Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) - Class of 1954 Page 1 of 138
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Ay fe te ae ones es fs WA IIIA CLASS ” Dresents with best wishes to SS LT. YZ YEE Wye Page four Proudly we dedicate ! this MISS ELSIE GULLEY Rare indeed is the person who, after living in a community, becomes not only a part of its physical activity, but a part of its heritage as well. For the past twenty-nine years, Wheaton has benefited by having had such a person live and grow with it. Miss Elsie Gulley has become a part of our life as she has shared with us her knowledge in the field of history. With her guidance we have not only learned about the fluctuations that have come with time but also of the personalities who have influenced these changes. At Syracuse University, Miss Gulley earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees. Later, she acquired a doctorate at Columbia Uni- versity. Her standards of scholarship and her passion for research have placed her among the most distinguished of Wheaton’s scholars. Miss Gulley’s love for travel sent her to England, Scotland, and Italy. From all of her trips, including the famous seven to California, our energetic professor has returned with new ideas and eagerness. Her kindness and understanding have influenced the lives of Wheaton students for many years. Miss Gulley, thank you for sharing your wisdom and spirit with us. Page five One day, while Pegasus was still wild and free, Bellerephon came toward him carrying a golden bit and a saddle. The golden bit was magic. It fascinated Pegasus and he allowed Bellerephon to thrust it between his teeth. Then for a time, Pegasus was guided through the skies by Bel- lerephon who showed him the way by pulling the golden bit to right or left. In their journey, they met the Chimera, a terrible monster with breath of fire. It was part goat, part lion, and part dragon. It was the epitomy of ignorance, for it had neither mind nor under- standing. Since Pegasus and Bellerephon loathed ignorance more than anything else in the world, they were forced to meet in conflict with the Chimera. And together they slew it. Bellerephon stayed on the back of Pegasus to direct him for many years, but one day he slipped from his back and fell to earth, and Pegasus was alone and free again to ride the skies by himself. But now he had slain ignorance and gained knowledge of the sky so that he was able to find his way to the mount of the gods by himself. It was there that he found science and art and the secrets of eternity. It was there that he himself became the symbol of wisdom. So it was that throughout four years at College, we placed his image on our ring, and chose him as our theme, so that we could imitate his journey for knowledge. In future time, when we glance through this book, we will remember the guided journey that a spirited young horse once took. Page six ee And together Pegasus and Rellerephon slew the Chimera. . . HL aU tM L GAS ee — ane A hy ee See wee OER ge Ss Soe Tater, SONS See: fe, se Nokes So ‘ Be Bis: soak eh Saiki we MArad Gio x Seg Sieeey’ = Page nine Page ten A retiring, thoughtful New Englander, our President, DR. A. HOWARD MENEELY Although we do not have the opportunity to meet President Meneely often, there are a few times through- out our four years at Wheaton when we are able to talk to him or just listen. These times we will not soon forget. As freshmen, we met him at his home, and he formally introduced us to Wheaton. At Christmas time, when we gathered around him in a decorated Plimpton Hall, we felt we knew him better, not just as the dignified president of Wheaton, but as a person with charm and wit. We have met him on the paths of Wheaton and he has stopped to say a kindly hello. We have listened to him speak to us in chapel. And when we stand in his garden and hold a glass of cool punch it will be President Meneely who will give us a last word of encouragement before we receive our degrees. Above all, as our college president, Dr. Meneely has served as a symbol of administration and order. With his calm and stately decorum he has unified all the phases of living and learning at Wheaton. Page eleven MISS MOGRE MRS. MAY Che Administration From the very beginning of our four years at Wheaton, we have had two good friends. Mrs. May helped us to make our own decisions and Miss Colpitts helped us to learn to live with other people. As we progressed through four years at Wheaton, we began to realize the real importance of independent learning and group living. RELL All of the members of the administration have helped us to have a well-run school, and often they have become our friends. We appre- ciate all that they have done to aid us in our four years of learning. MISS COLPITTS MISS RHODES AND MRS. HALL Page twelve MISS ZIEGLER welcome .. . Such a Meer Oa rene TS SARGENT MR. MISS DEARDEN ” money both mind and man who has “Blessed is the From chaos ta cosmos Page thirteen eo. INFIRMARY 1:00 fo 3:30... .. . Monday and Thursday S200 7013.0 BOOKSTORE The calm within the storm LIBRARY 1 can’t find Pogo in the card catalogue Page fourteen MAINTENANCE ‘Well, if the truck’s in the way, we'll have to walk on the grass.” PLACEMENT So I have a liberal arts education — HOUSEHOLD Turkey fricassee, missing laundry, and a dog with a Wheaton jacket ALUMNAE “Diamonds are a girl’s best friend.” NEWS BUREAU Bounce, bulbs, and _ bylines INFORMATION The voice in the darkness ae? Peete pe be Pate tae i MISS MISS MISS MISS HIGUCHi METCALF BUSH HEUSER Page sixteen Art In the beginning there was a piece of stone, and the stone came to life. For Pegasus endowed man with knowledge and Venus imbued him with the love of beauty. They called this combination art, and man was able to mould his feelings from the stone. Thus man became an artist. We saw flat figures of brilliant designs painted on the walls of the Catalonian Chapel. We watched images of the treasures of classical Greece and imperial Rome move on the screen before our eyes. We saw pictures of the maidens who bear their punishment and hold the weight of the Erectheum on their heads. Discussions helped us to feel the excite- ment of Lautrec’s dancers who go wild with gaiety. Some of us were able to use our knowledge to create a statue or a painting. Thus we, too, have become artists: some of us creators, and some of us appreciators. “We saw flat figures” NH ERERLRAEUAD SAADEH Tou UasceU A AACAAUN AHR TENA A = ™ seapennenananeenss ‘For your room?” MISS TRASK MR. GARABEDIAN MiSS FENNER MR. RAMSEYER Music Club: §. Unfried, pres.; J. Lowett, sec.-treas. PAPEL “Bach and Brahms together” With his hoof, Pegasus kicked the fountain of the muses, and music sprang forth from the earth and spread in brilliant tones throughout the world to inspire man. We heard music all around us. A counterpoint of music came in fragmentary bits from the music studio. We heard concertos and sonatas and études all at once. We listened and we learned that music, like all arts, must have form and order. At the music club, we came to- gether to listen to Bach and Brahms. We were sad the morning after the concert performance when we watched the workmen transport dis- membered pieces of the Steinway through the chapel door. But the piano was there in Mary Lyon for our morning classes where we plotted out our harmony. Some of us wrote the notes for our music. Some of us played the notes. But we all learned about music, the mystic art of the muses which Pegasus gave to man. Page seventeen MISS BURTON MR. SHARP MRS. MACKENZIE Left to Right: Mr. Dahl, Mr. Burr, Mr. Briggs, Mr. Reinert English Like Pegasus, Ariel, the winged sprite, lives on through time. By creat- ing his characters, Shakespeare has made his plays immortal. As long as literature lives, they will live. That which we have read has become a part of our own living. We met stylized man, the cultured hero, romantic man, and_ the psychologically introspective man of today. We explored the symbolism of Yeats, the satire of Swift, and the allusions of Elliot. In Psyche, we heard Richard Wilbur and other speakers who are the creators of our new literature. We have gradually been entering the world of the muses which stretches on and never dies as long as literature lives. Psyche: H. Lowe, Treasurer; 8. Horn, President; B. Macauley, Vice-President; L. Morehouse, Secretary MISS WORK MR. MACDONALD ‘At table it becomes no one to be bashful” “What is it that is four-legged and two-legged and_ three-legged?” Oedopus knew that it is a man who crawls on four legs when he is young, walks on two legs when he is full grown, and uses, when he is old, a third leg, a cane of wisdom. Pegasus inspired the Greeks to develop their dramas and myths, and he inspired ws to learn more about the clas- sical civil izations. Classh CS The ruins of ancient Greece and Rome are buried, but, after our study, we need not excavate deeply in our own minds to find fragments of classic thought that have become a part of us. For, after all, was not Pegasus himself a Greek Horse? Classic Club: N. Tisdale, President; M. Tarantino, Secretary-Treasurer a Page nineteen MR. VAKAR MISS LITTLEFIELD FRENCH CLUB: B. Carlson, Pres- ident; D. Epstein, Secretary-T reas- urer. GERMAN CLUB: M. Towne, President; J. Angeletti, Secretary- Treasurer. SPANISH CLUB: M. Tarantino, President; S. Spaulding, Secretary- Treasurer. Page twenty Modern Man had many feelings about his world and his life. He could not be a mute being. So Pegasus taught him to speak to other men with words that were not only necessary, but were beautiful, too. Pegusas is the petit cheval blanc with whom we rode into the literature of many lands. This wise cheval led us into the “Cercle Francais” where we listened to the songs of Jean Sablon and heard stories of Nouveau Wheaton arrivals in gay Paris. Even though we didn’t have a chance to drink real schnaps at the German club picnics, we did hear talks of the Valkyries and we learned of the mystic ondines who played in the brooks and the fountains and the rivers of the Rhine Valley. MISS MANDELL MISS BURLINGAME Anguages As the tape revolved, we tried to repeat the Russian sounds that were so strange to us at first. We listened to the music of the Russian people, and were moved by the gay and mournful tones. We tried to imagine the Russian peasants with their polished boots and bright colors. Perhaps we became a little more romantic when speaking Spanish. Tertulia was the time for fun, for eating spicy Spanish foods, and for learning vivacious Spanish dances. When some of us went with the Experiment to Spain or Mexico, we returned with a bien venido. We learned the languages of the world through careful study mixed with fun, and now we can speak with people of other countries and ap- preciate their literature and life We have discovered that our way of life is not the only way. MRS. KORSCH MRS. PIN ACOLI MISS SWEENEY MISS PICAVET ‘As the tape revolved ... ” Page twenty-one MR. KNAPTON MISS CLEWES MISS GULLEY Page twenty-two MISS JAMES MISS NORTON History and Government From the time of the winged horses carved in granite on the Assyrian tombs, to the time of the flying red horses on the signs of today, Pe- gasus has lived on earth as a winged being with the power of knowledge and wisdom. If Pegasus is sought out, he can teach many things to man. Man says, “Time flies! Where does it go?” It rides with Pegasu s through the ages. We stopped for a while to glance back at the past part of the journey to see how governments rose, functioned, and fell, as they still do today. We saw war and peace and then, perhaps, for a moment, we visualized our own century as a piece in the pattern of a world. Now that we have a better insight into the history of the world, we might see Pegasus as he flies above us into future time, and perhaps we will be able to help direct him in his flight. “Governments rose, functioned and fell.” MISS SMITH MR. CRESSEY MISS JENNINGS MR. REED “Life with order is beautiful” Soctology and Economics Life without form is chaotic, but life with order is beautiful. So Pe- gasus tried hard to help man to develop a pattern out of his life. He knew well man’s peculiarities. From his ethereal position in the skies, he could see that the Chinese looked as though they were crying when they were happy, and that the Navaho Indians were afraid to look at their mothers-in-law. He knew, too, that we never walk under ladders if we can go another way. Even though all men had different customs, Pegasus helped men to learn tolerance so that they could live with each other. He helped man to understand laws of diminishing returns, and busi- ness cycles so that he could better plan his economic life. Pegasus has helped teach us this knowledge of society in our turn from our classes, from our trips to cotton mills, and from our discussions on Samoa and other cultures different from our own. Now we have a better understanding of the order and pattern of the many ways of life, and the customs of other people. MR. GELINEAU Page twenty-three To balance our thoughts, our faith and our religion Philosophy and Religion Pegasus was lively and wild, but Bellerephon thrust a golden bit be- tween his teeth to teach him control. Thus Pegasus became wise and taught some of his wisdom to man. To be wise is to balance passion with the golden bit of philosophy. We gained understanding from seeing symbols of ancient Gods chalked on the boards in zig-zag strokes by Mr. Deitreichson. We had Aristotle’s ideas explained to us by anecdotes from Mr. Austin’s tennis experiences. We learned to apply this knowledge to our lives by picking and choosing the ideas that appealed to us personally, and by adding our own ideas. Yet, we did not really become wise until we learned to balance our thoughts with faith and religion. From our study of philosophy and religion we became familiar with the pantheist’s god of life, Plato’s god who moulded cosmos from chaos with his hands like a sculptor, Aristotle’s unmoved mover, and the Christian God of Love. Our candlelight and chapel services served to balance our concept of life with the know- ledge of God. MR. AUSTIN DR. MARTIN MR. DIETRICHSON Page twenty-four Too deep for thought Psychology There was a magic looking glass on the side of the mountain from which Pegasus saw man from many different angles. For many years, he smiled when he watched man try to understand his own behavior. He laughed at Cleopatra when she wondered why Mark Antony left her and went back home. He smiled to see Narcissus become powerless be- cause of his looking-glass complex. But Pegasus began to feel sorry for man and he started to teach man his secrets with ink blots and dogs that respond to gongs. We learned to call these ink blots Rorsharch tests. We learned to give these tests. We heard speakers at Psychology Club and helped out at the Foxboro Mental Hospital. And so, we have become a little wiser, for now that we can better understand ourselves, like Pegasus, we can even smile at ourselves, too. MR. SHIPLEY MISS CONSAV AGE MR. GILBERT Psychology Club: E. Mandell, President; 8. Unfried, Secretary-Treasurer The looking glass” | SE See ma me8 vl ato) Le Page twenty-five SCICHCE Together Pegasus and Bellerephon slew the Chimera, and it was then that Pegasus was free from ignorance. “He flew upward and onward to the ancient stables of Zeus where he was harnessed to the thunder car.” Now he controls the rainbearing clouds which descend from heaven and send lightning, thunder, and power to the earth. Now we know some of the century-old mystery of the uncanny power of Pegasus. We saw life in its smallest dimension under the microscopic glass. We saw the giant planets of the skies through the telescope, and we listened to Miss Hill speak of radio-sensitive instru- ments from which we can hear the presence of the stars. We were curious and we wanted to understand. We examined a cat’s brain so that we could see how an animal thinks. We mixed elements and ana- lyzed compounds in order to understand the complex order of the ele- ments of the earth. And always we wished to grasp the pattern of nature and to theorize and prove our ideas about the world in which we live. And now that we have become curious, we can continue to learn the secrets of Pegasus as we leave Wheaton and become older mem- bers of our century. We can help man to slay the Chimera. MISS EVANS MISS O’NEILL MISS MARSHALL MISS CHIDSEY MISS VAN SCHAACK MRS. JENNINGS MISS WHITE Page twenty-six SCIENCE CLUB S. Decker, President; V. Petrillo, Secretary-T reasurer Pattern of Nature Mixing elements MR. MISH MRS. GEIRINGER MR. MacCOY Page twenty-seven Che deserving few. . . btn Wee Kappa Chapter Mary King, history; Sandra Murray, english; Jean Liu, mathematics wi ZA Bie Page twenty-eight Pebt-ot lds Joan estelle anderson pollyann atwood Stratford, Connecticut Bantam, Connecticut History ‘ English Joanne marie ahlgren joan lincoln albelli Brockton, Massachusetts Mamaroneck, New York Psychology English + charlotte abrams Newton Centre, Massachusetts Psychology Page thirty marjorte bakirakis faith parker baldwin Malden, Massachusetts Berlin, Connecticut Mathematics Philosophy ann louise biester —sbetsey birkett Doylestown, Pennsylvania Nobleboro, Maine ; Art English phyllis cole blake Hartsdale, New York History Page thirty-one ‘ harriet bloomberg ann louise bollman Charleston, West Virginia Washington, D. C. History Government son ll oneal bonnie lee bond sean mildred bowden New York, New York Walpole, Massachusetts French Chemistry Janet lou brown Naugatuck, Connecticut Psychology Page thirty-two betty carlson barbara carnwath Norwood, Massachusetts Newtown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania French English anita ruth bunis millicent burley Buffalo, New York Summit, New Jersey Religion and Philosophy Biology sheila belle brown Roxbury, Massachusetts Government Page thirty-three constance corey peggy moss crystal Falmouth Foreside, Maine New York, New York Psychology History merna foyce colpitts Julia lynn cook Needham, Massachusetts Nashua, New Hampshire English Psychology harriet chimacoff Hillside, New Jersey History Page thirty-four x mary robinson cullens alice fane davis Newtown, Connecticut Federalsburg, Maryland English Government susan decker foyce eyo Cape Elizabeth, Maine Montclair, New Jersey : Biology English paula digrazia Passaic, New Jersey English Page thirty-five UES: alison davis dodge nancy millay doyle Arlington, Virginia Page thirty-six History Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Economics elizabeth aun drane anita helen eger Chartley, Massachusetts Hartford, Connecticut Music Sociology ruth jackson estes Auburn, Maine History EN ne ae espace messes soc audray merle gold —_adelene dean hall Roxbury, Massachusetts Cranford, New Jersey Psychology Art barbara freeman ose mary garbarino New Bedford, Massachusetts Framingham, Massachusetts History Psychology Jane ellicott evans Aurora, New York Philosophy Page thirty-seven sue ann horn audrey colt houghton Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Marblehead, Massachusetts English French rovanna hammel elizabeth hoffman Glendale, Ohio White Plains, New York English Government Nina susan hall Newton Centre, Massachusetts Sociology Page thirty-eight gwendolyn hughes susan whitney fanes Schenectady, New York Lakeville, Connecticut French English patricia Kearse —s mary lyman king Charleston, West Virginia Washington, D. C. Economics History nancy king Bar Harbor, Maine English Page thirty-nine carol ann kirkman rosalind kopstein Margate, New Jersey South Orange, New Jersey Psychology French barbara lou Kozol anita-marie krakaur Newton, Massachusetts Milford, Connecticut History English barbara fustice lee Rosemont, Pennsylvania Psychology Page forty lucta trene long helen lampton lowe Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Cape May, New Jersey Sociology English lsabel marion levy — fean ming lu Greenfield, Massachusetts Belmont, Massachusetts Music Mathematics suzanne theresa leo Bronxville, New York Psychology Page forty-one helen penniman marsh barbara ann mealoon Scarsdale, New York Newton, Massachusetts History ’ English ¢. conway maclean ——s ellen -mandell Baltimore, Maryland Plymouth, Massachusetts Sociology Psychology barbara ann macaulay Marblehead, Massachusetts Psychology Page forty-two eleanor sara mcknight constance miller Jamestown, New York Warwick Neck, Rhode Island Economics English Jean roberta miller sarah ellen moore Thomaston, Connecticut Lancaster, Pennsylvania Economics Government Iilias macon morchouse Katonah, New York Philosophy Page forty-three a helene marilyn morris sandra marie murray Forest Hills, New York Hartford, Connecticut Psychology English Joanne nalchafian norma jean nash Chelsea, Massachusetts Amherst, Massachusetts History Psychology mary o-callaghan Manhasset, Long Island, New York English Page forty-four rosaline burnham ray madeline ricker New York, New York Economics ae foan marie pillsbury evelyn rademacher Middletown, New Jersey Hamden, Connecticut English : Biology mary elizabeth overly Oakmont, Pennsylvania History Norwood, Massachusetts Psychology Page forty-fiva luctle agnes roesler phyllis ann rotondt New York, New York Belmont, Massachusetts History Spanish roberta bush robinson agnes scott rodgers Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts Sewickley, Pennsylvania Government History nancy eaton ritter Wilmington, Delaware Biology Page forty-six alice egbert russell sara wilkins sawyer South Bend, Indiana Boston, Massachusetts English Music Jeannette schermerhorn lots marion schiff Wilbraham, Massachusetts Newton, Massachusetts Psychology Biology ottilie schreiber Newtown, Pennsylvania Psychology Page forty-seven diana woods seymour barbara prue sherrill New Canaan, Connecticut Greenwich, Connecticut History History marcia ruth silver —phyllis silverstein Newton, Massachusetts Manchester, Connecticut English English Acborah ann smith Natick, Massachusetts Spanish Page forty-eight lyona strohacker Waterbury, Connecticut Psychology edith carol starr —_ nancy stevenson Swampscott, Massachusetts Englewood, New Jersey History ; History lisabeth louise sprinz Mount Vernon, New York English amy moore thomas Wayne, Pennsylvania Biology Page forty-nine charlotte vercoe = marilyn wantman Barre, Vermont Brookline, Massachusetts . Psychology Psychology penny jane thomas alleen fredericka troy Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts New York, New York Art English Page fifty clizabeth waters _—_ fatth allen weden Baltimore, Maryland Auburndale, Massachusetts English English margaret whitall edith doris zanditon Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts Psychology Economics Page fifty-one ee Aud Pan And Pegasus Became Good Friends . . . ALLY ts i ) Matt: i { . wok 4 t . s Fs { 1) ji . 4 F ’ i ‘ ( i ) f ! j i : j | f i Ona i) pee: Per rehy Ul Ladygt Ae a 2 it at ie } Hay eet ¥ Page fifty-five College Government Assoctation When Pegasus was young and free, he flew the skies at random. He would come to earth and pause. Then he would soar upward again as fast as he could. But one day he looked down at the earth. He saw rivers stretched in blue bands. He saw meadows scorched by the sun. And then he saw the forests that were cooled by darkness and he decided to come down to earth for awhile. And so, he came to the outside of a great forest. But while he explored, he heard the strange sound of a pipe. He didn’t know where it came from, but he NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION Left to Right: A. Bollman, Chairman Honor Board; A. Davis, President G.G.A.; B. Aldrich, Secretary; J. Walker, Treasurer; A. Midwood, Vice-President. Page fifty-sia was curious. So, for many days he followed the sound. He roamed the woods. He learned to drink from the cool brooks and he explored the whole wood as he followed the pipe. As the pipe grew louder and louder, Pegasus knew that he was near. As he leaned around to look, he saw a whimisical little creature who danced and played an ivory pipe. And then it was that Pegasus met Pan, the God of the woods. So, for a time, Pan showed Pegasus around the forest. He showed him the brooks that sent light spots to crawl among the fall leaves. He showed him the darkest portions of the woods, and he showed him the clearings that were bleached by white light. But one day, Pegasus asked, “Are there no other creatures in the woods?” And Pan answered, “Many.” So Pan took Pegasus to meet all of the ani- mals of the forest. But it was hard for Pe- gasus to live in the forest with the other ani- mals, for they had made rules and set up a complicated order to their life. At first Pe- gasus would get very mad. When he found a foolish rule that they had made, he said to Pan, “Look, why do you do this?” Pan answered, “Because it is a rule that we have made.” Pegasus said, “It’s a foolish rule.” But Pan answered, ‘There are a few foolish rules, but it is worth it to obey the foolish in order to have the benefit of the good.” But Pegasus couldn’t understand at first, SOCIAL COMMITTEE and he wanted a revolution. He wanted to Left to Right, Front: J. Deyo, C. Polk, K. Hart- well, §. Leo and B. McAloon, Co-Chairman Rear: S. Gaston, P. Whitall, J. Winch, M. Hall, Left to Right, Front: D. McHenry, V. Brennan, G. Schiot, B. Smith P. DiGrazia, F. Weden Absent: P. Klumpp, M. Lundy Middle: B. Aldrich, A. Midwood, A. Davis, A. Bollman, Chairman; B. Waters, H. Marsh, J. Cook Rear: N. King, J]. Walker, S. Moore Absent: K. Brockway, A. Purdy HONOR BOARD Page fifty-seven So Pegasus stayed for a while, and by liv- ing with the others, he learned this, too. Pan tried to explain the law of the for- est to Pegasus. First Pan showed him that it was neces- sary to have a group to make the laws. This group, he said, represented all the opinions of the animals. Then he showed him that it is necessary to have a group to judge the laws. This group was a very old and wise group. And then, Pan said, that it is necessary to have a group to maintain the laws. This group had the high respect of all the ani- mals. Vocational Committee: Sara Sawyer, Chairman Left to Right: S. Spaulding, Bulletin Board Chairman; A. Eger, Red Cross; B. Carison, Fire Chief; A. Bunis, Smokers; M. Burley, Auditor; L. Roesler, College Song Leader; Absent: M. Hall, Chairman of S. A. B.; M. Towne, B. Watts, Co- Chairmen of Dining Room overthrow all governments and all laws and all rules. Then Pan said, “If you do that, you will have to go back again to the skies by your- self. But if you really think some rule is foolish, you can help us to change it.” Academic Committee: Faculty | students = the union of thoughts. Page fifty-eight Class Officers Once Pegasus dreamed four dreams. In the first dream, he and Pan were on earth with a = OP of men. He E. McKNIGHT, Treasurer; P. CRYSTAL, arrived in front of a huge building. 7 e) 45 4 : President; A. THOMAS, Secretary; L. ROE- - SLER, Song Leader; A. BIESTER, Vice-President He had a suitcase, and from it he took all of his possessions. And they were very much like the possessions in the suitcases of each of the men. There were similar clothes, and simi- lar ideas, and similar mannerisms. He took them out and placed them on the steps leading up to the big building. And all through the dream, as he walked up the steps, he tried to keep his possessions like those that had come out of the suitcases of the Ochre But that was hard. For his clothes became worn to his own size. His ideas were altered. And his man- nerisms changed. In the second dream, Pegasus was inside of the building. High in the attic, he had discovered a room full of books. And so he began to read the books. He skimmed through them quickly, and then he hid them away and went down to tell the others all that he had learned. He felt very S. SAVAGE, Song Leader; V. CAMPANA, superior, because he did not believe President; J. LAKE, Treasurer; P. KLUMPP, a ] ) oY oy P ; Vice-President; N. JAMES, Secretary ? that the others would ever be able to find the books, and no one would be as wise as he. Page fifty-nine Che Juniors Page sixty Che Sophomores Ne Page sixty-one lass Officers In the third dream, Pegasus found Pan inside of the building, too. To- gether they roamed up and down the D. HENDRICKS, Song Leader; M. SMITH, 7 956 long halls. They were curious and ie reed ey oO ee eae EV ERD Se they tried to open the doors, but some were locked. They wanted to get in, so they tried to break them down with sheer force. Then they tried to coax the others to tell them how to get in. But finally they discovered that they would have to search until they found the keys. So they searched, and they found keys to open some of the bolted doors. In the last dream, Pegasus found himself outside of the building. He and Pan were standing at the bottom of a huge tree. Pegasus looked up and he could see the cut-up sky be- tween high branches. Suddenly, as he looked up higher and higher, he wanted to use his wings and fly. So he said goodbye to Pan, and he left to journey in the sky. When Pegasus awoke, he told his Be i BE A SESE Cy EINE NAL A. CARPLES, Vice-President; H. FITZ- it for a long time. They never for- ] O45 WA : GERALD, Secretary; P. YOUNG, Song Leader; oe . : N yee got the four dreams. D. ROBERTSON, President; S. BATES, Treas Urer Page sixty-two Che Freshmen Page sixty-three A. A. FAGULT Y. Left to right: J. Moodispaw, H. Wagner, M. Barry, H. Jacobs, C. White One day Pan told Pegasus about the myth of the forest. “There is a golden cup that is hidden away in the forest somewhere. No one knows where,” he said. And Pegasus said, “How can it be found? We must find it!” Aven GO UINGIE: Athletic Association Pan told Pegasus, “Every year there is a day when all of the animals of the forest meet together and perform their skills. The one who is the most grace- ful in his dance, and most clever in his play, and swiftest in his prance is the winner. It is said that on the day that someone becomes the winner, he is led to the golden cup as if by magic. Then it will be his until the next spring when it is time to hide it for the next spring’s tournament. Then Pegasus was sad, for he knew that, as a horse, he was not as graceful as some of the other animals. But Pan agreed to teach him so that he could try to win the golden cup. First Pan showed him how to move gracefully. He practiced until his prance was exciting and fast like the speed of the wind’s breath as it races the runner in fast counterpoint. He loved to feel the height of his body as he climbed upward and on- ward to the highest mountain of the sky. He learned to dance. Pan taught him a dance that he called a “modern dance”, but that was a little hard for him, and he preferred his own country dance. Left to Right, Sitting: L. Strohacker (Tritons) E. Whitman, P. Naichajian, H. Lowe, S. Savage, B. Summers (Modern Dance), F. Baldwin Second Row: J. Pemberton, M. Ricker, President; M. Burley, N. Rockefeller, S. Tan, H. Brown, M. Green, 8S. Decker (Riding), E. McKnight (Outing Club) Absent: N. James, V. Ryder (Country Dance), P. Silverstein, M. Whitall Page sixty-four RIDING TEAM Team Work rewarded OUTING CLUB Return by toboggan? And finally, he learned the rules of their own game at the signal of Pan’s bird-crazy pipe. He private game. When he descended to earth to play learned sometimes to be beaten in his game. But all with Pan, he learned that the skies were out of bounds, this he loved, for Pegasus was a horse of the fields for Pan could not fly. He learned to start their and the woods and the skies. MODERN DANCE “Hush, hush, whisper who WEIS. Ce Be COUNTRY DANCE “Dig for the Oyster” TRITONS Plop ... glub, glub! Page sixty-five When it was time for the tournament, all the animals of the forest gathered to- gether to perform. They stood in a row, and one by one they did their stunts. They ran and they danced and they play- ed games. Sometimes they had teams and played their games with others. Some- times they competed separately. And when the tournament was over, Pegasus was the winner. He left hap- pily, and as he wandered through the woods, he was drawn towards the brook by the chirping of the sparrows. And there he found the golden cup. It lay on the moss floor of the river bank, and it reflected the light of the brook. So he took it up and he ran back to show it to Pan. And when Pan saw the golden cup, he was glad. Page sixty-six BESET b: ; : — ¥ é 4 Ge USE Z ‘ “ Games and Rhythms for Children” Page sixty-seven Left to Right, Front: B. Smith, C. Kline, 8. Gaston, L. Roesler, M. Towne Rear: B. McAloon, E. Mandell, P. Atwood, P. King, P. Sherrill, President; A. Stowell, M. Haskell, S. Leo Christian Association But there were times when Pegasus wanted to be alone. Some mornings he arose early and wan- dered into the forest by himself. And there he found another world. He paused to hear the noises of the woods, the sound of the lonely wood- pecker, the singing treble of the locusts, the light scraping of leaves against a wind-swung branch. He watched the streams boil with light and shiver from the brilliance of the sun. One day as he stood upon the hill, the sun stopped shining and the clouds collided in shift- ing conflict. Fire ripped open a black sky. The air was filled with roaring noises; banging, split- ting, crashing noises. Pegasus was filled with fear and wonder. But then the world became still again and he walked home thoughtfully in the quiet rain. Serenity through simplicity Page sixty-eight In the winter he heard the snow slip from top- heavy evergreens to earth. In the spring he watch- ed the blue-grey mists rise to heaven. In the sum- mer he felt the hot stillness of the air and the sullenness of the heat. And then, as the days pass- ed, the dawns came later and the dusks came sooner. The nights became colder and the moon hung dangerously low in a solid sky. The trees rocked their barren sides, their branches swaying as though they were loose in their sockets. The last yellow leaves were alone. The fall would soon leave this place undecorated, austere, and only in- wardly breathing. He left then. He wanted to tell what he had learned about the great and powerful world that was beyond his own. He wanted to share with the others again. He wanted to help them to feel what he had felt and see what he had seen. And he went back to spend the winter in the world of men. “The hand that gives, gathers” Problems of ?57 “Follow the gleam” Page sixty-nine Drama forever! Miss Hughes and Miss Gardner Dramatic Association Pan told Pegasus about the drama, and he led him to the hall of the muses. There they saw fragments of a play. Enter: the muses (with cane and crutch, for they are very old now.) As they clatter to their seats, Pegasus stands and watches them. He waits for them to speak. They say: Muses: Listen to our music, for through music, you can feel. Listen to our poetry, for through poetry you can learn. But most of all, watch our drama, for then you can see and feel and learn. You laugh at the lives of the little man in our comedy, and you learn not to be little too. You are solemn when you see a great man fall in our tragedy, and you learn not to have his flaw. You feel the music of our words. You learn the meaning of our poetry. Then you know our drama. And after Pegasus had listened and they had left, he watched Bernarda Alba walk to the stage and beat her cane upon the floor to shoo her daughters. There were blacks and there were whites. There were no colors then. Only Bernarda and the others, and the words of Lorca. Left to Right: D. Seymour, E. Gleeson, H. Chimacoff, Pres- ident; S. Nichols, R. Ekman. Absent: J. Lowett, C. Zitzman, P. Silverstein, B. Carnwath ese Page seventy if “They sewed fig leaves together and made themselves “The thing to do is to supply light...” aprons” “Tyrant over everyone around her” (Lorca) “Do we, or do we not share secrets, Bernarda?” (Lorca) “Have you dared to powder your face?” (Lorca) Page seventy-one Rushlight One day, while they were walking through the woods, Pan showed Pegasus a piece of wax with a wick. “What is it?” Pegasus asked. “It’s a candle—a rushlight.” Whathiseit wore: “To make light, so you can see even in the dark- est portions of t he deep woods.” Pan lit the candle, and there was light. And all of the trees were clearly delineated against the black of the forest. Pegasus was fascinated. But when Pan told him that there were bigger candles, Pegasus was sad, and he asked him why he didn’t get a bigger one. Pan said that he couldn’t find a bigger candle in such a small place as the woods. So Pegasus said, ‘““That’s all right. A rushlight flickering and small Is better than no light at all.” PUBLICATIONS Left to Right: N. Hayward, R. Ekman, P. King, S. Murray, editor, M. Overly Page seventy-two Sa Pas : “S ces Front: N. Hall, M. Goodman, M. Silver, L. Conrad, M. Leith, M. Colpitts Rear: R. Ekman, A. Biester editor; Pegasus rose to the skies to fly toward the h and Pan stayed on the earth to mix among But they met often on the hill of man, an they talked all day, until a dark sky was cup down the earth, leaving only one Sma hole of white light to puncture the darkness th surrounded them. Then, to amuse themselves, they began to tell the news. Pegasus told of the skies, and Pan told of the earth. And every night, as they sat on the hill and talked, they thought of different ways to tell their news to each other. Sometimes they made it into humor- ous stories in order to make each other laugh. Some- times, they added their opinions. enjoyed it, and they always learned. Wheaton News But they always Mike In their long talks, Pegasus and Pan often liked to think back over the many things that they had done together. One day, they decided that it would be fun to find a way to keep their memories. So, they ran to the end of the woods where they got clay from the ground and moulded it into flat tablets. Then they wrote down their memories in words, and drew pictures. They let the tablets dry in the sun until they were brittle. Then they saved them forever so that they could remember the things that they had done together. Chaos to Pr... Our guardian angels Deadline: night mail Front: L. Ives, S. Reed, editor, N. Tisdale, J. Lowett, M. Patzau Rear: M. McDonald, L. Conrad, B. Watts, E. Whitman Page seventy-three Che Wheaton Choir Pan had a pipe and as he ran through the woods, he blew into its four tones and there was music in the forest. Pegasus could always tell when Pan was coming for he could hear the pipe, so he ran to meet him. There Pan danced and sang to the pitch of the pipe. But one day, Pan said to Pegasus, “Why don’t you, too, learn to sing and play the pipe?” So Pegasus learned and he was very happy for now he could make music. So he hummed and blew and practiced day after day. Then Pan said to Pegasus, ‘““Now we can sing and play the pipe together.” So Pegasus sang and Pan sang. And sometimes they harmonized. Pan sang high and Pegasus sang low. And they found that they enjoyed the music more because they could enjoy it together. “Remember, don’t 1ush down the aisle! Page seventy-four B. Robbins, J. Evans, Secretary; J. Gorder, J. Brown, President; S. Unfried, absent J. Bowman “Miserere Nobis Dominum’” Like it or lump Twinkle toes and heavy heads Vodvil 954 One day, Pan felt like laughing, so he enacted a little skit. He stood on a plateau and blew his pipe and sang a funny song to Pagasus. He told stories and Pegasus laughed. And then it was that Pegasus and Pan decided to take turns making each other laugh. They worked hard until they had skits that were clever and amusing. They soon found that they enjoyed making and performing their skits as much as they enjoyed watching them. Vodvil’s inspirations Front: M. Overly, A. Rogers, L. Kelley, C. MacLean, N. Ritter, Head, V. Brennan, L. Bartlett, I. Levy Rear: N. Hall, B. Waters, H. Chimacoff Page seventy-five - ISABEL LEVY, Head Whims: Notones- © JANE WALKER, Head Page seventy-six Pan became a minstrel and he played his music for all of the animals of the forest to hear. Whims- Wheatones- He played light tunes with high Spltivos able Sometimes Pan was gay as he played, and he learned to improvise. Sometimes he was melan- made the animals of the forest feel like dancing. choly. ELIZABETH WATERS, Head Notones- Sometimes he was funny. And everyone came to see him and they laughed. Page seventy-seven SES I. R. C.: R. Ray, President; J. Connell, Secretary-Treasurer; L. Morehouse, Program; P. Kearse, Scholarship International Relations Club One day, while they sat and discussed their news, Pegasus and Pan disagreed. “I think it is better to fly,” Pegasus said. “I think it is better to run,” argued Pan. So they began to disagree. At first they wer e sad, for they didn’t like to argue. They thought that it would be easier if they agreed on every- thing. But when they had finished, they found that they had learned many things from their discus- Problems of world order sions and even more from their arguments. They understood each other’s ideas better then. They were more tolerant. And most of all, they refused to be grave and they began to laugh together for a long time. But suddenly they both stopped laughing and Pegasus looked at Pan and Pan looked at Pegasus. For then it was that they realized that, more im- portant than anything else, through their activi- ties together, they had become very good friends! Through discussion, understanding Page seventy-eight 5 Aud Pegasus Sent Pan Unto Us... ULLAL te al “a L ‘tt r ey: Mtn aa Page eighty-one Soctal Side of Wheaton After Pegasus had left the earth, there came a time when he sent Pan to us. And so it was that Pan watched us during each year of our life at college. Outmoded summer blew its leaves into a lake to drown them. It was time for suitcases to fall to Wheaton earth. Well-tanned figures hurried along blank paths to fulfill a hundred preoccupa- tions. There was a time when voices dimmed, and small candles lit irregular patterns on the water. There were quiet thoughts before the candles faded into the shadows. A carnival spirit came, and a hundred costum- ed figures ran out to meet it with happy excite- ment and uncontrolled laughter. There were clowns and dancers and animals. They played games with each other and competed in a potato race. Time blended with the mists of snow, and Christmas came. With a pair of scissors and white paste, the dining room was decorated for the party with jesters and mummers. There was a time of crowded excitement and perfumed rooms, with tall dark shadows in stiff collars. There was music and laughter and the conversation of hidden glances that were caught in a moment and gone too soon. With Spring, a loosened buoy sailed to feel its sides against a brightened shore. The birds knocked their paper sides against a screened win- dow and rose to teeter in the sky. Bright tennis balls marked a newly painted wall and sheet- white bodies lolled desperately on a scorched roof. There were quiet, warm days when casual fig- ures sat on a foot bridge to read, and others walked to talk about a lot of little things which count so much. Spring danced about a may-pole and bowed be- fore a queenly sovereign and her court. There was dancing and magnified music and a hot sun. Finally, there was the time to leave, the time to pack stray items in a laden car, and the time for summer. Page eighty-two Senior retreat Sing, daughters, sing” g 3 Songs, sandwiches, and Mr. May Fage eighty-three May (y, UCCH GERRY HELLER “Good things should be praised” Page eighty-four “Beauty and Wisdom are rarely conjoined” Trip the light fantastic Finale Page eighty-five saw the child with Mary his mother, and they fell down and worshiped him” “The greater the fool the better the dancer” In recognition Charmed to meet you a = WITKIN Snow Time Page eighty-six Wa 3 Aches : Fes ea : . KONO tteey Unventilated coop It pays to advertise Page eighty-seven It’s Lent! By the people, for the people—in pajamas AM A pack a day... Newsy noses Page eighty-eight Page eighty-nine m = S SS Ss ares EE ; ™ = ee, 2 Eeeer es Z E Sy Ce ae 3 =. —- : 3 8 oe . A AES. = ye : | eS ; 9S oe a : S ™ : 1S 2 = : : aS) 8 “ S S Whate’er is 33 eas rning (Apocrypha) . . . all them that seek lea Page ninety “] eat and eat, 1 swear.” (Shakespeare) f .. . where happiness securely dwells ... (Peach) ec 33 e¢ . . . the beginning and the end” (Revelations) Page ninety-one “T like a tower, it speaks of strength, of might, of power” (Woodrow) “And I long for a long vacation.’ (Robinson) ec . . . a gatherer and disposer of other men’s stuff’ (Wootton) Page ninety-two Where is human nature so weak as in the book-store!” (Beecher) “Plough deep while sluggards sleep?” (Franklin) ee . .. a tapering spire,... lead man’s thoughts from earth to heaven.” (Woodrow) Page ninety-three Page ninety-four Class of 1955 Left to Right, First Row: Peggy Kellner, Nancy Rockefeller, Abbie Stowell, Virginia Campana, Jane Lowett, Marguerite Davenport, Joan Carney, Ruth White, Myrna Goodman, Betty Feldman, Louise Goedkoop, Marietta Patzau, Michaela McLane Second Row: Gail Lachmund, Sandra Seppala, Elizabeth Summers, Sally Unfried, Susan Prichard, Betsy Smith, Barbara Mann, Judith Lake, Marion McDonald, Viola Ryder, Cynthia Neyman, Margery Pearlman, Paula Robbins, Morrisa Basseches, Nadine James, D’Anne McHenry, Portia Raider Third Row: Ann Batchelor, Georgiana Mathews, Joanne Tuttle, Maria Tarantino, Barbara Karr, Jane Varey, Nancy Tisdale, Joan Jacobus, Elizabeth Wilson, Ann Noble, Marjorie Hall, Cornelia Washburn, Carolyn King, Ann Midwood, Lee Metcalfe Fourth Row: Joyce Connell, Sheila McKenney, Shirley Clark, Priscilla King, Beverly Pratt, Thekla Fitzpatrick, Annmary Hirst, Suzanne Spaulding, Nancy Hayward, Pa- tricia Klumpp, Ellen Whitman, Elizabeth Smith, Constance Kline, Laura Ives, Serena Savage, Lucy Hoge, Linda Bartlett Absent: Toby Berenson, Betty Jane Blair, Judith Bowman, Virginia Brennan, Mary Callimanopulos, Nancy Castro, Ilene Chor, Elizabeth Conrad, Rosalind Ekman, Dorothy Iipstein, Patricia Frink, Eleanor Gleeson, Frances Hedges, Nancy Heppenstall, Simone Hoff, Mary Hopkins, Joan Kellett, Elizabeth Knapp, Anne Knowles, Constance Lan- ner, Margaret Leith, Mary Lundy, Paula O’Connell, Nina Peckham, Vanessa Petrillo, Shirley Reed, Didine Shuttack, Sock Poh Tan, Marilyn Towne, Marian Trescher, Jane Walker, Lelia Wardwell, Ann Waterman, Barbara Watts Class of 1956 Left to Right, First Row: Nancy Gattuso, Olga Schwendler, Beverly Welsh, Barbara Perlmutter, Naomi Doig, Marilou Goldsmith, Diane Fuller, Sandra Dalton, Cornelia Hamilton, Susan Morrison, Alice Werner, Margaret Erdman , Gail Wootton, Pamela Jewett, DeRosette Hendricks Second Row: Mercy Haskell, Roberta Kahn, Carole Sumner, Barbara Sarner, Naomi Gordon, Jill Sugerman, Jill Reich, Barbara Busby, Julia Clarke, Carolyn Braman, Joan Gorder, Jane Woodworth, Barbara Manley, Barbara Robbins, Sylvia Greaves, Barbara Boynton, Carolyn Schmitt : Third Row: Amy Rabkin, Janet Morton, Cynthia Emerson, Sandra Ketelhut, Betsy Aldrich, Harriett Brown, Lois Doll, Marjorie Berridge, Ruth Clarke, Ann Forsberg, Sidney Cox, Jane Merselis, Barbara Wilson, Madeline Smith, Mary Hawke, Ann Gundry, Eve Wagner Fourth Row: Eleanore Orr, Gail Matheson, Lydia Jackson, Katharine Crone, Anne Huber, Aldene Pearsall, Mary Norsworthy, Phyllis Dugger, Marilyn Greene, Irene Leid- ner, Mary Ann Sawyer, Mary Austin, Olive Tibolt, Clevia Zitzman, Eleanor Ward, Edith Farnum, Lucie Gallagher, Alice Gow Fifth Row: Valerie Richards, Anne Turner, Carolyn Betts, Isabelle Magnus, Rebecca Byerly, Carolyn Biggar, Jane Scovell, Janice Williams, Mignon Gunther-Stirn, Nancy Nesbit, Carla Massey, Barbara Young, June Kipe, Marilyn Schwartz, Rosemary King, Sarah Brandegee, Alice Steele, Mary Means, Jacqueline Cook, Helen Arndt Sixth Row: Anita Alibertini, Ursala Ackerman, Lucy Cabot, Maria-Helene Manville, Barbara Herrmann, Shirley Ryan, Carol Matson, Priscilla Nalchajian, Jane Chambers, Maryline Poole, Wain Koch, Louise Mulert, Ann Kirkpatrick, Jane Redfield, Nancy Greene, Helen Nelson, Constance Green, Joyce Angeletti, Natalie Douglas, Elizabeth Burnham, Mary Edson, Christine Polk Page ninety-five Absent: Caroline Abell, Yvonne Andrau, Betsy Brazil, Lois Cohen, Mary Coolidge, Deborah Doyle, Betty Duncan, Patricia Fielding, Sandra Gaston, Elizabeth Griffin, Marylou Griffin, Laura-Mae Grinnell, Jean Hart, Andrea Hauslaib, Marilyn Hays, Mary Ann Hemry, Patricia Henning, Pauline Hibbard, Sally Hirsh, Margot Hoffman, Joanne Hysom, Beverly Johnson, Lynn Kelley, Sue Land, Anita Lester, Jane Lowenthal, Carol Marean, Barbara Mercy, Susan Nichols, Eugenia Palaologos, Rose Robinson, Joy Rogers, Carol Rosenburg, Joan Rothenberger, Gail Schiot, Susan Segal, Sally Soast, Jean Souter, Paula Swaebe, Judith Pemberton Swan, Mary Jane Swett, Barbara Whidden, Patricia Wink Class of 1957 Left to Right, First Row: Anne Rafferty, Jane Slichter, Lois Creighton, Margery Perell, Nancy Green, Margit Bliss, Carol Frank, Valerie Moore, Judith Stephens, Martha Hinman, Katharine Kerry, Ellen Newman, Lenore Heffner, Sharon Reed Second Row: Suzanne Roux, Diane Brickman, Ann Taber, Ann von der Linden, Marjorie Rosen, Sandra Hamburger, Carol O’Brien, Ann Meyer, Joan Nuht, Adele Kap- lan, Martha Spindler, Donna Gross, Mary Mallon, Nancy Campbell, Sheila Gardner, Marcia Stern Third Row: Sue Underwood, Roberta Goldberg, Eleanor Busansky, Barbara Fox, Julia Winch, Helen Fitzgerald, Delores Person, Gretchen Young, Joan Stanley, Marjorie Land, Louise Drucker, Paula Ketchem, Helen Gildden, Marion Willi, Anne Carples Fourth Row: Elizabeth Villa, Vivienne Branau, Judith Rubner, Naomi Gallet, Nancy Hatch, Jane Slater, Margaret Davidson, Deborah Robertson, Susan Van Ness, Elise Burks, Eleanor Wesslen, Judith Anderson, Manette Carpenter, Joan Danziger, Sandra Vose Fifth Row: Marian Brown, Marcia Sherwood, Kathleen Hartwell, Carol Walker, Judith Kaufmann, Nancy Leonard, Leone Asplundh, Helen Brown, Joan Lees, Deborah Blodgett, Deborah Dean, Mary Lincoln, Patricia Fleet, Carolyn Meyer, Wendy Witty, Ruth Goldfarb, Sara-Ann Lincoln Sixth Row: Lucille Rogers, Joanne Bourne, Anne Blackmer, Edna Baker, Elizabeth Peirce, Katharine Kane, Margaret Orr, Cherie Irwin, Betsy Hitzrot, Winfred Schaefer, Edith Baird, Ann Boyden, Barbara Fenny, Jean Brennan, Norma Emers, Martha Knapp Seventh Row: Carolyn Ross, Barbara Witte, Deborah Coles, Rosemary Chesbrough, Jean Govangeli, Jane Rowe, Anne Hutchens, Katharine Brockway, Joan Munyan, Hil- ary Thompson, Susanne Hague, Josephine Jamison, Sheila Denton, Dianne Hall, Re- becca Wheeler, Deborah Shapleigh, Joanne Levey, Ann Purdy, Sara Boyd Eighth Row: Charlotte Holland, Sara Burrows, Ann Greenhalgh, Ellen Clark, Suz- anne Caprio, Nancy Coleman, Carolyn Doeller, Alice Noyes Ninth Row: Sue Bates, Nancy Hayes, Annette Granstrom, Anne Shields, Shirley Salmonsen, Anna Steck, Nancy Cotton, Joan Karalunos, Patricia Cain, Catherine Sum- ner, Elizabeth French, Judith Alper, Susan McAllen, Virginia Perin, Betsy Powers Absent: Phyllis Annenberg, Gretchen Aronowitz, Lois Barty-King, Judith Beckan- stin, Kathryn Bishop, Peggy Blinder, Anne Bourne, Liza Bowen, Phyllis Buckner, Susan Burr, Alberta Cohen, Barbara Cohen, Sandra Cohen, Jane Cushman, Emilie Dana, Diana DiPietro, Mary Ann Easton, Sally Elliott, Betty-Lou Forsythe, Kalliope Garoufes, La- Donne Heaton, LaVerne Hellyer, Barbara House, Elaine Joseph, Rita Judd, Darce Kalker, Emily Lynch, Louisa Manger, Nancy Miller, Elizabeth Muller, Elizabeth Rich, Lucille Rieger, Carol Rudman, Caroline Savage, Barbara Sjostrom, Elizabeth Slack, Carol Spier, Martha Van Cott, Regina Ventura, Paulette Wauters, Joan Wilson, Anne Wingle, Nancy Wu, Patricia Young Page ninety-six “D find nothing so dear as what is given me” (Montaigne) MR. AND MRS. DOUGLAS ARANT DR. AND MRS. CHARLES BASSECHES MR. AND MRS. FRED K. BOLLMAN MR. AND MRS. BENJAMIN BROWN MR. AND MRS. GEORGE GAROUFES MR. AND MRS. SOL C. HAMBURGER MR. AND MRS. JOHN B. HOPKINS MR. AND MRS. MATHEW MATHEWS MR. AND MRS. LOUIS NEYMAN DR--AND MRS. E. S. RADEMACHER MR. AND MRS. J. EUGENE REQUA MR. AND MRS. ANDREW B. RITTER MR. AND MRS. LOUIS H. ROSEN MR. AND MRS. FREDERICK SCHAEFER MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM T. SCHWENDLER MR. AND MRS. HORACE L. SMITH, JR. MR. AND MRS. MAX STARR DR. AND MRS. JOHN H. TRESCHER MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM A. TROY MR. AND MRS. THEODORE H. VAN COTT MR. AND MRS. HARRY WOOTTON Page ninety-seven CONGRATULATIONS to the Class of 1954 COLLEGE GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION Page ninety-eight COMPLIMENTS LEWISTON LTD. Makers of RONNIE- ANN ORIGINALS COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND Page ninety-nine DEPPCCECCC EEOC CECOU EEC E ERE EEGE CREPE EEC CC EOC E CER EE ERE RE ROR EC EERE RECO EERE CER C CERO R EEC C REECE ER EC COREE EEC E OER COMPLIMENTS OF Mansfield Lumber Co. W. C. FULLER CO., INC. 365 N. MAIN ST. MANSFIELD TEL. 30 Complete Line Of Furniture, Hardware, Paints Plumbing Electrics PINE HILL FARM R. D.4 BOX 407 CORAPOLIS, PA. POOOUOU EOE DODO ODD P PN OE EURO OOOO POOP ESOP POOP TOTO N OREO UO OO DONO O OO OSPR ONO UD DOPED UOUOR OPPO NOOO ORDER ONTO URES COVELL CAB CO. DRIVING SCHOOL 3 PLEASANT ST. ATTLEBORO, MASS. TAXI SERVICE TEL. 1-0070 Page one hundred MONTCLAIR TRAVEL BUREAU Arthur W. Weyman AIR - BUS - STEAMER - RAIL Hotel Reservations — Tickets i 373 BLOOMFIELD AVE. : MONTCLAIR, N. J. : The refreshment for modern living refreshes without filling PEPSI-COLA COMPANY, 3 W. 57 ST., NEW YORK, N. Y. DECC CUCEUU EOE U RAO EC EERO Page one hundred-one SENIORS - CLASS OF 1954 SENIOR CLASS DIRECTORY ABRAMS, CHARLOTTE 74 Rowena Road, Newton Centre AHLGREN, JOANNE 512 Summer Street, Brockton ALBELLI, JOAN 622 Stiles Avenue, Mamaroneck, N. Y. ANDERSON, JOAN 683 Wilcoxson Avenue, Stratford, Conn. ATWOOD, POLLYANN Box 94, Deer Island, Bantam, Conn. BAKIRAKIS, MARJORIE 86 Henry Street, Malden BALDWIN, FAITH Wildem Road, Berlin, Conn. BIESTER, ANN Pebble Hill Road, Doylestown, Pa. BIRKETT, BETSEY Nobleboro, Maine BLAKE, PHYLLIS Hawthorne Way, Hartsdale, N. Y. BLOOMBERG, HARRIET 1205 Summit Drive, Charleston, W. Va. BOLLMAN, ANN 3801 Connecticut Avenue, N. W., Wash- ington, D. C. BOND, BONNIE One East End Avenue, New York, N. Y. BOWDEN, JEAN 17 Federal Street, Walpole BROWN, JANET 331 Hillside Avenue, Naugatuck, Conn. BROWN, SHEILA 254 Seaver Street, Roxbury 21 BUNIS, ANITA 409 Woodbridge Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. BURLEY, MILLICENT 9 Glendale Road, Summit, N. J. CARLSON, BETTY 111 Winter Street, Norwood CARNWATH, BARBARA Hickory Dell Farm, Newtown, Bucks County, Pa. CHIMACOFF, HARRIET 73 King Street, Hillside, N. J. COLPITTS, MERNA 14 Coolidge Avenue, Needham COOK, JULIA 31 Concord Street, Nashua, N. H. = COREY, CONSTANCE : Millcreek, Falmouth Foreside, Maine = CRYSTAL, PEGGY = 1125 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. = CULLENS, MARY Main Street, Newtown, Conn. BILL’S POLO DINER Taunton Avenue NORTON EET TU EET es STMT (DORCRO COURSES CHER OCR NCR O ROR RADIO CITY BOOK STORE 109 W. 48th St. NEW YORK 36, N. Y. BOOKS OF ALL PUBLISHERS WATERMAN TAXI, INC. MANSFIELD, MASS. POUCCCRO ORT CCU ONES RECUR RRO T OREO PERE ROO UPR CCRT HOUR U POEL O PEER CORNER CORE OO UR RRO R UEP E RHR E TROUT REET RNR N OOOH ROHN OPED ROMA P OCHO NRO OOOH OREO HOUR eee PETA PEUIITUAI CEPI TEI ITEP TIPPETT TPE O TPT OT ITI TTI TTI TT TTT I TITS UT TUT T UST I ST CTI TTT U ITED TTD P TPIS TUTTI CITED TT TTI TTT IIIT TSISI ITI Tit iii ii iiiiiii it TAXI Tel. Mansfield 40 POCEUCCSSU RESTO OUP CREED ESE OR UTEP OPORTO TEU P ROPE U EEO R ERP E PEA E SPD E OPORTO PP UU NEON RPC H NOP ORTHOP NOS TIT Page one hundred two ATTLEBORO TRUST CO. ATTLEBORO, MASSACHUSETTS ALL TYPES OF BANKING SERVICES MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. CEH = . 3 3 = 2 3 3 = = = E 3 3 = 3 = 5 3 = = = 2 3 3 E = COMPLIMENTS OF SOUTHWOOD CONSTRUCTION CORP. IRVING WARFIELD - President WRERRRGEEROROREO OEE GUSTAVE TARLOFSKY - Secretary B ALBERT’S THE GREATEST GIFT || CLEANSING SERVICE Cleansing and Dyeing at its Best OF ALL =: = BONDED COLD STORAGE = 29 South Main St. Opposite Sun Office ATTLEBORO, MASS. PREV ERCECUD POUR TEU OS ERO E CT EEE CEPR DORE O REDS: = Gowns a Specialty Rugs, any Size You don’t have to be a Rockefeller to : : Pick eee ae, Servi give our impoverished world neighbors : : pCR UD SANMLS er VOU es nee the gift they want most: The means to Shirts Laundered to Perfection help themselves to decent living standards. CARE has added to its food service; =: : provides modern tools for farmers; medi- : : QUALITY AND SERVICE cal supplies to save lives; new books to train students in self supporting fields. : : 1 Mail your inquiry or contribution at once! : : WAGNER Ss FLOWER SHOP 660 FIRST AVE. : CARE NEW YORK 16, N.Y. :: 23 BANK STREET PE ATTLEBORO, MASS. Phone 1-0729W = Page one hundred four As little as $10 to the self-help program : Z POCUUCOUEERUUCCEREAECOUU TUTOR ODOC COT CCCC CERO R COOP EO ORAM EOE CCC CREPE EERE CECCOROUEOCREEORE TO CUUOECCSECECCUERUREERSUCERCRERCEULOCUREOCCEOCEECRCUCRECROCCORGCRCUCCEUCOERCR™ § «|OOUERRURERUCCSCURERCCREEECRECCGCCRRCEECCORCRECRCEROECEEE COPDUCUUS SCC PLLC irirerrreerrerrrrrrerecrirrirrereerrriitiriritittiiiiiiiittiii iii JOSEPH KLUMPP CO. : COMPLIMENTS OF = ©: COTTON YARNS MR. MRS. 1617 Pennsylvania Blvd. PHILADELPHIA 3, PA. J. KOPSTEIN '? NEW YORK READING 7 PROVIDENCE SOU UCCUCOUC UOC COC COOC UCC UCC OCO CUO CUO C UOC UOC CUO CO UCOUUC UCN CUO OUUUUUUUUUUULUULUULLUS SO ee UU CUCU CU EC CULO UEC CLEC UUUUCCUUC CUO UUUCUUOC UOC UOOUUOUUOCUUOCUUOUUOROUC TO Parents and Friends of Wheaton College Students find it most convenient to stop at: HOTEL HIXON : ATTLEBOROUGH NORTH ATTLEBORO MASS. || SAVINGS AND LOAN For Reservations Call : ASSOCIATION North Attleboro 8-0750 a COMPLIMENTS OF Hotel Hixon is Only 5 10 Miles From Norton z Organized 1876 Over Excellent Roads ATTLEBORO, MASS. J. Freeman Marston, Pres. Page one hundred five CONGRATULATIONS THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ATTLEBORO Page one hundred six MEUCCOURCCOCCEOOUGHUROUEEOCREUESEOCHLECUGREGOUCUCESOOCGCURCGRURCCRUOUCEECECOUREEOCEROCURORERREEORSOCAEEEEUE COMPLIMENTS OF SPIC AND SPAN CLEANSERS 65 PARK STREET ATTLEBORO, MASS. “ CUCCUCRCREURDECREERURCURORCCC GROUT OR RCC ERCCR CREO CORCURCC COUR CORE ERERERC RECO RCC COP RC PERRO CUO CC COCR EEC PEDINI MOTORS, INC. YOUR LOCAL CHEVROLET DEALER 12 PRATT ST. MANSFIELD PHONE 142 DUCOOUUCCOCUCCCOCOCOOULCCCOOCCCOCUCCLOOCCOOUCCUCCOLCOOUOCOOUCCUOOULOOUUUUOUUUCULOUCCOLOLULLL ELLE ELLA LL iad ADDISON CLARKE BRO. IRON AND STEEL GEORGE W. FITZPATRICK Howard and Cross Streets P. O. Box 1168 BALTIMORE 3, MARYLAND IDEAL TAXI STEPHEN J. WRONA, Prop. Courteous and Efficient Service Phone 300 397 No. Main St., Mansfield = = FEUSEUEEAEAUESSUEASEOSUUCHEREASEAUCHONAREASOUDNORKAEEAUAKAUAEAEUAUEODERELUUUCCEULECOCUUEUL MI FEOUCUEUEUOEOUDEREREOEGGUE DORN EDP OD ORES ORCC URE ED ROU SUSE OREN OSE CROOCO SON OCE RN RESR OR SOCOSSSOOOSTNSNOCOEREEOOR OT) Sherman Hurrucks N. Main and Chauncy Sts. MANSFIELD, MASS. APPLIANCES - TELEVISION We Service What We Sell Tel. Mansfield 144 TUAUUDERDUEAREOEUEUHNERREROREGEEOEE TT tT Page one hundred seven SENIOR CLASS DIRECTORY (Continued) DAVIS, ALICE 118 E. Central Avenue, Federalsburg, Md. DECKER, SUSAN 246 Ocean House Road, Cape Elizabeth, Me. DEY ORJOYGE 88 High Street, Montclair, N. J. DIGRAZIA, PAULA 311 Van Houten Avenue, Passaic, N. J. DODGE, ALISON 3312 N. Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. DOYLE, NANCY 160 Arborway, Jamaica Plain DRANE, ELIZABETH North Worcester Street, Chartley EGER, ANITA 68 Sumner Street, Hartford 5, Conn. ESTES, RUTH 168 Davis Avenue, Auburn, Maine. EVANS, JANE % J. C. Evans, East Aurora, N. Y. FREEMAN, BARBARA 96 Ryan Street, New Bedford GARBARINO, ROSE 530 Waverly Street, Framingham GOLD, AUDRAY 16 Seaver Street, Roxbury HALL, ADELENE 8 Normandie Place, Cranford, N. J. HALL, NINA 50 Manemet Road, Newton Centre HAMMEL, ROXANNA 110 Fountain Avenue, Glendale, Ohio HOFFMAN, ELIZABETH 120 Old Mamaroneck Road, White Plains, COMPLIMENTS OF _ WINDROWS FARM NOBLEBORO, MAINE PUUUC ERO R ERE RE ED RO EEUU URE E OOO EDR R ROU REPRO R EPCRA PROPOR PROPOR PREC UHR E ER CR PREP O ROR Ree eee (CDP OU OCA CCC RECS RCE RCC O URED ROR ORCA ACCRA ORR RCO RCRA ACRE OOO RO RPO O COCR ROCCO CCEA C CROCCO RECO ORCS COCR RE OR OURO ROC O RCC R ROC OOR CROCE REECE OREO CE CRORE ERED PPETU TUCO tbe INGAY HORN, SUE | 1201 Ridgewood Road, Bryn Mawr, Pa. COMPLIMENTS HOUGHTON, AUDREY Corn Point Road, Marblehead OF HUGHES, GWENDOLYN 1551 Dean Street, Schenectady, N. Y. JANES, SUSAN Belgo Road, Lakeville, Conn. KEARSE, PATRICIA 707 Chappell Road, Charleston, W. Va. KING, MARY 4503 Hawthorne Street, N. .W., Washing- Cone Oe aoe KING, NANCY Holland Avenue, Bar Harbor, Maine KIRKMAN, CAROL 8807 Atlantic Avenue, Margate, N. J. KOPSTEIN, ROSALIND 470 Twin Oak Road, S. Orange, N. J. MR. MRS. B. LEVEY TTTIPIPIITITILITIT ISTEP TITSTTTT TTT TTT TT trtttititiiiii titi iiiiitiiiiititiiiiiiit iii iiiiii titi titi Page one hundred eight HICKS BAKERY “THE HOME OF GOOD THINGS TO EAT” Tel. Attleboro 1-0669 22 South Main Street (EUEUOUSOLSGUUNEEOQHURERSQUUUUCOUESUSSOCCOEOSUGSOCSOSEOOCSCUDOOCNCENSOCNOECOEORUCNGUCOSECOTASEEEOOEROROOETE COMPLIMENTS OF AGOOS Leather Companies, Inc. BOSTON, MASS. (UUNEEEGUNUEEROUQGUOACGCCRCCROSCEEORCOOESESDERREUESSCESSSSE EOE U EOE OHOSOEOOSOOESOOUOOSEONUOREUEDON DORR ODOS COMPLIMENTS WHEATON COLLEGE BOOK STORE NORTON, MASS. Furnishings For Modern Homes BOSTOCK FURNITURE CO. 10-12 TRESCOTT ST. TAUNTON, MASS. OU Ris LOR Ee COMPLIMENTS OF | THE F W FOOD PRODUCTS CORPORATION” DUTT LILLY’S DRUG STORE Donald P. Pitman, Reg. Pharm. Tel. 331 — Mansfield, Mass. Page one hundred nine AUUNCUNOUAUNAAUSUNEAULAUMDNUACUANCONNAESGUCOEOUOMGUCEEHMOGHOKAUUUKUECOEOUUUOEREALAOUNUUCUROUAEGOAEGUNTUOALEOUGOOUOSEEROUEGESOAROAUROUROOORAONROCOOEOOCUCULECOCROEROOREOKAOEREAOREEEOESUULEURUEEETEREUREEALELUEREAL CONGRATULATIONS To The Class of 1954 From the Classes of 1955 1956 1957 | Fiyavevuvuvnavavenavsnuensvevavenenenuanenavnuecensavanaysnuqesnanananenegnsennenanegs94Q200Q000000000000 0UQ600N0E00H0N0OARSBRAAANOBADEOANEONORONOOADADEOAOAAOANANERABASATAOAOAAOEOSOAUCAGUGOOOGNONOROUOOOBESOET Page one hundred ten PUUEEECCUCEEEEREOEERCCCCRCOCUCCCCEREERCREROCCRRERRECEECRECRCCC OER EECRECE ECC RUCR ECR ECR ECR ERE ECE ECR COCR ERE ER © COC OCP OCCUR RER OCCT EC CCC ORC COCO C CRE EC EERE CCC CCE E CCE CC ECC C EERE CROCE ECR O ECE EEEOCC EOC COCR OCR OCT EOE E EEE E ER = = = - SULLIVAN'S . ah OFFICE SUPPLY CO. :: Davol Printing House Est. 1921 CHARLES W. DAVOL TYPEWRITERS =? JOB PRINTING SINCE 1858 RENT REPAIR SAIGE sire “Everything For The Office” : : Raa Ta Re rONAScaa Pelephonern9621 Tel. 4-4076-7 2: THE TREDENNICK - BILLINGS CO. BUILDING CONSTRUCTION 10 HIGH STREET BOSTON, MASS. FACULTY HOUSING FACULTY DINING ROOM NEW INFIRMARY = = POUUCCCUEOLCOLUCLOOUL CC UUULCCUULCLOLL COOOL CULL CULL LE OLLL LULU LUGO LLCO R GULL RGEC L EGLO ORL L RECOLOR OORT TTT itt Tri TTT iyi WOCCOROCUEOCC CCRC ORCCCCCRCCC ECO ECCC CCC CPCUCEURCCUCCCCCCCOU ROCCE CCEOCE RCE CCERCESCCR EEE CCC ROPE REESE EEOE CE CPOCUEOCCRCCEOCCCECECCORCCOCCECCUCCCRCE ECC UCCCOCCETCOOCCECCCUCCCCCOCUECCEUCCCCCRUEOUCCCCEOCOCUREOROROROOEE = = = COMPLIMENTS OF COMPLIMENTS OF Atherton Furniture Co. 32 SOUTH MAIN STREET Ideal Furniture Attleboro, Mass. C ; ompany Complete Home Furnishings EE CHARLESTON Chester Gilbert - Ted Gilbert : WEST VIRGINIA Lawrence Gilbert - Edward Flowers a5 Page one hundred eleven SOUUUUUCOUO COC UUC UO CUO UOC UOC ULC UUL COU ULL COU UUCOC LOU LOU LUO UUUUUUCOUCUUUCUUUUUCOUUC COU UC OOOO UULULOUUUUUU CORO OOO ULC OUOUUUUUUCUUCUUUOUUCUUUUUOLLOUUGOUUUUUUUUU OCCU OOOO e kL COMPLIMENTS OF DEFIANCE BLEACHERY FINISHERS OF FINE FABRICS HEBERLEIN PERMANENT FINISH ON ORGANDY, OUR SPECIALTY BARROWSVILLE, MASS. SARKIS Radio Television 4 Service 2: GEORGE E. MANDIGO “Over 26 Years In Business” : 20 SOUTH MAIN ST. f: MANSFIELD, MASS. 2: SAND - LOAM - GRAVEL TEL. 95 : 5 gt tS PPR gd! ov: 18s SN CMa oul OO i CRANE - SHOVEL BULLDOZER SERVICE COMPLIMENTS OF Hanson Company, Inc. TAUNTON, MASS. Prescription Specialists + Tel. 4-4335 27 BROADWAY : TAUNTON, MASS. Page one hundred twelve A RUC UCP ORC CR OC CEC CEC O UCC OCCU COCO OCCUR COCR O CCC CEO C COCO O CROC PERCE ORCC O COCO C OR eeeerenoees ooeeet SENIOR CLASS DIRECTORY (Continued) COMPLIMENTS OF KOZOL, BARBARA 35 Kenilworth Street, Newton KRAKAUR, ANITA-MARIE 952 E. Broadway, Milford, Conn. LEE, BARBARA 1111 Beach Road, Rosemont, Pa. LEO, SUZANNE 13 Sunny Brae Place, Bronxville, N. Y. LEVY, ISABEL 111 Riddell Street, Greenfield LIU, JEAN 26 Woods Road, Belmont LONG, LUCIA One Midway Road, Pittsburgh 16, Pa. LOWE, HELEN Old Shore Road, Cape May, N. J. MACAULAY, BARBARA 388 Ocean Avenue, Marblehead MacLEAN, ELEANORE 4604 Kerneway, Baltimore 12, Md. MANDELL, ELLEN 1 North Green Street, Plymouth MARSH, HELEN Chateau Brittany, Scarsdale, N. Y. McALOON, BARBARA 782 Walnut Street, Newton McKNIGHT, ELEANOR 611 Jefferson Street, Jamestown, N. Y. MILLER, CONSTANCE 26 Narrege-nsett Bay Avenue, Warwick Neck, R. I. MILLER, JEAN Old Northfield Road, Thomaston, Conn. MOORE, SARAH 39 Glen Moore Circle, Lancaster, Pa. MOREHOUSE, LILIAS Cherry Street, Katonah, N. Y. MORRIS, HELENE 99-32 66th Road, Forest Hills, N. Y. MURRAY, SANDRA 164 Burnham Street, Hartford 12, Conn. NALCHAJIAN, JOANNE 5 Nichols Street, Chelsea NASH, NORMA 3845 N. Pleasant Street, Amherst O’CALLAGHAN, MARY 52 Rollinghill Road, Manhasset, L. I., N. Y. OVERLY, MARY 851 Twelfth Street, Oakmont, Pa. PILLSBURY, JOAN Nut Swamp Road, Middletown, N. J. RADEMACHER, EVELYN 449 Ridge Road, Hamden, Conn. THE MANSFIELD PRESS JOCUCOCCCCOCNCCUUUC RECUR CR CRERT UT CU RRC E RS AU OC HR CDC ERDOCOC RAUCH CU CUC ESC U RUC CR ROR AUT C NOOR FORT ORG OC CHUTE CCC CC ONTO C ROOT UNTER ONS OR ROAR OCR O NRO O ASO See aN eeeee EE COCR R ECC CC CCA CORE ROR RR CRRA RRR RE ARERR RC RO RCRA RRC RO RARE CREP C UR CC EEE RCR ECE EE DRE CRERCH RRO RURRCR ROR CCO RCO RO RRC R RARE CC REE EOU EEE RRH ERS RRORED RRO OR OREO REO eee VOCOC POC CE CECE ACCC CCC COCO CREO O PERCE CERO C OOOO COCR OCCU OCC R CC CC COON OOOO NCCU ORCC ORCC RTC OR CRON OCC nena eae COMPLIMENTS OF OLD COLONY FURNITURE CO., INC. NASHUA, NEW HAMPSHIRE PURAUREOEEEUECEOEEREREEOREREREEREEEREAREEEEREREDRERRSERRORERESEROOROEORTOEORORRERRERECROR EDN OSURCREERADUREREC ROR OROCE ROPE DE CCD RO AEDES CORO DERE R CORO S ERODE OCR PSEC PORES EDUC SCOR OPE OROROOD OSPR CCEDEDDUSPCDD URE DORORORUEORDERORURDOROUORODUCCCCRUSERORCSER DCSE DOO EUROUOCORUREROUREREREEREREEEOR OREO ER SCORPNORR ORDER OR ORARS RESO REGAOD PUT EUUUCUUITEEEU UPTO E EPITOPE OTOP ODOT ECCT E TEC T TESTES TOU TUT OT CTUU TESS ISTTTR OUT HOPPE ECUCREUUREUPEEUEC CUCU PERE PERO SPEU ERO R ECE E REGU EOEO CEE R ER AOC EOE ORPOD ERE E EPAPER EEEORPOU CREE OR ORORRGEEREE Y STU PUUIUIPPPU PPE E EEE DPPP TEEPE Eitiiiiiliitisiiiiiiiliiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiy Page one hundred thirteen POCUUCUUUUAUUCMUAEAAAAUAAAUUUAANOCULEASERUOAHAUUAANEDEASCORESOECRUSAUAMOUOEACACUCCMCAUCAUEROATODAGUOUAUCLEVEVEMUEEOUQEROAANUUSSSUAUSSUAUAUUOOOOOOOEOOOOONOOUAUSUOCCUUCOUNSUOUOOUOGOOURNUOUOAOSOUCSHAUSHAUOOOOUOUOUSSUOCOSUSUOAUSUAUSOOUOONOOONONCNOENOSOOOOUOOOOSSCOUSUONNUSUOOOUSEONONERECUREAEOUOOGOOOAEESRERERERRRAABORAEDY WEAR YOUR WHEATON CLASS RING always Your class ring is a symbol of lasting friendship and fellowship at Wheaton. Cherish it and wear it always. It will be the means of recognition wherever you go near or far away. The well-known symbols of Pan and Pegasus will be recognized by other college men and women wherever you may travel. With the deeply cut ‘““W” on either ring shank and the intaglio Pan or Pegasus on the ring top with your class year below, your Wheaton ring is a distinctive style and one that is particularly beau- tiful. Why not use your ring top im- pressed on a bit of sealing wax to seal your letters in a smart and unusual manner. Your official jeweler is located in the neighboring com- munity of Attleboro, the heart of the jewelry industry. In addition to the manufacture of your class rings, we also offer our services in the making of your commence- ment announcements and personal cards. TOM GALVIN is your friendly Balfour Representative L. G. BALFOUR ATTLEBORO, MASSACHUSETTS Company THE MACHINISTS NATIONAL BANK OF TAUNTON TAUNTON, MASSACHUSETTS EST. 1847 : NORTON OFFICE WEST MAIN STREET NORTON, MASS. J. J. AINSWORTH, Manager COMPLETE COMMERCIAL BANKING SERVICE Complete Commercial Banking Service Checking Savings Accounts Travelers’ Checks Registered Checks Personal Loan Department Mortgage Loan Department Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Eineeeor || WHEATO N INN Adjacent to the Campus SCHILDKNECHT : : Open 12 - 2 P. M. — 5:30 - 7:30 P. M. = CLOSED MONDAY LUMBER CO., INC. zi “A SNACK OR A BANQUET” ye DINING ROOM : 1051 IRVING AVE. =u SODA FOUNTAIN BROOKLYN 27, N. Y. - EVERGREEN 6-3636 Open 12 Noon to 7:30 P. M. zi Closed Saturday TPIT TUTE onnnae HEnanent ouennaeee DUDOCEEEOUEOSUED ORDO DEED ET veenenas PUPPOUDOPOUNOP DEO EPUE DEORE DEED COCCUETOEOSUREOO DEED E EDO PUSUUOSPOP POOP PP EE PEDU TOOT Page one hundred fifteen (POCPERCOOCCCUCCEDECECOCUCUECEEEROCPOTOCERCEROROGUOCCOROCORUCUCCEEEREROSUSSUUE DOSER OOCUCCCCUEEOREGOGRUCCCUOCOOGCUCEOCROCCOCECOCUCOUECACOOOOURRCCOEOOCCCOORRCOCOEOU OOO OOORUCUUCOERCOOCOCUTEORCER COS OROCCODOTECERECEERE Best Wishes To The Class of 1954 MR. MRS. ALFRED LOWETT AND FAMILY _ = NUUUDUOOUDOUOOEOOUSONSUNOOSOOSUSERONEOSUAOEOSHNAHAOVOSERANOOUOSONSUOOROOUONNNDUOOSOOSSONOSOODEOONOSSODAEDOSONOONODEOOLORHSHEDOSOOOOOEODAOOPOONONNONNSOOOONONSONSONSOROSOPORSORSNEDODAQNSONOOEOANONOSEDOUNOESSHNDRNODEORGT Page one hundred sixteen HOCCOCOUCCUCCCUORUECUUCCUCUCSOCUCCCOET ACAD OGONEOOUECCGUTCL ECU EOCCCCCUROCCROCCUCUORCEUCCOORCCCEOCOTERT ORE SUUCCCCC COCO CROCCO CON CC RCO CC ORC CCC CONC OCCA ECO C CC OCCROTEECOCOOCOCUROCCREUCCCURCCOOCHCCCORO ORCC OROEE = = ACADEMIC GOWNS CAPS HOODS Of Authentic Design Sold and Rented by COTRELL and LEONARD INC. Established 1832 ALBANY 1, N. Y. Suppliers to Wheaton College SENIOR CLASS DIRECTORY (Continued) RAY, ROSALINE 131 East 98rd Street, New York, N. Y. RICKER, MADELINE 11 Berwick Place, Norwood RITTER, NANCY 503 Brandywine Boulevard, Wilmington, Del. ROBINSON, ROBERTA 23 Thackeray Road, Wellesley Hills RODGERS, AGNES 13 Thorn Street, Sewickley, Pa. ROESLER, LUCILE 950 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. ROTONDI, PHYLLIS 5 Goden Street, Belmont 78 RUSSELL, ALICE 2721 Marine Street, South Bend, Ind. SAWYER, SARA 381 West Cedar Street, Boston ESHERMERHORN, JEANETTE 1155 Glendale Road, Wilbraham SCHIFF, LOIS 100 Park Avenue, Newton 58 SCHREIBER, OTTILIE Eagle Road, Newtown, Pa. SEYMOUR, DIANA Canoe Hill, New Canaan, Conn. SHERRILL, BARBARA Dover House, Round Hill Road, Greenwich, Conn. SILVER, MARCIA 30 Bruce Lane, Newton SILVERSTEIN, PHYLLIS 28 Stephen Street, Manchester, Conn. SMITH, DEBORAH 29 Longfellow Road, Natick SPRINZ, LISBETH 9 Rockridge Road, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. STARR, EDITH 12 Brown Road, Swampscott STEVENSON, NANCY 229 Engle Street, Englewood, N. J. STROHACKER, LYONA 28 W. Ridge Drive, Waterbury, Conn. THOMAS, AMY Pugh Road, Wayne, Pa. THOMAS, PENNY 22 Longfellow Road, Wellesley Hills TROY, AILEEN 1185 Park Avenue, New York N. Y. VERCOE, CHARLOTTE 218 Washington Street, Barre, Vt. WANTMAN, MARILYN 281 Mason Terrace, Brookline WATERS, ELIZABETH 608 W. University Parkway, Baltimore 10, Md. WEDEN, FAITH 22 Central Street, Auburndale WHITALL, MARGARET 5363 Magnolia Street, Philadelphia, Pa. ZANDITON, EDITH 96 Wolcott Road, Chestnut Hill 67 COMPLIMENTS OF Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Whitman and Family TUCDODECUUUEONTEOOSSOD ponnnene FODUUOUDEDOUDOSOLODOSD ODODE OSSOE OSSD NSTORESEODEO DOU OSDOEORSOEERDE OREO ONTT FRANCES WILMARTH CASUAL CLOTHES 217 MAIN STREET KINGSTON, MASS. COCCCC CECA NOHO OSE O OU NOM NNN O UE OORODOOODROOOROONONUEEEODD CCCCRECCCCEteeee OVOUESPEUAUUEERCSEOEREOURUPSUS TAD OS ESO E EOE ECAP POE OPEC E ERE O OPORTO ESOC ORONO UUSE PO OU HOU CUES ESOS ESE REE Eay Page one hundred seventeen Gulavg t ly {ad MCLs DE COMPLIMENTS OF ¢ —= ) aunton ) 4 : 1, A YS GRACIOUS HOSPITALITY 90 Modern Rooms and Suites With ii KIRLEY COAL Tubs and Showers : PePREMEPARKING—= SUPPLY CO. Air-Conditioned Herring Run Restaurant J. EDWARD DOWNES, Host :: Take Route 138 to Taunton z 208 NO. MAIN STREET Taunton, Mass. Mansfield, Mass. THL. 4-7574 4 BANQUET ROOMS TUOPEDDONOOUDESOVOROOSUONDERDASSUESOOOOSUSENSOOONOSUOPOODCUNESUORONOUOSSOOUOPOSUOOSOUOEOOONOODOO NS SOOO NONE VPUUESEOC CSE E DOTS DEEN EAE N ACCES CESSES ETON OPPOSE TEA O ANA P DHSS P CDOT SSO N PREP ODN OR SOROS OPER RED There is NO Substitute for: + ORANGE JUICE CLEMENT S. CRYSTAL, :: OR INC. a FRESH FRUIT SECTIONS 2 Orange - Grapefruit - Pineapple 218 W. 49TH ST. Delivered Throughtout NEW YORK 19, N. Y. New England '} Orange Food Products, BUILDING CONTRACTORS ?: Inc. 19 Wyola Place - Dorchester 2, Mass. TEL: BOSTON AVenue 2-1500 PROVIDENCE - GAspee 1-2212 a DUSEUOUEEUSUECSESSOSSERUUCOEUOCCEPEUOOUSEUOOPEEEUOESEOOOCSE ORO ESEDEOSS SUCH SS EPOSSENOENSOEOOSEEE CUCUCEETR «| VOSUUESSUEEECEOUEOCEEESEASEEESSEEONY DOUESEEEENE FUDEUEEDEDOUEROEE PEDEEEUECOUDECUEEUECOUESEEEECESEE ESSE EEE Page one hundred eighteen WIL-HOLD BOB PINS: The Bob-Pin that women select. They choose these better hair setting bob pins for these important reasons: more spring, tighter grips, non-chip, smooth finish, big round ball rubber tips. WIL-HOLD SHORTIES: Women are buying these sensational new 1 2” pins like hot cakes—the only short bob pin with all Wil-Hold quality features. ; We sure worked hard to make your hair-setting easier! Oh, yes . . , even mere men discover that hair- setting is a problem. And naturally a gentleman always tries to help a lady in distress. So we designed these Wil-Hold Bob Pins that don’t fall out all over the bed and let that terrific hair-do run wild. We gave them big round-ball rubber tips so they’re easy to open, scratch-proof, and don’t wreck your finger nails and teeth. We added a beautiful satin smooth plastic-base finish that won’t chip or break hair. Yes, we worked hard .. . but all you have to do is ask for Wil-Hold’s at the store. IENEGEOSRSPeOL REA TIPE. D 79 Madison Avenue, New York 16, N. Y. Page one hundred nineteen BEST WISHES COMPLIMENTS OF H. P. HOOD SONS BRISTOL FARMS 1846 - 1953 COMPLIMENTS COMPLIMENTS OF THE iy v KEARSE THEATRE FLYNN’S HARDWARE = SECUCOCEPECUNUEEEROQREOODOOOUPEOCDEREREUBSORCCERCOORRERRUGRCROERCCOUCUOURURMONEEOSSORGOREOUOEREREUEREREROE = “A COMPLETE HARDWARE S: COMPLIMENTS AND STORE” 1E fe SUCCESS TO NIKE and 1954 GRADUATES ATTLEBORO THE BUNIS FAMILY CERTIFIED + =x ont “= Here Pe , [4 AZ 4s Qa ENT CO Atlantic Corporation “CERTIFIED” by the Country’s Leading Manufacturer Johns Manville Spintex Home Insulation : : Asphalt Roofing - Asbestos Siding a= arter Aluminum Windows = E RUBIN EPSTEIN Pres 5] . Kota Combination Doors zi a: BOSTON A. J. Becker Son 2 22 PINE STREET ATTLEBORO : Tel. 1-2934 p: Page one hundred twenty AUCCEDEDEOROSEOREDUCECCOURERRECERCCOREERCONCOCEEORGREROOOC DOR OREDLCOOCRUCCCRCCRORSRUCHCUCHE OCOD CHEOECECOUCOROUCROCULERCCCCCCCCRRCCUUCCCOCCCOCCRCUCCCCCCCUROUOCUCUNNCCCCRCCRCCUCOCCURCHCOHOCHHUCCCOCCTORGRCCRCREREOCECE 4 = ESTABLISHED 1928 THE APEX TOOL CO., INC. AIRCRAFT PARTS 325 Cherry Street Bridgeport 5, Conn. A FRIEND “CARAVAN” OF by i MICHAEL JAY’S = WHEATON ANDOVER AS and 2 esac mumsnet arta : SE ree eeae be A COMPLIMENTS Wearables Accessories OF A “Things Different” FRIEND PTT TF PUPODOUSSOONOODOUUUUSDDO NUDED OU RORDEORROSEOOROORODCSESODROCROAOUDRSOOOOOERSAOPOOUCRERERUOOROUOUORR NOOO ORE) Page one hundred twenty-one PUCECCCOCCCOCCCOOCCCORCOCCCU CCRC COCCCCOOEERCCCCUCUCOCOCUCCRCRCOCUCCUCOCOCCOOCRECCCCOCUUCEOCCORRGECCUCRCECOCECCCEOEECCOROEORCRCRCCEOCCHCOCCCCOORECOEECCCCROCCCRCCCRRCCOCUR SOCCER GECOCRECCOCCERERCCCCROERECC ROUTER OROROEE COMPLIMENTS OF TEXTRON INCORPORATED COMPLIMENTS OF WEST MAIN STREET A NORTON ate R Girl's School and College Y Outfitters : WRIGHT DITSON 462 BOYLSTON ST. BOSTON, MASS. Page one hundred twenty-two CUCU UUUUCCUUUCCCOUUCCCUUUCCUUUUUCOULUCOULUULCUULUCCUUUOCOULUUUOUUUOCCOUUULLUUULLLLOLOLLLELLLLLL The Atlantic Coast Fisheries Co. HOTEL - RESTAURANT and INST. DIVISION 1 FISH PIER ROAD BOSTON, MASS. COMPLIMENTS OF Mr. Mrs. Fred Kellner COMPLIMENTS OF THE LOFT THE VILLAGE GREEN Norton, Mass ASHLEY DRUG CO., INC. Prescriptions - Cosmetics Si sPAR KS ATTLEBORO, MASS. SUSCORCCCOCOCCEU ECACC CC EO CCRC ECO ECORECC EURO RCRCO CCRC ORC CREOHOCCO CHER OOEOCCR DOUCHE ORDER EC CC OCR ERRCCE CREE COOL 1094 BAY ST. TAUNTON, MASS. Serving Fine ITALIAN DINNERS PIZZA Our Specialty Mansfiel d Record Shop 340 N. MAIN ST. MANSFIELD, MASS. Tel. 1121 Musie As You Like It Page one hundred twenty-three POCCOCD RCP O EOC CCC CCCORCCCTECTUCCCCCCCCC EERE CECCCECCCCORCECCUE CCT EECOROCCRCCCCCRTCCCOCCCRCCRECROEOCCCEREREEE | CECCCCCRCCCCCCCCCEC CCRC CREO ECCERTOCCCCORECCOCEEROCCCORCECECCCRORCCCOORCCECCCURECCOCOREROCRROCCECCEREEEREE EES COMPLIMENTS OF “A FRIEND ay a DUNNINGTON’S APOTHECARIES CLASS” : BROCKTON TAUNTON THE SPECIALTY SHOPPE NORTON DURAND CHOCOLATE | COMPLIMENTS OF SHOP :: L. G. Beers Company Fresh Candies Fine Ice Cream ?: JEWELERS Sanamionce :? Diamonds - Gifts - Watches 75 Expert Watch Repairing 19 TAUNTON GREEN =: 65 Main St. Taunton, Mass. (TeePOOSOODOODOOSOOONRDROSOANCOCUOUOOSOROOOSOUSSOASOSOSOAUNCEOODUSOSOSS SSOP OOS OCOOONUDODEOOSOOEESODODSO RED TITILITIIIT i Page one hundred twenty-four COMPLIMENTS OF MILLER CLEANERS COMPLIMENTS OF = OLD COLONY ROAD ae CHARTLEY, MASS. PRATT’S STORE | poten Serene THE CAMEO SHOP GIFTS - JEWELRY ROUTE 1238 NORTON, MASS. NORTON, MASS. Jewelry Repairing = =. = = SUEUECDODCCUOSO PDO U PEO E DOE OURO RODD U DORADA DERE SE ODOR O POPPE ROCHE RPO E DOOD O PROD AOR O DODO O DORR DOES SHOR RO DRDO GE) «SOURS ODER U DUC O DRDO O POR O SENOS RRR H ROPES PU SC HERE PSDP ENDO EPO P APRON NATO OUP EOP DURE PES OP ER OR ORD U DODO RCNP O ROE R aD A FRIEND OF WHEATON COMPLIMENTS OF COMPLIMENTS Blue Ribbon Meat — ri Market and = Alfonso’s Shoe Shop 7 Fleetwood Friends ITTTITITI THONOAUOUOEOOUSUOEOOUOEUOOUUOOUOUOEOSUANOOUOOUOUSUOUOOROOUKECEUENOUOEOSUOUOSEDEQECOOOEOEEDEOUESEOEREEOEOON Page one hundred twenty-five NSS ETA Ly é 2 © a EE SE i i { I | Sy Hl PAIN NAY N AS i c Ww i I Nt NY | ‘ wy ANN AY RA i) lier Again” A familiar and reassuring slogan _—— ba eA NY oy AWA GAG) vA uAvAuS VA F a it has appeared i j Sg EL ; i be Bn NIV ieee of the country's fee Wj{Z Pin Will Wier W BO AUN AEA Zp Za 4 _ LE 2) ) Ye books for the past half century. i a YY HAN er | A 6, ! R coed. th f lee A . se oN cesar | Mime AA i jf service, outstanding quality and de- M ) pendable delivery to the yearbook staffs M J with whom we work. : HHI}} i, | (ll f A ZA s AVE JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING CO, 4 Z 817 W. Washington Blvd. Chicago 7, Illinois Printed by The Benton Review Publishing Co., Inc., Fowler, Ind. Page one hundred twenty-six Nike Staff ART STAFF Barbara Watts, editor Anne Knowles Constance Lanner Anne Noble Susan Prichard Jane Walker ADVERTISING STAFF Jane Lowett, editor Morrisa Basseches Marjory Hall Frances Hedges Joan Jacobus Margaret Leith Sheila McKenney Serena Savage Elizabeth Smith CIRCULATION STAFF Marion McDonald, editor Joyce Connell Marguerite Davenport Barbara Karr Anne Knowles Margaret Leith Barbara Mann Marjory Pearlman Beverly Pratt Sandra Seppala OURSSPECIALS LEIANKS . 4. 0 Fe LO ee ne ee tee Shirley Reed PEE BC Ne Ooh, Po ERLE she ONS ak I BEN NE ES Laura Ives LITERARY STAFF Elizabeth Conrad, editor Nancy Castro Barbara Karr Barbara Mann PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Marietta Patzau, editor Betty Blair Joyce Connell Marguerite Davenport Betty Feldman Peggy Kellner Viola Ryder Elizabeth Smith PUBLIGUIVY STARE Ellen Whitman, editor Ann Batchelor Linda Bartlett Sheila McKenney Michaela McLane to Jane Walker for her impressive art work; to Mrs. Dahl and her trusty camera and her generosity and her professional advice; to Miss Jennings, our faculty advisor, for her infallible pen; to the Misters DeKane for their expert photography and willing help; to Mr. Gilmore, representative from the S. K. Smith Company, who smilingly settled our perplexing cover problems; and to Mr. Gurwit, our good friend from Jahn and Ollier, for his many encouraging trips to Wheaton, for the steak, and for his invaluable aide and advice .... we wouldn’t have this book without him. Page one hundred twenty-seven Page one hundred twenty-eight oh Rs ir, Fras 3 c ‘ 4 : ee Rie 42 rd : oct, “2 . Sig ae : r 5 “ $ A = = = o 4 é ; ‘ sea ) ¥ ‘ ' 1 :
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