Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA)

 - Class of 1943

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 128 of the 1943 volume:

: . Seo ae De go for IDAS COMPILED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS FOR THE SENIOR CLASS Mora ON “COLLEGE, - NORTON, MASSACHUSETTS VER the tops of Wheaton’s buildings the planes of a world at war are flying. The hum of their motors is constantly in our ears and their shadows are ever skimming across the campus paths. We have looked up and seen the sunlight glinting upon their wings, until gradually we have become used to the sight and sound of them. But we have continued to look up, beyond those flashing wings to other wings, to the wings of Nike, goddess of Victory. We feel her shadow too, falling on the campus, and we hear the rustle of her robes above the roar of the planes. It is this Wheaton we shall remember when we think back to the mighty moments of 1943, a Wheaton changed as the world is changed, and working as the world is working in preparation for an age of battle, while we strive for a final peace and a glorious renaissance. In the pages following we have tried to record this Wheaton, looking up as it works, past the wings of war to the The Editors wings of Nike, who is Victory. N appreciation and gratitude we dedicate Nike for 1943 to Dr. Ernest John Knapton, not only because of his stimulating analyses of current affairs; not only because of his ability to make even the decline and fall of the Roman Empire seem a personal tragedy; not even be- cause he represents the balance of creative imagination and active service on the home front, all of which do make him the man of the hour, but because he can still smile after a week of rationing; because he can come in from an hour’s hoeing in his victory garden and pick up a volume of Fontenelle; because his unmistakable laugh an- nounces his unmistakable enjoyment of life, and because he would probab- ly never admit these things himself. Because of what he is and because of what he represents: Wheaton’s best, we dedicate this book to him. ais ae ee OMINIOIPETION ZZ 2 Dy) SENOS UNTRUE a a i HE Administration Building is Wheaton’s Washington where all the proceedings of this minor nation originate. All day long the hum of the mighty machinery is heard: drawers open and close, typewriters clatter, bells ring, and every two minutes a clock jumps forward with a loud “‘click.”’ At night when rest settles over most of the world, a tiny rosy light near the dome of the capitol testifies that inactivity finds no companion there. The OPM, an old organization with a new appellation, has become recently the center of much excitement. Fortunate weekenders descend by droves on Secretary Barker, waving priceless reservation notices from the Pioneer, and colored slips of paper that read, not “weekend leave,” but “Saturday night privilege.”’ From the inner room of this office, a blushing young thing emerges, wearing from ear to ear signs of “‘permis- sion granted”’ to take a month off and get a new lease on life. Rushing into the sanctum sanctorum goes a bundle of determination who has a sister equally determined to hold her wedding two days before vacation, and she too emerges wearing that “‘permission granted” look. Secretary Remick steps over from the President’s office to confer with anyone who knows anything about the vanished lamb-chops Wheaton used to be so proud of, but no one seems to know. Sitting this one out Tense moment Last line defense Sunny-side up Sunning here too Day off “How d’you do?’’ Walking on air Naval secrets The OWI' down the hall where the clicking clock exercises has outbustled the larger office since the gas shortage has grown shorter and the bus lines longer. Not only are conjectures—the result of a puzzled scru- tiny of a time-table—confirmed here, but also the most up to date schedules conforming to the most recent Government orders are hidden in the office safe to be consulted on request. Night and day the switch- board tingles with calls from hundreds of Private Hargroves. ‘The morale side of the pomp and circum- stance of battle conducts its manoeuvres across these busy wires. The Office of Wheaton Information guarantees that all data are conveyed absolutely un- censored and unoverheard. Equally crowded and equally popular is the Post Office department downstairs. Here optimistic groups may be heard chanting to powers unseen, “Any more R’s? Are the T’s out yet?” From somewhere out of sight the oracles deign to answer their petitioners with classic ambiguity, and then, after a while, there is only the noise of tiny cage doors being slammed and excla- mation-point descriptions of the day’s postal cargo. Suddenly complete silence settles over the P.O., but this state does not continue long, for now is the ‘Time when the Mentors of the nation descend to open their little boxes and slam the little doors. Most of them find a bundle of communications awaiting them, and at the sight, strangely enough, they groan, and then draw out ten course election cards, five late assignments, one late term paper, and a request to scout air planes from one to six. Captain Perry, behind the bookstore counter, tosses a painfully cheerful greeting to her civilian friends and a verbal reminder of the weekly Sg ERNE conditioning class. a ay Day after day, hour after hour the Administration of i building rocks with action and resounds with the ringing : =F of phones, the clatter of typewriters, and the clicking of the great Clock. Like a mighty machine Wheaton’s Washington proceeds, hiding beneath this bustling ex- terior an efficiency most administrative capitals dream of but never realize. Information please How’s this? Back to nature Where’s Merrill? Pinch-hitting Bargain day is every day eg seem Zs ee mise Beast cw eg ot 23 US eveneesesnicannpi neni RGIS GIFS te machines moved in, we didn’t realize that this was symbolic of a chain of new activities soon to move into the college curriculum. A few industrious people gathered around the long table in the Sem and sewed for British civilians suffering somewhere in England. Then more of us began to ply the needle and thread, and we knitted as well as stitched for French and British relief. December of ’41 came, and the Sem was too small to hold the many projects organized to meet the changed world He: three years ago the card tables were moved out of the Sem and sewing brought by the new year. Now, looking back, we see how far we’ve come since that January only two years ago. Each Fall we pledge a gradually increasing amount to World Fellowship and War Relief funds. We listen more seriously to instructions for air-raid drills, and then we go back to the dorm and use up some of our excess enthusiasm in transom decorations with non-transparent stuffs. We volunteer to scout for planes, sign up for first aid and air raid warden courses, motor corps, fire fighting and all the various departments of civilian defense. Some of us even commuted to Attleboro to learn the intricacies of home nursing before a course was started on campus. On Wednesdays we crowd into the Post Office for more than mail and hershey bars: we go there to buy little colored stamps that supply the modern minute man, as if by miracle, with the things he must have. Courses in mechanical drawing, Russian, Portuguese, and more advanced Physics, Nuff said The last stretch Best dressed for 43. Keeping the home fires burning In the scrap The Song of the Shirt and Chemistry have been added to the catalogue, and we study the philosophy of democracy and the science of government with a new interest. ‘The emphasis has swung from the meaningless to the purposeful in every- thing we do, and enthusiasm has increased accordingly. Tuesday night the bell at 7:05 is the signal for de- fense courses in nutrition, home nursing and others; on Wednesday night the bell very often means a dance for service men from neighboring camps; and a two minute bell at any time is the spring that starts off action on every side of the campus. Lights go off, rooms are emptied, corridors filled, specified victims con- veniently fall into bath tubs, break arms, or get caught under illusory debris, while stretcher crews come ably to their rescue; invisible fires from fortunately non - existent incendiary bombs are put out, and dorm wardens reassure unconcerned bridge players in the dorms. In twenty minutes the normal routine is picked up and continued as easily as a piece of war relief knitting. The bell every other Sunday night sends us to dis- cussions of the political situation at home and abroad, discussions such as Mr. Cressey’s on conditions in India, or Mrs. Hidy’s précis of the Beveridge Plan, or Mr. Knapton’s interpretation of geopolitics. One very special week end, the bells rang to announce the open- ing of a student-led symposium where the all important topic of American Horizons in the fields of science, the arts, and politics was looked into and clarified. Despite the fact that we write out blanks for war bonds now more often than charges at Marty’s, and despite the fact that we spend our time on defense courses instead of playing bridge, times haven’t changed so much that we forget to worry about exams, look forward to vacations, and prepare for bigger if fewer week ends. Yellow warning Rehearsal Still stretching T-square time This is the Army Looking up sess Bee Be So pate pee Wal THT ie! A.B. is not a fraternity. Its the most showed-off building on campus, and almost the most used. We go there in dungarees for a post-exam cigarette and bridge game, or we meander in in our formal seating clothes for a Psyche tea, an I.R.C. discussion, or an informal dance for the service men. We even packed up our evening dresses one rainy night in order to dazzle despite the drizzle at the winter formal. We proudly point out to visitors the blend of grey and maroon in the alumnae parlor, the three story window of glass brick, and the tempting light fixtures that we’ve learned to resist sliding down. We still hope all visitors are impressed with the subtle blend of modern and traditional, beauty and utility. We know we still are. This year the dance floor in Plimpton Hall has become more and more polka- dotted with uniforms. Men from Myles Standish and the Mansfield Air Base have taken the place formerly held by the H.Y.P. trio. In fact, entertainments for the service men have been given by everyone on campus from the freshmen to the faculty; everywhere from polished Plimpton to the cage. And speaking of the cage, the new pool table there is our pride and joy, an enthusi- asm shared by Mr. Sprague and others. Perhaps the fantastic Peck murals (well, are they supposed to represent the faculty?) add to the attraction of the room, for it seems Of course it rained Two-no-trump Intermission Rush-hour Really, Sil! Polka dots and moon beams that pool has taken the place of bowling as our favorite indoor sport, although Game Room sitters claim that the crashing and thundering from the direction of the . alleys can still be heard. Despite S.A.B.’s social atmosphere, there are usual- ly people trying to study in the Game Room; and the student parlor is often filled with seniors discussing Shakespeare and Thoreau in not too serious tones. Clubs of every kind and description hold their meetings within these walls. There is the rushed “I’ve got to have a cigarette before my next class” club, which meets on the half-hour. There is the bridge club whose members claim that the bridge chairs are comfortable even for three hours at a stretch. This organization has no regu- lar meeting time, although usually it congregates after breakfast, lunch and dinner. When Bobby Lane sits down at the piano she always finds a group of Boogie- Woogie lovers eager to pay the membership fee of rapt attention. Just about any one with a good story to tell can be temporary president of any of these clubs. It’s a truly democratic place! The clubs that meet in Yellow or Student Parlor are a bit more formal in program and more organized in purpose. For example, International Relations Club wants to stimulate active interest in world affairs, and to accomplish this, this year, not only continued their policy of discussing world events, but included more speeches by student and educator in its program, added more general discussions, and organized a new com- mittee on reconstruction. Polly Driscoll, president of the club, modelled an Argentinian evening dress at an I.R.C. fashion show given to raise money for its scholarship fund. Results of this and a bridge tourna- ment were successful enough to send Neva Jane Man- ock out west as this year’s I.R.C. scholar. Frequent bursts of hilarity and ceaseless activity at the top of the steps are an integral part of S.A.B.’s biography for °43. Under the nimble hands of Althea Hooff and Dickey Reed, News was shaped into a vehicle for campus thought, opinion and “‘doin’s.” Boogie-woogie Deserted Three on a match N.B. Wall decorations Behind the 8 ball Through frank editorials, questionnaires on such subjects as the value of acceleration, “‘opinionnaires”’ on world conditions in which both faculty and students were given free range, and “Reveille,” a new column to which foreign students contributed resumés of happenings here and abroad, News succeeded in mak- ing the campus more war conscious. The ‘“‘Psyche Corner” was another new feature, where critiques and discussions of the latest books and literary trends ap- peared. “Hey yall, what d’you think of this i-dea?” drawls Hooff, and another News brainchild is born. Just like that! Rushlight has a share in the hustle and bustle of this busy room. Editor Mimi Adler and staff kept high the still undefined standards of college creative pro- ductions. For the first time in its history, Rushlight offered a prize of ten dollars in war stamps for the published work judged “best” by Mrs. Park and Mrs. Boas, who had a large selection of crisp stories and lyric poems on which to base their decision (despite Mimi’s quarterly worries about a week before deadline— “Only three things here and forty-two pages to fill!’’) While News and Rushlight rushed around keeping Wheaton informed of world trends and happenings, Press Board next door was keeping the world informed of Wheaton’s activities. Mrs. Sprague and Dottie Reed found out all about everything and trumpeted their findings abroad. They even secured us a two page spread of campus fashions in the Boston Globe. A few doors from these thriving hives of literary creation, nicely secluded from the rest, the NIKE staff worked all year, keeping their proceedings a close “AON OAVERAE secret. Edie Schwartz’s camera clicked and Nan Heller banged away at the typewriter. But now, the secret is out, and is so self evident that it needs no further comment here. See A quieter moment Mim ‘Spreading the News” B.W.O.C. Good publicity Here we are! LIBRARY BS Ponisi sini PH T used to be Marty’s or S.A.B. but this year it was the Library. The Library was Wheaton’s center of activity, the place where you found the gang. New books grew grey quickly and the new Jackson Wing has that lived-in look. Even the reserve book cards have many names scrawled across them now. With a new-born sense of reality and purpose, Wheaton has gone to work. We haven’t taken up a gun or worn our slacks or dungarees to a defense plant, but we have armed ourselves with books and marched off to the Library. We weren’t too tired for those eight thirty’s and we managed to do assignments so that our rosy faces usually bobbed confidently in the first row even if it was so cold that we took notes with our mittens on. Week ends started Saturday noon instead of Friday night and we were rewarded. Marguerite Temple and Elinor Wilbor were joined at the Phi Bete banquet by Odette Fluchére, Jeanne Heathecote, Bobbette Sondheim, Maribelle Tyree, Ruth Walker and Helen Zarsky, all proud owners of small gold keys. Black nights when cigarettes were the only other lights to be seen, the warm glow from the ‘‘Libe” drew us through puddles and ice up the thirteen stairs. Sometimes this happens A P-38? Mary Lyon The stacks Drowsy browsing Champ ECAUSE of a conspicuous lack of outside entertainment, Wheaton dug in and made her own good times better than ever. The Gym was the center of a great many of these attempts, and boomed with activity all year. War or no war, the riding team held its meet as usual with House in the Pines in November. Our greying heads and creaking bones did not prevent us from capturing the cup for the second consecutive meet and bringing us just one year away from permanent possession. Jane Scharrer, captain of the team, and Kay Kennedy, head of riding, planned the military drill which won the victory for us. Mary Ann Pearce, despite a recent appendectomy, was named the grand champion of the event when she won the cup for advanced horsemanship. Tennis took on a new spirit of competition in the Fall when, for the first time, the gym department ceded four players in the freshman and upperclass ‘Tournament. Those ceded for the freshman were Charlotte Carpenter, Mary Adie, Kay Lansing, and Dorothy Vollono. In the upperclass group, Kay Garrigues, Carol Coatsworth, Evelyn Murphy and Barbara Rossmassler were ceded. Many warm Fall afternoons the courts echoed with the ping and pong of heated contest until the last match was played between Kay, winner of the upperclass tournament and Charlotte, winner of the That Wheaton Spirit Goalie Ginnie Hands across the net Grab bag Long ray faculty freshman matches. Kay emerged, after a beautiful game all round, the proud victor for the tennis season. As the sport season progressed, competition grew more intense. The juniors showed their prowess in hockey and swimming when their teams took those two championships, and the sophomores reigned supreme on the basketball court. Badminton enthusiasts played their tournament through the winter term, and Bar- bara Rossmassler was crowned winner of the finals. An addition to the physical education curriculum, was the course in Instructors’ Life Saving. Many students took advantage of the opportunity and spent a strenuous week in the pool when the inspector from national headquarters arrived. The Tritons under the able direction of Peg Wing swam through their pageant, Marine Magic, like the graceful mermaids they are. Mike Ludwig inaugurated the Outing Club this year with hopes of making this organization a member of the Intercollegiate Outing Clubs after the war. The “outers” sponsored a Splash Party in the pool to in- crease the sale of war stamps and organized skiung parties to brighten bleak weekends. All went merrily until Chairman Mike broke an ankle on the last of those gay excursions. All in all, it was a big year and the Athletic Associa- tion under Virginia Weston, Milly McCarthy, Kay Garrigues and Syl Sherry added a great deal of fun to our efforts in acquiring a “‘corpore sano.” The Wheaton dramatists were limited this year be- cause of a full defense program, but, though we missed Founders’ Day and Mummer’s Plays the good old gym saw one of the finest productions of all in Lady Precious Stream. The play was presented in the typical Chinese style with the aid of our two Chinese students, Sally Cheng and Moolan Chuang, as the honorable readers. Proceeds from the play went, appropriately enough, to the Chinese War Relief. Professors Boas, Knapton, Cressey and Sprague did not “‘stand on cere- mony,” but, replete with costumes and queues, peddled Chinese sweetmeats to the audience. °° Ice follies T love to catch brass rings... The Life On your mark... The winners The Christmas season was celebrated only by the Nativity play (without the Gothic doors) and Anna Frances ‘Turner was one of the loveliest Madonnas ever to kneel on the Wheaton stage. Rellie Rambo was honored as Joseph. Next year the sophomore class will open the cast of Mummer’s Play to the whole college for participation and Nativity will be gone but not forgotten until 1944. Mrs. Francis Sheridan’s The Discovery was the frolic- ing comedy presented by D.A. in the spring. It was a happy beginning for the traditional May Day week end, and a perfect ending for the Dramatic Association’s season. Under the able direction of Helen Rambo, president, and Gay Lowry, Linda Willard, and Sue Weese, the other officers, D. A. divided into depart- ments. Instruction was offered in lighting, scenery de- signing, make-up, and directing so that many violets who preferred shrinking to an appearance behind the footlights could gain D.A. hours and the small pin that signifies active D.A. membership without coming out of character. Of course this addition broadened the field of dramatic endeavor as well. These departments were headed by Dorothy Wagner, Dagmar Mariani, Betsey Mackay, Molly Priedeman, Marilyn Atwell, Neva Jane Mannock and Pat Wales, and they all deserve our thanks for their consistent work behind the scenes that makes it possible for a play to be produced. Striking out on its own for the first time, Vaudeville brought us Up in Arms from Osawattamie College in Owl’s Gulch, Iowa. The Osawattamie girls descended on the gym stage in February to demand an army camp’s establishment near Owl’s Gulch, a situation that has its familiar side. Barbara Ridgway, Chairman of Entertainments, undertook to direct the Vaudeville production with Peg Wing as Dance Director. Orchids should and did go to them both for a fine performance. Maitresses de la danse Joseph and Mary The Winter’s Tale Back stage Rellie relaxed “ si fad iol - = - - Soi sal - = ROM the beginning of October when the entire Wheaton community dons academic dress in memory of the founders, the campus becomes so much a part of college life that we mentally picture its shape and contours whenever we say “‘college.’’ Campus means all the cheery (and dare we say too frequent?) hellos that echo from the libe to Mary Lyon; the C.G.A. whistles shrieking a warning to would-be grass immo- lators; it means mad dashes to Marty’s or the Inn for a speedy cigarette and coffee. We've seen the campus buried so deep in snow we thought for a moment we might not have classes that day; we’ve seen it so filled with service men that Emerson dining-room almost burst at the seams with curiosity; well, we see the campus every day of our college lives, and we feel we know every crack and puddle on its surface. But we still like to watch the dimple sprout a Maypole and become thronged with traditional characters sporting on the green to welcome in the spring and crown the May Queen. We still think the many colored hoods of the faculty’s academic robes on Founders’ Day blend well with our natural campus background. And we get to know that natural background better, especially the more primitive parts of it, when we plow through the underbrush to a picnic on the archery field. Little does the dimple realize how many of its grass blades it owes to C.G.A.! But, Procession All red-dy Roughing-it Service Hooff’’-ing it May Court my, my, we don’t want to create the impression that all C.G.A. does is tend to the survival of nature. By no means! Why, when we began to feel monthly pay- ments to War Relief weren’t enough of a contribution, they formed the Army-Navy committee through which we entertained service men and cadets. We gathered more than a dialect from the Australian soldiers we entertained; we took over their system of voting (as well as the U.S.’s) and trained ourselves to assume personal responsibility for getting the ballot and casting our vote. Last year C.G.A. adapted itself to changing condi- tions by arranging for a late train when chartered buses weren't available. This year they inaugurated a further change, Saturday Night Privilege, which makes a late permission possible though gas and tires are not available. Smoking privileges were extended too, pos- sibly to guide our groping steps from dorm to libe dur- ing the dim out; possibly just because they’re a kind hearted bunch of girls! But we weren’t always legislating or changing, or being granted privileges or whistled at (there are those grass blades again). Most of the time we were getting to know the language of the radiators in the dorms, or learning to recognize people by their footsteps down the hall. We had more to hash about this year than ever before. And the college seemed to realize this, for they provided us with extra time to do it in. Air raid drills that we said came at the wrong time—‘‘Just when I was getting interested in the stuff!’’—actually came most conveniently after we'd heard a rumor of another engagement. Or after we had a ring of our own to show off, a black out and drill put our diamond to excellent advantage. Somehow it was always harder to get back to books after a stimulating conversation in the dorm corridors. Sitting pretty President Turner Saturday 12:15 Skyscraper The student In Larcom we used to gather around the piano and listen to Hooff or Bobby beat out wonderful tunes. In Cragin we sat around the fire, toasting marsh- mallows and laughing at Linda. In Chapin, well, we were always all together any way, and any where. A sure place to find the gang that wasn’t in the dorm and who never went to the libe, “‘so they couldn’t be there,” was at Marty’s. And we usually found them there, too, singing “For God, for country and for Osawattomie” along with the rest of the mob, and swathed in a blue cloud of smoke like everything else. When he came up for the weekend, or when the much needed cheque arrived, maybe we went to the Inn for dinner and spent the evening. Now that we really start to think about all the things we did, we wonder how we ever could have been so ingenious! With prac- tically no facilities at hand, unless you want to count the Norton trio of stores, and trio of bus lines, we man- aged to fill every minute as full as it possibly could be. When automobiles became scarcer than Norton traffic cops, we took out our little sister’s bike and pedaled hither and yon, or we packed up a lunch and made a day of it in Chartley. About the most ingenious thing we did was to get Dr. Knapton to introduce us to a group of Canadian soldiers he didn’t know either, be- cause we thought they looked lonely. We said we came to college for knowledge only, once, and we still think that’s the main reason, but the things we'll talk about at reunions in twenty years will be the fun we had on campus and in the dorms. Waiting for Lefty Shopping center Closed on Wednesdays Mingling at Marty’s oe eee ee ee Song Leader: Sue Weese; Treasurer: Mary Louise Robinson; Secretar oss; Vice President: Jane Harmon; President: Donalda Lockwood. Back Row: Gilbreath, Dew- ey, Elliott, Garrigues, Decker, Genereu Bur- roughs, Critchlow, Grosse, Ahlers. Second Row: Con- ron, V. Cook, Fallon, App, Evans, J. Carr, M.B. Davis, Chittendon, Braude. Front Row: Arthur, Foley, Phyllis Brown, Barlow, E. Ball, Duggan, Conant Buffington, Christiansin, Flynt. 4.5 Back Row: Hadsell, Mul- cahy, Pearce, Mullins, Haines, Penman, Janney, MacGowen, M. Nickerson, Reynolds, E. Hamilton, Leary. Middle Row: Jen- nings, Heiser, Snook, Rob- inson, Leonard, Kringel, Kreuger, Pierson, Pappas, Hawkins, Harmon, Legler, Moore, T. Hood. Front Row: Lindsay, Richard- son, Peterson, Powers, Roess, Nixon, E. Mann, Lowman, N. Nickerson, Murphy, Meckes, Mitt- lacher. Back Row: Gumble, Wil- cox, Schmidt, E. Ludwig, Shumaker, Wohlsen, Tip- ton, Shreve, Smith, Hope. Middle Row: Sarno, Shea, Whitman, Wilder, Van Neil, Vincent, Finkelstein, Woodruff, Steffans, F. Walker. Front Row: Sulli- van, N. Williams, B. Walk- er, Weiler, Lockwood, Weese, Waring, Snipes, Sangree, Landauer. Secretary, Mary Tousey; President, Carla Childs; Song Leader, Patricia Mann; Treasurer, Char- lotte Carpenter. Back Row: Church, Bris- tol, Josephine Carr, Brett, Ford, Abbott, Estes, Fos- ter, Cherry, Allen, Adie, Dickson. Third Row: Bailey, Fox, Alpert, V. Finn, Applebaum, Dough- erty, Franks, Aronson, Freeman, Canarick, Al- lington, Bacon, Anderson, Barker, Carpenter. Sec- ond Row: Childs, Far- rington, Benecke, H. Ball, Berman, English, Boyn- ton, Barlow, Brownell, Fischer, Chesley, D. Bes- tor. Front Row: Farrar, Clarke, Eldred, Abbott, Duffus, Dorkey, Burtner, L. Black, Bavicchi, Cheney Back Row: Murray, Gar- land, Morse, Hagner, Lick- ing, Chase, A. Miller, MelIntosh, S. Kelley, Lum- mis, J. Hood, B. Mason. Third Row: Mead, Kent, Heiglemann, M. Mason, C. Gilbert, McKay, Hardi- man, Holmes, G. Hamil- ton, Noren, Gerry, E. Mer- riam. Second Row: D. Hayes, Hardy, Cremin, Lippincott, Keith, Nich- ols, Gentry, Gregg, Hecker, Gardner, J. Miller, Gillis. Front Row: Kenney, Ged- ney, A. Nelms, P. Mann, McMahon. Back Row: Whitney, Web- ster, Warren, Titsworth, Sargent, Stohlmann, Maria Montgomery, N. Weston, J. Paine, Schwamb, Carolyn Porter, Phelon. Third Row: M. Reed, Christine Porter, Slusky, Rowe, Unz, Tous- ey, Wise, Russakoy, Rob- erts, Somers, Seaton, Welch. Second Row: Peck, Skelton, Underhill, Regel, Vollono, Wright, Riese, Rogers, Swain, Utley, Webb, Pierce. Front Row: Wilson, Stringer, Sheedy, Phipps, Tavener. CHAPEM 4 490°: 7 Lele AYBE there’s something symbolic about the peacock on top of the chapel stub- bornly pointing west even though a north wind may be blowing. No matter what goes on around him, there he sits: unruffled by P 38’s; undisturbed by a scurrying world below, pointing calmly west. Though lines of seniors, mortar-board on head, hand on mortar-board, converge toward the center door beneath him promptly at 6:14 Fall mornings; though these same seniors march sedately out of the same door in May, diploma in hand; though his perch rocks with chords of the ‘‘Mes- 5) siah” and Fauré’s ““Requiem;” the peacock only gives a momentary glance to the shifting scenes, and continues to throw his shadow on the pond and to face west. He must have heard Mr. Boas’ urging to live these great days creatively; he must have heard President Charlotte Covell give the C.A. creed as Service (carried out in a re- creational program at the Norton school, in farm work, in clothes collections for the Russians, and countless other ways); and he must have noticed that the seniors treat this building as an indication of their lofty state. He could not help observing that campus life was indefinably different, and perhaps attributing this to the buzz of large wings near his own. But the strange bird never turned from the west. Practically speaking, he’s a most inefficient weather-vane, but theoretically speaking, maybe there is something symbolic about his stubborn streak. Choral arrangement Looks like Gym and Chapel Jump! Twelve deep Study in moods Charlotte Class History E looked up at the war clouds way back in the fall of 1939, excitedly packed all of our Mademoiselle-inspired clothes, and took up the battle of the books. We were typical freshmen, enthusiastic and healthy. We felt as if we could build S.A.B. in a day—instead, we carried away honors in interclass hockey and basketball. All freshmen do. Standing about the Sem in wide-eyed groups, we gasped at the Friday night sings led by Laura Steele, and some of us learned to smoke. The two M’s, Marty and the Moonbeam, loomed large in our social lives, as did the two B’s, Brown and Boston. We were still starry-eyed, but tried to look blasé. Sophomore year, red-rimmed glasses could hardly hide our newly-acquired look of self-importance. Although we weren’t of voting age, we put in a personal cheer for Willkie at the rally in Attleboro that Fall. We hailed Britannia under the nimble Jeader- ship of Janie Ewing; proudly held the first Soph Hop in $.A.B.; and applauded Priedie as our May Queen. While we whistled ‘“‘Pennsylvania 6-5000,” Norton registered men eligible for the first draft, and Vaudeville caught up the theme with ““We’ve Got Your Number.” Uniforms had not yet replaced tweeds, for College business went on as usual. Remember when the American Magazine featured our hockey team after the embarrass- ing defeat of Harvard? And when Hebe spent her spring vacation in an M.I.T. fra- ternity house? Hebe disappeared to the same campus junior year, but other more important things had come into our lives. Most of us missed lunch on December 8, 1941, as we heard President Roosevelt declare war against Japan. An emergency mass meeting outlined air raid procedures. Drills followed quickly, and we grew up overnight. An air of sophistication came in with the era of the diamond ring! Ellie Wilbor and Rita Temple sparkled too—with Phi Bete keys. The rest of us felt rich when Duff magnani- mously refunded two dollars of our budget money. Glenn Miller gave us nation-wide fame in a weekly serenade, while prominent magazines acclaimed two Wheaton additions, the Science and Library wings. We saved much time and tribulation that spring, when labor was too scarce to permit the moving of accumulated wealth from dorm to dorm, but we were still young enough to weep on Miss Young’s oh-so- capable shoulder. Senior year revealed our true age. We couldn’t run around the hockey field once without fainting; so we left the tennis court racquet to play a winning game in the library. There was plenty of time to win: Boston became even more remote without the C.G.A. bus; we struck cars, sugar, coffee, shoes and spring vacation off our list. Marty’s offered no Sunday diversion and charged us ten cents for cokes and coffee on the other six days. But we were a resourceful class. Mimi “‘Fadi- man” Adler put the faculty Quiz Kids through a gruel- ling routine; and eleven of us unearthed the wealth of American culture in a student symposium. Myles [ 62 | CLASS OFFICERS President: Betty Duffy; Vice President: Charlotte Nute; Secretary: Jane Wrather; Treasurer: Priscilla Wales; Song Leader: Peggy Wing. Standish Staging Area and the Mansfield Naval Air Base inspired the theme for “Up In Arms,” our first professional Vaudeville. We found we had broken another precedent when Nan Turner, head of CiGAy appeared in Nativity Play as Madonna. And again, for the first time, the president of the senior class, namely Duff, was a candidate for honors as well as our I.R.C. scholar. The already-bad-enough Norton weather broke a precedent too, in February. No one had the warmth of spirit to argue with Mr. Whittaker’s report of twenty degrees below zero. Some of us retreated to the infirmary to keep warm with German measles, and again we wondered how old we really were. Thus, things were in a state of flux. The only constant factor in our lives was the perpetual drone and whine of wing-overs spectacularly performed by the Mansfield Cadets. ‘‘Praise the Lord and Pass the Am- munition” was fitting enough accompaniment to the tune of airplane motors. Black-out regulations taught us to manoeuvre our way along Howard Street with- out falling into one of its craters. Our four years taught us the wisdom of ordering a soft egg for breakfast, the folly of trying to see around a chapel post, the economy of picking up our mail on the way to an 8:30 class, and the desirability of falling asleep anywhere at any time, providing only that we didn’t choose a tipped back chair or one of the more ancient couches in Metcalf basement. But we remained awake to the invig- orating ideals strengthened by the war, so that even these college trivia grew up to acquire a deeper meaning in our lives. It is with full realization that we add: “Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, But to be young was very heaven!” PEG BRANDON AND Hoorr [ 63 | MIRIAM ANN ADLER 1269 President Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. English BETTY LANDIS BARBER (Mrs. William J.) 95 Prescott Street, Cambridge English ELIZABETH JANE BARNES Main Street, South Dennis Psychology [ 64 ] ANN VIRGINIA BASTEDO 55 Burnside Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. English CAROLYN LOUISE BAUR 52 Hillcrest Terrace, Meriden, Conn. French MARION CAROLINE BAYETTE 850 Lafayette Street, Bridgeport, Conn. Mathematics [ 65 | PNG CAROL CONSTANCE BECKER 42 Elm Street, Oneonta, N. Y. Sociology MARION LOUISE BLACK 1318 Walnut Street, Newton Highlands Mathematics MARJORIE ELIZABETH BLAISDELL 135 Webster Avenue, Bangor, Maine French [ 66 | ANDREA ELIZABETH BLAKE . Jr N Nashua, anguages b) ance L 48 Lock Street Rom DOROTHY DeSOTO BOCKUS — N Maplewood, b) g2 Claremont Avenue story let) MARION AGNES BRANDON cat N it Montcla Upper b) 290 Park Street English [ 67 | LOUISE EMERY BRIGHAM 142 Clinton Road, Brookline English ELIZABETH DuBOISsGAny Ee Sunset Cottage, Gambier, Ohio EMistory HELEN LORETTA CAMARA 48 Mansfield Avenue, Norton Romance Languages [ 68 ] PAULINE ELIZABETH CAMPBELL 32 Forest Avenue, Bangor, Maine English NORMA ROSALIND CARR 35 Summer Street, Taunton Psychology MARJORIE WEEDEN CHAMPLIN 82 Gibbs Avenue, Newport, R. I. English | 69 | SALLY CHENG 49 Via Ermanno, Carlotto, Tientsin, China English HELEN EMELIE MARIA CONNELLY 29 Rotherwood Road, Newton Center French CHARLOTTE COVELL 35 Sowams Road, Barrington, R. I. French [ 70 J NGS SONG a7 NUON DO SZ SIN NS AS icago, Ill. . Amherst 10n ish seh wilizat wv C; ican 1ew idan Road DOROTHY DAVIS Amer 215 Dorset Road, Waban Chemistry Sher 28 Farv 3100 SARAH STETSON DICKINSON Way, Engl MADELINE DRELL [71 | PAULINE HARRINGTON DRISCOLL C. Franco y A, Ferreira, Olivos, b-G@:Ga om Buenos Aires, Argentina Mistory ELIZABETH MONTEITH DUPE 208 North Main Street, West Hartford, Conn. Economics DOROTHY EVELYN EVERETT 5846 Winthrop Avenue, Indianapolis, Ind. Economics [72 | JEAN HAMILTON EWING Petersham Psychology MARY ANNETTE FISHER 158 Boylston Street, Brockton Economics ODETTE SUZANNE FLUCHERE 125 West 58th Street, New York, N. Y. Chemistry [73 ] | 74 | ELIZABETH CHILTON FOSS 7 Chilton Road, Brockton Economics BARBARA HOLMES FULLER 819 Pearce Street, Fall River Sociology WINIFRED LEWIS GIBBS New Bedford Road, Rochester Music JEANNE MARIE GRAYLE ichport Harw ”) Sequatton Lane ish Engl Co : : We a OS NOS Co UND C7 YIN. pa SA IN oO son, Pater LUCILLE FAITH HARRIS 11 Linden Road Psychology ELIZABETH BRONK HAWN Ww . N Albany, b) 7 Academy Road h (BY Engl [75 ] WILDA JEANETTE HAYES 191 Oakdale Drive, Rochester, N. Y. Art NATALIE ANNE HELEER Hotel Parkview, Havana, Cuba Romance Languages MARNIE WILDE HENDERSON (Mrs. Charles F. C.) 164 Rock Road, Glen Rock, N. J. Music [ 76] ALTHEA MAITLAND HOOFF Manassas, Va. English HARRIET FAIRBANK HUME 144 Hancock Street, Auburndale story JANET WHITCOMB HUNTER 61 Ormsbee Avenue, Proctor, Vt. French erie LEAH MAE JOHNSON 148 Adams Street, New Bedford Chemistry PRISCILLA DOROTHEA JOHNSON 15 Woodward Avenue, Reading Art MONA LOUISE JONES 1831 Cloverleaf Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Koology [ 78 | RUTH ANN KELLY Home Road, Springfield, Ohio Music KATHERINE WORCESTER KENNEDY 6401 Darlington Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. Art EMILY MARY KING 365 Park Street, Upper Montclair, N. J. Art [79 ] SALLY JANE KOLODNEY 74 Bloomfield Avenue, Hartford, Conn. Socrology BERTHA CHESSIE KUCGCZUN 49 Dunlap Street, Salem French MARY CHRISTINE LAVEZZO 66 Harlow Street, Arlington English ADAH JEAN LAWVER 194 High Street, Greenfield Psychology MARY TREUTING LINCOLN (Mrs. Sperry D.) 59 Meadow Brook Road, Hamden, Conn. Koology (withdrew, 11 8 42) DOROTHY ELAINE LINDEMAN 930 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Psychology [ 81 | MARY ELIZABETH LOVELL 125 Brooklyn Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Estory NANCY BETH LYON 20900 Colby Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio Sociology ELIZABETH ANN MACKAY 326 McKinley Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Art | 82 | MARJORIE RUTH MacMULLEN Newton 5) 25 Brackett Road Psychology DAGMAR FRANCES MARIANI nA N d New York p) Avenue 1035 Park FMistory . McMURROUGH MARGARET B [ 83 ] Norton ry b) Fitsto Pine Street JEAN RENNELL MERRIAM 73 Dane Street, Beverly Art HANNAH LILLIAN MICHELMAN 83 Randolph Street, Springfield Art PATRICIA TAFT MOSES 54 Holly Street, Providence, R. I. Sociology [ 84 | ETHEL HARRIET MURDOCK 7518 Narrows Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Art ROBERTA JANE NELMS 399 State Street, Albany, N. Y. Psychology CHARLOTTE PARKER NUTE 34 North Main Street, Farmington, N. H. Psychology [ 85 | MARJORIE JOAN PARCHER 18 High Street, Ellsworth, Maine Romance Languages DOROTHY JEAN PAULSON The Rectory, Stonington, Conn. Mstory | MARGARET DEAN PAYNE 715 Valley View Road, Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Psychology [ 86 ] JEAN PEDRICK 59 Lindall Street, Danvers English BARBARA VIRGINIA PERKINS 32 Oxford Road, Newton Center Art MARGARET HART POMEROY 4 Germain Street, Worcester English | 87 | VIRGINIA FRANCES PONZO 123 Ames Avenue, Leonia, N. J. Sociology MARY KITTREDGE PRIEDEMAN 1944 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. Art aS eopswpssupese 6 oo S JEANNE BARBARA QUINT 80 Alderwood Road, Newton Center Latin [ 88 ] HELEN NINA RAMBO The Paddock, Cedars, Pa. Physics EVELYN LUCINDA RAMOS Diego Velasquez 20 F.F., Santiago, Chile English FRANCES ELAINE RANDALL 19 Everell Road, Winchester Music | 89 | ALICE DICKEY REED 1269 Murrayhill Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. Psychology DOROTHY WEBSTER REED Woodland Road, E.E., Pittsburgh, Pa. American Civilization HILDE LUISE RICHARD 788 West End Avenue, New York, N. Y. Psychology [ 90 | BARBARA ANNE RIDGWAY 54 Castle Ridge Road, Manhasset, N. Y. EMistory MARGARET ROSSMASSLER 432 West Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. Psychology DO) GS7.5 A MYSSALISBURY 193 East Rock Road, New Haven, Conn. English [91 ] ELIZABETH WOODRING SCHNABEL 1704 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. German CATHERINE FREEMAN SELLEW 450 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. English HELEN GRACE SHAPIRO 26 Mandalay Road, Newton Center Chemistry [ 92 ] Se BS GLORIA DIENER STARRETT 42-45 160th Street, Flushing, N. Y. French ESTHER ANN SWEENEY 221 Wilson Avenue, Rumford, R. I. English EWI ES DUDLEY “LARL 24 Hill Street, Whitinsville Biology [ 93 J FLORENCE CAROLYN TAYLOR Spurwink Avenue, Cape Elizabeth, Maine Psychology MARGUERITE TEMPLE Pleasant Street, East Pembroke Psychology MARY OKES THOMPSON (Mrs. Benjamin C.) 868 Fairmont Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. English (withdrew 1 12 43) [ 94 | MARJORIE DREW TILDEN 483 Pleasant Street, Milton, Mass. English MADELINE DOREEN TOFFEY 121 Whittredge Road, Summit, N. J. Psychology NORMA ESTELLE TORNQUIST 16 Academy Street, Winchendon Romance Languages (withdrew 1 12 43) [95 | ANNA FRANCES TURNER 38 Greystone Road, Malden Mathematics SUZANNE VELING 101 Dorchester Road, Buffalo, N. Y. Economics PRISCILLA ALDEN WALES 41 Morton Street, North Abington Sociology [ 96 | BARBARA WATKINS 40 Main Street, Shelburne Falls Koology VIRGINIA WHITING WESTON 15 Blackstone Terrace, Newton Art ELINOR FRANCES WILBOR 1604. Bern Street, Reading, Pa. EMistory ove MARGARET HEMPHILL WING 15 Shore Road, Greenhaven, Rye, N. Y. Koology JEANNE MARIE WIRTZ 48 Lowell Street, Andover French JANE FARWELL WRATHER 2 Westwood Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Mathematics [ 98 | Commencement The school-day is now over, and the bells Drop through the air to punctuate the pause Between the final ““Why?’’—the sad “Because.” What is the fatal query that impels An answer precedent to such farewells As we might choose to make? There is applause, And yet we have done nothing. Concepts, laws, Poems, we've learned. It is not that which tells? Behold, in proud procession, how each face, Now bright with morning sun, now shadoweéd, Wears the last answer, written 1n a look. It is the hour to leave this lovely place When each of us, in her strange way, has read The greater question in the greater book. JEAN PEDRICK [ 99 | | | | Assistant Editor BARBARA ARTHUR Business Manager RUTH WALKER Assistant Business Manager HERTHA SHEA Photographic Editor EDITH SCHWARTZ Al GoEbA OORT ADRIENNE AARON Nike Staff Editor-in-Chief BOBBETTE SONDHEIM Literary Editor NANCY HELLER Assistant Literary Editor JANE TIPTON Art Editor JEAN STEINER Assistant Art Editor DOROTHY DINGWELL Advertising Manager MERLYNN COOK Senior Representatives MARION BRANDON Sophomore Representatives MARY BRENT DAVIS [e102 )] Directory and Advertisements Board of Trustees J. Evcar Park, A.B., D.D., LL.D., President of the Board HERBERT M. Purmpton, L.H.D., Vice-President Sytvia MEApows, A.B., Secretary WILuiaM F. Cuase, A.B., Treasurer FREDERICK HARLAN Pace, A.M., D.D. Henry H. Crapo, A.B. CHANNING H. Cox, A.B., LL.D. JosrpH H. SoLmay Joun KirkLanD CLARK, A.B., LL.B. Harriet E, Hucues, A.B. HELEN WiEAND Co eg, Ph.D., L.H.D. SIDNEY W. WINSLow, JR. RicHARD P. CHapman, A.M. JosEpHINE Stotr Dawson, A.B. FRANCES VosE EMERSON, Trustee Emeritus Norton Norwood Waban West Newton Waltham New Bedford Boston Dedham New York City New York City Winter Park, Florida Brookline Wellesley Concord Boston Officers of Administration Joun Epcar Park, A.B., D.D., LL.D. President MiriAM FERONIA CARPENTER, NA oe dpe A Be ale 1a8.010) Dean SARAH BELLE YounG, A.B., L.H.D. Registrar; Secretary of the faculty MABEL ELIZABETH DUNKLE Bursar On leave of absence, U. S. Navy [ 104 ] BARBARA ZIEGLER, A.M. Secretary of the Board of Admissions Ex_mMA Dorotny LITTLEFIELD, A.M. Dean of Freshmen; Chairman of the Board of Admissions WruiAM Francis CHASE, A.B. Treasurer Faculty WALTER Oscar McIntire, Ph.D., L.H.D. Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus GRACE FLORENCE SHEPARD, A.M. Professor of English, Emeritus AGNES RUTHERFORD RIDDELL, Ph.D. Professor of Romance Languages, Emeritus Caro Lynn, Ph.D. Professor of Latin, Emeritus Masex Acnes Rice, Ph.D. Professor of Botany, Emeritus GLENN ALFRED SHOOK, Ph.D. Professor af Physics; Director of the Observatory Eunice Work, Ph.D. Professor of Classics CLIFFORD CHESLEY HuBBARD, Ph.D. Professor of History and Political Science MATHILDE MARGARETHE LANGE, Ph.D. Professor of Koology ELISABETH WHEELER AMEN, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology and Education Evste ELIZABETH GULLEy, Ph.D. Protessor of History RavupH Purp Boas, A.M. Professor of English HENRIETTA COOPER JENNINGS, Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Sociology EsTHER ISABEL SEAVER, Ph.D. Professor of Art Miuprep WILiiAms Evans, Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry CarL ARSHAG GARABEDIAN, Ph.D. Protessor of Mathematics Organist and Choir Director Heppa Korscu, Ph.D. Professor of German and Russian PAuL FREDERICK CreEssEY, Ph.D. Professor of Sociology WittiAM ALvIN Hunt, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology ERNEST JOHN Knapton, Ph.D. Professor of History MARGUERITE Metrvier, A.M. Associate Professor of French LoutsE ScHutz Boas, A.M. Associate Professor of English MartuHa WiLBur Watt, A.M. Associate Professor of Mathematics Exima Dorotuy LITTLEFIELD, A.M. Associate Professor of French FRANK WELLS RAMSEYER, JR., A.M. Associate Professor of Music RALPH WILLARD Hipy, Ph.D. Associate Professor of History PAauL WINGER SPRAGUE, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Religion and Philosophy WALTER CLEVELAND SHIPLEY, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Psychology KATHERINE BisHop NeErison, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Art Marra RIcKERS-OvsIANKINA, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Psychology MariE-Rosr BucHLer, A.M. Assistant Professor of French KATHERINE ALICE Burton, A.M. Assistant Professor of English Maup AticE MArsHALL, D.Phil. Assistant Professor of Chemistry tAnna ForwarpD Fau tt, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Botany kMIARNA VENABLE Brapy, A.M. Assistant Professor of Physical Education MourieEL Emmie Hipy, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Economics Dorotuy DEwuurst THompson, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry tt ELIzABETH KRiIsTINE NOTTINGHAM, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Sociology RoBERT LATHROP SHARP, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English On leave of absence U.S. Navy +1934-1943 kOn leave of absence U. S. Marines 1T1935-1943 Jane Louise Curpszy, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Xoolog y OsBorRNE EARLE, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Marion Vaux Henprickson, A.M. Assistant Professor of Italian and French EvizABETH MAXFIELD MILLER, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of French Mary STEDMAN SWEENEY, A.M. Assistant Professor of Spanish and Portuguese ELIZABETH READ SUNDERLAND, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Art +Dorotuy Mort, A.M. Assistant Professor of Physical Education MILDRED LyMAN OLLENDORFF HALL, NIL Assistant Professor of English MyrtrLe AGNES STUNTZNER, A.M. Assistant Professor of Education; Director of the Nursery School Lena Lots MANDELL, A.M. Assistant Professor of French and Spanish LoutsA Burt Woop Instructor in Vocal Music ELIZABETH CATHERINE MacLeop, A.M. Instructor in Music CLIFFORD RICHARDSON BRAGDON, A.M. Ed.M. Instructor in English and Education +{Mitprep Rut Pansy, A.M. Instructor in Music Ho.icomsBe McCuttocu Austin, A.M. Instructor in Philosophy ANITE Este, A.M. Instructor in Physical Education CARMEN DE ZULUETA, D.F.L. Instructor in Spanish and Portuguese CarROL SLEICHER, A.M. Instructor in Psychology [| 106 | CAROLYN Mae Ciewes, Ph.D. Instructor in History JEAN SUDRANN, A.M. Instructor in English Ann Matiack WEYGANDT, Ph.D. Instructor in English WALTER JOHN NICKERSON, JR., Ph.D. Instructor in Botany Mary McLeop Brooks, A.M. Instructor in Education NELLE FuLier, A.M. Instructor in English HeLene IRMGARD RrieEGNER, A.M. Instructor in German EMELINE Hurp H1i1, Ph.D. Instructor in Classics GraziA AVITABILE, A.M. Instructor in Italian and French MarGaARET LoulisE KeEIsTER, Sc.M. Instructor in Koology ELEANOR RutH Rots, A.M. Instructor in Physical Education CAROLINE PATIENCE AuGurR, A.M. Instructor in Art LUELLA GERTRUDE KRAMER, Mus.M. Instructor in Music AuicE Maup ToTtTeNn Assistant in Music Nancy BarBARA COonGcER, A.B. Assistant in English BARBARA AVERY Roper, A.B. Assistant in Chemistry Mirtam Goopwin HaAmiLTon, S.B. Assistant in English RutH CARLYLE YATES Assistant in Botany ANNE VAUGHAN GREELEY, A.B. Assistant in the Nursery School +On leave of absence, U. S. Marines On leave of absence, 1942-1943 +t+On leave of absence during the second semester of 1942-1943 Ne, at Pringle ... Braemar... HOLT RENFREW Magic names to sweater collectors everywhere! Today ... as ever... HOLT RENFREW ... the Dominion's leading Specialty Shop . . . brings you that famed royal family of Scottish Sweaters .. . the precious Pringles of Hawick . . . beautiful Braemars by Innes Henderson . . . also, Tweeds from Elgin . . . at low Canadian prices ... plus the added value of favourable exchange. SHERBROOKE AT MOUNTAIN - - - MONTREAL 1851—ESTABLISHED—1943 Before you were born ° Mansfield Press The For for Seventy Years QUALITY — VALUE — SERVICE Phone 1250 ? Quality ° Printers STAPLES 172 NORTH MAIN STREET COAL COMPANY MANSFIELD 35 TAUNTON GREEN MASSACHUSETTS TAUNTON, MASS. Senior Directory ADLER, MrrtaAm ANN 1269 President Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Rushlight 2, 3, 4 (Editor); Dramatic Association 2, 3, 4; Psyche 3, 4 (Pres.). BARBER, Berry LAnpis (Mrs. WILLIAM J.) 95 Prescott St., Cambridge. Barnes, ELIZABETH JANE Main Street, South Dennis. Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Circolo Italiano 2, 3; McIntire Scholarship 3. Bastepo, ANN VIRGINIA 55 Burnside Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; May Day 2. Baur, CAROLYN LOUISE 52 Hillcrest Terrace, Meriden, Conn. Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Tertulia Espanola 2, 3, 4; Romance Lan- guages Club 2, 3, 4; Press Board 3; Dean’s List 3, 4; Army-Navy Committee (Chairman ) 4; Conserva- tion and Consumer Education Committee (Chair- man) 4. BAYETTE, MARION CAROLINE 850 Lafayette St., Bridgeport, Conn. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4 (Asst. Librarian); Circolo Italiano 2, 3, 4; Dra- matic Association 3, 4; Tertulia Espanola 3, 4. BECKER, CAROL CONSTANCE 42 Elm St., Oneonta, N. Y. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Orches- tra 1, 2; Mummer’s 2; News 3, 4. Brack, Marion Louise 1318 Walnut St., Newton Highlands. Science Club 3 (Sec.-Treas.); News 3; Asst. House Chairman 3; Student Auditor 4; Y.W.C.A. Cabinet 4. BLAISDELL, MARjoRIE ELIZABETH 135 Webster Ave., Bangor, Maine. House Chairman 3. BLAKE, ANDREA ELIZABETH 48 Lock St., Nashua, N. H. Choir 2, 3, 4; Romance Languages Club 2, 3, 4; Circolo Italiano 3 (Pres.), 4 (Pres.); Der Deutsche Verein 3, 4; Dean’s List 3, 4. Bocxus, Dororuy DESoTo g2 Claremont Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Tertulia Espanola 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3, 4; Social Committee 4; Camera Club 3. BRANDON, Marion AGNES 290 Park St., Upper Montclair, N. J. Hockey 1, 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2; May Court 2; News 4; Rushlight 4; Psyche 3 (Sec.-Treas.), 4; Social Chairman; Dean’s List 4. BriGHAM, LoutsE EMERY 142 Clinton Road, Brookline. Choir 2, 3; Dance Group 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming Team 1, 2; May Day 1, 2, 3; Y.W.C.A. 4; House Chairman 4. CAHALL, EvizABETH DuBots Sunset Cottage, Gambier, Ohio. Hockey 1, 2,3, 4: Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Tennis 1, 2, 3, 4; Choir 1; Vaudeville 2, 3, 4; Symposium; Ath- letic Association 2 (Sec.), 3 (Vice-Pres.); Asst. House Chairman 3. CaMARA, HELEN LORETTA 48 Mansfield Ave., Norton CAMPBELL, PAULINE ELIZABETH 32 Forest Ave., Bangor, Maine. News 2, 3, 4; Psyche 4. Carr, Norma ROosALinD 35 Summer Street, Taunton. Tertulia Espanola 2, 3; Romance Languages Club 3; Science Club 4; Wews 4. CHAMPLIN, MARJORIE WEEDEN 82 Gibbs Ave., Newport, R. I. Choir 2, 3, 4; Cercle Francais 1, 2; International Relations Club 2, 3, 4; Y.W.C.A. 3, 4; News 3, 4; Der Deutsche Verein 3, 4. CHENG, SALLY 49 Via Ermanno, Carlotto, Tientsin, China. ConnELLY, HELEN EmMeLIE Maria 29 Rotherwood Road, Newton Center. Tertulia Espanola 1, 2, 3, 4 (Pres.); Makeup 1, 2, 3, 4; Ro- mance Language Club 3, 4; International Rela- tions Club 4. COovELL, CHARLOTTE 35 Sowams Road, Barrington, R. I. Choir 1; News 2, 3; Rhode Island Wheaton Club Scholarship 1, 2, 3, 4; Rhode Island Regional Scholarship 4; Y.W. C.A. 3, 4 (Pres.); Freshman Honor Roll 1; Dean’s Wist259354- Davis, DoroTHY 215 Dorset Rd., Waban. Choir 2, 3, 4; Swimming Team 3, 4; Badminton Team 3; Tennis Team 3; May Day 1, 2, 3; Nike (Adv. Mgr.) 3. DicKINsON, SARAH STETSON 28 Farview Way, Amherst. Choir 1, 2; Swimming Team 1, 2, 3, 4; Psyche 3, 4; News 1, 2; Dramatic Association 1, 2; Nike 3 (Editor); Rushlight 2, 3, 4 (Asst. Ed.); House Chairman 4. DrRELL, MADELINE 3100 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Ill. Tertulia Es- panola 1, 2; Mummer’s 2; Golf Team 3, 4; Psyche 4; Dean’s List 4. DriscoLL, PAULINE HARRINGTON C. Franco y A. Ferreira, Olivos, F.C.C.A., Buenos Aires, Argentina. Romance Language Club, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 2, 3 (Librarian), 4 (Pres.). Tertulia Espanola 3 (Pres.); Educational and Publicity Defense Committee 4. Durry, ExizApetTH MONTEITH 208 North Main Street, West Hartford, Conn. Class Treasurer 1; Class President 2, 4; College Government Association 3 (Treas.); International Relations Club 1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club Scholar 3; Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Dean’s List 3, 4; Economics Honor Student 4; Symposium 4. Everett, DorotHy EVELYN 5846 Winthrop Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Tritonettes 3; Tritons 4; International Relations Club 3, 4; Health Committee 4. Ewinc, JEAN HAMILTON Petersham. International Relations Club 3, 4; Sci- ence Club 4; Hockey 1. Fisher, Mary ANNETTE 158 Boylston Street, Brockton. Choir 1, 2; Dance Group 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3, 4; College Government Association 3 (Vice Pres.); House Chairman 4. [ 108 ] Compliments of MANSFIELD BLEACHERY Compliments of DEFIANCE BLEACHER Y Senior Directory FLUCHERE, ODETTE SUZANNE 125 West 58th Street, New York, N. Y. Dean’s List 3, 4; French Foreign Scholarship 3, 4. Foss, ELIZABETH CHILTON 7 Chilton Road, Brockton. Basketball Team 1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3, 4; Dean’s List 3, 4. FULLER, BARBARA HOLMES 819 Pearce Street, Fall River. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Or- chestra 2, 3, 4; Athletic Association 3 (Deck Tennis Head), 4 (Deck Tennis Head). Grpss, WINIFRED LEWwIs New Bedford Road, Rochester. Choir 1, 2; Circolo Italiano 2; Music Club 4. GRAYLE, JEANNE MARIE Sequatton Lane, Harwichport. Tertulia Espanola 1, 2; Press Board 1; Choir 1; Badminton 1, 2, 3, 4; Hockey 2, 3, 4; Basketball 3; International Rela- tions Club 3, 4; Psyche 4; Symposium 4. Harris, LucitteE FAITH 11 Linden Road, Paterson, N. J. Tertulia Espanola 3, 4; International Relations Club 3, 4. Hawn, ELIzABETH BRONK 7 Academy Road, Albany, N. Y. Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Badminton 3, 4; Dramatic Association 2, 3, 4; Ro- mance Languages Club 2, 3, 4; Psyche 4; House Chairman 3, 4. Hayes, WILDA JEANETTE 191 Oakdale Drive, Rochester, N. Y. Tertulia Es- panola 1, 2; Art Club 2, 3, 4; News 2, 3, 4 (Adv. Mer.); Press Board 2. HELLER, NATALIE ANNE Hotel Parkview, Havana, Cuba. Tertulia Espanola 1, 2; Romance Languages Club 3, 4; Tritons 3, 4; Swimming 1, 2; Basketball 3, 4. HENDERSON, MARNIE WILDE (Mrs. CHARLEs F. C.) 164 Rock Road, Glen Rock, N. J. Choir 2, 3, 4: Orchestra 1, 2, 3; Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Deck Tennis 1, 2, 3,4; Badminton 2; Der Deutsche Verein 3, 4; Music Club 1, 2, 3. Hoorr, ALTHEA MAITLAND Manassas, Va. News 1, 2, 3 (Asst. Ed.), 4 (Editor); Nike 2, 3 (Lit. Ed.), 4; Vaudeville 2, 3, 4; Choir 1, 2; Rushlight 2, 3; Class Sec’y 2; Music Club 1, 2, 3; Honor Roll 1; Dean’s List 2, 4; Psyche 4; Sym- posium 4. Hume, Harriet FAIRBANK 144 Hancock Street, Auburndale. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3, 4; Circolo Italiano 3; Romance Languages Club 3; Dean’s List 3, 4. Hunter, JANET WuHITcoMsB 61 Ormsby Ave., Proctor, Vt. Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4 (Captain); Varsity Swimming 1; Y.W.C.A. 3 (Treas.), 4. Jounson, LEAH MAE 148 Adams St., New Bedford. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Press Board 1; Understudy Dance Group 2; Music Club 2, 3, 4; Science Club 3, 4; News 4 (Asst. Adv. Mgr.). JOHNSON, PrisciILLA DOROTHEA 15 Woodward Ave., Reading. Choir 1; Understudy Dance Group 2, 3; Art Club 3, 4; International Relations Club 2, 3, 4; News 4. Jones, Mona Louise 1831 Cloverleaf St., Bethlehem, Pa. Science Club I, 2, 3, 4; Tertulia Espanola 1, 2; Y.W.C.A.; Swim- ming 3. Ketity, RutH ANN Home Road, Springfield, Ohio. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Music Club 2, 3 (Sec’y), 4 (Pres.); Tertulia Espanola 2; Der Deutsche Verein 4. KENNEDY, KATHERINE WORCESTER 6401 Darlington Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Riding Team 1, 2, 3, 4; Y.W.C.A. 2; Athletic Association 3, 4 (Head of Riding). Kinc, Emity Mary 365 Park Street, Upper Montclair, N. J. Choir 2, 3, 4: Music Club 2, 3, 4; Art Club 3, 4. KOLODNEY, SALLY JANE 74 Bloomfield Avenue, Hartford, Conn. Interna- tional Relations Club 2, 4; Press Board 3; News 3; Art Club 4; Rushlight 4. Kuczun, BERTHA CHESSIE 49 Dunlap Street, Salem. Der Deutsche Verein 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3; Asst. House Chairman 3; House Chairman 4. LAvEzzo, MAry CHRISTINE 66 Harlow Street, Arlington. Camera Club 1, 2; News 1, 2, 3; Press Board 2, 3, 4; Dramatic Associa- tion 3, 4; Art Club 3, 4; Circolo Italiano 2, 3. LAWVER, ADAH JEAN 194 High Street, Greenfield. News 3, 4; International Relations Club 4; Science Club 4; Camera Club 4. Lincotn, MariAn TREuTING (Mrs. SpERRY D.) 59 Meadow Brook Road, Hamden, Conn. (withdrew 11 8 42). LINDEMAN, DorotuHy ELAINE 930 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Art Club 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 2, 3, 4; Camera Club 3 4: Lovett, Mary ELizABETH 125 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Basketball 1, 2; Badminton 3, 4; Y.W.C.A. 3 (Vice Pres.); Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; International Relations Club 3, 4; News 2, 4; Understudy Dance Group 3, 4. Lyon, Nancy BETH 20900 Colby Road, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio. Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Base- ball 1, 2, 3; Dramatic Association 3, 4; Choir 1, 2, 3: Vaudeville 2, 3; International Relations Club 3. Mackay, ELIZABETH ANN 326 McKinley Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Dean’s List 1, 2, 3, 4; Dramatic Association 1, 2 (Sec’y), 3 (Vice Pres.), 4; NIKE 2 (Asst. Editor) 3; (Art Editor) ; Rushlight 2, 3, 4; Art Club 2, 3, 4; Cercle Francais 1, 2; Der Deutsche Verein 3, 4; Agora 3, 4; News 1, 2, 4 (Cartoon Editor). MacMutten, Marjorie Ruta 25 Brackett Road, Newton. Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4; Dramatic Association 3, 4; Basketball 3; Hockey 4; Science Club 4. MariAnt, DAGMAR FRANCES 1035 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. rc09] Comp liments of A. J. BRIEN AND SON Two Attleboro Stores For Fine For Fine Furniture Floor Coverings 21-23 Academy St. 22 No. Main St. Tel. 658 Tel. 300 Free Prompt Delivery ALBERT HOULE WATCHMAKER Watches, Diamonds and Clocks Room 4 59 Park Street Ashley Building ATTLEBORO, MASS. MORTON LAUNDRY TAUNTON, MASS. 1882 1943 J. J. BEARD FURNITURE COMPANY v ATTLEBORO, MASS. Furniture for Modern Homes Electrical Appliances Radi o Department Bostock Furniture Co. 10-12 Trescott St. Taunton, Mass. “Your Store” Furniture for college rooms a specialty Compliments of ‘Bonnie “Brook ‘Bungalow Compliments of THE WHEATON INN PHONE 729-W 23 BANK ST. le oe Attleboro, Mass. Senior Directory McMurrouGH, MARGARET BANCROFT Pine Street, Norton. MERRIAM, JEAN RENNELL 73 Dane Street, Beverly. Freshman Plays 1; News 2, 3 (Circulation Mgr.), 4 (Circulation Mgr.); May Day 2; Art Club 3, 4. MIcHELMAN, HANNAH LILLIAN 83 Randolph Street, Springfield. International Rela- tions Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Art Club 3, 4; Golf 2, 3, 4; Psyche 4. Mosss, PatrriciA ‘TAFT 54 Holly Street, Providence, R. I. Murpock, ETHEL HARRIET 7518 Narrows Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Rushlight 2, 3, 4; NIKE 3 (Asst. Art Ed.); Art Club 3, 4; News 4; Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Music Club 3; May Day 2; Mummer’s 2. Nets, RoBERTA JANE 399 State St., Albany, N. Y. Hockey 1, 2, 3; Base- ball 1, 2, 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3; British War Relief 2, 3; Science Club 3, 4; Asst. House Chairman 3; Play Club a, 3. NutTE, CHARLOTTE PARKER 34. North Main Street, Farmington, N. H. Basket- ball 1, 2, 3, 4 (Head); Class ‘Treasurer 3; Class Vice reset PARGHER, MARJORIE JOAN 18 High Street, Ellsworth, Maine. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; Camera Club 1, 2, 3 (Sec.-Treas.), 4 (Pres.); Ro- mance Languages Club 2, 3, 4 (Sec.-Treas.); Nike 3 (Photo. Ed.). PAuLsEN, Dorotuy JEAN The Rectory, Stonington, Conn. International Re- lations Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Deck Tennis 3, 4. PAYNE, MARGARET DEAN 715 Valley View Road, Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Basketball 1; Choir 2, 4; Tertulia Espanola 1; Understudy Dance Group 2. PEDRICK, JEAN 59 Lindall Street, Danvers. PERKINS, BARBARA VIRGINIA 32 Oxford Road, Newton Center. Tertulia Espanola 2, 3; Art Club 3, 4 (Pres.); Psyche 4. Pomeroy, MARGARET HART 4 Germain Street, Worcester. International Rela- tions Club 3, 4; Press Board 2; Psyche 4; News 4. Ponzo, VIRGINIA FRANCES 123 Ames Avenue, Leonia, N. J. PRIEDEMAN, MAry KitTREDGE 1944 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. Hockey 1, a, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Swim- ming 1, 2; Tennis 1, 3; Dramatic Association 1, 2, 3, 4; Vaudeville 1, 2, 3, 4; Art Club 3, 4; Athletic Association 3 (Head of Baseball); 4 (Head of Bad- minton); Athletic Association Award 3; May Queen 2; Amy Otis Art Prize 2; May Day 3; S.A.B. Repre- sentative 3; News 3 (Asst. Adv. Megr.). QuInT, JEANNE BARBARA 80 Alderwood Road, Newton Center. Y.W.C.A. 4; Classical Club (Pres.) 4. Ramso, HELEN NINA Cedars, Pa. Hockey 1, 2, 3; Basketball 1, 2; Swim- ming 1, 2; Dramatic Association 2, 3, 4 (Pres.); Vaudeville 3; International Relations Club 3, Deantsiuister 2s see) Ramos, EVELYN LuciInDA Casilla 3914, Santiago, Chile. International Rela- tions Club 3, 4; Tertulia Espanola 3, 4; Psyche 4; Dean’s List 3, 4. RANDALL, FRANGES ELAINE 19 Everall Road, Winchester. Riding Team 1, 2, 3, 43 Choir 1, 2, 3, 4 (Sec’y); Music Club 3, 4. REED, ALIcE DickEy 1269 Murrayhill Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. Choir 2; Dramatic Association 2, 3; Class Hockey 3, 4; Bad- minton 3; News 3 (Asst. Ed.), 4 (Associate Ed.); Romance Languages Club 3. Reep, DorotHy WEBSTER Woodland Road, E.E., Pittsburgh, Pa. Choir 1, 2, 3; May Day 1, 2 (Attendant), 3; Riding Squad a, 3, 4; Nat’l Defense Committee 3. RicHarp, Hinper Luise 788 West End Avenue, New York, N. Y. Interna- tional Relations Club 2, 3, 4; R efugee Scholarship 2, 3, 4; Der Deutsche Verein 2, 4. RipGway, BARBARA ANNE 54 Castle Ridge Road, Manhasset, N. Y. Class Song Leader 1, 2, 3; Hockey 1, 3, 4; Asst. Chairman Enter- tainments 2; Chairman of Entertainments 4; Vaude- ville 3 (Director), 4 (Director); Basketball 1, 3; Badminton 1, 3. RossMASsLER, MARGARET 432 West Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. Archery 1, 2, 3 (Mgr.); Tennis 2; Badminton 2, 3 (Head); News 3; May Day 3; Camera Club 4. SALISBURY, AMY 193 East Rock Road, New Haven, Conn. SCHNABEL, LizABETH WOODRING 1704 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Der Deutsche Verein 2, 3, 4; Mummer’s 2; May Day 2, Badminton 3; Athletic Association 4 (Head of Hockey); Rushlight 4; Press Board 4; Defense Committee 4. SELLEW, CATHERINE FREEMAN 450 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Tennis 1, 2, 3; News 2, 3 (Asst. Editor) 4; Tritonette 3; Tritons 4; Psyche 3, 4 (Vice-Pres.); Dramatic Association 3; War Education and Publicity Com. 4. SHAPIRO, HELEN GRACE 26 Mandalay Road, Newton Center. Strophe 1; Freshman Honor Roll 1; Dean’s List 2, 3; Science Club 2, 3, 4; Understudy Dance Group 3; Baseball 3; Badminton 2. (eri2)} Compliments of TAUNTON INN Taunton, Massachusetts E. A. Thomas Co. 77-79 Main St., Taunton, Mass. Exclusive Representatives of . . . Laiglon Frocks Printzess Coats Catalina Sweaters Joan Kenley Blouses And scores of other well known garments L. G. Balfour Company ATTLEBORO MASSACHUSETTS Known Wherever there are Schools and Colleges Official Jewelers to Wheaton College C. B. GOODWIN, Representative Attleboro Office PLANTS .. .CUT FLOWERS for COMMENCEMENT - WEDDINGS HALL, the Florist 26 SCHOOL ST., TAUNTON Telephone 1422 Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere Compliments of J. C. PRATT Senior Directory STARRETT, GLORIA DIENER 42-45 160th Street, Flushing, N. Y. Press Board 1; Romance Languages Club 1, 2, 3; May Day 2; Baseball 3; Dean’s List 3, 4. SWEENEY, EsrTHER ANN 221 Wilson Avenue, Rumford, R. I. Press Board 2; Psyche 4; News 4. Tart, Epirh DupDLy 24 Hill Street, Whitinsville. Choir 1, 2; Press Board I; Science Club 2, 3, 4 (Pres.); NrkEe 3 (Business Mer.); Rushlight 4. (Business Mgr.); Wood’s Hole Scholarship 3; Dean’s List 4. TAYLOR, FLORENCE CAROLYN Spurwink Avenue, Cape Elizabeth, Maine. Strophe 1, 2; News 3, 4; Camera Club 4. ‘TEMPLE, MARGUERITE Pleasant Street, East Pembroke. Hockey 1, 2; Swim- ming 2; Basketball 1; Freshman Honor Roll 1; Dean’s List 2, 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa 3; Der Deutsche Verein 4 (Pres.) Alumnae Scholarship 4. THompson, Mary Oxes (Mrs. BENJAMIN C.) 868 Fairmont Avenue, St. Paul, Minn. (withdrew 1 12 43). TILDEN, MAryor1IE Drew 482 Pleasant Street, Milton. Hockey 1, 2, 3; Golf, 3; Romance Languages Club 1; Dramatic Association 3 4: Torrey, MADELEINE DOREEN 121 Whittredge Road, Summit, N. J. Hockey Team 3, 4; Social Committee 3. Tornguist, NorMA ESTELLE 16 Academy Street, Winchendon. (withdrew 1 12 43). ‘TURNER, ANNA-FRANCES 38 Greystone Road, Malden. Class Sec’y 1; Class Treas. 2; Class Pres. 3; College Government Associ- ation 4 (Pres.); Madonna, Nativity Play 4; Hockey I, 2, 3, 4; Badminton 1, 2, 3; Swimming 1, 2; Tennis Bah ae Cin 3s) Choinotnoss Dean ss liste4 a Circolo Italiano 1, 2. VELING, SUZANNE 101 Dorchester Road, Buffalo, N. Y. Hockey 2, 3, 4; Swimming 2, 3, 4; Y.W.C.A. 3 (Social Chairman) 4; May Day 2; International Relations Club 4. Watss, PRiscILLA ALDEN 41 Morton Street, North Arlington. Romance Languages Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Hockey 1, 2, 3; Badminton 2, 3; Dramatic Association 2, 3 (Head of Make Up) 4 (Head of Make Up); Art Club 2, 3, 4; Class Trea- surer 4. WarKINS, BARBARA 40 Main Street, Shelburne Falls. Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming 2; Strophe 1; Science Club 3, 4; News 1,2, 3 (Asst. Managing Editor) 4 (Managing Editor); House Chairman 4. WEsTON, VIRGINIA WHITING 15 Blackstone Terrace, Newton. Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming 2, 3,4; Tritons 3, 4; Press Board 1, 2; Art Club 2, 3, 4; Class Secretary 3; Athletic Association 4 (Pres.). WILBoR, ELINOR FRANCES 1604 Bern Street, Reading, Pa. Freshman Honor Roll 1; Dean’s List 2, 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa 3; His- tory Honors Student 3, 4; Choir 1, 2, 3, 4; News 2, 3, 45 Swimming 1, 2; Basketball 3, 4; Agora 3, 4; May Day 3; Mummer’s 2; International Relations Club 3, 4; Psyche 4. Winc, MARGARET HEMPHILL 15 Shore Road, Greenhaven, Rye, N. Y. Class Vice President 2, 3; Class Song Leader 4; Dramatic Association 1, 2; Vaudeville 3, 4; News 2, 3; Athletic Association 3 (Treas.) 4; Athletic Award 3; May Day 3; Science Club 4; Hockey 1, 2, 3, 4; Swimming I, 2, 3,.4;, Lritons 3,4 (Pres.); Golf m2 neeae Wirtz, JEANNE MARIE 48 Lowell Street, Andover. Choir 1, 2, 3, 4 (Pres.); Der Deutsche Verein 1, 2; Dean’s List 3, 4; Wheaton Scholar 4; Romance Languages Club 2, 4 (Pres.); Hiking (Head) 3, 4. WRATHER, JANE FARWELL 2 Westwood Drive, Washington, D. C. Class Vice President 1; College Government Association 2 (Sec’y); Class Secretary 4; Freshman Honor Roll 1; Dean’s List 2, 4; Camera Club 1; Science Club 4; War Relief (Head) 4; Basketball 1, 2, 4; Dance Group 2, 4. =: [ 114 ] Wheaton Inn ‘Beauty Shop MARJORIE WALLENT Permanent Waving Compliments of WHEATON COLLEGE BOOKSTORE POLISHING GREASING WASHING NORTON CENTER GARAGE B, CABISIUS, Prop. STORAGE Telephone 119 Norton, Mass. Compliments of ALGER’S MARKET Taunton Avenue NORTON - - MASS. Hanson Company, Inc. PHARMACISTS Prescription Druggists Since 1870 27 Broadway Taunton, Mass. DOLE BAILEY, Inc. ESTABLISHED 1890 MEATS 19-21-23 New Faneuil Hall Market BOSTON, MASS. 30 Mill Street Arlington, Mass. FERNANDES MARKET MAIN STREET NORTON, MASS. R. B. McKeever T.M. Leahy F. B. Tyler Pres. Vice-Pres. Treas. Lowell Brothers Bailey Company EstaBLIsHED 1866 47-48 South Market Street BOSTON, MASS. Compliments of Marty’s Coffee House Another Publication... SHOWING SARGENT SUPERIORITY KKKKKKKEKKEEK KEKE EEE COMPLETE PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVIGE Om IE 1943 NIKE CEE ELLER SARGENT SEUDIOMING 154 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON, MASS. Printers of THE NIKE and many other fine publications for New England’s out- standing schools and colleges Ps The ANDOVER PRESS, Led. ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS ‘es x ano OLLIER AGA oy = —— itil | WV 3 q ! | Beil | Repeated acceptance by discriminating Year Book Boards has inspired and sustained the Obit ta Bath ti eile iae 1 MLM BOLL Mae baal A. ° . Ae teen Jahn Ollier slogan that gathers increas- | i ng significance with each succeeding year. ul ’ = a od-cut style illustration. of Michigan : Aveni looking north from Chicago Art Institute. ee : ; : ‘ = : y; Ce! ne JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. “817 West Washington Bivd.,-Chicago, Ill. = Telephone MONroe:7080 Commercial Artists,“Photographers and. Makers of Fine.Printing Plates;-for Black and C@lors = =e x ee ae Bee. ; clea a. 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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

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

1942

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

1944

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946


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FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.