Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA)  - Class of 1937 Page 1  of 154   
 
 
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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         
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