY TAUNTON DIVISION TELEPHONE 1250 THE MANSFIELD PRESS MORTON LAUNDRY COMPANY Establisned 1882 has complete, modern facilities for carefully executing the printing of TAUNTON, MASS. COLLEGE BOOKLETS CONCERT PROGRAMS TAUNTON STEAM LAUNDRY DISPLAY CARDS OFFICE FORMS STATIONERY B. B. McKeever, Pres. T. M. Leahy, Vice-Pres. | MENUS F. B. Tyler, Treas. RULED FORMS LOWELL BROS. BAILEY CO. 172 North Main Street Established 1866 MANSFIELD Fruit and Produce Telephone 120 47-48 South Market St. Boston, Mass. One Hundred Seventeen IN Gla ae FisHER, SUSAN JEANNETTE FreisHerR, RutTuH Green, ALIczE CAROLYN GREENE, SARAH MorriL Gwium, Muriet Taytor HeatuH, EvizapetH WoopwArpD Hewtett, Leura Topp Hussey, Heren Knicut . Iason, JANET Rut . Ipz, Grace Suirey . Jonzs, DorotHy ANNE . Kewrey, EvizapeTH CLarKk . Knicuts, Marcaret Cercit Lams, Heren EvizABetu LAMBERT, Dorotuy PINGREE Lane, Erinor Betty Lepair, Lucite LeSurez, Exren Louise om: Leucus, Aucusta ViIcTOalA rete T aos Lirtierigtp, DorotHy ALDEN . Macan, Linettz ARrNy MacCussin, Ruta . Macy, Nina Rute . : McDouear, Marcaret JOAN Meap, Priscitta Esrerre New, EvizapetH VIRGINIA . O’Nett, Mary JANE PELLEGRINI, CATHERINE Mary Putnam, CynruiA ALLEN . Raynes, Marion EizaBeTH Rico, Evetyn Miriam . Rirrer, RutuH SCHEINZEIT, JEANNETTE ScHoBINGER, ExisapetH Hair . SIBLEY, JANET WARDNER SPRAGUE, BARBARA . Sropazus, BARBARA CHRISTINE SUTHERLAND, Nancy Ming Taytor, REBECCA Tuomas, Epirnh May Tispetts, Mary ANN TREGONING, EvetyN Mae . Tucker, Dorotuy SPENCER VauGHAN, Lioyp EruHet WALDEN, WINIFRED . Watxer, Emity Lucitre Warren, Nancy ADAMS WETHERELL, Dorotuy LorHrop WHEELER, SALLIE Wuire, Ervina Sawin . WoopMAN, JANE Wyman, Corene Louise Page One Hundred Eighteen INGNGes abe EaING 77 TEL RRED Yee 7 po baer oe 158 Boylston Street, Brockton 7906 Rambler Road, Elkins Park, Philadelphia, Pa. 6 Antrim Avenue, Suffern, N. Y. ‘ . Elkin, North Carolina 41 Farmiontn Agee Plainville, Conn. 24 West River Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 50 Inwood Road, Bridgeport, Conn. 703 Laughlin Avenue, Aliquippa, Pa. Hotel Ste: 145 West 58th Street, New York, N. Y. : Mirror Lake, N. H. 5538 Wayne! Avenue: Gernancowne Philadelphia, Pa. 207 North Main Street, Concord, N. H. 39 Chatham Street, Chatham, N. J. ‘ Riegelsville, Pa. Forest Hill Avenue, Lynnfield Center 4 888 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. . 15 Washington Avenue, Cedarhurst, L. I., N. Y. 3910 Bayside Boulevard, Bayside, L. I., N. Y. Round Hill Road, Greenwich, Conn. 58 School Street, Sanford, Maine St. Agnes School, Alexandria, Va. 140 Gordonhurst Avenue, Montclair, N. J. ; 31 May Street, Worcester 609 Ashland Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 8 Hillcrest Road, Belmont 26 Salter Place, Maplewood, N. J. 15 Bennett Street, Taunton 88 Angell Street, Mansfield 1042 Downer Place, Aurora, Ill. . 103 Milton Avenue, Hyde Park 409 Ridgewood Avenue, Glen Ridge, N. J. 110 Stearns Terrace, Chicopee . 1518 Union Street, Schenectady, N. Y. 301 Swarthmore Avenue, Swarthmore, Pa. 5640 Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, Ill. 330 Highbrook Avenue, Pelham, N. Y. 341 Irving Avenue, South Orange, N. J. 250 Bronxville Road, Bronxville, N. Y. Taylor’s Lane, Riverton, N. J. Oakland Avenue, Monroe, N. Y. Bethel, Maine 27 Upland Road, Attleboro 55 Yale Street, Holyoke 334 West Emerson Street, Melrose 26 Blithedale Road, Newtonville 47 Auburn Street, Concord, N. H. 125 Plymouth Road, Newton Highlands 29 Henry Street, Mansfield 168 Homer Street, Newton Centre 60 Hollingsworth Avenue, Braintree 826 Main Street, Westbrook, Maine Ferry Lane, Barrington, R. I. L. G. BALFOUR COMPANY Attleboro Massachusetts Manufacturer of CLASS RINGS AND PINS FRATERNITY AND SORORITY INSIGNIA COMMENCEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS DIPLOMAS CUPS, MEDALS, TROPHIES OFFICIAL JEWELER TO WHEATON COLLEGE Ccmpliments of MARTY’S COFFEE HOUSE GOWNS” - HOODS CAPS by America’s oldest and largest manufacturer COTRELL and LEONARD Est. 1832 Inc. 1935 ALBANY, N. Y. Wheaton College uses this service HANSON COMPANY, INC. PHARMACISTS Prescription Druggists Since 1870 27 BROADWAY TAUNTON, MASS. SHATTUCK JONES, INC. Sea Foods of the Better Grade 152 Atlantic Avenue Boston, Massachusetts Compliments of WALTER EMERSON BRIGGS D.M.D. Suite 20, Bates Block Attleboro, Mass. Telephone LAFayette 3770-1] -2-3 WM. E. GILLESPIE CO., INC. WHOLESALE Beef, Lamb, Pork, Veal and Poultry 18 North Street Boston, Mass. One Hundred Nineteen N-I-K-B- NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN Anpbrews, ExizapetH Davis AytswortH, Marcaret Miicent . Baker, Betry ANN . BarsBer, Doris VIRGINIA BARDWELL, HANNAH Barry, JANE ELizABETH BgacH, BARBARA BetyzA, BARBARA Benner, RutH Grapys . BERNSTEIN, RosALIND ANNE Brake, Berry Everetr . Boss, Crara Enpicorr . Broperick, ELEANOR KATHERINE . Brooxs, Rut nef Bruce, Mure, ExizaBete . Burkett, Puytiis ARLENE . CAVENDER, CAROLINE Cutoupex, ExizapetH JUNE Covet, Heren Crawtey, ELizABETH Crosspy, JANET MarcurritE Danzic, Evetyn . j Day, Marian Locxwoop . Demsirz, SURITE . Doory, ReBrcca . Fre, Joan . : Fernserc, Epire Nene FisHER, JANICE Fox, Rut K. Garney, Muriet RIcKER Gittettz, Her—en MARGUERITE Green, Dorotuy Lowe . Harris, JEAN HELENE Hayes, Louisz SoROKER Hine, ANNE JANE Hussarp, Lucy Reap . Jerrrey, Heren Etsiz Jenney, ExizAperH CLevELAND Jounson, Natauie Aucusra Jounston, Mary ELien Kamere, RutrH ANNA KENDALL, BARBARA . Kipp, JANg EvizABeTH Kircuinc, SARAH Lanpon, MerepirH . Lear, Marcaret LAURA Lzonarp, Lois KATHRYN Linpen, Eunice ExizaBeTu Locke, Nancy LoverinG Mann, EpNA FRANCES . Martin, Laura JANE . Maruesson, Eruer Pace Page One Hundred Twenty Sophomores 65 High Ridge Road, West Hartford, Conn. 2435 Burns Avenue, Detroit, Mich. 67 Eagle Rock Way, Montclair, N. J. 262 Glen Street, Glens Falls, N. Y. 65 Main Street, Hatfield 94 Washington Street, Ayer 23 Prince Street, West Newton 101 Liberty Street, East Braintree i ae 50 High Street, Monson 25 12 Reniiworth Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio New Meadow Road, Barrington, R. I. . 167 Ash Street, Willimantic, Conn. ; 67 South Street, Jamaica Plain 15 Wimbledon Circle, West Newton 8 Mount Vernon Terrace, Newtonville 80 Rumford Street, Concord, N. H. 2635 North Park Boulevard, Cleveland Heights, Ohio 1724 Livingston Street, Evanston, Ill. 285 Ryder Road, Manhasset, N. Y. 124 Spring Street, East Greenwich, R. I. 30 Hinckley Road, Milton 35 East 76th Street, New York, N. Y. } 257 Waban Avenue, Waban 7 Homestead Avenue, Highland Falls, N. Y. : Shi 76 West Street, Bangor, Maine 1004 West Rudisill Boulevard, Fort Wayne, Ind. 73 Monument Avenue, Swampscott 123 Rotch Street, New Bedford 232 North Fifth Street, Reading, Pa. 16 Burrill Avenue, East Lynn Pleasant Street, Colchester, Conn: : 20 Dean Avenue, Franklin 6706 North 12th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. : Boothbay Harbor, Maine 179 Cove Street, New Haven, Conn. Main Street, Norton 9720 Hardane Boulevard, Wauwatosa, Wis. . 605 Union Street, New Bedford . Parker Road, Shirley Center ; South Main Street, Ulster, Pa. . 43 Morris Avenue, Morristown, N. J. 32 Buckingham Street, Worcester 2109 Genesee Street, Utica, N. Y. 14 Orient Avenue, Melrose 153 Lyman Street, Waltham 333 Bala Avenue, BalaCynwyd. Pa. Lyndonville, Vt. 201 Sanree Street, Providence, R. I. Newfields, N. H. Lincoln 4018 late Pee Peeea: Ohio 4453 Volta Place, N. W., Washington, D. C. the Graduating Class - - Up to now, you, members of the graduating class, have been preparing yourselves for your place in what is known as “the Scheme of Things.” After graduation you will assume your places. d Life is a hard task master, but your training gives you the weapon with which to conquer where others might fail. We wish you lots of luck in fighting the battles of life, and hope you will derive great pleasure and en- joyment in the fruit of your victories. As for ourselves—we only wish you to consider.us your personal photographer, as so many others have done since 1884. AIME DUPONT STUDIOS 509 Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street New York City OLD COLONY GARAGE Hudson and Terraplane Repairing and Storing D. W. SALLEY Phone 70 Norton, Mass. M. F. ELLIS CO. Wholesalers and Mills Agent Paper - Twine - Woodenware 297 Montello Street Brockton, Mass. el. 694 Compliments cf J.C. PRATT Compliments of the WHEATON INN Page One Hundred Twenty-one INGIEKGE McCormick, PARKER MerriaM, MarrtHa GrirFIN Meserve, Emity Rowsgz Murpuy, Epwina Lois . Newton, Constance P PATTERSON, CorNneLIA Houcu . Peavey, Beatricz ADDIE Perry, Daura Heien Persons, Heten . ay: PLumMer, MarGAretT Rinavenen : Potanp, Mitprep Louise . Powers, SuHirtey ELizABETH Riper, Rutu Louise Ross, Mapetine RutH . Ross, Vircinta Mary . Rowett, Donna Mavis Rusin, Ruopa Erma SHort, WInIFRED Stmonps, Mitprep , Stmpeson, AILEEN ALMEDA . SmirH, Caro, Dawson SmirH, Matitpa CHURCHILL Smock, JANET Naomi SPANGLER, JULIET Mier . Sraats, MARGARETTA REEVES . STEVENSON, Emity WATSON Swa.tow, Louise Symonps, BARBARA . Trssats, ExizApeTH Abby . Trexter, RutH CarisTINeE . Tryon, EvizapetH ARTILLA Turner, Puytiis Russert . Watsripce, Marian WALBRIDGE, SUZANNE Watker, Ercet JANETTE Wann, Heren Louise WARREN, JOANNA CLARK . WersauM, ERNESTINE . ’ Wuiraker, VircIniA LUNETTE Winter, ANN AcHer, ADRIA VIRGINIA Avams, ELIzABETH ADAMS, JEANNE . ae ANDERSON, CONSTANCE Beer Armstronc, Monica BLackwoop Atwoop, Vircinia May . Bacu, Marcery JANE . BaMBERGER, Etten Loulse . Barker, EvizapetH LAWTON BartLett, RUTH Bates, BARBARA . Page One Hundred Twenty-two NUL NE EEN 7 High RY eres Veen 175 Claremont Ave., New York, N. Y. 73 Dane Street, Beverly 5 Hamlin Road, Newton Centre . 9 Highland Avenue, Beverly 32 Wyoming Heights, Melrose : 528 Fern Street, West Hartford, Conn. Quarters 25, Infantry Post, Fort Sam Houston, Texas 12 Northside Avenue, Lynn 98 Elmwood Avenue, East Aurora, N. Y. 91 Warren Street, West Medford . 30 Summer Street, Fitchburg 6 Quimby Street, Haverhill 17 Carpenter Avenue, Mansfield R. F. D. 3, Attleboro ‘ Litchfield, Conn. 71 Genter Street. Wethersfield, Conn. 1195 Beacon Street, Brookline 115 Depew Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 25 Falmouth Street, Portland, Maine 308 Taylor Street, Manchester, N. H. . 65 Eliot Avenue, West Newton 2708 Coventry Road, Cleveland, Ohio . 210 Monmouth Avenue, Lakewood, N. J. Riverview Farm, Winterport, Maine 110 Plymouth Place, Merchantville, N. J. 7038 Thomas Boulevard, Pittsburgh, Pa 209 Ray Street, Manchester, N. H. 248 Pleasant Street, Marblehead : Mahwah, N. J. 900 Maden ee New York, N. Y. South Glastonbury, Conn. 33 Robbins Road, Watertown 8 Granite Street, Peterborough, N. H. 884 West Ferry Street, Buffalo, N. Y. 482 Main Street, Glastonbury, Conn. 108 Pleasant Street, Bradford, Pa. 403 Danforth Street, Taunton 175 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. Depot Street, Unadilla, N. Y. 48 Oak Knoll Terrace, Needham Freshmen 49 Waller Avenue, White Plains, N. Y. Hanover, Conn. 2034 Woodmere Delve! Cleveland Heights, Ohio 465 High Street, Burlington, N. J. 207 Fourth Street, Warren, Pa. 6 Park Terrace, West Roxbury 1155 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. . 100 Gregory Avenue, West Orange, N. J. 133 Madison Street, Fall River 489 Worcester Street, Wellesley Hills 17507 Narragansett Avenue, Lakewood, Ohio Compliments of THE CLASS OF 1938 Page One Hundred;Twenty-three N-]-K- FE « NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN Berney, ELtt—eN Cone Bestor, BARBARA LOUISE Brtuines, Jutta Lots : BratspELL, NATHALIE BARTLETT BrocH, Mary MEINRATH Biopcett, BARBARA WARREN . Bioom, ExizABETH ; BorroMLey, RurH ELEANOR Brepow, KATHERINE [RMA . BREEDING, ANNE . , Britt, ELEANOR THOMPSON BROADBENT, Heten IRMA Brooxs, MarGaret WIsTAR Browne, Marion CarROLINE Brunet, Lots GitLetrre . Brust, Berry JANE . Burorp, Mary CamMegRON . BurkKHARDT, Dorotruy ELizABETH . BuTtTerFIELD, ELIzABETH JANE . CarLETON, GRACE CAROLYN Carpenter, Mary Atys Cass, Patricia Rut Cuevers, Rutu Lois Co tins, PriscitLA STODDART . Conant, Bettina Gray Conners, Mary Loulisz Coox, Vircinta WILSON Cox, Nancy . Crosstey, JEAN Masaren Datzy, Dororuy DarneLL, RutH Wits . Davis, LuzttaA GERTRUDE Dent, MarGARET JANE Dickson, BertiniA EpirH DunuamM, JutiA MarsH Dyer, Lois Miriam . Epensore, Axice EvizaABeTH Emstein, Aice ExizABerH . Experc, ExrsA Miriam . Ey, VircintA VAN Dyne . FaircHILD, NATALIE Marion . FarNnswortH, Dorotuy Fisher, Dororuy HorrmMan Fiske, Bero Harrier Fiskz, NANcy Turpin Firtinc, Dororuy FREEMAN, LILIAN FLORENCE FREEMAN, Marian Louise . Frieper, EpNA JANE Furneaux, Herzen Rutu GABELER, GEORGEANNA . Ga.iaGHerR, Harriort NAIDENE Griascock, Susan Harmon Page One Hundred Twenty-four 2605 Talbot Road, Baltimore, Md. Mountain Road, Bloomfield, Conn. . 161 Bigelow Street, Brighton ‘ . 50 Harriet Avenue, Belmont 217 East 37th Street, Kansas City, Mo. 10 Solon Street, Wellesley 807 Main Street, Agawam North Worcester Street, Chartley 820 Shadowlawn Drive, Westfield, N. J. 505 Boston Post Road, Rye, N. Y. 101 Stacy Avenue, Trenton, N. J. , 117 Union Street, Attleboro : 23 Pah Hill, Westmount, Quebec, Canada . 38 Walnut Street, Fairhaven 28 Centre Street, Concord, N. H. 194 Central Avenue, New Haven, Conn. 551 Park Street, Charlottesville, Va. 28 Glendale Road, Quincy ; 69 Granite Street, Bath, Maine . 10 Sheldon Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. 605 William Street, Boonton, N. J. 284A Commercial Street, Provincetown Race Brook Country Club, Orange, Conn. . 47 East Morris Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 696 Washington Street, Whitman 43 Highland Avenue, Bangor, Maine 50 Ivanhoe Avenue, Dayton, Ohio ee a? 173 Beacon Street, Boston 83 South Main Street, Middleboro Prospect Heights, Rensselaer, N. Y. 19 Valley View Terrace, Moorestown, N. J. 32 Batchelder Street, Melrose 1108 Walnut Street, Allentown, Pa. 515 Wee Clapier Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 1011 Columbia Street, Scranton, Pa. 1616 Boulevard, West Hartford, Conn. 14 Cushing Avenue, Dorchester 15 W. 81st Street, New York, N. Y. ‘ West Point, Va. 2955 North Sunnie Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. 1170 Main Street, Reading 412 La Fayette Avenue, Rockford, Ill. 125 West Wood Street, Norristown, Pa. 2890 Attleboro Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio 21 Westover Road, Montclair, N. J. 233 Whitford Avenue, Nutley, N. J. South Worcester Street, Chartley 86 Harbor Street, Branford, Conn. 3981 Rose Hill Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 48 Hardy Street, Methuen 12 Locke Street, Andover 175 Dean Street, Taunton Marshall, Va. Compliments of THE CLASS OF 1939 Compliments of THE 1937 NIKE STAFF Page One Hundred Twenty-five N-ILK-E , NINETEEN GrirritH, Nancy Fretp Grou, Mary CaTHERINE Guturiz, JEAN ELIzABETH . Haun, ExizABeTH REGINA . Hatt, Frances CLEVELAND Hamitton, Constance LILIAN Harcan, ELEANOR : Harper, DorotHy ELEANOR Hastam, RutuH GerrruDe . Heatp, Mary ExizaBETH HeINEN, ANNELIESE . HessENTAHLER, Mary Tee Hiccrins, Frances CATHERINE . Hits, GerTRUDE Hirscu, RutH Orca Hopces, ELEANOR ALICE Horr, ExisABeTH ANNE . Ho tianper, Emiry Drey Homan, Mary CatpwE Lt . Howarp, Priscira Fay Howe, BarBARA Howe, Puytuts JANE Hussparp, Mary DoNNELL Hussett, Marion : Huestis, BARBARA SIMISTER Hutt, JEAN Jenxs, GERTRUDE Jounson, ANNE WyaAtTT Jones, DorotHy EstHER Jorpan, BarBARA RuTH Kane, Epirn GgRALDINE Keacu, ELrzanor RIcHARDS Kimpton, ALISON Rerp . Kinc, ExizasetH Lowe . dime Abe e Sle We oN! e277 Grantiotreets Utica Nee “149 Oakland Street, Manchester, Conn. 14 Columbia Boulevard, Charleston, W. Va. 5311 38th Street, Washington, D. C. 912 Main Street, Danville, Va. 19 Washburn Avenue, Needham 487 East 16th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 9119 175th Street, Jamaica, N. Y. 132 Everett Avenue, Providence, R. I. 2300 Nevada Road, Lakeland, Fla. . Kent Road, Lakewood, N. J. 82 West Fifth Street, Chillicothe, Ohio 604 Nelson Avenue, Peekskill, N. Y. 876 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 280 Ward Street, Newton Centre : . 66 Plummer Avenue, Winthrop 2739 North Prospect Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. 2513 Talbot Road, Baltimore, Md. Conomo Drive, South Essex 18 Davidson Road, Worcester 60 Long Avenue, Belmont 383 Westford Street, Lowell Main Street, Norton 33 Park Tee Rockville Centre, N. Y. a 865 Hope Street, Bristol, R. I. 67 Ashland Avenue, Pleasantville, N. Y. 22 Hillside Road, Wellesley Hills. . 119 Foxcroft Road, West Hartford, Conn. . 154 Merrimac Street, New Bedford 126 Coolidge Road, Worcester 395 Willow Street, Mansfield 58 Olive Street, Providence, R. I. 470 Beacon Street, Boston 156 Congress Street, Bradford, Pa. INO Wines ss Lan cA Nye VCR 1 3166 Washington Boulevard, Cleveland Heights, Ohio Koerxer, Nipa Louise . LatHropz, BARBARA Lawrence, RutH 3260 Avalon Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio 32 Hamilton Road, Morristown, N. J. 575 Park Street, Attleboro LinpeMan, Maryjoriz iy Fides viene Cudene 183rd Gece rad Pinehurst Avenue, New York, N. Y. Lyncu, JANicE ELEANOR Lynen, Mary ANN . MacPuerson, JANET Louise Maueu, Constance Marie Martinc, CATHERINE 41 Judson Avenue, East Hartford, Conn. 155 Linwood Avenue, Ridgewood, N. J. : 95 Warren Road, Framingham . 157 Walden Street, West Hartford, Conn. “Merriebrook”, South Egremont MaArsHAtL, ADA’ GENDERS TM. a) tl ta eee 3125 Suth foreland Boulevard, Shaker Heights, Ohio Martin, PriscittA SAWYER McCattisterR, MARIANNE . McKenna, JANET LoutsE Merriam, AcNnges CATHERINE MerrIAM, BARBARA Mouter, ELisABeETH . MorcGan, JANE Morse, ExizAseTH Loutse . Page One Hundred Twenty-six : North Street, Grafton 126 Pe rihor Street, Edgewood, Pittsburgh, Pa. : 16 Webster Street, Taunton 04 Cranlyn Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio 56 Thetford Avenue, Dorchester 1336 Bennington Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. 13 Williams Avenue, Hyde Park 964 Pleasant Street, Worcester Compliments of A FRIEND OF WHEATON PARK HOTEL Attleboro Wheaton Jun Beauty Shop An old fashioned hotel with a ALLS) MS Nad INAS delightful modern atmosphere SEA FOODS PLANTS — CUT FLOWERS FOR Fish, Oysters, Clams, Scallops COMMENCEMENT, WEDDINGS Everything in Season HALL THE FLORIST SHATTUCK JONES 26 SCHOOL STREET TAUNTON 150, 152, 154 Atlantic Avenue Telephone 1422 CAPitol 1436- 1437-1438 Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere Page One Hundred Twenty-seven N-1-K’E° NINETEEN + THIRTY + SEVEN IMMGNKENBECK SIV ULAR TORTIE NS EVAG. aan te ee 790 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Myrrs, ANN Riss . ... . =. =... =. =... «-. 6608 Park Heights Avenue, Baltimore, Md. NEARS JANET CS i Gla OR, ee ee nn ee ee 85 Charles Street, Rochester, N. H. Nevins, BARBARAN 2) a) sn) Gent tn Geen nn enews Ol lighlandslentaces brocknon NEWELL, EDIZABET ERIS fy) 50 5 en ne ce on en 17845 Lake Road, Lakewood, Ohio O’Brien, RutH Mary. . . Bai a Sacha Ba . . . 9 Forest Street, Taunton Oneony, Buia Inomy, . « « 2 2. « « 3315 Daleford Road Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio PAINE, MARION YEO ley =e nn 08 nen GrattonuocatedlospitalaeNorenaGralton Patrerson, HARRizit BELLE 9 4) 5. . . . + «... . «= 431 Midland Avenue; St. Davids Par Praxes, Ortve ELizABeTH 9% 4 Gs) ee , BDelano Road pV inevarar aren PEDRICKEANNE, 202.) 8 Uden eo ee . . 59 Lindall Street, Danvers Picken; AUDREYi2 ai 4 ee ee Ce ee ee 106 Ellison Avenue, Bronxville, N. Y. Ponp, Heren Marrua. . ae ee ee oe ae eG South: Streeta stamtorda@onne ProvANpiz, MARGARET . . . . =... =... . . . =. . = 4220 Bellevue Avenue, Melrose Reese, MARJORIE) Mister) 9) eee) oo ee en's: PalisadesAwenuemonkenrses Nama REE TN GUN LATRUAINTNY As 35 Beverly Place, Dayton, Ohio Rosinson, MarcareT ANN... . .. ... -._ . 1501 Delaware Avenue, Wilmington, Del. RosENTHAL, BARBARA r 43 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston ROSENTEATS 2 | ANE Areas Oe ener nena ler ene ae 43 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston ROWEAND, Myra ALBERTA) 0) =) 0 rn eel O2uWainthroprotreeqmlaunven iagsmid, ame Ie kl Pas 60 Pleasant Street, Bradford, Pa. Russert, Mary SypNey WHITTAKER. . . . . . . Round Hill, Woodbridge, New Haven, Conn. Ryper, KatHarine Berp—eN.. . . =. =. . S.StSCt« Yt‘“CeS «S:SC «CS:C « « NS Edgecliff Terrace, Yonkers, NV. YY. SANBORN DORO TE VpOIeR AT GEL een aon 404 West 116th Street, New York, N. Y. Scuapt; Bersey ADAMS . . . . . = « « + « = J6OprucelandjAventenopringneld Scorm, JANET MARY) et )s whan Guin ee einen ene Gatesthloucemp ata sewarcm Scott, Nancy McKinizy . . a a et em. . Gates House, Bridgewater SHAW AE ELT ZAB EET SOA UE 1 ae (Callowey Road, Warwick, N. Y. SHEPARDSON, LouIsA eofse ee ee Ul Ue es 61 omer Street Newtons Genera SmversTeIn, DorotrHy ...... .. . . . . . 696 Glenwood Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio Smpson, JANE . . . . de xt We Tee A pe 5801 Glenview Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio Gijon, Wrocisesy Bye 14 Merrimack Street, Concord, N. H. Smiro, EtwaserH DEAN . . . % . =... . . . . = . . «2416 Courtland Street) Middleboro Smira, Mure BURNHAM. =. 1... 4 Richards Street Danvers SNOW;, LA) MiAve 025 2 ee i eT OMA Onmockee reo cltrcins SPENGLER, |] OAIN ) pyuhtyh ras tr Bue tan rl geet a ere . . Hudson, Ohio Steet, LauRiz . . Se oR Ie ay Ca lenge Boa eee 28 ie Place Pipher Montclair, N. J. StreTTLeR, ELizABETH eae oot ee wae Oe | ee ee 2 Garden Place, Chatham, N. J. STEVENS, BEVERLY Se! Ga 2. a ee 8e 0 3 ec ee ee 25 Highland Avenue, Lexington STEWART, MARY 975.0 32 2 ee) ene en Oe Via on Awenucw Necchan STUD Vay hz Aca EET RVAUN CS . . . 175 Union Street, Attleboro. STEMPLINGR BARBARA ISEST Eas meine) Gln mnt ent ee Racine Road, Port Washington, N. Y- Tomxinson, CHARLOTTE ANNE... . . . . . +6808 North 11th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. TrencH, Laura MacDonatp . . . . . +. =+-25 Ellicott Place, New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Trowt, FRANCES ELLEN, 7.)). 9.) 5 e209 5) ene ee een OO4 Ialelotreetmbriciers Grossing Waist, INUNR? INGAAMONS) 4 5 5 lk cr 102 Dean Street, Taunton WALTHER, JEANNE PEvDLIcg ne) ln nen 474 ns Ween Avenue, Upper Montclair, N. J- WARNER, ALICESOWIFTEEME IS) 0) en ee nese eee ee 1091 Erie Cliff Drive, Lakewood, Ohio: WARNER, EUNIcH CHANDLER 9 5°. 4 . 0. 952 au. oe) 7 Alden Avenues New Havens @omnr WARREN UccE mene oe le ee eee eae Kennebunk, Maine WATERMAN. JELEL EN ai) Wich Ui Remtieya cate h on nite nen en 284 Pleasant Street, Rumford, R. I. WEAVERS) ERIANGES | mL pnne enn tne . . . 603 Angell Street, Providence, R. I. Weaver, Her—n MARGUERITE. . . . Derighe Whee: Apartments, Palisades Avenue, Englewood, N. J- Page One Hundred Twenty-eight Ff; [ aS i Year Books Manufactured by THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS Awarded All-American Honors BY DIRECT WIRE FROM FISHER DOUBLEDAY DORAN SFLASH LUCKY BAG WINS ALL AMERICAN HONORS: 2GUS 907A.0CT 13. TRE COMPANY STLa APPRECIATE SUCCESTIONS FROM [TS PATRONS CONCERNING [TS SERVICE N THE recent nationwide All American Critical Service | competition conducted by N.S. P. A., in which over 700 schools, colleges and universities were represented, highest All-American honors were awarded to Army’s “‘Howitzer” and Navy’s “Lucky Bag.” We offer our heartiest congratulations to the staffs of these winning Year Books, and we proudly bask in the reflection of their glory. For both the “Howitzer” and the “Lucky Bag” were printed and bound at the Country Life Press, and it is the first time in history that a single organization has produced two All-American Year Books for these schools in the same year. For twenty-five years, we have upheld the highest standards of quality in typography, reproduction, printing, binding, and general excellence of production. Our staff is competent, courteous, helpful and cooperative, and their services are at your disposal. We invite you to submit your Year Book plans for an estimate that will match your budget. DOUBLEDAY, DORAN COMPANY, INC. mob COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, Garpen City, New York Page One Hundred Twenty-nine N-I-K-E- NINETEEN , THIRTY + SEVEN WELLINGTON] DOROTHY silmen naan tne nent nnn ne ee EO (@ITTORGIOtECCE Me none Wirrrs® ire ANOR ss DAW SO Nima panera ine Te Kingston, Jamaica, British West Indies WENNEIS ANNES Gre NIDEN IN ine mre mnt natn a Massapequa Road, Farmingdale, N. Y. WituraMs, Crarre WITHERFORD . . . . . =... . +. +. . 304 Putnam Avenue, Hamden, Conn. WitAmMs, ELEANOR STEWART . 9. 95 5. =) 5 =) 2) ee eee.) 117 Chapin streets southbridge WinG;-ExizaberH JEAN}; 29 G2 0o, 6) 2s 2c em se ee ol Beard ‘A venue, Buttalogeruamen Wirrer, CHARLOTTE se nen ee en ee ees 7aledyvarcl Road Westiiarttords|Gonm Wotr, NAncy NEWBOLD 29. 93 =) 4) 2 9. 8 6 ewer a 74) FernbrooksA venue, Wiyncotemie: Wooprurr, JEANS. .) cee oe a) le te ee ee et) wl ©) O14 Main Street;|Manchester)@onm WRAY) BETTY FERN Gn Seen tc) ee 45 Darwood Place, Mount Vernon, N. Y. ZIMMER, BARBARA JANE... . . . . =. . 4551 Central Avenue, Indianapolis, Ind. ZIMMER, RUTH oe a a ene Wee a) co) Je) eee ee reo Oi cark-otreets Gloversvillem NMaye Students Entering In September 1936 With Advanced Standing Cuirppo, Gracz Marjorie... . . . . . . . 67 Townsend Avenue, New Haven, Conn. HIANDSEREED a EDWIN AG E1Oy AR Dane nnn nar 93 Fifth Street, Garden City, L. 1., N. Y. elec acelw Pb gn MaeyN an RE ie ol aac eas Ge. do a1 Bee ie ace, Mere ebibl, Ilana IsseRsTEDT, CARUs DoroTHEA . . . . . . . Charlottenburg 9, Kastanienallee 24, Berlin, Germany Kine, Payiris Mprissa 9. 8 eee ) 143e5anta Be Avenue, News Havens@onn Mvyrcurersr, Dororny IVA 6 ee ee es e236 balmiotreetebiantiorca@onne Napres, Lucie Marin, 2 4,0. 99) +) eee ee en 67 Au Neal Streets Portland sian ROPOEE, GONSTANCED ELA TIN Eee un Belvidere Heights, Haverhill RYAN; DORIS 3 eye Ga ee en nscitraresNOllepaeantsmeXavalles renee SCHERNER, RurH EtmaseToH . . . = . + «. =| « « « . « 2 Whitman Street. Spmmonem Page One Hundred Thirty
”
1934
1935
1936
1938
1939
1940
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.