Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA)

 - Class of 1941

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 116 of the 1941 volume:

ps  ; ' a a on = = | r x7 i —— , - - - 3 € = 7 , 7 - a ai ; a —_ ; . a 7 ‘ „ t - = gal = a - 7; ' a oa P| c F „ : 7 - - - _ a : ; ; ; 1 - = a” la = : ; ' - at 77 = 6 NINETEEN FORTY-ONE Mint WHEATON COLLEGE Norton, Massachusetts HERBERT M. PLIMPTON who as a friend and trustee of Wheaton has done so much to encourage the growth of the col- lege, and for whose long standing interest and support we sincerely Oh. Te extend Words Jo You “Were you really alive in 1941?” This is the question which will be asked you in future years. You can always adequately reply if you keep this volume. You can open its pages and prove that you were one of those who made up this world in the most critical year of its whole history. Through some gorgeous luck you lived some of those days in the peaceful scenery of Wheaton. And yet the alarms of war touched you then and there also. For do you remember how the old Sem was turned into the work room for war relief, and how Plimpton Hall was filled with students who were stirred to new depths of emotion by the call ofthe hour? In more peaceful years in the future the You that then will be You will look back over this volume and remember great days. “Tt zs the trouble with personality that none of “Tt 2s the trouble with us vs one, we are all legion. personality that none of You cannot get the two us is one, we are all legion. personalities, the three personal- You cannot get the two ities, the score of wersonalities, the three personal- personalities which are ities, the score of you to be unified.” personalities which are you to be unified.” J. Edgar Park in New Horizons ee oR Ree n% 2 Soe: „ - De ae Phe Serious You is your deepdown self which prompts You to chew a pencil and peer out at the world through horn- rimmed specs. It is the You that is intensely interested in your major, that pitches into bull sessions to argue about labor problems, meta- physical poetry, and the Balkan situation. It is You with your feet planted firmly on the ground, realizing just what sort of a job you're undertaking when You enter college. Ceremony Gap The Chapel is one of the first buildings we learn to love when we come to Wheaton, and the services held there on week-day mornings wil] be among the last things we will forget when we leave. We remember Dr. Park’s words, and in our minds we hear them again against a background of Bach on the organ. In the Fall we watched the Seniors take their places, sober in their caps and gowns, and now we recall the ex- citement of the March services and the announcements of election results. New officers for old organizations. The end of the old order; the beginning of the new. ’ er nee Day Founders’ Day means the color of hoods; the solemnity of the procession; the Wheaton Hymn; last year’s seniors, now alumnae. This year our speaker was Allardyce Nicol] of Yale, who talked on the modern theater. Resplendent Se ac al ia We find that what we came to college for was knowledge after all, and we hurry to philosophy with a theory of our own to be tossed into the general discussion. We work in the Jabs until long after dark. There are discussions where we can air our pet ideas and have them judged. In the Spring we invade our own home towns and attack the unsuspecting citizen with ques- tionnaires for a sociology paper. All these are a part of our college life. PHI BETA KAPPA Back Row: Jane Farwell, Su- zanne Rose, Doris Barrett, Evelyn Fay, Margaret Joy Tibetts, Mary Scoit Powell Front Row: Anna Mulno, Agnes Sheff, Elizabeth Hoye, Eleanor Haggett, Marjorie Rush Concentration Of course some of us do better than others. In February came the announce- ment that seven students had been elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Society. At the initiation banquet Eleanor Haggett, Dusty Barrett, Jane Farwell, Elizabeth Hoye, Anna Mulno, Polly Powell, and Sue Rose received their gold keys. Four others from the class ot 1941, Evelyn Fay, Mardi Rush, Agnes Sheff, and Margaret Joy Tibbetts had joined this society during their Junior year. { Page 11 } This year, resplendent in its new, psy- chologically-designed quarters in S. A. B., the College Government Association began the task of carrying out and modifying the policies inaugurated last year. Every Monday night, impressively capped and gowned, Cabinet gathered around its shining table. The officers, Evie Fay, President; Eleanore Beane, Vice President: Jane Wrather, Secretary; and Helen Lewis, Treasurer, discussed Wheaton’s policies with Social Chairman Betty Brown, and the House Chairmen, Agnes Sheff, Eliza- beth Bowman, Jean Hare, Carol Tilling- hast, Margaret Joy Tibbetts, Margaret King, Hastie Price, and Ruth Hirschland. With our best interests in mind C. G. A. aimed for a larger degree of self-govern- ment among us, with fewer restrictions and penalties. This year they claim to have borrowed their theme song from Gilbert and Sullivan in their endeavor “to make the punishment fit the crime,” whenever such evils were necessary. The number of penalties that the Council did find it necessary to inflict was so small that it illustrated a victory for our new liberal system. As results of C. G. A. Board meetings, when the Dean, House Fellows, and repre- sentatives from classes and organizations joined the Council, innovations which are hoped to facilitate campus activities were presented for our approval. For instance, it was decided that more members of the junior class should be enabled to have ex- perience as members of Council. Therefore, the position of Junior House Chairman of Everett was created and it was decided that the Social Chairman should be elected from the junior class rather than the Senior. The Board also suggested that the Junior House Chairman of the White House should hereafter be elected by the student body. The ambitious Council undertook a complete renovation of the point system in order to assure more equal distribution of positions in campus activities. Another innovation was made in estab- lishing the S. A. B. House Committee to look after our popular young addition. It is Jane Williams, the chairman, whom Evie { Page 12 } you must thank for that bright-penny look about the building after a full y ear of enthusiastic and energetic use. From time to time C. G. A. stepped out of its conventional role as monitor of the college to play hostess to the students. On the fateful evening of November 4, while Wheaton Democrats strutted merrily in the Science Building, optimistic Republi- cans took their knitting and swarmed into Plimpton Hall to attend the C. G. A. elec- tion party. After watching three hilarious cartoons and listening to election returns, they dunked their sorrows with fat dough- nuts in great cups of coffee. The year 1940-1941 saw the success of the new formal seating plan, whereby Seniors take the place of the former faculty heads of tables, who are now invited as guests. The system has worked out to the satisfaction of both students and faculty, since it has none of the former ceremonial stiffness and claims a more natural atmos- phere that promises to give it a permanent place in the Wheaton scheme. On the second Tuesday evening of each period C. G. A. held coffees after dinner. In mid-February C. G. A. held its proce- dure party, an opportunity for the painless housecleaning of the ancient and musty procedure files of campus organizations. Well fortified with brownies and cokes, the officers invaded the Cage and emerged with newly-typed procedure cards, for the gratetul reference of future generations. This spring The Wheaton News, in coop- eration with C. G. A., published a special election issue, containing a list of all candi- dates for offices together with an account of their activities. This not only put more spirit into the voting, but also made the decisions even more difficult and exciting, and probably a little fairer. The enthusi- astic voting assured us that at least here on our campus the democratic system is still reigning supreme. All in all, this has really been a banner year. For improvements and innovations, for understanding and spirit, it has rarely been surpassed. And, in spite of the many facets ot our personalities, C. G. A. has managed to blend us into a unified whole that is the spirit of Wheaton. Monday Night { Page 13 } Somewhere toward the end of your pre- college summer came a letter that said, “Welcome, Ji] sis.”’ And that was your first contact with Wheaton and with C. A. Well, then, C. A. (and we hope you're not stil] calling it Y. W.) is here to help you make that initial climb to fourth floor Everett, and to point out the Dimple and S. A. B. Your lamps and your chair and probably your hassock came from the second hand store. At the C. A. picnic in the Archery Field you gota taste not only of hamburgers and onions, but of firelight, the pines, and campus singing. There’s the candlelight service in the early fall. You remember the silence of Chapel, and later the shimmering of tiny lights afloat on Peacock Pond. C. A.’s everywhere and into everything. Perhaps we should mention such speakers as Louise Morley (yes, she’s Christopher’s daughter), Ben Coles, who'd only been back from China a week, Howard Thurman, War Relief Betts and the Labrador Browns, all of whom pleased us so much. Grant Noble opened the marriage lecture series and was so popular that we overflowed the Yellow Parlor and landed in the auditorium. We attended conferences at Smith, Benning- ton, Washington, Boston, and Northfield, and are going to O-At-Ka to tie up the season. We joined with British War Reliet and J. R. C. in a simultaneous drive bring- ing World Fellowship alone over $1800. In Norton we help the district nurse collect clothes, and keep the infirmary stocked with magazines. Lost and Found, Night School, the Riding Meet Dance, Nursery School, and even the candy in your dorm are part of C. A. So you see, you can’t get away from it anywhere. C. A. bas fun planning vespers and par- ties and auctioning off the best of the “unclaimed” from Larcom basement. The officers who met in the new office in S. A. B. this year were: Betts Gibbs, President; Middy Hollis, Vice President; Hunter Hearne, Secretary; and Molly Rhodes, Keeper of the Moneys. { Page 14 } a fc clicf Even if you’ve sewed only 36-100 of a stitch, you've done something for B. W. R. this year. This new ‘protege’ was intro- duced on campus at a Symposium in the fall and swept us right off our feet. The Symposium—‘‘America in the World Crisis’ —was sponsored by the history, economics, and sociology departments. Led by both outside and faculty speakers, it was an eye-opener and stimulant tc every one of us, and reached every part of the campus in one way or another. A simultaneous drive with World Fellow- ship was launched at a community meeting by Dr. Park, Miss Carpenter, and Evie Fay. A faculty-student committee conducted the drive, which extended over seven months, and has collected more than $5,000 from pledges. Added funds have come from the Christmas Choir Concert, the sale of pins, lapel studs, compacts, and cigarette cases in the Bookstore, and the collection of old newspapers and tinfoil. D. A. and the Faculty Club produced the success of the year, ‘‘The Turn of the Tide.” All during the play filthy lucre was tossed at the feet of the actors by the rollicking audience, which had caught the spirit cf old-fashioned mellerdrama. The sale of Coca-Cola and peanuts between the acts plus that of the tickets enabled us to have a Wheaton Kitchen rolling in England by January. Kay Langsdorf and A. A. started us early ‘“‘knittin’ a mitten for Britain.” Almost overnight the Sem became the B. W. R. Center, under the direction of Mrs. Ballou. It has been.open every after- noon all year to everybody, whether she could sew or not. It didn’t take long for us to learn the art and, incidentally, it was a lot of fun. In the fell we were shown a glimpse of what the well-dressed student should wear and Dr. Sprague, Dr. McIntire, and judges from Harvard, Brown, and M. I. T. voiced their approval. Another fashion show was given in the spring by Fredley’s. Admission from these exhibitions was turn- ed over to B. W. R. Dr. Knapton was chairman of the general committee, Miss Jennings was treasurer, and Miss Winslow produced clever posters which kept our useful pro- jects always in mind. Success Story ee rears See Ta RL N-2O=59 3 WEEK UMS { Page 15 } What's Doin’? Gr The bulletin boards are constantly flaunting notices concerning one or another of the numerous departmenta] clubs. Everyone is able to find a group which is sympathetic to her own interests. This year of al] years we took our current events seriously and supported with a will the projects planned by President Dot KJoss for International Relations Club. In mid-winter we heard Dr. Irving Leonard of Brown speak on South America, and our interest in things Latin-American was increased when we attended the spring meeting at which our South American students, Nat Heller, Sonia Souffront, Corinne Williams, Julia Fernandez, and Pauline Driscoll, told us about life in their home countries. One night a week we took part in the discussions planned by Jane Dickie, and now we bid an early Bon Voyage to Ruth Detlefsen, who will spend the summer in Peru on the I. R. C. scholar- ship which Phyl Lord and her committee raised by running a style show, selling on election night, raffing meal tickets at Marty’s, and persuading us to give up a Wednesday night dinner for beans and jello. coffee Wheaton classicists gathered at Miss Work’s house in the fall for the first meeting of the Classical Club, and after mid-years Patricia Dimelow, president, invited every- one on campus to hear Dr. Frederick Grace of Harvard speak on ‘‘The Cult of Zeus at Olympia.” Last fal] twenty-three of us, dressed in white, gathered in Hebe parlors. With tea and cookies and a word of welcome by Jane Dickie, we were initiated into Whea- ton’s honorary literary society—Psyche. Psyche’s program this year included a meeting with Mr. Boas on ‘Modern Trends in Poetry,” and an open meeting at which Mr. Charles Hill spoke on “Boswell.” We will not forget the evenings in the student parlor, talking about poetry, metaphysics, and literary criticism. There were eight Seniors and five Juniors this year who were the fortunate invited members of Agora, the honorary social science society. Anne Gladding, the presi- { Page 16 } dent, planned several closed meetings for the group and also presented to the student body Dr. Hans Rothfels of Brown Univer- sity, who spoke on ‘‘The Historic Back- grounds of German Policy in Eastern Europe.” Everybody says Tertulia, led by Betty Ann Fell, has the best parties on campus, with Spanish records and mantillas lending atmosphere. Both Le Cercle Frangais and Le Cercolo Italiano have built reputations for themselves by sending bags of toys to French children as well as having open meetings and parties. Mary Lou Vincent and Charlotte Hewitson, respectively, are the presidents. When Adelaide Dunbar called a meeting of the combined Romance Languages Club, you had Wheaton’s ver- sion of the Tower of Babel. The members of Der Deutsche Verein are lucky, because they learn from Mrs. Korsch about a German life which is totally charm- ing. At private meetings they sing ‘‘Muss’ I’ Denn”’ lustily, sip coffee sweetened by whipped cream, and eat spicy little cookies covered with powdered sugar. They meet formally for lectures, which president Ellen Greeley plans, and this year they pre- sented to the college Dr. Fritz Karsen of Bryn Mawr, who spoke on ‘Progressive Education in Germany.” The program of the Science Club, headed by Eleanor Haggett, included many inter- esting closed meetings, at one of which high speed movies were shown. Miss McBride, Dean of Radcliffe, spoke on “Brain Lesions” at a meeting open to the college. Jane Adams and the Vocational Com- mittee presented to us at interesting con- ferences speakers from various fields of work. These lectures aided us considerably by showing just what opportunities for jobs lie ahead of us after graduation. Scientifically Speaking { Page 17 } Oe aS lrennous You is the strong-arm You that takes two steps at a. time and is often seen dashing from one end of the campus to the other. It is the You that starts out for the lbe and finds itself on the tennis courts, that manages to keep a happy spring in its step even on the grayest of Monday mornings. It 1s the exuberant You which often feels it just can’t sit still a moment longer. Newbert The Athletic Association sponsored a year top-heavy with Wheaton victories i n intercollegiate sports, and exciting for its intermural contests. Nancy Newbert, left wing on the senior hockey team and swift swatter of the birdie on varsity badminton, . was President of the association. She was Fair Harvard assisted by Vice-President Sally Peck, who has seen service on varsity badminton, hockey, and basketball; Secretary Linda Thomas, and Treasurer Betty Cahall, both mainstays on our varsity hockey and basketball teams. = ull Most unique and exciting of fall sports events was Wheaton’s historic first meeting with Harvard on the hockey field. The number of hockey enthusiasts made an immediate jump to include the entire stu- dent body on that eventful day of October 28, 1940, when Harvard went down under the crushing defeat of 1-0 by Captain Hastie Price, her worthy forward line, and supporting backs. Continuing its ascend- ancy over Jackson, Pembroke, and the Freebooters, the varsity hockey team real- ized another undefeated season, and shield and chevrons were well-won by Doris Alex- ander, Jay Jenkins, Helen Kingsley, Betty Lewis, Bobbie Payne, Hastie Price, Cherub Schnabel, Linda Thomas (hockey mana- ger), May Affleck, Ruth N. Walker, and Carol Tillinghast. On Our Side { Page 20 } Out of seventeen tennis matches, the Sophomores won a total of 61%, thanks to the superior curves and back smashes of Bobbie St. Clair, Bobbie Payne, Nancy Cunningham, Cathie Sellew, and Peggy Rossmassler, who replaced Cathie after her accident on the Science Building steps. Bobbie St. Clair, Peggy Rossmassler, Bob- bie Payne, and Nancy Cunningham re- ceived the well-deserved class numerals. The Freshmen ran a close second in the class tournament, with Terry Coatsworth and Hilda Rodman dividing the honors equally to make a total of six victories. Then Hilda and Terry fought for the cov- eted Freshman Cup to an exciting victory of 6-0, 6-3 for Hilda. The Fall Riding Meet with House in the Pines was especially exciting this year be- cause the Wheaton Riding Team, ably cap- tained by Lucille Donle, needed only one more victorious military dril] in order to - retire the cup. However, Wheaton lost the drill and the cup, but ’Cille took first place with ribbon and trophy in the Champion- ship Class. Lois Johnson received a chev- ron for her fourth year on the team; Lu- Ribbon Winners cille Donle and Norma Dickey, for their third year; and Margo Boote, Billie God- frey, Kay Kennedy, Helen Masson, and Ruth Rabe, for their second year. New- comers who rode for their first year re- ceived shields. They were Marilyn Atwell, Jean Dickey, Jean Farmer, Pat Kuehner Jane Martin, Jane Mills, Frances Randall, Jane Scharrer, Theo Wood, and Betty Meyer. HEADS OF SPORTS Hagedorn, Creighton, O Donnell, Kline, Thomas, Donle { Page 21 } Winter Badminton and swimming furnished mid-winter athletic excitement both among classes and with Radcliffe, Pembroke, and Jackson. The varsity ‘‘Basketeers,”’ in- spired by the especially professional com- petition of the experienced Antiques, by the Radcliffe forwards who could reach even farther then Wrather and Nute, and by the Pembroke ability in general, de- veloped a successful team that will con- tinue to be good next season, for no players will be Jost by graduation. ‘‘Bud’’ Creigh- ton, captain, demonstrated more than once to a surprised and cheering audience just how to toss the ball into the basket while running and jumping simultaneously at a forty-five degree angle. The other victor- ious varsity members were: Ginny Weston, Bobbie St. Clair, Betty Cahall, Janie Lud- wig, Dinny Price, Ginny Thompson, Fran Lawler, Charlotte Nute, Jane Wrather, Althea Hooff, Jean Collins, Linda Thomas, Ruth Royal, Margo Boote, and Les Finn. Miss Mott’s new idea for an interclass badminton tournament produced excep- tionally good teams of four pairs of students from each class. Enthusiasm ran high on the evenings of the games and each girl showed what class spirit really is by a real fight for the “‘birdie.”’ The Varsity Badminton team had sched- uled matches with Brimmer School, with Pembroke, and with Radcliffe and Pem- broke in a Triangular Match. The varsity members were Anne Gladding, Nancy New- bert, Betty Meyer, Fran Lawler, Edna Hagedorn, and Theo Wood. The swimming enthusiasts were well- pleased by the exciting interclass and out- side swimming meets this year, especially by that 64-37 victory over Radcliffe. The annual Triangular Meet of Radcliffe, Pem- broke, and Wheaton teams: also ended most successfully for Wheaton. It was planned this winter to organize a club in which various swimming formations would be developed and perfected. During the past winter both Miss Brady and Miss Mott were qualified by Washing- ton to give the Instructor’s Course in swimming. Action { Page 22 } EST lie It always snowed on dance week-ends; it was beautiful skiing weather when we had to study for exams; it rained for Dart- mouth Carnival. But we got to North Conway for February 22 anyway—not quite positive of whether we would be forced to sleep on the floor or on the roof, but not really caring. The snow was hard on top, wet underneath, and poor in general, but we loved it because February 22 was a Saturday and we could recuperate all day Sunday—if we didn’t ski some more. There wasn’t enough ice to suit anyone, but, when the Gulf Stream wasn’t aping June in January, we really did have fun playing in the snow, getting to classes late, OneeDown and spending the whole period getting dry. Frosted aE { Page 23 } Slice Spring Bowling took Wheaton by storm this year after the two alleys in the Student-Alumnae Building were opened. Mr. Lawley was chief instructor and high-scorer for the college experts. The Golf Tournaments in the fall brought victories for Wheaton in a Quad- rangular Meet with Radcliffe, Jackson, and Pembroke; in a Triangular Meet with Rad- cliffe and Jackson; and in a single tourna- ment with Jackson. Wheaton golfers who carried away the laurels were Peggy Wing (Captain), Ruth Eddy (Manager), Ruth Kerbeck, Margie Garrigues, Ann Hunter Hearne, and Laila Raabe. As usual, a Quadrangular Archery Meet climaxed the spring archery season, this time at Pembroke. In the fall, chief archers Edna Hagedorn, Ann Linton, and Vera Engelhardt inflicted a rather humili- ating defeat in the arts of Robin Hood and William Tell upon Mrs. Gallagher, Miss Rider, and Miss Mott. Good One! { Page 24 } cst 2 hy, The First Aid course which Miss Brady and Miss Mott gave this year was new, popular, and successful. One hundred and twenty students and twenty-five faculty members learned exactly what to do in any emergency—how to treat broken bones, how to cope with skiers’ mishaps or auto- mobile accidents. The class drew up a list of campus hazards which were grad- ually corrected, notably the street light placed on Howard Street next to Kilham. Miss Brady admitted that the course was very difficult, but that the war had given it an added impetus aside from its impor- tant use in everyday life. Spring ee First pushed its head above the snow in March, and by the time May arrived everyone was bursting either with a desire to ‘“‘go somewhere” and ‘“‘do some- thing’’ or just to relax in the sun and pre- tend the waves were rolling gently nearby. For the more adventuresome souls who Damaged wished to cover ground, there were bicy- cling and hiking explorations of eastern Massachusetts. The twenty-mile ride to and from Foxboro was a favorite in the spring besides other jaunts toward Taunton or any town where weary legs could be rested in a theater. And for those less athletic individuals who wished to acquire that ‘“just-back- from-Florida’”’ hue, there were always the gym roof and Metcalf and Kilham sun- bathing centers. Hot Stuff { Page 25 } we Ge ve Yon is the dreamer, the artist, the idealist. It is You when your imagination 1s spurred by Dr. Park’s chapel talks, by the pink and blue walls of S. A. B., by the sunsets over the frozen campus. It is the You ‘who wishes to express its. delight or sorrow by writing it, singing it, acting it, or danc- ing it. Itis the You whom the four walls of a class- room have difficulty in restraining. SD ia bon aiie: The theater season opened this year on Founders’ Day with about as fine a batch of plays as we’ve yet seen. The Sophomores presented ‘‘Nocturne’’, the story of George Sand and Chopin. Relly played master- pieces on a wooden piano while backstage Althea Hooff and Bobby Grant made the music. In ‘A Night at an Inn”’ the Juniors, one by one, succumbed to a hideous green jade idol (Penny), and the class of ’41 won the competition (for the third year) starring Kingsley and Canby in “A Sunny Morning.” The second great show was presented by the Faculty Club and D. A., and was the war relief sensation, “‘The Turn of the Tide.’’ This was a very mellow drama, including a hero (Mr. Hidy), a villain (Mr. Sharp), a helpless maiden (Gay Lowry ), and a mortgage overdue. Through three acts professors struggled against the plots of other professors and against the longings in their hearts for sweet young things—the students. The comic relief was a lazy good-for-nothing darky whose role consisted of dancing ’a la Stepin Fetchit and sleeping. (Mr. Boas, couldn’t you guess? ) In the end each good man got the woman of his heart, and the bad ones got what they deserved. As important as the play itself were the entr’actes. Dr. Lange gave her rendition of ‘Father, Dear Father, Come Home With Me Now’ while coins fel] at her feet. There was a constant shower of them throughout the production. There were several barmaid choruses and Jesse Ridgway entertained with a mono- logue. But we will never forget Professors Sprague, Bragdon, McIntire, Earle, and Ramseyer in handle-bar moustaches and white aprons selling cokes and peanuts up and down the aisles. Nor shall we forget Miss Buchler, who donned a Gay Nineties costume and appeared in the front row, bobbing under a parasol, for which she was recognized at the Christmas Banquet by a gift from Dr. Park as the best dressed woman on campus! Settings for the Nativity Play this year were inspired by the paintings of Fra Angelico. Jean Nevius was the first blond Madonna in four years. Joseph was played by Peg King, and Jane Farwell was Gabriel. Our Freshmen wrote and presented three { Page 28 } one-act plays on the eve of spring vaca- tion: ‘“‘Celebrity for Dinner’ by Barbara Douglas, ‘“‘In the Red”’ by Betty Augur, and ‘“‘New Year” by Jeanne Heathcote. For the spring play D. A. turned away from comedy to an ancient Greek tragedy, the “Antigone” of Sophocles, which was pre- sented as part of the Color Symposium. Mardi Rush, gowned in traditional Greek robes, as Antigone moved across a many- leveled stage designed by Miss Winslow, and the flame color of her drapery con- trasting with the white of the ramps and blue of the background re-created the mood and spirit of life in old Greece more vividly than a literal setting of ancient columns could have. Relly Rambo,as Creon, appearing in every scene and the chorus, which played a most important part, contributed to the production which was an effective blending of color, speech and movement. Helen Boord chairmaned a large committee in charge of costumes, and the lighting, which played such an important part in the im- pressive production, was arranged by Mary Craig and her crew. Lydia Geer directed the construction of the set. The whole production was an eloquent defense of the use of abstract media for the creation of a dramatic illusion. Annunciation We supported Theatre Guild, six busses strong. Mardi and Cid spent most of their time juggling dates around, and_ their efforts were successful. For an open meeting the Dramatic Association invited Estelle H. Davis-Coit to discuss the prob- lems and joys of directing. D. A. officers for the year were Mardi Rush, President; Ciddy Hall, Vice President; Betsey Mackay Secretary; and Tommy Snyder, Treasurer. Bold, Bad Men { Page 29 } Pat News Last spring Jane Dickie, News’ associate editor, carried a worn copy of Bartlett’s Quotations from Stanton B to the News Room in 8S. A. B.; Sally Peck, number one assistant editor, scrawled a picture of Pat Keelan, editor-in-chief, on the News blackboard; Dusty Barrett, assistant num- ber two, installed herself behind a type- writer; and News was off on another tem- pestuous year of its career, a year which Dr. Park has acclaimed as one of the most successful in the history of the paper. News ran no campaigns this year, but it took an intelligent interest in the academic side of campus life, and in its Free Speech and editorial columns questions of impor- tance to a college woman were thrashed out. News kept its position as a leader of campus opinion, but it also turned toward the world outside, and Martha Sloan, in her “‘Pierian Spring,”’ interpreted each new development in world history as it was related to a college student. In the fall the staff went on a field trip to Boston, investigating the activities of The Boston American reporters in their news room and looking for opportunities for bright young women in journalism. All through the year Wednesday nights in the News room, once an editor’s night- mare, were turned into Parties-for-Any- body-Who-Drops-In, with Peck presiding. at the coffee pot and chocolate mints disappearing mysteriously from the kitchen downstairs. Elections for a new board were held in the spring, and at the annual News Tea Pat summed up the events which have made this year historic for News. Deadline { Page 30 } fashlight Ellie Traver has made herself immortal at Wheaton by giving to Rushlight the inimitable, invisible Minerva, character of the spirit behind Rushlight’s rapid expan- sion into a good-sized literary magazine under the editorship of Martha Sloan. In the fall a publicity campaign which swept the campus off its feet and dollars into Rushlight’s treasury was opened, with Peck’s surrealistic pictures hanging on the walls of Mary Lyon and the gym, whimsi- cal notes from Minerva pinned up on every door, and a Rushlight staff member wher- ever you turned waiting to sign you up as a subscriber. The first two issues appeared in the familiar blue covers, but spring had its inevitable effect on the staff, and Rushlight celebrated the end of the gloomy season by sporting bindings first of green and then of yellow. Faculty and alumnae contribu- tions were solicited tor each issue, and Bysshe Lynen was one of the first to respond with a poem, Lines Written in Dejection Near New York. A contest for the best work appearing in Rushlight during the year incited Wheaton’s literati to contribute its poetry and stories, but as we write this history the names of the winners remain locked in Minerva’s invisible brain. Student Press Hoard Press Board moved into its first real office equipped with typewriter, desk, tables, and a business-like atmosphere, for an exciting and successful year. Not only once, but half a dozen times, Mrs. Sprague impressed pho- tographers from The American, Architectural Forum, Interiors, The Christian Science Monitor, and The Boston Post with S. A. B., the hockey team that really defeated Harvard, and the nursery school. Once, Lowell Thomas and Fred Waring spread the name of a victorious Wheaton over the radio. Last February, for the second time, Mrs. Sprague attended the American College Publicity Association meeting at Portland, Maine where she served on the Resolutions Committee. She and_ the Press Board, under Jane Williams, the chairman for a second year, have served over one hundred newspapers throughout the states represented by the student body. Chief reporters serving under Mrs. Sprague and Jane Williams were Lillian Dillaber, Jane Adams, Doris Barrett, Alta Powell, Peggy Gallinger, Marion Burkhardt, Peggy Snow, and Wilma Mar- tin. And Fran Lawler took the pictures. Sloanie { Page 31 } Mie: Choir will always claim a warm place for itself in the hearts of its members. They work for it, sacrifice dates, meetings, and Monday evenings for it, and would almost flunk a Shakespeare exam rather than give it up. When the organ took a long week-end, and a rehearsal had to be called off, Monday seemed to have a hole in it to the girls who make the Chapel their Monday-night Mecca. But Choir isn’t for members only. Listening to it on Sunday mornings and at concerts is a privilege enjoyed by those of us whose voices are no better than that of the Stan- ton goat. One of the high points of the year was the Carol Concert given before Christmas vacation. Carols from France, the Slovak countries, and Catalonia followed the Caplet “Gloria’’, and the concert closed with a magnificent Bach cantata, ‘‘Unto Us a Child Is Born.” Then, this spring, the Harvard Glee Club and the Wheaton Choir joined together for the first time to give a concert which was offered as the second presentation of the Wheaton Series. The big success of the evening was the Strauss number sung by the girls and men together. More Strauss was presented at the annual spring concert on May 11, when Choir also celebrated the hundredth birthday of Dvorak by singing four move- ments from his ,“Stapat Mater” with full orchestral accompaniment. Music Club is the gathering place for the musical talent of Wheaton. As a rule it moves quietly, but once a year it throws wide its doors and invites the whole com- munity to an open meeting. This year on March 19, Ellen Greeley, President, presented Mr. Ramseyer as guest soloist, Downbeat { Page 32 } and his concert included selections from Liszt and Chopin. The other officers of the Club were Anne Greeley, Vice Presi- dent, and Eleanor Newell, Secretary- Treasurer. Martha Graham and her modern dance group opened the Wheaton Concert Series in November with a brilliant program which served as inspiration for Wheaton dancers—Dance Group ‘‘professionals”’ and Freshman Rhythmists alike—for the rest of the year. The Harvard-Wheaton Con- cert was the second presentation, and the last event in the musical season was a concert of chamber music by the Curtis String Quartet, bringing a distinguished series to a worthy conclusion. The Dance Group was proud of an uni- formly excellent set of members—with Nancy Kline as leader, and Helen DeMott as assistant head. They were not content this year to stay on campus and dance. In November the members performed at the Newton High School, and in the spring they danced for the Boston Alumnae. The annual campus recital took place in March, and presented an effective set of IRODTIOTOE. 6 6 6 a 6 6 Patterns parodies on society, exams, and_ ballet. The dance, ‘““The City”’, illustrating various phases of the bustling life, was especially well accepted. Credit is doubly due the girls this year, for they composed most of the dances they presented and there was little emphasis put on traditional dance forms. Nancy Whitten and Miss Weygand contributed the music for the dances which were enthusiastically received. The Group was beautifully synchronized, whe- ther in syncopated Congo rhythm or Rhum-boogie, and no one enjoyed their work more than did the members them- selves. Strophe spent much of its time working on Vachel Lindsay’s ‘““The Congo’’, which it gave as accompaniment for the Dance Group’s rendition of the poem at the March recital. This number was also given jointly by the groups last year and its popularity de- manded its being repeated. At Christmas, the members gave a read- ing of the story of the Nativity in chapel, and in April they presented a spring recital. The officers of Strophe were: Irene Alle- man, President; Eleanor Webster, Secretary- Treasurer; and Dorothy Paulsen, Librarian. { Page 33 } Higa Mysterious figures floated across the “Dimple’’ after houses closed those dark nights in the middle of May and provided tantalizing but elusive subjects for Larcom and Craigin dwellers to attempt to identify. The long-awaited appearance of the mid- night phantoms on that momentous Satur- day afternoon presente d a glittering sight for the many spectators. The scene was made gay by the popular Robin Hood pageant. The hero, his Merry Men, and the happy dancers paid their homage this year to a lovely court, entirely brunette for the first time in many years, when Molly Priedeman, the Queen, escorted by her attendants, Dottie Reed and Micky Maenner, entered amid a dramatic fanfare. Over our traditional strawberries and ice cream later in the afternoon and while we danced in Plimpton Hall that evening, the beauty and impressiveness of our 1941 May Day was appreciatively discussed. PE RER { Page 34 } Hail, the Queen! On the Green as Cis Art Club this year decided that it was high time the student body was initiated into the mysteries of Picasso, Dali, and other members of modern schools, so it brought Dr. J. B. Neumann to Wheaton in November to give a Jecture on the sub- ject at an open meeting. Not long after, an exhibition was held in the library of the work of Graham Peck, Sally’s brother, who is even now in war-torn China. Then, along in February, Miss Van Ingen gave an account of her trip to Mexico last summer, illustrating her talk with slides. A month later Mardi Rush and Dot Kloss furthered the cause of Pan- Americanism by lecturing on their trip to Peru and arranging an exhibiticn of Peruvian art in the library. For nearly two hours they kept their audience en- thralled with the tales of their adventures in Peru and they showed squat little jugs and colorful scarves which they brought back with them. Pat Dimelow was presi- dent this year, and Ruth Hirschland was secretary-treasurer. ee Cl! Camera Club members have a sense of humor. They’re always kidding them- selves about their debts and waylaying members to collect dues. But for all their difficulties, they seem to get a lot of work done. The proud possessors of a new and complete dark room in S. A. B., they have made the most of it. They have had several contests this year for snapshots, awarding prizes to the winners. They held a big exhibition in the library in May, showing all the best shots of the year. Under the guidance of President Meg Heath, Camera Club, one of our youngest organizations, made strides toward be- coming a leading campus club. Inspired Jhe ivolous You is the You that perks up when the ’phone rings, that romps and bounces “si makes bad puns. It is the gadabout You who clicks to Friday classes in high heels and impatiently watches the clock. It is the You that does crazy things just because they’re fun, and always has time for another rubber of bridge and one more coke. ; { { and played Mover lh ANA WOTREA ANA pa ut ils beight pied eerste almosphere - we ELTA only too easy to Wi eG lo IS DTS SSS . PED: ENE SEND Hail to Britannia ”’ I] , iy | UMLMNETSA Play We'll never forget those husky sopho- more voices accompanying their tramp- tramp-tramp onto the gym stage the night before Christmas Vacation, when the Class of ’43 enacted “Saint George and the Dragon.”’ Bursts of “Ho, Men, Ho!” punctuated the performance to the ac- companiment of Miss Winslow’s drum and Eleanor Webster’s flute. Cathy Sellew burst forth as Saint George himself, and when Trappie charged in with her Turkish turban, and that glare which set the audience cringing (and then into hysterics ), the success of Mummers’ was assured. Master of Revels Janie Ewing entertained with her usual pranks, and the audience held its breath with Phil Herland while she sang ‘‘On the First Day of Christmas.” When we heard “Hail to Britannia” echo- ing from every corner of campus we realized our favorite vacation had really begun. Bier mie Vaudeville for 1941 proved two things: first, that Wheaton is full of creative gen- ius, and second, that Phil Haller is tops when it comes to writing songs. A new type of Vaudeville introduced itself when the Script Committee consisting of those _ famous innovators Haller, Kingsley, Til- linghast, Cahall, Ridgway and Martin produced a show with continuous plot, songs that suited the action, imitations that looked like the imitated, and dances a la Peg Wing. Janie Ewing, alias Mitzi, and Ciddy Hall, alias Melinda, vied for the affections of Benjamin Baring (Helen DeMott), the innocent assistant of Mr. Hidy (Sis Rabe). Ciddy’s rendition of “She’s Got What It Takes” will go down in Vaudeville history, and such songs as ‘‘Dimple Stomp” and “We've Got Your Number’ have rated high places on the Wheaton hit parade. “They ve Got What It Takes” { Page 40 k Hoops, My Dear Playtime e “having-a-wonderful-time-hoping- you-are-too”’ mood happily sticks right with us from those first days of freshman year 'til the very end when it is conclusively proven that whoever started that rumor about seniors being staid has never ob- served them at Wheaton. The essentials of one pair of dungarees rollable to knees, one shirt preferably with long tails, one pair of toeless sneakers, and one gay bandanna are in everyone’s closet. The first occasion to use this costume comes at the Junior-Freshman Bacon Bat. Attired thus we tear to the archery field en masse, settle on a spot near the open fire, tackle a hamburger with onions, and “sing all over God’s hebin.”’ Every class has its own hey-day. Just after mid-years comes the Senior-Sopho- more party, a hilarious affair at which everybody looks funnier than everybody else and nobody is as funny as Kingsley. Here we hunt up the childish things we have put away. We play ‘Farmer in the Dell” and “Drop the Handkerchief.” Those of us who can, sing the songs that were left to us by our forerunners, Steel and Schadt. Much akin in costume and spirit is Junior Frolic, a free-for-all that goes on in the Dimple once a year. It’s a way of letting off steam before assuming our senior dignity. We appear in pigtails and sun- bonnets, carrying lollypops and musical teddybears to dance and play ‘neath the elms. You’d think we’d grow up by the time we are seniors. But, no; come out May Day morning while we wash the Libe steps. And we tie it all up with hoop-rolling, just before our exodus into the cold, cold world. Keep It Clean { Page 41 } AanucĂ©es Prom-trotting leaped into first place as the most popular pastime of the year when Plimpton Hall became the setting for Wheaton dances. Lights reflected in a polished floor, Peacock Pond seen through a wall of glass, muted trumpets and the call of a sax lured us from the library, the movies, and other campuses to dance in Plimpton Hall. Time Out “It Happened One Night” When the Harvard Gold Coast Orchestra struck up one Saturday night in November a hundred men and their girls appeared on campus for the Riding Meet Dance, the girls bearing faint resemblances to the wind-blown athletes who had cheered the Wheaton team in the Riding Meet that afternoon. Then came that wonder week-end, the Promenade Soph Hop, when the Sophomores gave a demonstration of class spirit which set the campus agog by attending their Hop almost one hundred per cent. All roads led to Boston on the night of the Wheaton Club Dance and men stood patiently by in the Louis Quatorze Ball- room of the Somerset while their under- graduate dates compared notes and engage- ment rings with the seniors of a few years Service With a Smile ago. Came spring—came Junior Prom! After a shag session in the Cage and a banquet in Emerson the juniors and their senior guests, danced with their favorite men to sweet swing played by Larry Cooper. And now we look ahead to Commence- ment Ball when once more we shall dance in Plimpton Hall and say good-bye to the seniors and to the year that is passing. we Ne Pes z ae { Page 43 } IPRISAO 6 6 Oo 5 Sen September rolls around again .. . the room's a mess, there’s sand in the trunk, down the hall a phonograph blares, and the ’phone is ringing insistently . . you re back! College like it is in the movies . . . the crowd gathers in your room, chocolates vanish, old New Yorkers and Mademoi- selles are pulled out, and there are all the makings for a lengthy bull session The perfect winter evening . . . sitting in front of an open fire reading, knitting, toasting sandwiches, or merely enjoying its cheery atmosphere 4 Page 44 } aA OF Bags in the slype . . . leaving to catch the “Senator” with high hopes for the best time yet during a momentous week- end or long-awaited vacation For getting away from it all, there's Boston on Saturdays ... the movies, symphony, dancing at the Statler and good-bye at the bus Mr. Rogers, his flashlight, and his friendly “‘good-evening’ have become Wheaton traditions, along with the frantic dashes to Information at one minute to one { Page 45 } A le ee the Seniors and the less mighty Yous, too, who fuse in your complete selves a bit of the serious, the strenuous, the creative, and the frivolous in such varying proportions that You are all unique person- alities. Itis this unified You that we think we know best only to discover that its complexity can never be fully realized. Perhaps it is not the real You but only the composite effect of All the Yous. OFFICIATING .... Nancy Whitten, secretary; Anne Gladding, treasurer; Betty Weatherbee, vice-president; Barbara Fisher, song leader; Alice Canby, president [94] The serious You would be in Everett studying for generals. The frivolous You would be drinking cokes in Marty’s or dancing to the nickelodeon at The Moon- beam. The strenuous You would be break- ing a hundred in the bowling alleys. The creative You would be whipping off a short epic poem on the Pressboard typewriter. But, because even more than you are any of these other ‘Yous,”’ you are a Senior, you are sitting on the library steps in your cap and gown chanting along with the rest. AJthough you can only sing on the prover- bial one note, you know the words to The Alma Mater Hymn. “Long ago the Pilgrims landed,” you sing (slightly off-key) but you aren’t thinking of the Pilgrims. You’re thinking of that historic day four years ago when you landed (very low) on “‘the rock-bound shores” of Wheaton. That was quite a day, wasn’t it? You were terrified of everything and every- body. You can’t remember much about that first week at Wheaton. It was all a pink cloud of ignorance. But you remem- ber those speeches by Miss Littlefield and Miss Carpenter. They made you feel frighteningly adult and a part of Wheaton. You remember having your picture taken in the Art Studio. You looked exactly like a convict in it. And you remember taking your swimming test and not know- ing how to “sink and save.” After that came the week when you wore sign-boards with your name brazenly printed on them in large black letters. For every ten steps forward you had to take two backward, and your life was a blur of holding doors open for endless streams of Sophomores. It was a gay winter that followed. There were college house parties at Prince- ton and Williams. There was the thrill of your first Wheaton Christmas with the teary splendor of the Nativity Play and the rollicking gaiety of the banquet and Mummers’ Play. There was the throbbing terror of your first mid-years and the pleased telegram you sent home the evening after marks came out. There was the exciting day when Dr Park came home to Wheaton and you saw him for the. first time. And then, suddenly, it was the first day of spring. { Page 48 } You’d never seen anything like spring in Norton before. It was too wonderful to be true with its lazy sunbathing, its picnics on the Cape, its beautiful pink, birthday cake evenings, and its ultimate May Day. You watched the May Queen with caught-in breath and pinched yourself to be sure that you weren’t merely dream- ing. You felt just like Alice in Wonderland. You never even remembered that Austria had been invaded by Germany that spring. There were many more important things to think about Freshman Plays, for instance. They were a real high spot for you. How very proud of your three class authors you were .. Worthy Kit e, Skeeter Ransom and Jean Nevius. “Now there stands a college noted for these virtues true,’ Freshman year is over and once more you are a Senior, singing on the library steps in your cap and gown. Snatches of your Sophomore year frolic laughingly across your brain. That was the most fun of all, you remem- ber. That was the year you came back to Wheaton with a real bang... a_ hur- Hopeless ricane in fact. There was some sort of a crisis in Munich too, but you didn’t bother with that. It was the year when you really became an upperclassman and had a dance all your own. It was the year when you actively partook in the Christ- mas celebration and gave the Mummers’ Play. How proud of Nancy Newbert, the Master of Revels, you were. How you laughed at the antics of Ruthie Jacobs as the very diminutive clown. You received your class rings that winter and then suddenly almost before you could say ‘‘Robin Hood” it was May Day again. And that May Day was even more exciting than the preceding one had been because one of your classmates, Bunny Hare, was the May Queen, and her attendants were Frankie Turner and Edie McHutchinson. That was the year you brought your car to Wheaton for two weeks and saw Massachusetts first. It was the year you played endless bridge in the old Sem and drank endless cokes in Marty’s. It was the year Tilly and New- bert made their historic Bermuda trip. You’re still hearing about that Wheaton invasion of the Coral Isle. And it was the year when three quarters of the class serenaded Laurie’s Bill with great gusto as he stepped off the Mansfield bus. “On the spot where the Pilgrims came,”’ you sing sentimentally, and the words re- mind you of Junior year. The war had { Page 49 } Conference finally come to Europe. You almost, but not quite, decided to leave college and become either a war nurse or a spy. You had six eight-thirty’s a week that winter and all of your exams came on the first three days of exam period. You were pretty important that year. You’d even inherited a Freshman sister, or two, or three. Your class won the Founder’s Day Play Contest with excellent performances in ‘‘Riders to the Sea” by Canby, Rush, Kingsley and Heath. Vaudeville was packed with Juniors and you'll never for- get Phil Haller’s songs and Kingsley’s rendition of them, especially ‘That Kind of a Sort of a Gal.” Skirts were shorter that fall and you hummed ‘“‘South of The Border” as you danced from one class to the next. The high spot of Junior year was, of course, the Junior Prom. That was really a gay week end with the banquet and dance on Saturday night and numerous picnics on the Cape on Sunday. But that spring was real bedlam. You voted for everybody and everything and you liked the way all of the elections came out. Evie Fay made just as good a College Government Presi- dent as you knew she would. Betts Gibbs made the whole campus C. A.-minded with- { Page 50 } out any trouble at all. Keelan and Dickie put out a year’s News the likes of which you'd never seen. Mardi Rush divided her time between Stanton and D. A. in a very ambidextrous fashion. Newbert almost got the A. A. out of debt. Phil Haller directed the best Vaudeville that Wheaton’s ever seen, and Alice Canby was the truly perfect Senior Class President. But one bright May morning you awoke to find that your nice little world had been shattered. Holland and France were in- vaded and the battle of France had finally begun. You listened to the news bulletin on the Sem radio in horrified silence. And so your Junior year ended with the omin- ous roar of cannons and the sharp crackle ot machine guns across an ocean which was suddenly much too narrow. “Sing, daughters, sing of your loyalty to Wheaton.”’ You choke a little over the words because these are the words that only seniors can sing. They carry a very special meaning for you now. They remind you of that first day you put on your cap and gown. You kept telling everyone that you didn’t feel a bit like a senior. They remind you of ushering in church and tripping up those fatal steps below the altar. They remind you of eating on the Late Date “Sing, Daughters, Sing’ porch of Emerson Dining Hall during the spring. And they remind you of the thou- sand and six other things that are sacred to all seniors. Memories of this past year crowd achingly before your eyes. It’s been the best year of all, you think. How strange you felt the first morning you walked through the front doors of the chapel. That was in the fall. A won- derful part of that fall was the Senior Picnic. It was late in the year but a few brave members of your class even went swimming in Lake Winnecunett. But the election occupied most of your thoughts. You went en masse to Attleboro to hear Willkie speak. You argued heatedly with classmates and your faculty. And finally you celebrated the election with a large and very noisy party in Everett basement after the results came in. Christmas came almost before you knew it. You watched Jean Nevius as the Madonna and Peg King as Joseph in the Nativity Play with wide and solemn eyes. And then on the night before vacation you clothed yourself in sheets, lighted yourself a candle, and walked many miles to sere- nade the faculty. That was the most fun of all. Bombs fell over Europe like snow- flakes that winter. You sewed and you knit for the British. You stayed up many long nights listening to your radio and telling your friends how terrible it all was. Occasionally you went to classes. And then it was spring again. You got dressed up in your very best and went to Doctor Park’s for dinner one nigbt. You went to Alumnae coffees. You went to the Junior-Senior Prom again and wished that you were stil a Junior. You read the newspaper stories about the new war in the Balkans with terror-stricken eyes. You worried loudly about generals, but you never found time to begin review- ing for them. “To the flag of Wheaton’s blue.’ And now here you sit with almost al] of your college life behind you. There’s still a lot to look forward to, though. . . generals, and the houseparty at Manomet, and Class Day, and the Daisy Chain, and the Graduation Dance, and Graduation itself, and finally the day when NikĂ© comes out. Maybe your picture will look much better in print than it did in the proofs. Your frivolous self certainly hopes so, doesn’t it? { Page 51 } Eva BELLE ANDERSON Fryeburg, Maine American Civilization JANE ADAMS Brookline, Massachusetts English HELEN ELIZABETH ANDERSON New Rochelle, New York Art FRANCES ELEANOR ANDERSON Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania English { Page 52 } Mary HELEN BEETLE Hanover, New Hampshire Zoology FRANCES TREXLER BALDRIGE Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania English Mary ELIzABETH BOWMAN Brantford, Ontario, Canada History BARBARA JANE BERT Oak Park, Illinois Economics { Page 53 } MuvuRIEL FARNSWORTH BROWN Newton Centre, Massachusetts French Betty THOMPSON BROWN Shaker Heights, Ohio Art EpITH CONGDON Attleboro, Massachusetts Psychology ALIcE IDA CANBY Dayton, Ohio Art { Page 54 } JANE ADELE DICKIE West Orange, New Jersey English VIRGINIA FRANCES Day Dedham, Massachusetts English CONSTANCE PATRICIA DIMELOW Staten Island, New York Art LILLIAN KATHERINE DILLABER Northbridge, Massachusetts English { Page 55 } ADELAIDE DUNBAR Brooklyn, New York Sociology BARBARA FRANCES DREW Ogunquit, Maine Zo6logy BARBARA FISHER New Bedford, Massachusetts Chemistry EVELYN MILLER FAY Southbridge, Massachusetts English { Page 56 } ELIZABETH GIBBS Nutley, New Jersey Zoology FLORENCE GREY FORGER Crestwood, New York Economics ELINOR GLUCK New Rochelle, New York Economics ANNE GLADDING Wilmington, Delaware Sociology { Page 57 } Mary WARE GoopRICH Middletown, Connecticut Zoology SHIRLEY GLUNTS Brookline, Massachusetts Music ELLEN HOUGHTON GREELEY Lexington, Massachusetts Sociology ANNE VAUGHAN GREELEY Lexington, Massachusetts Psychology { Page 58 } ELEANOR GRACE HAGGETT Malden, Massachusetts Chemistry LORAINE TUTTLE GREGG Pelham, New York Mathematics PHyLtis Mary HALLER Needham, Massachusetts Psychology JANET CLOWER HAINES Upper Montclair, New Jersey English { Page 59 } MARGARET DRAPER HEATH Winchester, Massachusetts Sociology aa JEAN GILBERT HARE Bucks County, Pennsylvania Art HELEN BARBARA HITCHCOCK Braintree, Massachusetts Economics CHARLOTTE RACHEL HEWITSON Edgewood, Rhode Island French { Page 60 } ALBERTA LILLIAN ILSLEY East Weare, New Hampshire Mathematics MartTua RIcHARDS HOFFMAN West Hartford, Connecticut English RuTH JACOBS Boston, Massachusetts English JEAN Horton INGLIS Middletown, Connecticut Art { Page 61 } Amy LouIsE JOSE Indianapolis, Indiana Sociology Lois BERNICE JOHNSON Chocorua, New Hampshire Psychology MARGARET GREENOUGH KING Upper Montclair, New Jersey Art PATRICIA KEELAN Dedham, Massachusetts English { Page 62 } DorotHy ANNA KLoss Buckspert, Maine Economics HELEN SHERBORNE KINGSLEY Pelham Manor, New York Psychology PHYLLIS BOYNTON LorD El Paso, Texas Philosophy Doris LEMAIRE New York, New York Art { Page 63 } ELIZABETH KRAFFT MEYER Beverly, Massachusetts Zoology JANE ROBERTA MARTIN Providence, Rhode Island Zoology JEANETTE KATHERINE NEVIUS Flemington, New Jersey English MaArjoRIE HILDA MONCRIEFF Newton Centre, Massachusetts Philosophy { Page 64 } Mary OLIVE O’DONNELL Brockton, Massachusetts History Nancy NEWBERT Weymouth, Massachusetts Psychology ALTA POWELL Hamden, Connecticut English MARY CATHERINE ORME Providence, Rhode Island French { Page 65 } ELEANORA ANNE RAILA Brockton, Massachusetts Chemistry MARION HASTIE PRICE Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Psychology MARIAN GENEVIEVE ST. Cyr Mansfield, Massachusetts Philosophy Marjorie May Rusu Winchester, Massachusetts English { Page 66 } AGNES ANN SHEFF Hartford, Connecticut Classics PRISCILLA SCHIRMER Concord, Massachusetts Art JEAN LOUISE SMILLIE Princeton, New Jersey Botany MartuHa Lucy SLOAN Larchmont, New York English { Page 67 } DorotHy RUTH STECKER Mcunt Carmel, Pennsylvania Mathematics MARGARET LOUISE SNOW Saugus, Massachusetts Psychology JoAN CAROLYN STRASSBURGER Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Art MARCIA STEWART Webster, Massachusetts Art { Page 68 } CaroL Mary TILLINGHAST Cleveland Heights, Ohio Art MARGARET JOY TIBBETTS Bethel, Maine History FRANCES DUDLEY TURNER Southfield, Massachusetts Music ELEANOR MARGARET TRAVER Barrington, Rhode Island English { Page 69 } Mary Lov VINCENT New Rochelle, New York French RuTH FRANCES TUTTLE Attleboro, Massachusetts Zoblogy NANCY HEMENWAY WHITTEN Winchester, Massachusetts Music ELIZABETH PAGE WEATHERBEE Plainville, Massachusetts English { Page 70 } EUNICE WILLIAMS Taunton, Massachusetts Psychology MARIE ELOISE WINANS Elizabeth, New Jersey TTistory Mary LouiszE WING Crestwood, New York English { Page 71 } e-president vue Margo Boote, ident pres ko, ns Dee E Fran Lawler, treasurer; Elinor Townsend, secretary; June Daisley, song leader Barbara Ridgway, song leader; Anna Frances Turner, treasurer; Betty Duffy, president; Peggy Wing, vice-president; Althea Hooff, secretary Back Row: Everett, Hawn, Dickey, Forsyth, Connelly, Blake, Champlin, Carr, Dickinson, Davis Middle Row: Becker, Brigham, Fuller, Covell, Foss, Fisher, Cunningham, Camara, Blaisdell, Hamant, Campbell Front Row: Gibbs, Bairstow, Black, Cahall, Baur, Brandon, Driscoll, Harris { Page 74 } Back Row: Lovell, Mackay, Kuczun, Nelms, Nute, Lindeman, Hearne, Johnson, Kidd, Kolodney Middle Row: Lyon, Lawver, Parker, Herland, McMurrough, MacMullen, Hayes, Merriam, Parcher, Kelly Front Row: Landis, Lavezzo, Jones, Johnson, Murdock, Morgan, Kaufman, Nevius Back Row: Sellew, Shaw, Toffey, Traphagen, Salisbury, Priedeman, Weston, Wrather, Wilde, Randall Middle Row: Wales, Poweli, Rossmassler, Tilden, Taylor, Watkins, Thibodeau, Quint, Taft, Tornquist Front Row: A. Reed, Wilbur, Treuting, Veling, Payne, Wirtz, D. Reed, Sweeney { Page 75 } Celeste Finn, vice-president; Anne- Hart Brown, treasurer; Cameron Biggers, president ; Naney Traill, secretary; Joan Whiting, song leader Back Row: P. Brown, Fredericks, Gray, Davis, Finn, Birdsall, Farmer, Atwell Middle Row: Coucouvitis, Crowley, A. Brown, Betz, Coatsworth, Altman, Alexander, Bagger, Collins, Creasy, Cook, Biggers Front Row: Bestor, Epstein, Clymer, Block, Augur, Douglas, Boyle, Callaway, Clute, Davis, Foulkes Third Row: McCarthy, Nisbet, Marshall, Palmer, Howard, Heathcote, Kielland, Park Second Row: Humphrey, Landenberger, Keesey, Pfeiffenberger, Price, Hubbell, Raabe, Manock, Muir, Jenkins, Mulcahy Front Row: Lynch, Newth, Lowry, Ludwig, Lane, C. Hall, Lawlor, Oren, Meredith Back Row: Wetherell, Royal, Schneider, Verges, Sherry, Wood, Williams, Sondheim, Staley, Zarsky, Reeder Middle Row: Smith, Walker, Williams, Sherman, Sanborn, Searle, Toulme, Kirk, Wilding Front Row: Scharier, Willard, Ross, Wilbor, Wells, Wagner, Steiner, Tyree, Watson { Page 77 } Sua e During the year NikĂ© produced many serious moments, for we admit that this little book concerned us deeply now and again. . . . There were also strenuous times, for instance when we balanced ourselves precariously for a special picture, or when we were all involved in the traditional last minute rush. . . . We tried to find inspiration by gazing out of our new office window only to find that our creative ego needed much coaxing. . . . It was easier by far to give vent to our more frivolous nature and discuss the past week-end over cokes and gingersnaps than to concentrate on our galley cor- rections. But finally, here it is, and all in all we had a wonderful time putting it together. We hope that all of you will be able to remember this year just a little bit better because you have NikĂ© to glance through once in a while. Thanks for all your help. And best wishes especially to the class of 1941. Wi Ae Staf f Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Assistant Editor Literary Editor ; Assistant Literary Editor Art Editor Assistant Art Editor Photogra phy Editor Assistant Photography Editor Advertising Manager Assistant Advertising Manager Assistant Business Manager Senior Representative Sophomore Representatives Faculty Adviser { Page 78 } Carol Wright Elizabeth Lewis Betsey Mackay Doris Barrett Mildred Hollis Priscilla Hall Mary Rhodes Frances Lawler Joan Parcher June Daisley Ann Hunter Hearne Barbara St. Clair Martha Sloan Barbara Grant J Althea Hooff Paul W. Sprague OS Pel itin @ ficers of Hdiministeation @ ahicully | On Sie One et ent: On ie { Page 79 k Board of Listed, J. Epcar Park, A.B., D.D., LL.D., President of the Board HERBERT M. PLIMPTON, vice President SyLviA Mrapows, A.B., Secretary WILLIAM F. CHASE, A. B. , Treasurer FREDERICK H. PAGE, A. M., eb: Henry H. Crapo, A. B. FRANCES VOSE EMERSON CHANNING H::Cox, A.B. LE. D. JosepH H. SOLIDAY . JOHN KIRKLAND CLARK, A. be HG B. Harriet E. Hugues, A.B. . HELEN WIEAND Co.e, Pu.D., L. H. D Lovis SAWYER NICHOLS, A. B. SIDNEY W. WINSLOW, JR. RICHARD P. CHAPMAN, A.M. Norton Norwood f Waban West Newton : Waltham New Bedford Boston Boston ‘ Dedham New York City New York City Winter Park, Fla. Barre, Vt. Brookline Wellesley NN ficers of Dire Ge A le Joun-EpGar Park, A.B; D.De LUD: MIRIAM FERONIA CARPENTER, A. Bre me Lirr. D. SARAH BELLE YOUNG, A.B. ie HH: Ds BARBARA ZIEGLER, A.M. EutMA DorotTHY LITTLEFIELD, A. M. WILLIAM FRANCIS CHASE, A. 2 MABEL ELIZABETH DUNKLE President Dean Registrar: S ecretary of the Faculty Secretary of the Board of Admission ; Dean of Freshmen Treasurer Bursar =Aacully GRACE FLORENCE SHEPARD, A.M. Professor of English, Emeritus AGNES RUTHERFORD RIDDELL, PH.D. Professor of Romance Languages, Emeritus Caro Lynn, Pu.D. Professor of Latin, Emeritus WALTER OscaR McIntire , Pu.D. Professor of Philosophy GLENN ALFRED SHOOK, PH.D. Professor of Physics; Director of the Observatory EunIcE Work, Pu.D. Professor of Latin and Greek +CLIFFORD CHESLEY HUBBARD, PH.D. Professor of History and _ Political Science MATHILDE MARGARETHE LANGE, PH.D. Professor of Zoology MaBEL AGNES Rick, PH.D. Professor of Botany ELISABETH WHEELER AMEN, Pu.D. Professor of Psychology and Education Eusig ELIZABETH GULLEY, PH.D. Professor of History RaupH Puiuip Boas, A.M. Professor of English HENRIETTA CooPER JENNINGS, PH.D. Professor of Economics and Sociology EstTuer ISABEL SEAVER, PH.D. Professor of Art Miuprep WiuuiaMs Evans, Pu.D. Professor of Chemistry Cart ARSHAG GARABEDIAN, PH.D. Professor of Mathematics and Physics; Organist and Choir Director Heppa Korscu, Pu.D. Professor of German PauL FREDERICK CRESSEY, PH.D. Professor of Sociology WiituiamM ALVIN Hunt, Pu.D. Professor of Psychology JosepH Mayer, Pu.D., LL.D. Visiting Professor of History and Po- litical Science + On leave of absence during the first semester of 1940-1941 On leave of absence during the second semester of 1940-1941 { Page 80 } MaARGUERITE Metivirr, A.M. Associate Professor of French Lovisr Scuutz Boas, A.M. Associate Professor of English MartTHa WILBUR Watt, A.M. Associate Professor of Mathematics ERNEST JOHN KnaptTon, Pu.D. Associate Professor of History Euma Dorotruy LITTLEFIELD, A.M. Associate Professor of French ELIZABETH CORNELIA Evans, Pu.D. Associate Professor of Greek and Latin ELEANOR ELIZABETH RANDALL, A.B. Assistant Professor of Art ELLEN BARTLETT Bauiou, A.M. Assistant Professor of English; Director of the Drama MarIz-RosE BucuueErR, A.M. Assistant Professor of French FRANK WELLS RAMSEYER, JR., A.M. Assistant Professor of Music KATHERINE ALICE Burton, A.M. Assistant Professor of English RautpH WILLARD Hipy, Pu.D. Assistant Professor of History KATHARINE BisHop NEILSON, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Art Maria RICKERS-OVSIANKINA, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Psychology PauL WINGER SPRAGUE, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Religion and Philosophy Mavup AticE MarsHatu, D.PHIL. Assistant Professor of Chemistry ANNA FORWARD FAvutt, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Botany MARNA VENABLE Brapy, A.M. Assistant Professor of Physical Educa- tion MorieL Emmi Hipy, Pu.D. Assistant Professor of Economics WILHELMINA VAN INGEN, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Art Dorotuy Dewuurst THompson, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry EvizaABetH Kristine NorrincHaM, Pu.D. Assistant Professor of Sociology RoBERT LATHROP SHARP, PH.D. Assistant Professor of English JANE Louise Cuipsey, Pu.D. Assistant Professor of Zoology OSBORNE EARLE, PH.D: Assistant Professor of English Marion Vaux Henpricxson, A.M. Assistant Professor of Italian and French Louisa Burt Woop Instructor in Vocal Music VIRGINIA HapGooD GALLAGHER Instructor in Physical Education; Di- rector of Modern Dance Juuia Jacosy, M.S. Associate Director of the Nursery School JANET BARBER CLARK, A.B. Instructor in Philosophy ELIZABETH CATHERINE MacLeop, A.M. Instructor in Music LuciLE McMUuLLEN Travis, A.M. Instructor in Spanish Mary Lrr Evans, A.M. Instructor in French MurieLt ANNE VoTER, A.M. Instructor in Zoology Dorotuy Mort, A.B. Instructor in Physical Education Dorotuy Norton Ponp, A.B. Instructor in Spanish CLARA EMMA Marie Krause, A.M. Instructor in Music CLIFFORD RICHARDSON Ep.M. Instructor in English and Education HELEN BoEHM Instructor in Physical Education Mary BuULKELEY WINSsLow, A.B. Instructor in Dramatics LovIsE CLEWELL TURNER, A.M. Instructor in English Naomi CATHERINE ADAIR JACKSON, A.M. Instructor in German MILDRED ELIZABETH MAXFIELD, Pu.D. Instructor in French MILDRED LYMAN OLLENDORFF, A.M. Instructor in English MarGERY CoLe BALpwin, A.B., M.E. Director of the Nursery School MiLpRED RutH Pansy, A.M. Instructor in Music TEILEEN MacomBer, A.M. Instructor in Zoology AticE Maup ToTTEeNn Assistant in Music AvuGusta VICTORIA HARRIET ANTONIA Lreucus, A.M. Assistant in Botany Marion HUBBELL, A.B. Assistant in English KATHARINE SANGREE Assistant in Botany Lois GILLETTE BRUNEL, A.B. Assistant in Art Bracpon, A.M., On leave of absence during the second semester of 1940-1941 + Second semester of 1949--1941. { Page 81 } ny CULOTS ADAMS, JANE 163 Babcock Street, Brookline Vocational Chairman, 4; Treasurer of Camera Club, 3; News, 1, 2, 3, 4; Psyche, 3, 4; Agora, 3, 4; Dean’s List, 2, 4; Winner of Rosemary Buckingham King Prize in History, 3; Vaudeville, 1, 2, 3. ANDERSON, Eva BELLE Fryeburg, Me. International Relations Club, 2, 3, 4. f ANDERSON, FRANCES ELEANOR 215 Outlook Drive, Mt. Lebanon, Pittsburgh, Pa. Understudy Dance Group, 3; Founders’ Day Play, 3; News: Feature Writer, Assistant Advertising Manager, 4; Committee for Movies, 4; Psyche, 4. ANDERSON, HELEN ELIZABETH 155 Centre Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. Camera Club, 1; Art Editor of Nike, 3; Art Club, 3, 4; Class Tennis, 4; Rushlight Art Staff, 4; Psyche, 4. BALDRIGE, FRANCES TREXLER 1017 Walnut Street, Hollidaysburg, Pa. Choir, 1, 2; News Reporter, 1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 3; Founders’ Day Play, 2; Press Board, 4; Litera ry Editor of Rushlight, 4; Psyche, 4. BrrtLe, Mary HELEN 13 North Balch St., Hanover, N. H. Class Tennis, 1, 2, 3; Class Swimming, 1, 2, 3; Varsity Tennis, 3; Class Badminton, 2; Varsity Badmin- ton, 2; Science Club, 4. Bert, BARBARA JANE 208 South Scoville Avenue, Oak Park, II. Riding Team, 1; Varsity Swimming Team, 1, 2, 8, 4; May Day, 2; Understudy Dance Group, 3; Class Badminton Team, 4; Student Industrial Committee, 3. Bowman, Mary ELizaABETH 120 Dufferin Avenue, Brantford, Ontario, Canada Varsity Hostess, 2, 3; Art Club, 2, 3, 4; Classical Club, 2, 8, 4; Chairman of Costumes for Dramatic Association, 3; Agora, 4; House Chairman, 4; Student Auditor, 4. Brown, Brtry THOMPSON 23849 Shaker Boulevard, Shaker Heights, Ohio Choir, 1; Varsity Swimming, 1, 2, 3, 4; Vaudeville, 3; Dance Group, 4; Social Chairman, 4. Brown, Muriet FARNSWORTH 1456 Centre Street, Newton Center Freshman Plays; Mummers’ Play, 2; Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Romance Languages Club, 3, 4; Music Club, 3, 4. Canbsy, ALICE IDA 528 Belmont Park North, Dayton, Ohio Vice President of Class, 2; Treasurer of C. G. A., 3; Founders’ Day Play, 3, 4; Understudy Dance Group, 2; Art Club, 3, 4; President of Class, 4; Dean’s List, 4. CuHEvVERS, RUTH Race Brook Country Club, Orange, Conn. Choir, 1, 2, 3; International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Press Board, 2, 3, 4; Psyche, 3, 4; Science Club, 3, 4; Varsity Golf and Badminton, 4; President of Camera Club, 4. Conapon, EDITH 22 Holden Street, Attleboro Choir, 1, 2, 3; News Staff, 2, 3, 4; Tertulia; 3, 4; Press Board, 4; Science Club, 4; International Rela- tions Club, 4; Norton Night School, 4. Day, VIRGINIA FRANCES 29 Laurel Lane, Dedham Music Club Secretary, 3; Secretary of Choir, 4; Social Committee, 4; Psyche, 4. Dickin, JANE ADELE 37 Ridgeview Avenue, West Orange, N. J. Vaudeville, 2, 3; Rushlight Literary Editor, 3, 4; News: Feature Writer, 1; Exchange Editor, 2; Assistant Editor, 3; Associate Editor, 4; Nike, 3; International Relations Club Program Chairman, 4; President of Psyche, 4. DinLaABER, LILLIAN KATHERINE Fowler Road, Northbridge News Feature Writer, 1, 2, 3; Romance Languages Club, 2, 3; Dean’s List, 3; Press Board, 2, 3, 4; S. A. B. Student Chairman, 4; Psyche, Vice President, 4. DIMELOW, CONSTANCE Patricia 689 Todt Hill Road, Dongan Hills, Staten Island, N. Y. Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; May Day, 2; President of Art Club, 4; President of Classical Club, 4. Drew, BARBARA FRANCES Knocknaveigh Cottage, Ogunquit, Maine Nike, 1, 2, 3; Music Club, 1, 2, 3; Rushlight Literary Editor, 4; Science Club, 4; Head of Deck Tennis, 4; Publicity Manager of Athletic Association, 4; College Fire Chief, 4. DunBaR, ADELAIDE 360 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Class Basketball, 1, 2; Class Hockey, 1,2; Mummers’ Play, 2; May Day, 2; Assistant House Chairman, 3; Curriculum Committee, 2, 3; President of Romance Languages Club, 4. Fay, Evetyn MILLER 14 Harding Court, Southbridge Dean’s List, 1, 2, 3, 4; Assistant Editor Nike, 2; News: Feature Editor, 2; Assistant Editor, 3; Phi Beta Kappa, 3; House Chairman, 3; President of C.G. A., 4; Psyche, 4. FisHprR, BARBARA 85 Mill Street, New Bedford Business Staff of News, 3; Camera Club, 3, 4; Science Club, 4; College Song Leader, 4. ForGEr, FLORENCE GREY 219 Crestwood Avenue, Crestwood, N. Y. May Day, 2; International Relations Club, 2, 3; Founders’ Day Play, 3; Agora, 4. GiBBs, HLIzABETH 215 Rutgers Place, Nutley, N. J. S. A.B. Representative, 1; Mummers’ Play, 2; Nativity Play, 3; Assistant House Chairman, 8; Treasurer of C. A., 3; Vaudeville, 3, 4; President of C. A., 4; Science Club, 4. { Page 82 } Inviting Your Patronage TAUNTON INN Taunton, Massachusetts A Modern Metropolitan Hotel with the Warmth and Hospitality of an Old New England Inn Frank G. Anderson, Manager POLISHING GREASING WASHING Compliments of Norton Center Garage B. CABISIUS, Prop. DEL OR AG he Telephone 119 NORTON, MASS. MARJORIE POORE'S Compliments of Bonny Brook Bungalow Braproao =- Mass. ( (Marion Leonard Hall) Route 140 MANSFIELD, MASS. Wheaton Inn Beauty Shop Compliments of MARJORIE WALLENT JI. C. PRATT Permanent Waving GLADDING, ANNE 913 Stuart Road, Wilmington, Del. Camera Club, 3; Treasurer of Class, 3, 4; Circulation Manager of News, 4; Varsity Badminton Team, 4; President of Agora, 4; Science Club, 4. Guuck, ELINOR 168 Beechmont Drive, New Rochelle, N. Y. Dance Committee for Sophomore Hop, 2; News Reporter, 3; Chairman of Conferences in I. R. C., 4; Art Club, 4. GLUNTS, SHIRLEY 34A Park Street, Brookline Romance Languages Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club, 2, 3, 4; Music Club, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Italian Club, 4. GoopricH, Mary WARE 2 Miles Avenue, Middletown, Conn. Camera Club, 1; Science Club, 3, 4; Choir, 4; Art Club, 4; Founders’ Day Play, 4; International Rela- tions Club, 4. GREELEY, ANNE VAUGHAN 1948 Massachusetts Avenue, Lexington Varsity Basketball, 1,2; Varsity Hockey, 1, 2; Varsity Tennis, 1, 2, 3,4; C. A. Peace Committee, 1, 2, 3; Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Assistant House Chairman, 3; Music Club Vice President, 4. GREELEY, ELLEN HOUGHTON 1948 Massachusetts Avenue, Lexington Varsity Hockey, 1, 2; Romance Languages Club, 2, 3, 4; Understudy Dance Group, 3; C. A. Peace Chairman, 3; World Fellowship, 4; Treasurer of Athletic Association, 3; Music Club President, 4; Choir President, }. GreaaG, LoRAINE TUTTLE 121 Elderwood Avenue, Pelham, N. Y. May Day, 2; Camera Club, 3, 4; News: Business Staff, 3; Assistant Circulation Manager, 4; Social Committee, 4; Science Club, 4. HaaGcetrt, ELEANOR GRACE 33 Woodland Road, Malden Choir, 1, 2, 3; Varsity Tennis, 1, 2, 8, 4; Dean’s List, 2, 3, 4; Music Club, 3, 4; Science Club, 3, 4; Wheaton Scholar, 4; Phi Beta Kappa, 4. HaInEs, JANET CLOWER 12 Fairmount Avenue, Upper Montclair, N. J. Romance Languages Club, 2, 3; Psyche, Secretary-Treasurer, 3; Dean's List, 4; News: Business Manager, 4; Dramatic Club Stage Manager, 4. Hauer, PHYLLIs Mary 29 Coulton Park, Needham May Day, 2, 3; Vaudeville, 2, 3; ““Much Ado About Nothing,’ 3; Head of Baseball, 3; Chairman of Entertainments, 4. Harz, JEAN GILBERT Trevose, Bucks County, Pa. May Queen, 2; May Court, 3; Varsity Archery, 2, 3; International Relations Club, 3; Art Club, 3, 4; House Chairman, 4; Press Board, 4. Heatu, MARGARET DRAPER 8 Everell Road, Winchester Photography Editor of Nike, 3; Assistant House Chairman, 3; President of Camera Club, 4; Science Club, 3, 4; Agora, 3, 4; Music Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dean’s List, 3, 4; Wheaton Scholar, 4. Hewitson, CHARLOTTE RACHEL 20 Hudson Place, Edgewood, R. I. Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Tertulia, 2, 3; Strophe, 2; Varsity Archery, 3; Music Club, 2, 3, 4; Romance Languages Club, 2, 3, 4; President of Circolo Italiano, 4. Hircucock, HELEN BARBARA 20 Cochato Road, Braintree Choir, 1; Romance Languages Club, 4; Tertulia, 4; International Relations Club, 4. HorrMan, Martrua RicHARDS 142 Four Mile Road, West Hartford, Conn. News Reporter, 2, 3; Secretary-Treasurer of Classical Club, 3; Publicity Manager of Dramatic Associa- tion, 3; Assistant Editor of Rushlight, 4; Art Club, 4. InsLEY, ALBERTA LILLIAN East Weare, N. H. News, 1, 2, 3; Sctence Club, 2, 3, 4; Agora, 8, 4; Head of Hiking, 4; Art Club, 4. Inauis, JEAN Horton 33 Mansfield Terrace, Middletown, Conn. Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Art Club, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 4. Jacoss, Rutu 14 Keswick Street, Boston Mummers’ Play, 2; Dance Group, 3; Psyche, 3, 4. JOHNSON, Lois BERNICE Chocorua, N. H. Riding Team, 1, 2, 3, 4; Play Club, 1, 2, 4; Camera Club, 4; Psyche, 4; Music Club, 4; Science Club, 4; Dean's List, 4. Josp, AMy LovISsE 410 North Audubon Road, Indianapolis, Ind. Class Swimming Team, 1, 3; Dance Group, 3; Nativity Play, 4; Social Committee, 4; S. A. B. Com- mittee, 4. KEELAN, PATRICIA 135 Court Street, Dedham News: Reporter, 2, Assistant Editor, 3, Editor-in-Chief, 4; Rushlight: Literary Editor, 2, 3, Writing Staff, 4; Press Board, 2; Psyche, 2, 3, 4; Music Club, 2, 3; Nike Literary Editor, 3. Kine, MARGARET GREENOUGH 365 Park Street, Upper Montclair, N. J. News Reporter, 1, 2, 3, 4 ; Press Board, 2; Editor of Rushlight, 3; Advertising Manager of Nike, 3; House Chairman, 4; Literary Editor of Rushlight, 4; Nativity Play, 4. Withdrew May, 1941. { Page 84 } Gas Is the Ideal Fuel —For cooking —For refrigeration —For water heating —For house heating Taunton Gas Light Co. Interlude College Shop Collegiate Clothes Alterations PLANTS . .. CUT FLOWERS for Commencement - Weddings HALL, the Florist 26 SCHOOL ST., TAUNTON Telephone 1422 Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere Compliments of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Varney Pierce-Perry Company Wholesalers Heating and Plumbing Supplies 236 CONGRESS ST. BOSTON Albert J. Richards 153 Branch Street Telephone 740 MANSFIELD, MASS. Flowers for all occasions E. A. Thomas Co. 77-79 Main St., Taunton, Mass. Excluswe Representatives of .. . Laiglon Frocks Printzess Coats Berkshire Dresses Town and Cottage Dresses And scores of other well known garments Watch for our showing at Wheaton Inn Compliments of A FRIEND KinGsLry, HELEN SHERBORNE 540 Fowler Avenue, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Varsity Hockey, 3, 4; Captain of Class Swimming Team, 3; Varsity Basketball Team, 3; Assistant Chairman of Entertainments, 3; May Day, 3; Understudy Dance Group, 3; Class Song Leader, 3 Kioss, Dorotoy ANNA 17 School Street, Bucksport, Maine C. A., 3; Strophe Secretary-Treasurer, 3; Art Club, 3, 4; Camera Club, 4; International Relation Club: Scholarship Winner, 3, President, 4. Lemaire, Doris 1120 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Camera Club, 2, 3; Head of Make-up for Dramatic Association, 2, 3; Secretary-Treasurer of Art Club, 3; Classical Club, 4; Choir, 4. Lorp, PHYLLIs BoYNTON 2601 Altura Boulevard, El] Paso, Tex. Strophe, 1, 2, 3; C. A. Cabinet, 3, 4; Chairman of Social Problems, 3, 4; Chairman of International Relat- ions Scholarship, 4. Martin, JANE ROBERTA 89 Hazard Avenue, Providence, R. I. News, 2; Press Board, 2; Science Club, 3, 4; Riding Team, 4. Meyer, EvizABETH KRAFFT 34 Washington Street, Beverly La Team, 1; Mummers’ Play, 2; May Day, 2; Varsity Tennis, 3; Varsity Badminton, 3, 4; Science ub, 4. MoncrinFrr, Marsorte HILDA 47 Tarleton Road, Newton Centre Archery Team, 1; International Relations Club, 3; Press Board, 3, 4; S. A. B. House Committee, 4. Nevius, JEANETTE KATHERINE 81 Broad Street, Flemington, N. J. Varsity Swimming Team, 1, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 1, 2; C. A. Vice President, 3; News: Sports’ Editor, Feature Editor, 3; Rushlight, Poetry Editor, 4; Nativity Play, 3, 4; Vaudeville, 4. NEWBERT, NANCY 67 Fogg Road, South Weymouth Mummers Play, 2; Varsity Badminton, 2, 3, 4; Vice President of Athletic Association, 3; President of Athletic Association, 4; Science Club, 4; Camera Club, 4. 2, O’DonNELL, Mary OLIVE 78 Hillcrest Avenue, Brockton Choir, 3; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Art Club, 4; Manager of Swimming, 4; Chairman of Night School, 4. Orme, Mary CATHERINE 17 Preston Street, Providence, R. I. News, 2, 3, 4; Romance Languages Club, 2, 8, 4; Der Deutsche Verein, 2, 3, 4; Secretary of Le Cercle Francais, 4; Head of Badminton, 4. PowELL, ALTA 91 Churchill Road, Hamden, Conn. Choir, 1, 2, 8, 4; News, 1, 2, 3; Press Board, 3, 4; Music Club, 4; Art Club, 4; Camera Club, 4. Pricr, Marion HAstTIE 522 Jarden Road, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Class President, 1; Music Club, 1, 2, 3; Secretary of C. G. A., 2; Social Chairman of C. A Vaudeville, 3, 4; House Chairman, 4; Captain of Varsity Hockey, 4. . Raita, ELEANORA ANNE 87 Battles Street, Brockton May Day, 2; Science Club, 3, 4; News, 4. Rusu, Marsorin May 6 Woodside Road, Winchester Romance Languages Club ,1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Camera Club, 2, 4; Art Club, 3, 4; Psyche, 3, 4; Dance Group, 3, 4; President of Dramatic Club, 4; Phi Beta Kappa, 4. St. Cyr, Marian GENEVIEVE 24 Beech Street, Mansfield Strophe, 2; C. A., 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 3, 4; Commencement Program Committee, 4. SCHIRMER, PRISCILLA Westford Road, Concord Art Club, 3, 4; Rushlight, 3, 4; News, 3, 4; Press Board, 4; 8S. A. B. Committee, 4. Suerr, AGNES ANN 30 Pequot Street, Hartford, Conn. President of Classical Club, 3; Phi Beta Kappa, 3; Managing Editor of News, 3; Student Curriculum Committee, 3, 4; House Chairman, 4. Stoan, Martua Lucy 40 Beechtree Drive, Larchmont, N. Y. News, 4; Vaudeville, 3, 4; Press Board, 3, 4; Psyche, 3, 4; Dean’s List, 4; Nike, 4; Editor of Rush- light, 4. SMILLIE, JEAN LOUISE Rockefeller Institute, Princeton, N. J. Strophe, 1, 2; Varsity Tennis, 1, 2, 8, 4; Camera Club, 1, 2; Science Club, 1, 4; Tnibrnaieonal Relavcona Clubs 5 Chairman of Class Day, 4. Snow, Marcaretr LovuIsE 18 Wakefield Avenue, Saugus Varsity Swimming, 1, 2, 3; Assistant House Chairman, 3; Press Board, 3, 4; Business Manager of Dramatic Association, 4. STecKER, Dorotuy RutTH 120 North Hickory Street, Mt. Carmel, Pa. Mummers’ Play, 2; Founders’ Day Play, 3; Music Club, 3, 4; Science Club, 4. STEWART, Marcia 25 Elm Street, Webster Art Club, 4; Romance Languages Club, 4. STRASSBURGER, JOAN CAROLYN 6515 Beacon Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. May Day, 2; Class Swimming Team, 3; Class Tennis Team, 3; Art Club, 4. { Page 86 } Gowns - Hoods - Caps Worn by the Graduates and Students of WHEATON COLLEGE Were Furnjshed by Cottrel Leonare, Inc. established 1832 America's Pioneer Academic Outfitters ALBANY, N. Y. Compliments of a FRIEND Compliments of A Friend Emma R. Houle Weise Gilts 8 NORTH MAIN ST. ATTLEBORO Records Phonographs Music Store ACADEMY ST. Sheet Music Instruments Hot Dog aes It's the 2 w EXSY BEAGLER ey Rush out and see this Arnold Authentic. Try it on for th e way it looks and you'll wear it right out of the store. It’s that wonderful! The Beagler comes in lots of colors includ- ing Arnold’s newest knockout “Old Pine.” M. N. Arnold Shoe Co. South Weymouth, Mass. AlREpeariGs EAST BRIDGEWATER, MASS. Compliments of MA SIR YES Trppetts, MARGARET JOY 60 Main Street, Bethel, Maine Classical (UMS, 2 iy HG ry of Basketball, 3; Phi Beta Kappa, 3; Business Manager i Nike, 3; Psyche, 8, 43; Agora, 3, 4; Wheaton Scholar, 4; House Chairman, 4. TILLINGHAST, CaRoL Mary 2374 Woodmere Drive, Cleveland Heights, Ohio Class Present, 3; Circulation Manager of News, 2, 3; Art Club, 3, 4; Vanden, 3, 4; Varsity Hockey 4; House Chairman, 4. TRAVER, ELEANOR MARGARET Rumstick Point, Barrington, R. I. Dramatic Association, 2, 3, 4; Editor of Nike, 3; Art Club, 3, 4; Psyche, 4; Rushlight, 4. TURNER, FRANCES DUDLEY Southfield Music Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; May Day Court, 2; Class Secretary, 3; Dean’s List, 4; Choir Manager, 4; Art Club, 4. TuTtLE, RutH FRANCES 8 Jefferson Street, Attleboro May Day, 2; Science Club, 2, 3, 4; Choir, 3; International Relations Club, 4. VincENT, Mary Lou Hillandale Farms, Weaver Street, New Rochelle, N. Y. Roumnce Languages Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club, 1, 2, 3; Student Industrial Commer 3, 4; President of French Club, 4; Scholarship Committee, 4; Business Manager of Rushlight, 4. WEATHERBEE, ELIZABETH PAGE 40 School Street, Plainville Founders’ Day Play, 1, 2, 3, 4 ;Vice President of Class, 4; Student Member of Committee for National Defense and War Relief, 4; Art Club, 4. Wuitten, Nancy HEMENWAY 3 Hillside Avenue, Winchester Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Assistant Photography Editor of Nike, 2; Secretary of Camera Club, 3; Class Vice President, 3; Class Secretary, 4. WILLIAMS, EUNICE 27 Newcomb Place, Taunton Play Club, 1, 2; Spanish Tertulia, 3; International Relations Club, 4; Science Club, 4; Day Student Head, 4. Winans, Marte ELoIse 640 Newark Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J. News: Assistant Headline Editor, 3, Headline Editor, 4; Secretary-Treasurer of Romance Languages Club, 4; Class Hockey, 3, 4; Class Swimming Team, 3, 4 Wine, Mary Louise 144 Brookdale Drive, Crestwood, N. Y. Riding Team, 1; May Day, 2; Understudy Dance Group, 3; Student Industrial Committee, 3; Press Board, 4; Psyehe, 4. ALLEMAN, IRENE SIMPSON BarReEtTT, Doris ARLEEN Baur, BARBARA BEANE, ELEANORE BrEBE, ELIZABETH BALDWIN Briius, PHYLLIS HELEN BisHop, ANN WALCOTT Bioor, Mary Rutu Boorp, HELEN Harwoop Bootrt, Marco Carroiu BRYAN, CAROLYN GUILD BUMFORD, SYBIL JANE BURKHARDT, MARION HELEN BuURNHAM, SHIRLEY ARLINE CAMPBELL, VIRGINIA CLARK, SUSAN HATHAWAY CoLuins, JEANNE CoRINNE CREIGHTON, ROSAMOND JERMAIN DaIsLEy, JUNE LOUISE DrMortt, HELEN EvGENTE DE LEFSEN, RutH HENRIETTE Dickry, Norma Lois Don E, LucILLE GERTRUDE Juniors 13 Water Street, Hingham 3 Chestnut Street, Leominster 211 Vreeland Avenue , Leonia, N. J. 63 Green Street, Augusta, Maine Pleasant Street, Marion 214 Onley Road, Woonsocket, R. I. 10 Villa Rand Larchmont, N. Y. 220 South Cook Avenue, Trenton, N. J. 305 Wilson Avenue, Washington, Pa. 128 Bruce Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Norwich Inn, Norwich, Conn. Independence Road, Concord 75 Tillinghast Place, Buffalo, N. Y. 10 William Street, East Hartford, Conn. 123 Walnut Street, Stoughton 5488 Northumberland Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Glenbum-Daltom Pas 515 Elm Avenue, Swarthmore, Pa. 484 Linden Road, Birmingham, Mich. 6 Walden Lane, Rye, N. Y. 215 Lafayette Avenue, Swarthpvene Pa. 73 Churchill Road, West Springfield 16 Hall Place, Edgewood, R. I. { Page 38 } = ano OLLIER AGAIN” 4 yl, By = VTXY, sd z . ' 144 fir . TUK. 5 ae ats TUNG he MQ MW 52s See were, bnane ail Repeated acceptance by discriminating Year Book Boards has inspired and sustained the Jahn Ollier slogan that gathers increas- ing significance with each succeeding year. 7 ; 4 Dx metalic Mi PACT ALS apg sls a MG YA ee OPIN, TEIN OLE 6 es peel 8 egy h Minna tity ne WW gp Vol 44, af) Miho A G) LYNN G Uyt 4 LEME OLS 7 “et 4 Ly Ge thy: oe say roe LGA ALAS SEES JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING.CO. 817 West Washington Blvd., Chicago, Ill. - Telephone MONroe 7080 Commercial Artists, Photographers and Makers of Fjne Printing Plates for Black: and Colors Eppy, RutH NICKERSON . Ensxo, DoroTHEA CHARLOTTE FARWELL, JANE ELIZABETH FELL, ELizABETH ANN Fuavin, Ruts Liniyn FREUND, MARGARET HARRIET FuLuer, Mary Louise GALLINGER, MARGARET LOUISE GARRIGUES, MARGARET HENRY GER, LYDIA GILBER T, MARION Louise GopFrREY, Mary FRANCES GROSBERG, Mrr1AM SENDA HaaeEporn, Epna Dororuy Haines, ALICE CRESSON . HAu., PRISCILLA HARRIMAN, KATHARINE HartTMAN, MIriaM JANICE Hiaains, Mary CATHERINE HIRSCHLAND, Rutu ELSE Hous, MILDRED HousaprLe, DorotTHy Hostry, Dorotoy FARNAM Hoye, ELiIzABETH GENEVIEVE HuBER, JANE Hen ter, JANICE JoHNsoN, Mary enor KeERBECK, RutH NAomI . Kipprr, RuTH SEAVEY Kung, Epirg Nancy Know.ton, Nancy HAMuIn LANGsSDORF, KATHERINE LAWLER, FRANCES KEARY Lewis, ELIzABETH RICHARDSON Lewis, HELEN FARNSWORTH . Linton, ANN ELIZABETH Lors, nein Viger, Nee ame Wises Martin, WitmMa ETHEL Masson, HELEN LOUISE . McCormick, ELINOR FRANCES MiLts, JANE Morsr, Mary Scorr Moyen, MAarGareT ELLEN Mututno, ANNA GERTRUDE Murray, ELEANOR . ; NEWELL, ELEANOR MARGERY NorMAN, HELEN MILDRED . 80 Putnam Street, West Newton 410 East 57th Street, New York, N. Y. The Taft School, Watertown, Conn. 7018 Boyer Street, Philadelphia, Pa. ale: 14 Forest Street, Attleboro 62 West Kirby Avenue, Detroit, Mich. 2356 South Overlook Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio 44 Valley Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. 1102 Westover Road, Wilmington, Del. 244-09 90th Avenue, Bellerose, N. Y. 16 Choate Road, Hanover, N. H. 33 Fisher Street, Dover, N. H. . 387 Arborway, Jamaica Plain 622 Pelnamdale Avenue, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Chestnuthill Apartments, Philadelphia, Pa. 75 Carpenter Street, Foxboro iaeng North Main Street, Laconia, N. H. 61 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. 55 Harwich Road, Longmeadow Kenilworth Road, Harrison, N. Y. 28 West Schoolhouse Lane, Germantown, Pa. . 4 Hartwell Avenue, Hudson, N. Y. 315 Otis Street, West Newton ; . 209 County Street, New Bedford 20880 Avalon Drive, Rocky River, Ohio 26 Brantwood Road, Arlington : . 2254 Tudor Drive, Cleveland Heights, Ohio 11 Bertha Place, Grymes Hill, Staten Island, N. Y. eae see AD) Teneon Street, Stanenan 3319 Grenway Road, Shaker Haigh Ohio 36 Westwood Road, West Hartford, Conn. Huntington Road, Stratford, Conn. 100 Witherbee Avenue, Pelham Manor N.Y: 2 Forest Street, Lexington 5 Lowell Street, Beverly 23 Clinton Street, Cambridge 503 Fairview Avenue, Montgomery, Ala. . 87 Pleasant Street, Attleboro 49 Lincoln Park, Newark, N. J. 724 Fourth Street, 8. W., Rochester, Minn. 2317 Macdonough Road, Wilmington, Del. ; Albany Avenue, Kindesheals Ne Ye 3649 North Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, Ind. 5 Points House, Pomona, N. Y. 94 Bannan Road, Lowell 14 Duryes Road, Upper Montclair, N. J. 7 Meredith Street, West Roxbury 100 Sewall Avenue, Brookline { Page 90 } BAYARD TUCKERMAN, JR. ARTHUR J. ANDERSON ROBERT J. DUNKLE, JR. ROBERT T. FORREST JULIUS F. HALLER @ policy has always been to give customers and prospective customers unbiased advice. Our organization is built up for the purpose of furnishing complete insurance service without any additional charge. Satisfied customers are our best reference and our greatest asset. O’BRION, RUSSEL COMPANY Insurance “A Good Reputation Does Not Just Happen — It Must Be Earned’’. 108 Water St., Boston 111 Broadway, New York Telephone Lafayette 5700 Telephone Barclay 7-5540 Nye, Nancy : PacKARD, MARY oer ' Peck, SARA GRAHAM PENHALE, JEANNE FELLOWS PENNEY, VERNA ELLEN Piercr, Berry Louise PIERONI, ANTOINETTE LOUISE PowE.Lu, Mary Scorr Ras, RvuTH Reip, BARBARA DICKEY . Ruoves, Mary Hau ROEHRICH, FLORENCE JUNE Ross, SUZANNE SCHAUL . SHARP, SHIRLEY BARBARA SnyDER, Mary EvizABETH SpeNncER, Marcia May TarsHis, HELEN FLorRA . Tuomas, Linpa HastTINGs Tuompson, Mary VIRGINIA TOWNSEND, ELINOR . TupDBURY, BARBARA . : TURNER, ELIZABETH LAYTON . TwomBLy, Nancy ABBOTT Waun, EpirH BAKER Waker, RutH NICHOLSON WEBSTER, ELEANOR . Weick, MArJorix LOUISE WELLMAN, MarJoRIE RutH WELSER, BARBARA WILLIAMS, JANE WoopwortH, BARBARA (Ricans WRIGHT, CAROLYN . ABRAMS, ESTHER RUTH ADLER, Miriam ANNE Barrstow, LItuIAN BARBARA BarRNES, ELIZABETH JANE BasTEDO, ANN VIRGINIA . Baur, CAROLYN LOUISE . BAYETTE, MARION CAROLINE BECKER, CAROL CONSTANCE Buiack, Marion LOvISE . BLAISDELL, MARJORIE ELIZABETH . Bocxus, Dorotuy Dr Soro BRANDON, MARION AGNES 292 South West Street, Bellevue, Ohio 270 Plain Street, Brockton . 20 Fairview Terrace, Derby, Conn. 15 Evergreen Road, Summit, N. J. 6 Brookside Avenue, Worcester . 48 Madison Circle, Greenfield 10 West Broadway, Derry, N. H. 7 Huntington Road, Abington, Pa. Villa Road, Winter Ha ven, Fla. . 16 Lodge Road, Great Neck, N. Y. 518 Brighton Avenue, Portland, Maine 146 Pennington Avenue, Passaic, N. J. . 255 West 84th Street, New York, N. Y. 29 Herkimer Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. 369 Bedford Road, Pleasantville, N. Y. 6 Winslow Street, Worcester “579 Realyn mrcnne! Westmount, Quebec, Canada 31 Howard Avenue, Gives Hill, Staten Island, N. Y. 62 Bryant Avenue, White Plains, N. Y. 15 East Main Street, Le Roy, N. Y. 11 Hemenway Road, Salem 1606 Sunset Avenue, Utica, N. Y. 3 Clarina Street, Wakefield . 66 Arborway, Jamaica Plain Westtown School, Westtown, Pa. ion Randolph Avenue, Waterbury, Conn. 10 Second Street, Presque Isle, Maine 75 Royce Road, Newton Centre Oconomowoc Lake, Oconomowoc, Wis. 20 Washington Park, Maplewood, N. J. 15 Ransom Reade Newton Centre 94 Shore Acres Drive, Old Greenwich, Conn. Sophomores 185 Admiral Road, Buffalo, N. Y. 1269 President Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 110 Market Street, Warren, Pa. Main Street, South Dennis BB Burpade Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. 52 Hillcrest Terrace, Meriden, Conn. . 850 Lafayette Street, Bridgeport, Conn. 42 Elm Street, Oneonta, N. Y. 1318 Walnut Street, Newton Highlands 135 Webster Avenue, Bangor, Maine 92 Claremont Avenue, Maplewood, N. J. 290 Park Street, Upper Montclair, N. J. { Page 92 } Compliments of MANSFIELD BLEACHERY Compliments of DEFIANCE BLEACHERY BrigHaM, Louise EMERY CAHALL, ELIzABETH DuBois CAMARA, HELEN LORETTA CAMPBELL, PAULINE ELIZABETH Carr, NorMA ROSALIND . CHAMPLIN, MARJORIE WEEDEN CHANDLER, DOROTHY CONNELLY, HELEN EMBLIE CovELL, CHARLOTTE Craig, Mary FRANCES CUNNINGHAM, Nancy JANE Davis, DoroTHy Dickey, JEAN LIVINGSTON DICKINSON, SARAH STETSON DRELL, MapernyE IBiacrei, PAULINE Hannineron Durry, ELizaABeTH MONTEITH ENGELHARDT, VERA LOUISE Ericson, Berry LovIsE EVERETT, DoRotTHy EVELYN . EWING, JANE ; EWING, JEAN HAMILTON . FisHer, Mary ANNETTE . ForsyTuH, JEAN . Foss, ids, ena Cuttron Foster, GRAcE ELLEN FULLER, BARBARA HOLMES GEBHARDT, RutTH FULLER GipBs, WINIFRED LEWIs . GRANT, BARBARA PATRICIA GRAYLE, JEANNE MaRIE . HAMANT, JEAN FRANCES . Harvey, JANE ELIZABETH Hawn, EvizaBetH BRonK Hayes, WILDA JEANETTE HEARNE, ANN HUNTER HELLER, NATALIE ANNE . HERLAND, PHYLLIS GARDINER Hoorr, ALTHEA MAITLAND Hume, Harrinr FAIRBANK HUNTER, JANET WHITCOMB IGLEHEART, HLEANOR JACKSON, JEANNE NANCY JOHNSON, LEAH MAE JOHNSON, PRISCILLA DOROTHEA Jones, Mona Louise KaurMan, NAN SHIRLEY 142 Clinton Road, Brookline Sunset Cottage, Gambier, Ohio 48 Mansfield Avenue, Norton 32 Forest Avenue, Bangor, Maine . 85 Summer Street, Taunton 82 Gibbs Avenue, Newport, R. I. 44 Cheswick Road, Auburndale 29 Rotherwood Road, Newton Centre . 35 Sowams Road, Barrington, R. I. 343 Pleasant Street, Milton Jerusalem Road, Cohasset . . 215 Dorset Ro Waban 19300 Shaker Boulevard, Shaker Heights, Ohio : 28 Rarniee Way, Amherst 3300 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Ill. C. Francoy A. Ferreira, Olivos, F. C. C. A., Buenos Aires, ‘Areenthan 31 Brookside Boulevard, West Hartford, Conn. ; 59 Seasongood Road, Forest Hills, N. Y. 61 Summit Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. 5846 Winthrop Avenue, Indianapolis, Ind. 29 Highland Avenue, Greenfield ; Petersham “158 Bovieten Street, Brockton 218 East State Street, Athens! Ohio : 7 Chilton Road, Broeten 220 East State Street, Athens, Ohio 819 Pearce Street, Fall River 3801 Sedgwick Avenue, New Youd Naye New istiliaul Road, Rochester 170 Elm Street, New Rochelle Nee Sequatton Lane, Harwichport Ary: 81 Eliot Avenue, West Newton 52 Gramercy Park North, New York, N. Y. . 7 Academy Road, Albany, N. Y. 191 Oakdale Drive, Rochester, N. Y. 734 Foxdale Avenue, Winnetka, III. Hotel Parkview, Havana, Cuba 308 Wilson Avenue, Rumford, R. I. . Manassas, Va. 5 Elm Sect, Windsor, Conn. . 61 Ormsbee Avenue, Proctor, Vt. 141 Lookout Road, Mountain Lakes, N. Je 44 Payson Terrace, Belmont 148 Adams Street, New Bedford 15 Woodward Avenue, Reading 1831 Cloverleaf Street, Bethlehem, Pa. 232 Winding Way, Merion, Pa. { Page 94 } Compliments of Ralph A. Gardner “The Grate Man“ Brockton, Mass. Compliments Compliments of GENERAL PLATE COMPANY Attleboro, Massachusetts of a Friend KeELity, RutH ANN . ; Home Road, Springfield, Ohio KENNEDY, KATHERINE Momenann ; : : 6401 Darlington onal Pittsburgh, Pa. Kuczun, BERTHA CHESSIE , : 49 Dunlap Street, Salem KUEHNER, Mary Patricia. ; 334 Nor th Steele Road, West Hartford, Conn. Lanpis, Berry JANE : : : . 2559 Dysart Road, Gieweland Heche Ohio Lavezzo, Mary CHRISTINE . : : : 66 Harlow Street, Arlington Lawver, ADAH JEAN , 194 High Street, Greenfield LINDEMAN, DoroTHy eee ; ies Hudson View Gardens, West 183rd Crees nil Pinehurst Avenue, New York, N. Y. Locker, GLADYS CAROL. . . . « 4 Woodmere Boneewds Woodrien’ Nuys Lovetu, Mary ELIZABETH. , . 125 Brooklyn Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Lyon, Nancy Beto... : . 3203 Sycamore Road, Cleveland, Ohio Mackay, ELIZABETH ANN . 326 McKinley Avenue, New Haven, Conn. MacMutuien, Marsorig RutTu : ; 25 Brackett Road, Newton MamnniER, Mary FRANCES. ; . 5678 Marcy Street, Omaha, Neb. Mariani, DAGMAR FRANCES . : 390 West End Avenue, New York, N. Y. McCartny, Berry Maric. = oe : 131 Chestnut Street, Fairhaven McMorrovuacu, MarGarret BANCROFT : . Pine Street, Norton MeERRIAM, JEAN RENNELL .. . 73 Dane Street, Beverly MIcHELMAN, HANNAH LILLIAN... ey D: 83 Randolph Street, Springfield Morean, Marion EVELYN . 661 Commonwealth Avenue, N ewton Centre Murpock, ErHeL HARRIET . ee 7518 Narrows Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. NELMS ROBERTA JANE |=) ne nn) eee 447 State Street, Albany, N. Y. Nevius, Mary JANET. : : . 37 East High Street, Somerville, N. J. Nute, CHARLOTTE PARKER . . 34 North Main Street, Farmington, N. H. Oxes, Mary. ; 868 Fairmount Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. PARCHER, MARJORIE joues : : : . 18 High Street, Ellsworth, Maine ParRKER, Mary ELIZABETH : ; . 210 Central Avenue, Oil City, Pa. PAULSEN, DoroTuy JEAN : : cc alvary Church Rectory, Stonington, Conn. PayNiE, BARBARA STANDISH. . . . 158 South River Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Payne, MARGARET DEAN : ; 4404 Fairfax, Dallas, Texas Pepron JEAN . ; : : , ‘ 59 Lindall Street, Danvers PERKINS, BARBARA area 541 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston Panne case Marcarer Hart . - . . . . . 4 Germain Street, Worcester PoweE.u, NaTauige Maer . - . . . . . 418 County Street, New Bedford PrieEDEMAN, Mary KitrrepGeE . . . . 1944 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. PRITCHARD, JANE(CLARISSA =) 4 )ep ee 113 Ten Acre Road, New Britain, Conn. QUINT, JEANNE BARBARA : ; 80 Alderwood Road, Newton Centre RAMBO, Heren NINA he 2) | eee 827 West Main Street, Norristown, Pa. RANDALL, FRANCES ELAINE . . . . 7. | 10 lverell Ree! Winchester REED, DorotHy WEBSTER... SWokae: Woodland Road, E. E. Pitan Pa. Ripeway, BARBARA ANNE. 69- 11 Yellowstone Boulevard, Worest Hills, N. Y. RouFre, Dorotuy JUDITH . . . . 62 Woodland Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. RoOssMASSLER, MARGARET ; : ’ . 4382 West Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. ST. CLAIR, BARBARA JEAN... , ; . 129 Garden Street, Needham SALISBURY AMY : 193 East Rock Road, New Haven, Conn. { Page 96 } QUALITY .... finest of flavors . . . . laboratory control based on . modern plant methods its HOOD'S Ice Cream “The Flavor’s There’ Compliments of Mansfield tame: Co. Lumber - General Hardware Building Materials Masons Supplies Webb Place Mansfield, Mass. Tel. 310-311 Established Incorporated 1890 1935 Dole Bailey, Inc. MEATS 51 YEARS AT 19-21-23 New Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON, MASS. CAPitol 0708—0709-0710 BOSTON, MASS. Quality Poultry New England’s Premier Poultry House Purveyors to the leading schools, colleges and institutions Samuel Holmes, Inc. 17-25 FANEUIL HALL MARKET Basements 3 and 4 South Side ScHNABEL, BETTY WooDRING ScHnuRR, EVELYN ANN SEGALL, EpiTrH ANN . SELLEW, CATHARINE aor Saas. HELEN GRACE . SHARFMAN, ELAINE IRMA SHARP, LUCILLE Suaw, Berry Ruts . STARRETT, GLORIA DIENER SWEENEY, EsTHEeER ANN Tarr, Epira DUDLEY TAYLOR, FLORENCE CAROLYN TEMPLE, MARGUERITE THIBODEAU, PHYLLIS ESTELLE TILDEN, Marsor1n DrREw ToFFEY, MADELEINE DOREEN TRAPHAGEN, JUDITH TREUTING, MARIAN ae TURNER, Se FRANCES VELING, SUZANNE Wages, PRiscILLA ALDEN WATKINS, BARBARA . : WESTON, VIRGINIA WHITING . WILBUR, ELINOR FRANCES Witpr, RutH MARNIE Wine, MARGARET HEMPHILL . Wirtz, JEANNE MARIE Woop, MILDRED ETHEL . WRATHER, JANE FARWELL AFFLECK, May FRANCELIA ALEXANDER, Doris ELISE ALTMAN, JANE OLGA ASINOF, Berry MARJORIE ATWELL, MARILYN AvuGur, ELIZABETH ANN . BaacEr, Doris ANN. BEAUCHAMP, JEANGE BENSON, EVELYN LOUISE. Bestor, RutH Louise Betz, ARLENE CAROLYN . BIGGERS, JUDITH CAMERON BIRDSALL, CORNELIA CHASE Brock, RutH CAROLYN Boye, MARJORIE ALICE 1704 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 3 Oakwood Street, Albany, N. Y. 179 William Street, New Bedford 450 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 26 Mandalay Road, Newton Centre 32 Terrace Drive, Worcester 6 Oxford Road, Larchmont, N. Y. 36 Dorchester Road, Buffalo, N. Y. 42-45 160th Street, Flushing, N. Y. 221 Wilson Avenue, Rumford, R. I. 24 Hill Street, Whitinsville Spunk Avenue, Cape Elizabeth, Maine Pleasant Street, East Pembroke 65 College Avenue, Medford 21 Wadsworth Street, North Quincy 121 Whittredge Road, Summit, N. J. 4132 North Farwell Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. 59 Meadow Brook Road, Hamden, Conn. 38 Greystone Road, Malden 101 Dorchester Road, Buffalo, N. Y. 41 Morton Street, North Abington 40 Main Street, Shelburne Falls 15 Blackstone Terrace, Newton . 1604 Bern Street, Reading, Pa. 164 Rock Road, Glen Rock, N. J. 15 Bhote Road, Greenhaven, Mamaroneel Ni: 48 Lowell Street, Andover King Street, Littleton 4300 Overhill Drive, Dallas, Texas hl) MWLEWL 74 Magnolia Avenue, Larchmont, N. Y. Conestoga Road, Wayne, Pa. 1201 Madison Park, Chicago, Ill. . 37 Lismore Road, Lawrence, N. Y. 155 Somerset Street, Belmont 154 Berrian Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. 131 South Euclid Avenue, Westfield, N. J. St. Paul’s Rectory, Portsmouth, R. I. 158 Lincoln Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. 55 Mountain Avenve, Bloomfield, Conn. . 275 Beard Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 8 Old Salem Court, Birmingham, Mich. ; 2 Summit Avenue, Bronxville, N. Y. 5725 North Park Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. 42 Orchard Avenue, Rye, N. Y. { Page 98 } C. CRAWFORD HOLLIDGE TREMONT AT TEMPLE PLACE BOSTON FOR FINE FOOTWEAR Delman and Deb Mode Shoes Shoes by Bally Andrew Geller Shoes Trade Mark Registered L. G. Balfour Company Hanson Company, Inc. LEBORO MASSACH ETTS ree aS PHARMACISTS Known Wherever There Are Schools and Colleges Jeweler to the a Classes of Wheaton College Since 1870 Represented by—C. B. GOODWIN ATTLEBORO OFFICE 27 Broadway Taunton, Mass. Prescription Druggists BUTTER CHEESE EGGS Compliments of “Quality you can taste” Ber WHEATON COLLEGE H. A. Hovey Co BOOKSTORE 35 NO. MARKET ST. BOSTON, MASS. Brown, ANNE-HART. ase sant Clee 23 Sunny Brae Place, Bronxville, N. Y. Brown, PRISCILLA GARFIELD ; ; ; . 2 Prospect Street, Attleboro CALLAWAY, Mary ELIZABETH. . . . . 331 Walnut Street, Lexington, Ky. CHAMPION, Mary ANNE ; ; : . Old Lyme Inn, Old Lyme, Conn. CiutTE, Mary GRIDLEY . . : : : : Strathmont Park, Elmira, N. Y. CLYMER, NANCY VIRGINIA. ’ eee ; . 121 Windsor Street, Reading, Pa. CoOATSWORTH, CAROL . . . «= +. . + « Il Penhurst Park, Butiglogiveae CoLuins, JEAN COOPER . : 365 Camden Avenue, Moorestown, N. J. GOoK, MERUYNN- HALE (20) eee ee 20 Prescott Street, Cambridge CovucovuvitTis, ELINORE JAMES ; . 185 Broadway, Haverhill Creasy, ELIZABETH LAMBERT : 144 Grove Street, Waterbury, Conn. CROWLEY“ LURANA) BUTLER) 0 all ee 220 Lowell Street, Peabody Curtis, PATRicIA ANN. : ’ 5 : : ; 136 Fuller Street, West Newton Davis, MarsjoRIE GERTRUDE. . . . . . . 23 Everett Avenue, Norwood Davis, Mary GILLETT . Se Aes, ae . 33 Colebrook Street, Hartford, Conn. DicNnaM, CLARA MARIE . oy . 23 Chester Street, Nashua, N. H. DINGWELL, DorotHy KATHERINE : 64 Faxon Road, North Quincy DovuGuas, BARBARA ANN Ă© : ; . 33 Erwin Park Road, Montclair, N. J. EPsTEIN, CHARLOTTE MILLICENT . .s.. 81 Mount Pleasant Street, New Bedford Fautows, Dorotuy ELIzABETH . : ; 9 Dana Street, Cambridge FarRMER, JEAN Myrick . ; ; 817 Comstock Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y. FINN, CELESTE [Da . ; 1200 Amherst Place, Dayton, Ohio FouLkes, Mary NANcy . ; 960 Allyns Creek Road, Rochester, N. Y. FREDERICKS, BARBARA JANE . Nut Swamp Road, Red Bank, N. Y. GILBERT, 2 EEDAsS B THe eee 6 ee eee 41 Bassett Road, Brockton Gray, ETHEL EpNa . : . 3 Edgewood Road, Clayton, Mo. GRIFFIN, FRANCES CoNANT . . . . . 417 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. Hau., PrisciuLta LOVELL : . Moodus, Conn, Harris, LucILLE FaiTu . ; : : u lander Road, Paterson, N. J. HaypDrENn, NANcy VIRGINIA. ; : F . 367 Lincoln Street, New Britain, Conn. HEATHCOTE, JEAN ANNE ; ’ 1146 Stafford Road, Fall River HELLER, Nancy CONLIN . ae Ge 384 Parker Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. HoLMAN, SHIRLEY Harriet 91— 03 Hollie Court Boulevard, Bellaire, Long Island, N. Y. HOVEY VIRGINIANE er ee eee en 11 Fairfield Street, Newtonville Howarp, Mary MYNDERSE . . Kinderhook, Columbia County, N. Y. HuBBELL, MartTHA Morris . - es 107 Rockaway Road, Garden City, N. Y. HumpuHrey, Nancy CAMPBELL .. . 157 Christiana Street, North Tonawanda, N. Y. JENKINS, JANET RITCHIE . . . . . 780 Rosewood Avenue, Winnetka, III. Kerrsny, MARGARET MACKINNON Pers 101 E. Springettsbury Avenue, York, Pa. Kipp, CHARLOTTE MELCHER . . . . ; Ruxton Road, Ruxton, Md. KIELLAND, Horr Harris : : ; : “15 Histon Road, Upper Monbelain Nee Kirk, VIRGINIA ROGERs . ; : . 17 Warwick Road, Summit, N. J. LANDENBERGER, JEAN 518 E. CWillon Grive Avenue, Chesnut Hill, Philadelonaas Pag LANE, BARBARA MANNEN RE eee | Sd, ee 919 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. LANE, CYNTHIA CARSON eee OS ee 77 Church Street, Torrington, Conn. LAWLOR, CATHERINE CASHMAN . . . 20 Lexington Street, Dover, N. H. Lowy, GAINOR|PHARO (3 ee td ie 3911 220 Street, Bayside, N. Y. Lupwic, Mary JANE Olde aie ite Canoe Hil), New Canaan, Conn. { Page 100 }- STAPLES COAL COMPANY COAL = COKE = OIL =. e - ° ° e Sere ye eek ‘shoes i] pL wes Ce oe 8%, A ee ees Be) et aa-e se 7 oe ° = OL ee COAL BURNERS OIL BURNERS Compliments of also— Webster-Thomas Co. A Complete Line of Manufacturers 3 Packers Heating Equipment Matchless Food Products Telephone Taunton 1250 217 STATE STREET BOSTON, MASS. B. B. McKeever TT. M. Leahy fF. B. Tyler res Vice-Pres. Treas. Compliments of Lowell Brothers Bailey Company Established 1866 47-48 South Market Street Boston, Mass. Wm. E. Gillespie Company WM. MeDERMOTT R. STOLAR Pres. Treas. 18 North Street CAPitol 5146-5660-9410 BOSTON G. M. Austin Son, Inc. Massachusetts Wholesale Dealers in MEATS, POULTRY and GAME 26 to 32 New Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON, MASS. Lyncu, ALICE FAITH Manock, NEvA JANE MARSHALL, MARION PAULINE McCartuy, MILDRED McLavucGuuin, MARION JANET MEEKER, SHIRLEY WESTBROOK MEREDITH, CAROLYN ELIZABETH MERRILL, JEAN SHIRLEY . Moor, BARBARA ANN Moreau, ANDERENE NATOLIA Mosss, Patricia TAFT Moskau, CONSTANCE VIRGINIA MutcaHy, JEAN Newtu, Marner ANN NISBET, CHARLOTTE OREN, CATHERINE ANNE PALAIS, SHIRLEY ENID PatMer, Mary EvIzABETH Park, MartHa DELIGHT PFEIFFENBERGER, JANE fone PuHILuips, ALICE Ord Prick, VIRGINIA GILPIN . RAABE, LAILA JEAN . REEDER, ANNE ELIZABETH Ropman, Hitpa May RosENAU, BARBARA JANE Ross, JEAN ESTHER . Roya, RutH VIRGINIA SANBORN, MARGARET MARTIN SCHARRER, JANE SCHNEIDER, ELAINE RuTH ScHWARTZ, EDITH SEARLE, EpNA MARGARET SHERIDAN, ADRIENNE NEYLS SHERMAN, CHARLOTTE ALETHEA SHERRY, SYLVIA Ă© SMITH, BEATRICE Mewatian SMITH, JANE LEE ct iE BOBBETTE ‘oe SOUFFRONT, SONIA CYNTHIA SPEAR, ELLEN LOUISE STALEY, Mary DoRoTHEA STECKER, VIRGINIA WATKINS . STEINER, JEAN ELBERT TOMASELLO, FRANCES JOSEPHINE TouLmMg, EvizABETH LLoyD TRAILL, aioe. TYREE, MARIBELLE Beans 6128 Columbia Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. 26 Wintemute Street, Fort Erie North, Ontario, Canada 714 Rugby Road, Charlotsecvilles Va. 118 Shirley oat! Syracuse, N. Y. 1800 DeKalb Street, Norristown, Pa. 559 Park Street, Upper Montclair, N. J. ; 107 Maple Avenue, Troy, N. Y. 400 Elmwood Avenue, Woodbridge, N. J. 147 Angell Street, Providence, R. I. 58 West Main Street, Freehold, N. J. 54 Holly Street, Providence, R. I. Easthampton Road, Holyoke 190 Dudley Street, Brookline Fairway Drive, Barrington, R. I. . . . 44 Montrose Avenue, Portland, Maine . 710 West Washington Avenue, South Bend, Ind. 115 Sewall Avenue, Brookline 177 Central Avenue, Dedham 33 Summit Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. 463 Bluff Street, Alton, Ill. 1724 Taylor Street, N.W., Washington, D. C. 522 Jarden Road, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. 325 WoodJand Road, Madison, N. J. . 8s rete Avenue, Fort Monmouth, Red Bank, N. J. 694 Rockdale Avenue, New Bedford ; 95 Balch Street, Beverly 86 Bank Street, Lebanon, N. H. 2910 ihn Road, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio 5 Middle Street, Augusta, Maine 700 Kenilworth Avenue, Dayton, Ohio eh 167 Babcock Street, Brookline 437 Wolf’s Lane, Pelham Manor, N. Y. 48 Gurley Road, Stamford, Conn. Blossom Hill Farms, Lebanon, N. J. 155 Woodside Avenue, Amherst Orchard Road, Syracuse, N. Y. 1220 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. 102 Darwin Drive, Snyder, N. Y. 1006 Prospect Avenue, Melrose Park, Pa. 25 Cristy Street, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico 45 Franklin Street, Rumford, Maine ie 361 State Street, Albany, N. Y. 102 North Hickory Street, Mount Carmel, Pa. 39 East 78th Street, New York, N. Y. . 41 Arborway, Jamaica Plain Twin Oak Road, Short Hills, N. J. : 54 Cherry Street, Spencer 24656 Grandin Road, Ginminnety Ohio { Page 102 } Dairy Products by Buttrick Retail Delivers in Arlington Somerville Belmont Waltham Cambridge Winchester Lexington Woburn Telphone ARLington 2460 Furniture for Modern Homes Electrical Appliances Radio Department Bostock Furniture Co. 10-12 Trescott St. Taunton, Mass. ‘Your Store’ Furniture for college rooms a specialty Shattuck Jones Incorporated Fish 152 Atlantic Ave. BOSTON CAPitol 1436-1437-1438 M. Stoll Company EST. 1863 Wholesale Grocers 434 HARRISON AVENUE BOSTON, MASS. The Mansfield Press for Sixty-seven Years Quality Printers 172 NORTH MAIN STREET MANSFIELD MASSACHUSETTS PIERCE - Hardware Complete Sports Outfitting Department Main Street Taunton, Mass. WATERMAN TAXI NEW YORK LACE STORE OLSEN FLOWER SHOP VERGES, ISABELLE CAROLYN . VINCENT, JEAN NICHOLS . WAGNER, DoroTHY STEEL WaLKER, RuTH Watson, HELEN Die WELLS, NANCY WETHERILL, FRANCES RAcoMe WHITING, JOAN THURSTON WixBor, MARJoRIE WILLIS WILDING, JOSEPHINE WILLARD, LINDA WILLIAMS, CORINNE ewe WiuiaMs, Mary ANN Wine, Nancy EvizABETH Woop, Martian THEODOSIA ZARSKY, HELEN FREDA 1126 Beacon Street, Brookline Hillandale Farms, New Rochelle, N. Y. 614 Righters Mill Road, Penn Valley, Narberth, Pa. 795 Middle Street, Portsmouth, N. H. 300 North 5th Street, Reading, Pa. 1401 Green Bay Road, Lake Forest, Ill. 3012 West Coulter Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 63 Chester Place; New Rochelle, N. Y. , 92 Laurel Street, Fairhaven 3 Church Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. 21 East Tenth Street, New York, N. Y. Port au Prince, Haiti, West Indies , 162 Pearl Street, Springfield 144 Brookdale Drive, Crestwood, N. Y. McLean Hospital, Waverley 271 Salem Street, Malden Students Cutering with tdvanced Standing BuLAkKb, ANDREA ELIZABETH Bristow, Dorotuy ANNE Burton, BARBARA CHESLEY, ADELE BROWN CuHEVvERS, RutTH Lots Eaton, KATHERINE WEBSTER FERNANDEZ-HERRERA, JULIA . HADLEY, JEAN Hvsert, Louise Post Kine, Emiry Mary . KOLODNEY, SALLY JANE . LAUBENSTEIN, JOANNE Mauoy, HELEN Patricia Ponzo, VIRGINIA FRANCES ReeD, ALicE DIicKEY Tornaquist, NORMA ESTELLE ; WaLkeiR, MILDRED Witcox, Nancy Gay Yuates, ISABELLE ELIZABETH 48 Locke Street, Nashua, N. H. 790 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 179 Hope Street, Providence, R. I. . 254 Ocean Street, Lynn Race Brook Country Club, Orange, Conn. 205 Bacon Serer Waltham Benavidez 2080, Santiago, Chile 5 Montague Terrace, Brooklyn, N. Y. 799 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 365 Park Street, Upper Montclair, N. J. 74 Bloomfield Avenue, Hartford, Conn. 425 Center Street, Aghlanel Pas 95 For est Avene, Silver Lake, Staten Island, N. Y. 123 Ames Avenue, Leones Nv 1269 Murrayhill Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. 16 Academy Street, Winchendon 34 Kast Street, Hingham 137 Arlington Avenue, Prowdenee het 48 Mayo Avenue, Needham { Page 104 } a : oS epserssesp seers sasscei em scppeinseene EE ISIS PNAS Lee z ERS soy SINTON s CoS ee . Âą 5 Ss Fe aa ISTE : SO PRIME BO RE SG YP Se ee Poe ON ye PO eS POE SON KZ DL. CEE eS SN BAN SOREN NES 7 @ es eee ae ; Jo. oe - cate oo Se ea Oe YU Journey s Sd Re Life is truly a journey and some- times soon forgotten. Mankind, however, has been given various methods whereby precious mem- ories may be recorded. Recollections of these happy days and events have been preserved between the covers of this annual. Entrusted with the responsibility of printing this edition, our crafts- men have endeavored to make this book one which you will treasure, until... Journey’s End WARKEN PRESS 160 WARREN STREET Incorporated 1860 BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS eel he Page UCU? 5 Un eee 16 | VOLUN Ao | 2 a a 24 BE LR re ee Me oye x: 40h, Sa eI eS ser saw dots as 35 PPC HICEASSOCIANION. « . .. 6.556 sede ees eon 20 OT GLLANTEOUSSE he aes ea ge 22 BME TVA) NR PT erie, jarce iv cael Gs EY Pao Cod Kw Exe PeeECOMODMETUSLEES 2. 5 5. alos sas as veda bee es 80 ON NOE aco iene a 24 einem Vat Relict. v42.0s2.06 4c seeds see e ee 15 Corny (OTL ee 35 COE 466 G.0tely e 32 (PGw isin ASSOCIAtiON. |. ... 6. csckaeedena ces 14 CN oe tse MCLs enc 16 College Government Association............ 12 COS 300 SO 33 TOO. ahd 42 EE UR EOUD Sees fe Se cic 5, wid bates. eae 3 33 “SULIT Se, 5 Oa rn eee 4 Weremische Verein... .. 2 ..cecne cece sc ces 17 PEP IGOASGOCIALION , «jis c0s apace cae ele owes 28 SLES. 4 Cha Shh ie Ee ob 80 nwt: ANG) oe et 25 OMMIUCOLS MELD VisfeyeeAiid alos ccsr ole arate @ wm vel ae 10 MPMI 0 hs Sieh oo Ste ida. hig! si Beige sha hace Rent ot 76 TECH, 5 506 ose gen 24 PER EEO 6k pa On rinry, dle PAROS AES 20 International Relations Club........ J LDLOTS Oe arya ONT CR eee ere MurnimersÂź Play ieucse, - e es sees : IM Tisic Clu bataaena aay eres Stee ARO marty Le NikĂ© Acknowledgement.................-.. Oiicers of Administrations 906. ae eee Phi Beta, Kappa setae ees 6) ee een a Preflace.to AV 7ke mene aeo ar ee we eee rc Press! 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Suggestions in the Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) collection:

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

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