Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA)

 - Class of 1965

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 232 of the 1965 volume:

NIKE 1965 WHEATON COLLEGE NORTON, MASS. The staircase leads through shadowed halls And entrance ways (a maze of ways) We turn our feet to follow it And chart the trackless infinite. Each breathless step leads down and on Its many angles beckoning Ahead, tomorrow’s vision brings Behind are strewn rememberings, And moments (all-together shared) With those like us who place their feet And dreams upon a winding stair: Our faces turned to follow it Beneath the torch that we have lit. _ ee eee ee : tt ‘a. a ‘ ; 8 7 r DEDICATION With grateful recognition of the 34 years she has spent as an economics profes- sor and head of the Economics Department at Wheaton, the class of 1965 dedi- cates Nike 1965 to Henrietta Cooper Jennings. The rhythm and pomp of the last 34 years has imparte d to Wheaton the sense of controlled progress only a judicious use of experience can bring. Miss Jennings is an individual who mirrors this strengthening of creative yet traditional forces by an instinctive exercise-of insight. During the years she has given to Wheaton, she has devoted herself with characteristic thoroughness to the tasks of her convic- tions. Appreciative of the worth of a complete library, she diligently worked toward the planning of the new library wing, and is presently an energetic and resourceful President of the Norton Public Library Board. Recognizing the grace of tradition, she has patiently worked with the senior cap and gown committee. Responsive to the beauty of clarity, she has always awakened in her students a respect for the objective approach and the explicit statement. Finally, in tribute to the stability of order, she has since 1947 led faculty processionals into Cole Memorial Chapel. With the sense of difficulty in surrendering a teacher who for so long has employed her heart and mind for Wheaton’s well-being, the college extends to Miss Jennings a sincere hope for happiness after this conclusion of her successful Wheaton era. ietta Cooper Jennings ect lcs Dono A RRM a ian — v a= hide its 168 a HOW TO BUY STOCKS eeneeer aevn) areebs ii' d veda HESAOMEY OF Be Once DOCTRINES OF° aieie Abram T. Collier, Chairman BOARD OF TRUSTEES Abram T. Collier, A.B., LL.B., Chairman Gilbert H. Hood, Jr., A.B., M.B.A., Vice-President Maurice L. Clemence, A.B., M.B.A., Treasurer Muriel E. Reynolds, A.B., L.H.D., Secretary Sylvia Meadows, A.B., A.M. Helen Wieand Cole, Ph.d., L.H.D. Richard P. Chapman, A.B., M.B.A., LL.D. Garrol.M; olankenb:b7Ar Le ele: William T. Hastings, A.M., Ed.D., Litt.D. Ruth Capers McKay, Ph.D. Frances Ruml Jordan, A.M. Herbert Gezork, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D. Magdalena V. Quinby, A.B. Brackett H. Clark, Ph.B. Irene E. Longley, A.B. Margaret S. Eberle, A.B., A.M., Ed.D. Helen Watson Buckner Luther Gardner Holbrook, B.S., M.B.A. David Weld, A.B. William C. H. Prentice, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., ex officio William Courtney Hamilton Prentice A.B., A.M., Ph.D. President f ce a : ; ; K Mee ; 7 240 L fee 5 meee In comparing the past of any college with its pre- sent, we find it easy to concentrate on the differences between old and new; it is equally easy to concentrate on what has remained the same; what is harder, I think, is to keep in mind, as part of a single concep- tion, the changeless and the changed. The growth of human institutions has much in common with organic growth. It must always build upon the old, and, in successful and healthy growth, the old is recognizable in the new. With colleges as with people, “the child is father to the man,” but hidden in that phrase are con- quests and failures, pride and regret, knowledge and mystery. No one could have foreseen the exact shape of Wheaton College today, and hindsight may reveal truer ways in which it could have been formed; but the faith and idealism of its founders still shows through, and the adult college surely achieves their purposes more effectively than the infant ever could. Unlike people, institutions do not have a fixed life span, and careful planning can grant them unending years of maturity or even of youthful growth. Wheaton is still flowering, still gaining strength, still laying the groundwork for the changes that future generations will bring, whether those changes are in size, in the success of particular programs, or in wholly new edu- cational contributions. Even today we are laying plans for the next decade—alternative plans that can be ex- plored and compared before final decisions can be made. The healthy and lively stimuli to growth are present. To what ends do you think they should be di- rected? PLLA ODL ERE LE SLE SABE — a : ee : os i we Seas Walter James Kenworthy A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Dean of the College Our world changes so rapidly now that many of us have come to resent change as such. We all agree that a flexible mind is an essential attribute for anyone who wants to live comfortably in this world. Of course, complete flexibility is never achieved by anyone, but fortunately is not really desirable. Your professors have shown you the ways in which schol- ars deal with both new and old ideas, and they have encouraged you to prac- tice these methods. I hope that you will neither be fright- ened by novelty nor infatuated with it. Be comfortable with your own views and evaluate each new thing. Never be afraid to accept or reject any new idea or method. Your class has been successful in preserving the traditions of the College during its period of greatest change. I have no fears for your future. | ‘ % Nae, Diverse and widespread changes at Wheaton have given rise to the question, have the girls changed, too? After all, Wheaton is its students. The answer is yes, they have changed, and no, they are unchanged. Warmly friendly, thoughtful, courteous, genuine and loyal—they are the same Wheaton girls I have always known. More responsible to meet the challenge of ever-increasing freedoms, more conscious of the need of facing social inequalities, more certain of the value of the tools of learning, they are more maturely able to cope with an insecure world. Leota Carolene Colpitts A.B., A.M. Dean of Students ant cccmcaael atin whe a ve a th masa Nancy Paine Norton A.B PhD} Assistant Dean of the College Ellen Freedman Dingman A.B. Assistant Dean of Students ey, Harry Moore Landis A.B., M.S. Assistant Dean of the College Donald Clayton Anderson B.B.A., M.B.A. Business Manager Peter Paul Wieliczko B.S. Comptroller Leah Margaret Dearden B.S.E., A.M. Registrar Arthur David Raybin A.B. Director of Development and Public Relations Carolyn Colbath Crandall Barbara Ziegler A.B. A.B., A.M. Associate Director of Admission Director of Admission Hilda Frame A.B., B.S. Librarian Harris Mario Stanhope Keating Palmer, M.D. College Physician 7 wee a ® . vo ess issse8 og sanee ee + 4's 0? i: Margaret Elizabeth Clayton A.B. Executive Secretary of the Alumnae Association John Patrick Wright Director of Household Department % fe a 4 t cae m: | | . an Se ws Wilfred Phillips Raymond Manager of the Bookstore James Fox Director of Dining Halls ‘ee Charles William Harting Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings 5 ; : ‘ Qo Ny , f z - tie , Vy nS, . oe rr. ‘ , % tre 8 ee a ART Wheaton is growing. For the art department, fortunate in its new quarters in Watson Hall, this has meant the opportunity to provide a gallery program which will increasingly enrich campus life. Informal gallery talks will supplement the program of scholarly lectures made possible by the Shippee Memorial. An art library with a growing collection of fine books provides each student enrolled in an art course with a quiet and lovely place for concentrated study. A studio program thoughtfully devised to provide the budding art historian with an understanding of concerns and working methods of artists now and in the past is housed in flexible and well-equipped studio areas. We look ahead to improved slide and photograph collections and, eventually, to a collection of fine works of art. Of greatest importance is a continuing dedication on the part of students and faculty alike to serious study on a campus still small and compact, fortunate in the richness of the total college offerings and in its nearness to great museums and libraries. Melvin Zabarsky, B.F.A., M.F.A. Joyce Reopel Zabarsky Assistant Professor of Art Assistant Professor of Art | Mary Shimer Mangat-Rai, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Art Lucile Elizabeth Bush, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Art, Head of Department NJ sie: - Marion Richards Wise, A.B. Assistant in Art Seam CA come sl Mary Laura Heuser, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Art 4 s en Charles Knight Fassett, A.B., A.M. Frank Wells Ramseyer Jr., A.B., A.M. Choral Director and Instructor in Music Professor of Music Helen Zoe Duncan, B.Mus. Ellalou Dimmock, A.B. Assistant Professor of Music Instructor in Music MUSIC To relate courses to the living art of music— To present listening to music and the making of music as more than idle pastimes— To provide opportunities for the students to encoun- ter the qualities of perfection and grandeur which, to be recognized and understood, involve heart, spirit, and intellect— All this we seek to do in order to assure music its rightful place within the liberal arts. dL Edna Dorintha Parks, B.Mus., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Music, Head of Department Carlton Thrasher Russell, A.B., M.F.A. Instructor in Music Nancy Ann Yeager, B.Mus., M.Mus. Instructor in Music Phillip Kaplan Instructor in Music Felix A. Viscuglia, B.Mus. Instructor in Music Willard Finley Enteman, A.B., M.B.A., A.M. Instructor in Philosophy Nancy Cirillo Instructor in Music Janet Espo, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Philosophy RELIGION As far as the classroom activities of the college are concerned, the most obvious change at Wheaton is that there are about twice as many students as there were back in 1957. The initial fear, of course, is that such an increase means an inevitable decline in the quality of instruction. But, I think that this is not necessarily so. The increased enrollment may mean an. increased diversity of thought, and hence, an enrichment of classroom discussion. In the Religion Department, it has enabled us to increase the number of mem- bers of the Department, and consequently we have increased the diversity of course offerings. This has meant that we are able now to cover the field of study in greater depth and to offer some courses which reflect the special interests and competencies of the faculty members. And this is all to the good. We are still a small college—small enough to preserve the great value of the small college—the personal attention of the professor to the interests, needs, abilities, and deficiencies of the individual student. John Arthur Martin, A.B, Seb oul Megas Professor of Religion, Head of Department peer eee 4 ee Charles Conrad Forman, Harold Field Worthley, A.B., A.M., S.T.B. ah , S.T.M. 2 holt ted bal 4 BEY I, J ea BY College Chaplain and Instructor in Religion PH ILOSOPHY Lecturer in Religion The Philosophy Department seeks to provide a vari- ety of courses which may be taken without prerequisite —for freshmen, a contemporary philosophy course; for upper classmen, ethics, logic, Plato and Aristotle in translation and philosophy of religion. These varied offerings make it possible for nearly every student to include at least one semester of philosophy in her schedule. Intermediate courses emphasize the philosopher's inquiry into human nature, the standards of knowledge and the realms of value. The views of Hume, Kant, Kierkegaard and other great moderns are studied. Co- ordination of our program with that of the Department of Religion is a noteworthy feature. Advanced courses focus attention upon recent thought: e.g. William James, A.N. Whitehead, John Dewey, and representative thinkers from the analytic, phenomenological and existentialist movements. An atmosphere of discussion and rigorous criticism helps the student cultivate dialectical skill, sympathy for unfamiliar points of view and a self-reliance tem- pered with humility. Holcombe McCulloch Austin, A.B., A.M. Professor of Philosophy, Head of Department ENGLISH A growing Wheaton. . . A growing English Department. . Katherine Alice Burton, A.B., A.M. Professor of English, Head of Department Edwin Stuart Briggs, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of English Curtis Dahl, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Louise Barr Mackenzie, A.B., A.M. Professor of English Professor of English Ld Charles Edward Aughtry, Frances Ann Shirley, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Robert Sundling Taylor, A.B. A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Lecturer in English Associate Professor of English —_ Walter Joseph Renaud, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English Judith Laurence Anderson, A.B., A.M. Jane Lewin, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English Instructor in English Arthur Kenneth Oberg, A.B., A.M. Richard Pearce, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English Assistant Professor of English | hs Soe cee | Rebecca H. Shankland, A.B., A.M. Lena Lois Mandell, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English FRENCH Recent recognition by outside objective evaluation of the validity of the ten year experiment conducted by the French department, in the integration of language and literature through the coordination of classroom and laboratory instruction, has culminated in a sweep- ing reorganization of the French curriculum, in which the ideal of a bilingual senior French major who can manipulate the French language in literary criticism and in research in French literature as a senior major in English can do in her native language is no longer a fantastic dream. ae Professor of French Elma Dorothy Littlefield, A.B., A.M. Professor of French, Head of Department Anne-Marie LaCapra, Certificat, A.M. Instructor in French Mary Louise Libby, A.B., A.M. Associate Professor of French Catherine Lombard-Latune Crowley Patricia Morin, Baccalaureat, Licence es Lettres Licence de Philosophie Assistant in French Assistant in French SPANISH For the last few years the teaching of languages has under- gone drastic changes. The Spanish Department has tried to keep abreast with them by subscribing, like the other foreign language departments, to the College policy in the field. We have initiated the 200 intensive or “double” course to enable beginning students to major in Spanish, and we are offering the new 110 to provide upperclassmen with a second foreign lan- guage for graduate study purposes. Our literature and civiliza- tion offerings have also been thoroughly revised and increased. Lucinda Moles, A.B., A.M. Doctora en Filosofia y Letras. Professor of Spanish, Head of Department Roberto Ruiz, A.M. Ana Maria Martin Beatrice K. Ruiz, A.B., A.M. Maestro en Filosofia. Licenciada en Filosofia y Letras. Instructor in Spanish Assistant Professor of Spanish Instructor in Spanish oe teens RUSSIAN The role of the Department of Russian at Wheaton College is not confined to the teaching of language skills and literary appreciation; rather, it strives to give a picture of Russian cul- tures of pre-revolutionary and contemporary Soviet times in meaningful context. To this end, the staff has been doubled, a major in Russian literature has been established, and a Russian Club inaugurated. Cooperation with the German and Spanish Departments has led to integrated and compatible course offerings. Russian has been taught at Wheaton for nearly twenty years, and this has afforded us a sound foundation upon which we have endeav- ored to build for today’s students and for those we hope to have in increasing numbers in the future. Serge Vladimir Pastuhov, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Russian, Head of Department i i Hans Rudolph Burger, Lehrausweis fiir Sekundarshulen Burkhard Seubert, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of German, Head of Basil V. Vaviloff, Licence en Droit, Juris Dr. Instructor in Russian Department Instructor in German GERMAN Over the past two years the German Department has undergone a thorough reorganization. New faculty and a new course program, most up-to-date methods of instruction and teaching facilities endeavour to make the study of German language and literature as interesting and challenging as its place within a true liberal arts education demands. Asta Helena Lepinis, A.B., A.M. Instructor in German CLASSICS Rapid growth of a small college such as Wheaton creates many problems. A larger college community offers more op- portunities for everyone and requires a greater sense of responsibility. The fac- ulty must try new methods of teaching and students must acquire a measure of self-sufficiency. These changes, signs of healthy growth, are now coming to Wheaton. Doris Taylor Bishop, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Isobel Henderson, A.B., A.M. Associate Professor of Classics, Head of Department Visiting Professor of Classics . - : f Pe Bets “ i : J a ee : = 4 : SR Samuel Ira Abrams, A.B., A.M. Ernest John Knapton, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Classics Professor of History | HISTORY The History Department has grown with the college. Our effort in the introductory course has been concen- Hi trated on keeping sections small enough for close di- 7 rection of work by the instructors. We have experi- mented with a different content for a special section, and wish we could do more of this. In our more ad- vanced work, we have not tried so much to add courses as to enrich the ones we have. Our program for majors is changing in the face of the need to avoid passive student participation, the real danger generated by large numbers. We seek to prepare each of our majors to work effectively on her own as soon as pos- sible. Increasing enrollments have thus been a chal- lenge to us, but also a welcome opportunity to try out new ways of encouraging an education in depth as well as breadth. ‘ia lion tebina erase Carolyn Mae Clewes, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of History, Head of Department Jane Eleanor Ruby, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Nancy Paine Norton, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of History Associate Professor of History Barbee-Sue Rodman, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Paul Christian Helmreich, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History Assistant Professor of History Anna Herbert Abernathy, A.B., A.M. John Hill Barcroft, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in History Assistant Professor of History ot oe ee a _ sd 7 PAH. AS Us: asta | if Ys Henrietta Cooper Jennings, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Rockwood Quock Ping Chin, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Economics Professor of Economics, Head of Department ECON OM ICS The Economics Department was built up mainly by the lifetime dedicated work of Professor Henrietta Jen- nings. Mrs. Elizabeth May, now a Director of the Ex- port-Import Bank, combined part-time economics teaching with administrative duties. It is apparent that unlimited opportunities await the Wheaton graduate in economics. This year we have been strengthened by additional staff, a new Economic Analysis course, and increasing emphasis upon modern theory. David Loschy, Ph.D. Visiting Lecturer in Economics Jan Parker, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Economics Daniel Meier Lewin, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Government GOVERNMENT David Lowenthal, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Government, Head of Department Matthew A. Zuckerbraun, A.B. Instructor in Government Anne Ellen Freedman, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Government The field of Government tries to answer three questions: 1) What is the nature of our government, and what ought its policies to be? 2) What are the various types of government, and how are the most important contemporary nations ruled? 3) What is the best form of government? Government draws upon the other social sciences and the human- ities as well—in the latter case upon history, literature, and philos- ophy. Today, those working in the field have given increased atten- tion to the realities of political behavior, to new or hitherto unstudied governments around the world, and to the variety of policy problems facing our own country. In addition, political philosophy, which con- centrates on the question of political justice and excellence, is attempt- ing to regain the dignity it once possessed. At Wheaton, the teaching of Government has been significantly by the expansion of the department. New courses have been added and old ones are now offered more regularly. This makes it possible for us to supply better nourishment to the political interest engendered among students by the civil rights movement in particular, as well as by problems of war and peace. SOCIOLOGY Sociology is the disciplined study of society. This sounds redun- dant and simplistic. But it isn’t. In an age of rapid change and immense challenges we need to know more about the structure of our own society, about the organization and culture of distant socie- ties (here our boundaries overlap anthropology), about human be- havior as group behavior, about the subtle and complex relationship between social issues and the shape of our individual lives (here we converge on social psychology). There is useful information to be got from sociology; we hope some Wheaton students obtain it and make use of it. But we will be dissatisfied unless they come away with something more, with what C. Wright Mills has described as “the sociological imagination,” a quality of mind open to the close connection of private troubles with public issues, a quality of mind that seems “to promise an understanding of the intimate realities of ourselves in connection with larger social realities.” Sidney Alexander Forsythe, A.B., A.M., B.D., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Sociology Mavis Heron, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Sociology James Robert Shuster, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Sociology seision pede Emi AA, Richard Harrison Robbins, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Sociology, Head of Department Thomas M. Osborne II, A.B., A.M. Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology Walter Cleveland Shipley, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Nancy Newbert, A.B., M.A. Professor of Psychology Visiting Lecturer in Psychology PSYCHOLOGY It’s easy to be enthusiastic about Wheaton. The college, I think, is on the threshold of great- ness. Its persons are moving ever closer to their realization. The department's goal is to assist in the becoming of both. Leonard Hassol, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Visiting Lecturer in Psychology Picture not shown Paul Joseph Sprosty, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Psychology, Head of Department pe Robert Clarkson Webb, A.B., A.M, Sherman Eisenthal, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Psychology Visiting Lecturer in Psychology EDUCATION Marjorie Hill Ford, B.Ed., Ed.M. Lecturer in Education, Nursery School Director Evelyn Irene Banning, A.B., A.M., Ed.D. Professor of Education and Psychology, Head of Department wae Elizabeth Kingsley Horton, B.S. in Ed. Assistant in the Nursery School K. Rubgundi Padmabai, A.M. Visiting Instructor, United States Indian Women’s Exchange Program. Eva Anneliese Neumann, A.B. Assistant in the Nursery School MATHEMATICS Because of the many improvements that ha ve been made recently in the Mathematics curriculum in the secondary schools, the majority of the students who now elect a first course in Mathematics at Wheaton are ready for a moderately rigorous introduction to the calculus. To capitalize on this change in the spirit and content of mathematics education in the pre-college experience, the Department of Mathematics revises its introductory courses every year—each time raising the level of maturity expected of the student. As a result of the increase in the size of the college, the enrollment in our advanced courses is larger; this tends to make the courses more rewarding for both the teacher and the student. At present we are expanding our course offerings in abstract algebra; the increased mathematical sophistication of the beginning calculus courses enables us to offer, to undergraduates, courses which deal with the abstract concepts which tradi- tionally were left to the graduate school. } weil Anne Frances O’Neill, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics, Head of Department ASTRONOMY Barbara Jean Beechler, A.B., M.S., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics William Richard Smith, A.B., A.M. Lecturer in Astronomy Helen E. Ginsberg, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Elizabeth Lloyd White, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Biology, Head of Department Clinton Viles MacCoy, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Biology poe yee ee i e)) 195 Ooh th 4000 : | ‘ A us gs ee eer a oe 4 Rhoda Garrison, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Biology BIOLOGY Evolution is slow and involves the addition of small changes to an almost stable system which has survival value; so it is with Biology at Wheaton. In the freshman course the quadrat study goes on, and permanent quadrats make information from past years available for comparisons. The Wheaton Woods are being studied more systematically each year, and there seem to be ever more freshmen to participate in the study. But labora- tory sections cannot increase in size; they remain at twenty- four students, and this year there are ten sections. In recent years secondary. school courses are giving students good back- grounds in biology, and many of the freshmen are ready for specialized work. Therefore, in the second semester many of them now go into 200-level courses in the department. For biology majors guidance is provided by a core of courses which insures a broad background in the field of bi- ology. Majors continue to develop their particular interests, and more majors this year are choosing Individual Research and planning to go on to graduate study. New courses have been introduced, notably Biochemistry, which is conducted in cooperation with the chemists upstairs. New equipment and new journals have been purchased, for which college funds have been supplemented by several grants from the National Science Foundation. The pressing limiting factor now is space, but dreams are taking form in architects’ drawings of the new science building. Jane Louise Chidsey, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Biology Walter James Kenworthy, A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Biology Barbara Watkins Kimball, A.B. Assistant in Biology Anne Newell Robertson, A.B. Assistant in Biology Zs -— Walter C. Quevedo Jr., B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Irene Scaturro, A.B. Visiting Research Associate in Biology Research Assistant in Biology (Not Shown) AN mys Allen Vegotsky, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biology and Chemistry PHYSICAL SCIENCES The Physical Science Department has rearranged the order and prerequisites of its offerings during the last five years to be in accordance with national trends. These emphasize, for Chem- istry, the early study of physical chemistry, the use of recently developed instruments and the study of new concepts in the theory of both inorganic and organic chemistry. The effort in Physics has been directed toward combining and integrating the course offerings in such a way as to emphasize the unity of the subject, rather than the more traditional compartmentalized approach. Through grants we have been able to acquire some funda- mental but expensive instruments, giving us a well-equipped laboratory for a college of our type. We have expanded our department slightly by the replacement of a part-time labora- tory assistant with a full-time assistant professor. We are look- ing forward to moving from our crowded quarters to a more spacious and modern building when funds for it become availa- ble. Our coeducational summer research programs supported by the National Science Foundation continue to attract good stu- eae oon dents from various colleges. The department’s accreditation by Maud Alice Marshall, A.B., D:Phtl i f : ; Professor of Chemistry, Head of the American Chemical Society has been reconfirmed this past Dencrmeni year. Bojan Hamlin Jennings, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Her bert Richard Ellison, A.B., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry a Lucy Read Hubbard Warren, A.B., A.M. Laboratory Technician in Chemistry Myrna S. Pearson, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Nancy Beers LeRoy, A.B., A.M. Assistant in Chemistry Philip Reece Wilson, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Francene Smith Burnett, B.S., A.M. Assistant Professor of Physics Assistant in Physical Science Harry Moore Landis, A.B., M.S. Associate Professor of Physics PHYSICAL EDUCATION Christine White, B.S. in Ed., M.Ed. Head of Department Associate Professor of Physical Education T Wil UL. HUA Gail Parks, B.S. Instructor in Physical Education Rosalie Brown, B.S.Ed., M.Ed. Instructor in Physical Education Virginia Bailey Olney, A.B. Cynthia Grogan, B.S. Hilda Bolster Mason, A.B. Instructor in Physical Education Instructor in Physical Education Assistant Professor of Physical Education ee ite te RES RE TIE Cech a ae ee ea aa al wil Py Where wild beach meets wild sky we stood Where wild waters of youth had moulded the sand The shore, between foam-tipped emptiness beckoning And the land. A gull screamed, and still we paused questioning Our footprints stretching behind us cool and black, O unknowable ocean we sought, O powerful mother We shall not turn back. But now at the last when dreams lick our toes In foam, and the beach is so endless and bare Give us one moment to think and remember The past that we share. ESET ee ee ee ee ee MARIANNE ANDRESON Psychology SUSAN LLOYD ANDREWS European History PATRICIA PALMER AVERY Biology JOAN MARGARET ATWOOD American History SUSAN DICKSON ANDREWS ROSEMARY SUE BACKUS Economics Government COLLES BAXTER Art History LAURA VIRGINIA BARRETT Sociology NANCY ELIZABETH BALDWIN English CECILY BASTEDO European History JEAN ERWIN BALIVET EDITH PRESCOTT BAXTER Economics American History PAMELA RACHLEFF BERMAN English CAROLYN CLARK BLANCHARD (Mrs. Robert B.) German W aacad DEBORAH LOUISE BERTSCH English SUSAN ELIZABETH BRODRICK Music LESLIE RUTH BOORKY Chemistry JANE MORGAN BIRCHARD European History DOROTHY CALLAWAY Art History DOROTHY MARIETTA BURKE Mathematics PATRICIA CARNEY Biology JOAN LOUISE BROOKS ‘English CAROLYN HALL BUTLER French CHARLOTTE MURRAY CHESTON Chemistry JANE ROGERS CHITTICK Sociology ANNETTE THERESA CICALESE French DOROTHY LEE CINER Psychology MARY CLEAVES English CYNTHIA CLEMENCE English JUDITH ANN CLIFFORD Chemistry TANI HELEN CLINCHARD Art History ISABEL EUSTIS CLUETT English DIANA WALKER CLYMER (Mrs. John H.) Art History DEBORAH LOUISE COLLINS American History KAREN CONANT English HELEN WATHEN CONDON Art History NANCY CAROL CONSTANTIN : PHYLLIS FOWLER DENNY Government o European History STEPHENIE JEAN DAVIS English MARILYN RUTH DEPHOURE Philosophy and Religion SUZANNE de LONG French VIRGINIA DAUGHERTY American History SARAH EILEEN DICKINSON Government NANCY LOUISE DIETZ European History CAROL JOY DINE European History LINDA BRAYTON DOLE Psychology and Education ROBIN MAYNARD DOWNING English KIRKE VAN ARNAM DYETT American History MARILYN JOYCE EATON Psychology CYNTHIA LOUISE ERB Economics ANNA JULIANNA ERNST European History ANN LOUISE ERDMANN European History BARBARA ROSE ELSER DORINDA EVANS Psychology Art History CAROLYN RUTH FISH French PENELOPE FARLEY English LUCIA FAITHFULL European History ie PATRICIA HUNTER FINK European History ANNE FANKHAUSER RUTH PAGE FLICK French American History ALICE CAROL FORK French NORMA JEAN FRAME French PAMELA MITCHELL FOSS Art History JACQUELINE ENID GAGNON American History JULIA PEARCE FULPER English LINDA FOX Sociology HELEN MARIE GIFTOS, JR. 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English a GARYTESLOCKETMISMILELER: European History eeatsa o BETSY ARDITH McMILLIN English MARJORIE ANNE MERRITT Biology GAIL HART MILLER American History MELINDA MOUNT CANDACE MOLLOY American History English DOLORES ROSALIE MORANT European History DEBORAH AMELIA MOORE Sociology _ PATRICIA CONSTANCE MOSER European History LINDA ANN MURRAY Art History CATHERINE OLIVER NEWMAN German GERALDINE ANN PACELLE Classics SHELLEY SWIFT NORTON (Mrs. Arthur) Psychology JANE PAFFARD English MARY ANN OSLEY Biology JANE NICHOLS Psychology MARTHA BONNIE PAGE LAURA-LOUISE REED Government Government ROBERTA ARTHUR PREU Biology MYRA ALICE REINGOLD European History MELISSA PUMPELLY Government JUDITH ANN PALLIN Psychology ANNE WENTLING RIAL American History CORNELIA ROGERS Biology CORNELIA CLARK ROBERTS (Mrs. Brinton) American History LUCY ELLIS RIDDELL Philosophy and Religion PHYLLIS ARLENE ROGDE Philosophy and Religion MARY CARROLL ROGERS American History CAROL JANE SCHIFRIN European History RUTH LOUISE ROSE Economics SHARON SACHS French MYRA RUTH SCHIFF Mathematics PHYLLIS GAIL ROSEN MARGARET LOUISE SCHLICHTING English Psychology ae) SUSAN JANE SCHNEEBELI SUSAN ANN SHEPPARD European History Philosophy PAMELA ANNE SEVERANCE English LARNA GAIL SHATTUCK Classics SUSAN JAYNE SCHOCH LINDA JOY SHERMAN European History Music SNJOLAUG SIGURDARDOTTIR English PRISCILLA CARVER STEVENS European History SUE SWISHER SKALINDER (Mrs. Gregg) Biology NATALIE HAVEN STOKES European History DONNA GAY STEVENSON Chemistry KATHRYN ANNE SMITH English CAROL LOUISE STONE Chemistry Pa a Ee MARY HOLROYD STRIDER English RACHELA LEA SUBEL Spanish MARILYN TALIAFERRO SWAN Mathematics LINDA DWIGHT TAYLOR European History SUSAN TAYLOR French JEAN MURRAY TRUSTY English WENDY SHILAND TAYLOR Art History MIRIAM LEE TROPP American History MARY CHAILLE THACH English MARGARET-ANN TROYANO Spanish LESLIE FORBES USHER English LOIS JEANNE VOLPONE English ELEANOR ROSE WEITZMAN Philosophy and Religion ANNE HAMILTON WARD Art History ELIZABETH WHITING European History VIRGINIA ANN WEIL Government JUDITH ANN VREELAND Psychology MARY KNIGHT WICKENS English CANDY YAGHJIAN English ENID ANNE WILLIAMS Economics BARBARA JANE WILDING Music CYNTHIA WETHERILL WISTER Art History MARGARET CARPENTER YOUNG European History CATHERINE JANE WILLIAMS Psychology 7 £ z a _setacretttestsrstbtoreae Cte AMET i i LE ia whi i ‘opm ASAE BLL AL! ARARABALALRB I PLP ERIN RR, a Ce Tea’ a © amano 88 mame CH ‘ve pie ‘ily Taisho ith . eet aot es a w ERE aa ree: Se ’ o MQ HAHEE CONG, i : : i Be ae See ine 3 3 4 $ Se or ae ee PACnes COLLEGE GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Susan Schneebeli, President Catherine Ericson, Vice-President Nancy Pearlstine, Secretary Elizabeth Charr, Treasurer HONOR BOARD Jane Nichols, Chairman JUDICIAL BOARD Jane Nichols, Chairman SOCIAL COMMITTEE Deborah Moore, Chairman ACADEMIC COMMITTEE Sally Hutton, Chairman ACTIVITIES COUNCIL Susan Schneebeli, Chairman rats ae dh ats JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Winifred Dickey, President Karen Stone, Vice-President Sandra Burnish, Secretary Cheryl Huested, Treasurer SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Bonnie Page, President Joan Makechnie, Vice-President Karen Conant, Secretary Ruth Flick, Treasurer FRESHMAN COUNCIL Shirley Griggs Chairman SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS Anne Farnham, President Ellanor Stengel, Vice-President Judith Barnett, Secretary Nancy Montgomery, Treasurer ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Charlotte Cheston, President Laurie Reynolds, Vice-President Nancy Montgomery, Secretary Patricia Higgins, Treasurer RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATION Lucia Faithfull President Jane Zacharias Vice-President Evelyn Hopkins Secretary Elizabeth McCarthy Treasurer V J PEOPLE TO PEOPLE Carolyn Butler, President LIBERAL UNION Susan Schoch, President PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Shelley Swift Norton President YOUNG REPUBLICANS Nancy Lurensky President C C Te Re Rh Pd Ag Cdlin Sn Sb Te | Xe Je ‘ 7 Z (49 _ $0 51 52 83 $4 NB Me Dy Ho Pore SCIENCE CLUB Patricia Avery, President PSYCHE Susan Rand, Rice Smith, Co-Heads YOUNG DEMOCRATS Rosemary Backus, President WHIMS Tani Clinchard, Leader ASE RRR iseinescvaiies ERM ae nell eS PSS WHEATONES Celia Zatoon, Leader GLEE CLUB Judith Mapletoft, President EE BEE LE AEE 4 i as ae im a se decile esteem tation ae DANCE GROUP Alexandra Marshall, President san i saat swe lin eta ie ‘piss tpenillee pnp tis A Oe ie Ee seerance ie $ Ce ee ee SECOND SHEPHERD’S PLAY eae NOILVIDOSSV 2) LV WVa d (UMOYS JOU) Juapisaig ‘AQUIRD BID Sie soypupig {Oo 40}Ja1q ‘uRWsuIqg AuoYyjUYy poaH ‘ulpe| Apo juapisaig ‘tuipjeg ueor JuapIsadd “IPA Ole H juapisadg “Yst{ uATO SPANISH CLUB RUSSIAN CLUB FRENCH CLUB ts ; roo ate sees : I ® ADDS WHEA TON NEWS Cheryl Bailey, Editor-in-Chief CLASSICS CLUB Elizabeth Rhoades, President ————————— CY Nancy Baldwin, President RUSHLIGHT Rachela Subel, Editor-in-Chief mel i Roberta Preu, House Chairman Allison Grant, Assistant STANTON Betsy McMillan, House Chairman Phyllis Mervis, Assistant CRAGIN Patricia Fink, House Chairman Sage Dunlap, Louise Hemingway, Assistants t as rs + at EVERETT Betty Dill, Assistant Mimi Tropp, House Chairman i EVERETT METCALF Jane Couser, Assistant Robin Downing, House Chairman cntctmanglinnencigensotarsancoeh Judith Eaton, Assistant Jane Birchard, House Chairman KILHAM i em inl 4 J CC. ies WOSUINKNANKN é Ugcaennenen yi 4 Hi 4 Be Aid CHAPIN Joan Brooks, House Chairman Caroline Hart, Assistant TO aad J T IF ITF ty Susan Creasy, House Chairman Laura Jeppesen, Assistant CLARK , House Chairman Sally Anderson, Assistant Roberta Hess ssistant McINTIRE Katherine Douglas, A = = is 4S 3 = 1S) %) he 5 vel 3) ws a= bo pa _ S McINTIRE YOUNG Priscilla Stevens, Assistant Joan Makechnie, House Chairman Ac TIRE IEE MEADOWS NORTH Elizabeth Briscoe, Assistant Nancy Dietz, House Chairman iI NaC Nia tA reco i ak Ln MEADOWS ti tighn Mata £0) bh Assistant House Chairman +] Barbara Hayes Pamela Harris Oo OQ x taal = ar 8 SOS Age be as ae aq o 2 eh TS Ege 3 so lo! 9) ac ¢ 5 n S18) oS (=| fa} n = N MEADOWS ley, Miss Ziegler, Miss Brown, Miss Morin 1r Hahn, Mrs. Crowley, Miss Sh 18S MEADOWS WEST HOUSE FELLOWS ALIAILVAYD debbie goodman To the Successful Poet The dark narcissus flowered in his mind Steady, sure, a careful opening Disclosing splendid petals thrust to the fine heart, Releasing, in the safer times, its poetry. I regret only this: That I did not take myself More seriously, as did he, and all the other Certain travelers between the worlds, Who, knowing well the almost unknown track, safely made the journey, safely made it back. kathy smith jill murray Like Buddhist priests bowed down in meditation Bent under the snow the Jonquils. sharon seeche I thought I could be content Drifting in unknownness in the place I have never been, with the person I have not yet met Now it is not enough to dance to danger, A solo floating to rhythm and time. I am a part (apart)— the string on a red balloon, the steam of a delicate flower, You. elizabeth meany when. . A Classic Despair Achilles sun-blessed at Troy Clear-eyed Andromache on a marble shelf sat, Smooth brow reflected in dull sheen, White hand gliding ceaselessly over Cool—Flat—Perfect—Stone, Her low hushed voice whispering “Tt is near done now. I have it as smooth As my infant’s cheek.” Flickering eye, craftsman-anxious, Tells of madness in woman-mind. And Helen sat weaving Her chant ever breathing “Ah, despair, That bear despair, Take him by his hair Back to his lair. . Ah, despair, That bear despair, Take him by his hair Back to his lair. . . ah, despair. . .” jane holly zacharias eee oa Taos ¥ candy yaghjian Modern verse is like Monopoly. . . You follow around And only get to GO— osed oy} lynn johnson Mother, why Did the turtle die? Such a beautiful funeral With George and I We lifted the toilet seat And laid him in with roses sweet “Here lies” and “Rest in Peace.” George pulled the chain Everything went down the drain Petals sweet and turtle With a gurgle. . . Mother, why Did the turtle die? lynn johnson U Pa. Ss “ Ritual Wait for me Please don’t run too fast, whirl so— You don’t play fair. Slow down. Stop your dizzy dance! Do you forget? Your priestess Bears your relics Gently Chants Softly Sways Slowly O cease your slashing pagan frenzy Listen: Love needs the tenderness. mary cleaves helen condon Spring Excuse? You need no excuse. Spring diffused the island air; Robins flocked in the skies and rested on the brown straw lawn: Osprey built their nests on the platformed posts And lazily swayed in the breeze; Crocuses burst through the relenting frosted earth; And buds appeared on the weeping trumpet vine. Farm folks reminisced On ninety-mile winds, the forty-foot frost, And speculated on the cattle loss while wallowing in the mud and sun. The bellies of the sheep were bursting with young, And Farmer Prime’s bull was traded ’round. Fishermen had removed their gloves And no longer shivered in a biting wet wind. The raucous waves had turned to ripples, And the ice had melted into high tides. The ferry was always on sche dule And didn’t get stuck in the middle on a starless blizzard night. A few of the old had died but way beyond their time. And gossip had been dull With only one divorce, three beatings, and two suicides. And thirty-six babies were expected before July. Ronald Higgins had walked the waters Testing his faith like Saint Peter— And almost drowned. And the matriach of the island was tearing down the Laval house— Its pillars and gingerbread trim— To clear the view of the bay from her new eighty-foot pool. Winter was a tired death: Skiing had melted away with the hearth-round songs, And the ice-carvings had lost their shapes. The snow nights and cloud days were exchanged For new snow—the stars—and new clouds embracing the sun. Spring was a new-born child, And Eros had touched our lips with the fountain’s sweet waters. Haggard we reached the island, spent by the winter’s night. We were greeted by a smell so long forgotten— The smell of Spring. We felt the cracking fields underfoot as we raced to the shore, And heard the drill at the boat yard searing and splintering hulls. The sun-warmed air swept across our cheeks As we walked along the serpentine high above the bay Watching the red-yellow reflection trip across the waves. We played “catch me if you can” With the flopping waves along the beach. My feet ached from the icy sea, and you warmed them with your hands. The sand was a heated blanket and we stretched out on it, And watched a tanker puff through the channel and tie up at Picozzi’s dock. The harbour was empty— Except for the few stakes that had survived the sweeping ice— And I painted for you in our talk The sc hooners and ketches and yawls _ Which would rock in the quiet waters when Spring had come to an end. Zeus’s thunder was forgotten, And Aphrodite stretched her arms from the sea, Comforting the sheep and whispering songs to the birds. Our world was the island, the island our paradise. Excuse? You need no excuse. We were tired, and the island fulfilled our dreams. We were in love—perhaps only in love with Spring— But you may go; you need not explain. I was a part of your dream: that you can never take back. But I return your heart though with sorrow. Your excuse, my love, was Spring. patricia moser TMM, KA _ | A ins ATA AY el | , ag we : WWW : il} — Wea ai ( pec) Qe SOLITCHL “ a ’ _—_—_— a — Sy N — )) — = ; esis: ee wa! —= 6g 10e TthigGl oer. “ tp, LLL OILS ae OPS Ping SE bg , LLL aS S , | ORL %e —— Faces What thoughts old man huddled on last week’s news in London rain—you, with 2000 years of Auschwitz in your eyes? Old lady in Market Road shuffling before the organ man with his tin eyes and tune— How can a face have seen such experience and missed such meaning? Sad silent eyes waiting waiting for a corduroy jacket to turn and smile. Close them young girl, You have made a decision by default. Only before such gentle eyes (deeper than deepest and green) can I leave myself naked without fear letting you softly close the parts of me I should not have exposed. elizabeth meany candy yaghjian — = 4 It is not smart to categorize And wisely place things in their spatial place. —One—In what region lies the sense of taste For—Two—what your tongue feels‘when someone else Eats a kosher pickle, sucks a lemon, Grates his knife against a china plate. The sloven mystic classifies for me The coffee grains into a future stain And illustrates the plates on which I should never allow my knife to grate. For a well-made silver dollar—One— She improvises on her careful list Of whats to seek, of whats to safely shun. (But will there come a time when I shall say “Think of all the pickles I have missed!’’) Outside her tent, tasting half a moon, Not knowing where to classify the taste, I wonder if I must believe That in the silent circle Of a helpless asteroid of earth Dark is cut by light, And both so sharply placed, That light is all that is not darkly faced. kathy smith The face of Love is black, the eye Of Love is black unseeingness. Love came upon me in the dark And I did not know her from my bedpost. I said nothing (For I do not speak to bedposts) And when I awoke I said “It was only a dream.” lynn johnson Pain I lie And into the dark I gaze and wonder What has caused the pain So sharp it nearly Drugs me. I lie And a weight presses My eyes to blindness. But I have no fear For sight will return. What if. . .? I think Of many reasons Which would cause this pain. And as I think the Pain intensifies Until From my Pale unwrinkled brow Come slowly hot tears Love, Anxiety Amid frustration; Lonely bitterness, Self-pity, envy. All rush for escape But are caught by a Short sob. Now trapped, My anxieties Create a pain so intense. . . A short cry, I reach— But I reach into Darkness. My friends Parade before me, One by one I watch. Not one will listen. The one who did, is No more. And where Shall I turn for peace? I can’t run or scream For the house sleeps and Waked they would ask. So. . . My pen. deborah hall Gift iT gave you f 2 Pears, perfect yellow-and-beige __ Dripping from tender : straining — im boughs. — ‘But you wanted Pale sun-fingers That urged them into life, [gave you ___ The night— Sleep of ancient gods— an any smoothed you with love ee of cool Peon hende But you wanted _ The wind! | That tore through the dark _ And left young pines, and me, Naked and shivering. I cannot give you Eternity. gently pressing their blossoms into aging fruit. elizabeth meany Pamela Foss—photograph IN WHITE AMERICA LIPPOLD PLAY OF DANIEL RANDALL JARRELL ns iad = oS) x o. Lu ia) fe) = = © im Z sa N “ y . fea VARS ‘ Be S “ ) “a teks ef ag et ey ee A Wars | . “2 Se fa a dan aT f he a BEEP 7 a ; cela i Por H5: eee ts “Swe ree! ME star i 4 : Paet te wee x ef ! te cie Lia tt oe ¥ ’ td LL et DB are as ae OPEN { aSaray « lll ee | re vm aH MTOM MUM a SENIOR DIRECTORY ANDRESON, MARIANNE 18 Longfellow Rd., Worcester 2, Mass. ANDREWS, SUSAN D. 7 W. Avon Rd., Avon, Conn. ANDREWS, SUSAN L. 15 Manor Dr., Yonkers, N. Y. ATWOOD, JOAN M. 16 Buttonwood Lane East, Rumson, N. J. AVERY, PATRICIA P. 724 Guilford Ct., Silver Spring, Md. BACKUS, ROSEMARY 5S. 4600 27th St. N., Arlington 7, Va. BALDWIN, NANCY E. 80 Jefferson Ave., Short Hills, N. J. BALIVET, JEAN E. Danville, Vt. BARRETT, LAURA V. 164 Madison Ave., Holyoke, Mass. BASTEDO, CECILY 925 Park Ave., New York 28, N. Y. BAXTER, COLLES Hearth House, Philamont, Vt. BAXTER, EDITH P. Boxe lO7@R teste ehariess iil: BERMAN, PAMELA R. 215 Manchester St., Hartford, Conn. BERTSCH, DEBORAH L. 35 Sidney P., Brooklyn 1, N. Y. BIRCHARD, JANE M. 170 Walker St., Lenox, Mass. BLANCHARD, CAROLYN C. BOORKY, LESLIE R. 12 Old Brook Dr., Worcester, Mass. BRODRICK, SUSAN E. 64 So. Elm St., W. Bridgewater, Mass. BROOKS, JOAN L. 28 Crescent Dr., Convent Station, N. J. BURKE, DOROTHY M. 10 Avon Rd., Wellesley 81, Mass. BUTLER, CAROLYN H. 1 Stinson Rd., Andover, Mass. CALLAWAY, DOROTHY White Hill Rd., Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y. CARNEY, PATRICIA Cushing St., Ashburnham, Mass. CHESTON, CHARLOTTE M. Whitpain Farm, Ambler, Pa. CHITTICK, JANE R. 111 Ross St., Fitchburg, Mass. CICALESE, ANNETTE T. 55 Es 9th St, New York 3, N.Y. CINER, DOROTHY L. 1 Broadmoor Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. CLEAVES, MARY L. R.F.D. 1, Bar Harbor, Maine CLEMENCE, CYNTHIA 2 Jackson Rd., Wellesley Hills 81, Mass. CLIFFORD, JUDITH A. Down Rd., Stevenson, Conn. CLINCHARD, TANI H. 25 Hillcrest Rd., Glen Ridge, N. J. CLUETT, ISABEL E. 201 Middlebrook Farm Rd., Wilton, Conn. CLYMER, DIANA W. 8 Glenbrook Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. COLLINS, DEBORAH L. 4 High St., Hingham, Mass. CONANT, KAREN 325 Highland St., W. Newton, Mass. CONDON, HELEN W. Westerleigh Rd., Rye, N. Y. CONSTANTIN, NANCY C. 11 Birmingham Dr., Rochester 18, N. Y. DAUGHERTY, VIRGINIA 12 Cole Rd., Hingham, Mass. DAVIS, STEPHENIE J. Long Hill, Woodridge, Conn. deLONG, SUZANNE 72 W. Green St., Westminster, Md. DENNY, PHYLLIS F. Bacon Rd., Westbury, N. Y. DEPHOURE, MARILYN R. 38 Harvard Ave., Brookline 46, Mass. DICKINSON, SARAH E. 7307 No. Bridge Lane, Milwaukee 17, Wisconsin DIETZ, NANCY L. 1162 Galaxy Circle, Upper St. Clair, Pa. DINE, CAROL J. 31 Chestnut Hill Terr., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. DOLE, LINDA B. 14 Thomson Rd., W. Hartford, Conn. DOWNING, ROBIN M. Pomfret School, Pomfret, Conn. DYETT, KIRKE V. 1204 N. George St., Rome, N. Y. EATON, MARILYN J. 6 Eaton Rd., Needham 92, Mass. ELSER, BARBARA R. 3 St. James P., Yardley, Pa. ERB G@yoN EL Awe 102 Grove Ave., Leominster, Mass. ERDMANN, ANN L. LIST ES 79th stNew vy orke2 lmeNeeYe ERNST, ANNA J. 45 Righter’s Mill Rd., Gladwyne, Pa. EVANS, DORINDA 120 Main St., Wakefield, Mass. FAITHFULL, LUCIA Mianus River Rd., Bedford, N. Y. FANKHAUSER, ANNE H. 117 Moore St., Princeton, N. J. FARLEY, PENELOPE 58 Garden Rd., Wellesley Hills 81, Mass. FINK, PATRICIA H. 360 E. 72nd St., New York 21, N. Y. FISH; CAROLYN R= Winchester Rd., Northfield, Mass. . FLICK, RUTH P. 15 No. Helderberg Pkwy., Slingerlands, N. Y. FORK, ALICE C. 3734 Woodland Ave., Indianapolis 5, Ind. FOSS, PAMELA M. Sugar Rd., Bolton, Mass. FOX, LINDA 81 Hazelton St., Mattapan 26, Mass. FRAME, NORMA J. 35 Spring Ave., W. Barrington, R. I. FULPER, JULIA P. Ferry Rd., Yardley, Pa. GAGNON, JACQUELINE E. 74 Ryan Rd., Florence, Mass. GIFTOS, HELENE M. 41 Stonybrook Rd., Cape Elizabeth, Maine GORHAM, ROBIN M. “Westmorland” Fairylands Rd., Pembroke, Bermuda GRANTHAM, SHIRLEY JANE H. 20 Clapp St., Norton, Mass. HABER, DIANNE H. 190 Lorraine Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. HALFNIGHT, SUSAN E. 259 Hartford Ave., Wethersfield, Conn. HAMBERGER, JUDITH I. 352 Redmont Rd., W. Hempstead, N. Y. HARRIS, CAROLYN E. Box 370, Rossini Rd., Westerley, R. I. HARRIS, PAMELA P. Ridge Rd., Laurel Hollow, Syosset, N. Y. HATHAWAY, EDITH L. 1404 Massachusetts Ave., Lexington 73, Mass. HAYES, PAMELA 476 Belden Hill Rd., Wilton, Conn. HEMPHILL, SARA S. 8 Union St., Milford, Conn. HESS, ROBERTA O. 1235 Conshohocken State Rd., Gladwyne, Pa. HICKS, MARY C. 219 Steeplechase Rd., Devon, Pa. HILL, CATHERINE R. 128 Lakeview Ave., Falmouth, Mass. HILL, NANCY I. 252 Blackstone Blvd., Providence 6, R. I. IMPERT, SYLVIA. J. 111 Orchard St., Horseheads, N. Y. JACOUBS, PATRICIA J. — 91 Belcher Ave., Brockton, Mass. JANAKOWSKI, CAROL E. 5 Daniels St., Dudley, Mass. JEFFERSON, DENISE A. 5048 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago 15, Il. JOHNSON, CYNTHIA 2735 Rockridge Circle East, Toledo, Ohio JOLIS, GILLIAN Game Cock Isl., Byram, Conn. JONES, JEAN M. Fox Run Lane, Greenwich, Conn. JONES, KAREN O. 21 Inwood Rd., Essex Falls, N. J. JORDAN, MARY L. 1695 Oakmount Dr., Santa Rosa, Calif. JULIUS, LINDA C, 108 Jeffrey Lane, Meriden, Conn. ELLE Y. CONSTANCE, I 10 Sturges Commons, Westport, Conn. KIRILUK, CATHERINE O. Elm St., Monroe, Conn. KITZMEYER, GAIL C. Pleasant St., Barre, Mass. KNIGHT, LAUREL R. 214 Popponesset Rd., Cotuit, Mass. KUNDE, KAREN D. Acme Dr., Middlebury, Conn. KUNZELMANN, SUSAN E. 129 Monument Ave., Old Bennington, Vt. KURN, ELLEN B. 65 Riverview Terr., Springfield, Mass. KURSON, JANE 14 Greylock Rd., Newtonville, Mass. LANGSTON, LINDA G. 1359 Hollywood Ave., Jacksonville 5, Fla. LESSER, PATRICIA N. 20 Hayden Lane, Bedford, Mass. LITCHFIELD, JANET M. 5090 Warwick Terr., Pittsburgh 13, Pa. LOEB, STEPHANIE E. 132 Sewall Ave., Brookline 46, Mass. LUBELL, JOAN S. 241 Crafts Rd., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. LUKENS, ELEANOR L. 208 Righter’s Mill Rd., Gladwyne, Pa. LURENSKY, NANCY J. 35 Woodlawn Dr., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. LYONS, JAYNE E. Coach Lamp Lane, Cos Cob, Greenwich, Conn. MAKECHNIE, JOAN D. 19 Percy Rd., Lexington, Mass. MAPLETOFT, JUDITH 7 Winding Way, Verona, N. J. MARSHALL, ALEXANDRA C. 28 Washington Ave., Irvington-On-Hudson, N. Y. MARTING, ANNA H. 1474 Lowell Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. McGUNIGLE, SUSAN R. 59 Norton Ave., Cranston 9, R. I. McLAIN, SCOTT B. 700 State St., Alton, Ill. McLENNAN, MARGARET S. 12 Overlake Rd., Wakefield, Mass. McMILLIN, BETSY A. 180 Lansdowns Rd., Warwick, R. I. MEANY, ELIZABETH A. Northfield School for Girls, E. Northfield, Mass. MERRITT, MARJORIE A. 10 Cross Gates Rd., Madison, N. J. MILLER, CAROLE A. 175 Lakeview Ave., Falmouth, Mass. MILLER, CARYL L. 5124 Bolton Rd., Washington, D.C. MILLER, GAIL H. Doubling Rd., Greenwich, Conn. MOLLOY, CANDACE 43 W. 10th St., New York 11, N. Y. MOORE, DEBORAH A. 8 Merritt Dr., Trenton 8, N. J. MORANT, DOLORES R. 1504 Stanley St., New Britain, Conn. MOSER, PATRICIA C. Burrs Hall, Shelter Island Heights, Long Island, N. Y. MOUNT, MELINDA 48 Greenfield Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. MURRAY, LINDA A. 67 Pickwick Rd., Hamden, Conn. NEWMAN, CATHERINE O. 17 Moon Hill Rd., Lexington 73, Mass. NICHOLS, JANE 1760 Highland Ave., Rochester 18, N. Y. NORTON, SHELLEY S. 19 Everett St., Cambridge, Mass. OSLEY, MARY A. 69 Main St., Hatfield, Mass. PACELLE, GERALDINE A. 107 Thompson St., Hamden 18, Conn. PAFFARD, JANE 106 Beaver Rd., Sewickley, Pa. PAGE, MARTHA B. 18 Maple Terr., Needham 92, Mass. PALLIN, JUDITH A. 28 Warren Ave., Chelsea, Mass. PREU, ROBERTA A. 91 Knollwood Dr., Rochester 18, N. Y. PUMPELLY, MELISSA 9 Cimarron Dr., Littleton, Colo. REDD, LAURA-LOUISE 45 Bolinas Ave., San Anselmo, Calif. REINGOLD, MYRA A. 32 Pershing Ave., Stamford, Conn. RIAL, ANNE W. 5510 Aylesboro Ave., Pittsburgh 17, Pa. RIDDELL, LUCY E. 545 County Line Rd., Radnor, Pa. ROBERTS, CORNELIA C. 137 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. ROGDE, PHYLLIS A. 15 Foxcroft Rd., Winchester, Mass. ROGERS, CORNELIA 857 Winyah Ave., Westfield, N. J. ROGERS, MARY C. 616 Southeast First St., Evansville 13, Ind. ROSESRUTHSE: 60 Clarendon Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. ROSEN, PHYLLIS G. 28 Carwall Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. SACHS, SHARON P. 601 Williams St., Longmeadow, Mass. SCHIFF, MYRA R. 49 Fonda Rd., Rockville Centre, N. Y. SCHIFRIN, CAROL J. 220 W. 93rd St., New York 25, N: Y. SCHLICHTING, MARGARET L. 16 George St., Holyoke, Mass. SCHNEEBELI, SUSAN J. 870 Hollywood Circle, Williamsport, Pa. SCHOCH, SUSAN J. Merion Manor, Merion Station, Pa. SEVERANCE, PAMELA A. Smead Hill, Shelburne, Mass. SHATTUCK, LARNA G. 18 Auburn St., Nashua, N. H. SHEPPARD, SUSAN A. 912-A Troy Towers, Bloomfield, N. J. SHERMAN, LINDA J. 1123 Albemarle Rd., Brooklyn 18, N. Y. SIGURDARDOTTIR, SNJOLAUG Miklabraut 56, Reykjavik, Iceland SKALINDER, SUE S. 329 Lake St., Evanston, III. SMITH, KATHRYN A. 4600 N. Kemper St., Alexandria, Va. STEVENS, PRISCILLA C. 459 Field Pt. Rd., Greenwich, Conn. STEVENSON, DONNA G. Richardson St., Middlebury, Conn. STOKES, NATALIE H. Thirza’s Way, West Dennis, Mass. STONE, CAROL L. 51 Britton St., Stoughton, Mass. STRIDER, MARY H. Mayflower Hill, Waterville, Maine SUBEL, RACHELA L. 1044 E. Upsal St., Philadelphia 50, Pa. SWAN, MARILYN T. 815 N.W. 40th St. Oklahoma City, Okla. TAYLOR, LINDA D. 450 Park St., Upper Montclair, N. J. TAYLOR, SUSAN 30 Porter St., Wenham, Mass. TAYLOR, WENDY S. 780 Newtown Rd., Villanova, Pa. THACH, MARY C. 701 N.E. 50th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. TROPP, MIRIAM L. Newtown Tnpke., Westport, Conn. TROYANO, MARGARET-ANN 75 Kenwood Rd., Garden City, N. Y. TRUSTY, JEAN M. 6438 Indian Lane, Shawnee Mission, Kan. USHER, LESLIE F. 8 Grove St., Winchester, Mass. VOLPONE, LOIS J. 19 Cushing Ave., Newburyport, Mass. VREELAND, JUDITH A. Waughaw Rd., Towaco, N. J. WARD, ANNE H. 68 Wilson Ave., Rowayton, Conn. WEIL, VIRGINIA A. 3608 Thomas Ave., Montgomery, Ala. WEITZMAN, ELEANOR R. 42 Morgan St., Middletown, Conn. WHITING, ELIZABETH J. 607 Glenmary Rd., St. Davids, Pa. WICKENS, MARY K. Groton School, Groton, Mass. WILDING, BARBARA J. 24 Orchard PI., Providence 6, R. I. WILLIAMS, CATHERINE J. 807 Elm St., Rome, N. Y. WILLIAMS, ENID 142 East 6th St., Hialeah, Fla. WISTER, CYNTHIA W. 1681 E. Willow Grove Ave., Philadelphia 18, Pa. YAGHJIAN, CANDY 1730 College St., Columbia, S. C. YOUNG, MARGARET C. 42 Sunset Ave., Montclair, N. J. N Good Wishes to THE SENIORS £ fom Your S op homore Sisters Se COMPLIMENTS OF THE WHEATON COLLEGE ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION y Mr. and Mrs. F. Archabal Dr. and Mrs. William H. Avery Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Awe Mr. and Mrs. Jack H. Bagan Captain and Mrs. J. A. Barker Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Barker Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Barrett Mr. and Mrs. James P. Baxter Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Beach Mr. and Mrs. M. Melvin Berman Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Bertsch Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Bourassa Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Boyd Fitch M. Briggs Mr. and Mrs. Marcus N. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Buckner Mr. and Mrs. James T. Burnish Mr. and Mrs. Charles Monroe Butler Mr. and Mrs. Herbert K. Butz Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Carney Mr. and Mrs. Morris Cheston Mr. and Mrs. Stanley F. Chittick Mr. and Mrs. Gordon H. Clark Mrs. E. Vaughan Cleaves Mrs. Charlotte M. Dill PATRONS Jeannette G. Cleaves Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. Clifford Richard W. Condon Douglas M. Connor Mr. and Mrs. Drury W. Cooper, Jr. Rev. and Mrs. John R. Cooper Mr. and Mrs. W. Griffith Couser Mr. and Mrs. John R. Crellin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Cucinell Mr. and Mrs. John C. Curtis Mr. and Mrs. Horace W. Davis II Mr. and Mrs. Alfredo Degens Mr. and Mrs. Alfred deLong Mr. and Mrs. John A. Dill Mr. and Mrs. William L. Dole Stuart S. Drier Mr. and Mrs. C. William Edwards Mrs. Jean T. Ensign Dr. and Mrs. A. A. Erdmann, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Ericson Mr. and Mrs. Javis Farley Frances M. Faus Dr. and Mrs. Lyman R. Fink Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Finley MANDIGO SAND GRAVEL, INC. COMPLIMENTS OF THE JUNIOR CLASS Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert I. Fitzgerald Mr. and Mrs. George E. Flaccus, Jr. Charles and Norma Flanders Mr. and Mrs. Irving Flax Mr. and Mrs. Albert P. Gagnon David G. Gamble Mr. and Mrs. John I. Gillis Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Godfrey Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Gorham Mr. and Mrs. W. Wallace Grant Mr. and Mrs. Howard Grayson Mr. and Mrs. Wyman O. Griffin Mr. and Mrs. J. Edward Harris Dr. and Mrs. Leonard L. Heimoff Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Hemmingway Mildred B. Herron Mr. and Mrs. H. Ober Hess Mr. and Mrs. Milton P. Higgins Mrs. R. J. Honig Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Huested Mr. and Mrs. James F. Hutton Dr. and Mrs. Edward L. C. Jacoubs Evan A. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Johnson John Junge Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Keeley Mr. and Mrs. Edward O. King Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Leith Kitzmeyer Mrs. Norman E. Kunde Colonel and Mrs. Francis X. Leary Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert M. Leigh Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Lesser Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Little, Jr. Mrs. Eugenia F. Lombard Mr. and Mrs. David A. Lurensky Mr. and Mrs. A. H. MacCarthy Mr. and Mrs. Eugene T. Maher Jean and Frank Manker Mary B. Margeson Paul L. McC abe Mr. and Mrs. George S. McEwan Mr. and Mrs. Frank McMillin Edmond S. Meany, Jr. Captain and Mrs. Robert Nicholas Miller, III Mr. and Mrs. Amos Milo David Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Moore Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Moore COMPLIMENTS OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Morgan Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Morison Mr. an Mrs. William H. Morris Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Moser Dr. and Mrs. Lester A. Mount Mr. and Mrs. Gardner A. Murray Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Newman Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Louis Nichols Mrs. George M. Noss Mr. and Mrs. H. Clinton Owen Mr. and Mrs. Clifford L. Porter Dr. and Mrs. Paul William Preu Mr. and Mrs. William A. Pye Mr. and Mrs. James J. Quigley Mrs. James Reed Mr. and Mrs. Leon Reingold Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reisfeld Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Rhees Mrs. Arthur T. Rodge Jesse Rosen Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Ryll Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Salmon III Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Schiller Mr. and Mrs. Herman T. Schneebeli Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Schock, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Everett H. Schroeder Mr. and Mr. Christian Seger Mr. and Mrs. Anthony M. Setapen M.D. Sheppard Mrs. Charles Sinkler Irwin Ward Smith Mr. and Mrs. Saul Sokolsky Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stein Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Stengel George Cooke Stevens Mr. and Mrs. George C. Stevens Mr. and Mrs. Ben Strouse Mrs. Webster B. Todd Philip Townsend Mr. and Mrs. Reginald T. Townsend Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Tropp Mr. and Mrs. W. Lawrence Usher Everett B. Vreeland Mr. and Mrs. James L. Warga Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Weck Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Weitzman Mr. and Mrs. Graham White Mr. and Mrs. Gifford F. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Willis Mrs. Norman A. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Zacharias A Friend PB a U = (a4 Lu = 7 LL SZ = : BUFFALO 15, NEW YORK Publishers for Nike 1965 developed by Lincoln Studios LINCOLN STUDIOS MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS Official Photographers for Nike 1965 THE FIRST-MACHINISTS NATIONAL BANK of Taunton NORTON OFFICE Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation TANK FONSECA FOOD CENTER Taunton Ave. Norton Compliments of the Dining Room Wolch Dr. and Mrs. Nut Candy H. Sherman Company 1801 North Central Park Avenue Chicago 47, Illinois Russell B. Myers Sons Plumbing - Heating - Oil Burners h M c . ee . Tho mas B. Wolch Sheet Metal Work - Air Conditioning 494 WEIR STREET - TAUNTON, MASS. Telephone VAndyke 4-9401 things 20 better with th ie ee he BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Quality Compliments of Wears the HASKINS PHARMACY Worth Label 2. MAGEE CARPET fo] am :tehy fe), | MAKES A HOUSE A HOME Chestnut Hill Route 9 Boston 406 Boylston Street COMPLIMENTS OF SSSR eR eice WHEATON COLLEGE BOOKSTORE GIMBEL-HOPKINS, Inc. AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE Ford, Falcon, Mustang, Thunderbird Authorized Sales and Service 225 S. Easton Road Glenside, Pa. Compliments of WATERMAN TAXI Dr. and Mrs. Walter Impert Compliments of. . . FRIENOLY Super Markets West Main Street, Norton Now 14 Stores to Serve Southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island ROBERT ROLLINS BLAZERS, Inc. 242 Park Ave. South INéwW Yorks Nave Compliments of THE LORD FOX SPECIALIZED BLAZER SERVICE Foxboro, Mass. Schools Classes Colleges Glee Clubs Athletic Teams Choral Groups CAPITOL YEAST COMPANY WEST BROOKFIELD MASSACHUSETTS Town Country KLOSE HORSE Motor Inn Norton, Taunton, Mass. ROUTE 44 RAYHNAM, MASSACHUSETTS COMPLIMENTS OF Dry Cleaning Fur Storage eemsdy Cleaners. 34-44 Cohannet St. and 334 Bay St. Taunton, Mass. Phone Van Dyke 2-6161 “Dermody’s—Y our Clothes Best Friend” LOUIS A. CASCONE REAL ESTATE-INSURANCE 1228 E. Jericho Turnpike HAmilton 3-4618 Huntington, N. Y. Mrs. John Eveleth Dickinson TAUNTON LANDSCAPE GARDENERS, INC. LANDSCAPING TREE SERVICE 252 So. Walker Street Taunton, Mass. Mulady’s OF ATTLEBORO “What’s new in fashion?” We hope you'll drop in to Milady’s and see the many beautiful things designed for the young at heart. We love company, and the welcome mat is always out. Our staff will be delighted to show you ar ound! OPEN WEDNESDAY UNTIL 9 P.M. PARKING AT REAR DOOR RARITON VALLEY FARMS INC. Post Office Box 8 STUFT SHIRT Somerville, New Jersey RESTAURANT PASADENA e« UPLAND NEWPORT BEACH STUDENT LINEN SERVICE Our College Department will serve you weekly with SHEETS (72 x 108) PILLOW CASES BATH TOWELS and BLANKETS and PILLOWS Thoroughly Sterilized and Laundered Your linens will be supplied and laundered by the foremost college linen service in New England... GORDON LINEN SERVICE 60 ABERDEEN AVE. CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Gall AKT 7-8285 THE GONDOLA The Finest Italian Restaurant and Lounge DRexel 6-2950 INTERSTATE WRECKING Co., INC. Serving the Students of Wheaton for 20 years Telephone VA 4-8754 52 Commerce Street RAY WEILL Springfield, N. J. BEST WISHES CLASS OF 1965 MILDRED and BART PAULDING For the perfect gift— Send Flowers THE CHRISTATOS KOSTER, Inc. MANSFIELD FLORISTS BRYNOLF FAHLANDER PRESS fee Vice-President INC. 709 Madison Avenue New York, N. Y. 10021 TEmpleton 8-0022 Pre-requisite reading for the pet set — two cartoon books by THELWELL Perfect your horse- and dog-manship You can’t get much doggier or horsier than THELWELL REEP HIS NOSE COLD AND DAMP TOP DOG Thelwell’s Complete Canine Compendium Guaranteed to convince every young dog owner that his animal will be the winner of any training contest. 2nd printing $2.95 MAKE SVRE HE IS FIRMLY RESTRICTED BY THE LEAD... YOU WILL SOON DISCOVER THE SORT OF BED HE PREFERS. A LEG AT EACH CORNER Thelwell’s Complete Guide to Equitation Short and to the point, these deadly clear cartoons lead you through the ups and downs of a pony-mad world. 6th printing $2.95 pee ee NEVER BUY A HORSE THAT WHISTLES USE THE Booy BRUSH VIGOROUSLY TALK To YouR Pony — HE WILL KNOW WHAT You MEAN Fry E. P. DUTTON CO. sé 201 Park Avenue South, New York, N. Y. 10003 CONGRATULATIONS WHEATON COLLEGE Class of 1965 THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Attleboro 19 Park Street, Attleboro Washington Street, So. Attleboro 105 Pleasant Street, Attleboro Bakers Corner, Seekonk The Bank That Does More For You And Enjoys Doing it MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM MEMBER FDIC Compliments of WRIGHT DITSON Division of Spalding Sales Corporation GIRLS SCHOOL COLLEGE OUTFITTERS 462 Boylston Street Boston, Massachusetts RHODE ISLAND BUS COMPANY Excellence in Charter Service UN 1-5000 Providence, R. I. Compliments of FRATES DAIRY and GRILLE Dr. and Mrs. also Pizza after 5:00 p.m. Listevvelt S. Winfree Norton, Massachusetts Located at Norton Reservoir on Route 140 WILLIAMS LUMBER CO. Rear 62 Weir Street SHEPARD’S FLOWERS 174 Spring Street Taunton, Mass. Mansfield, Mass. Telephone 824-5897 OLD COLONY INN GIFT SHOP 5 Taunton Ave., Norton, Mass. GIFTS FOR ALL Free Gift Wrapping BRODRICK BROS. REALTORS John R. Pauler SIX THIRTY SIX COMMONWEALTH AVENUE NEWTON CENTRE 59, MASSACHUSETTS Miniature Mint Patties Dainty and Delicious Telephone 222-5555 REARDON LYNCH Co., Inc. WHOLESALERS Plumbing, Heating, Oil Burning and Water Supplies Corner Brook and East Sts. Attleboro, Mass. NEW JOY HING CHINESE AND AMERICAN RESTAURANT 490 Pleasant Street Attleboro, Mass. Orders Put Up Take Out Air Conditioned Tel. CAstle 2-3542 Open Daily 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. Sunday Monday to 10 P.M. 481 Pleasant St. Mass. State Route 123 Attleboro, Mass. JAMES O. WELCH COMPANY Division of National Biscuit Company CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS Jill Murray, Editor NIKE 1965 EDITORIAL Literary Lynn Johnson, Pam Harrington, Shelley Meltzer, Carol Magovern, Leslie Gaynor. Art and Layout Debby Hall, Anne Gwaltney, Debbie Goodman, Tatty Meyer, Sharon Seeche, Louise Flaccus. Photography Louise Hemingway, Judy Knight, Sue Meddaugh, Liz Briscoe, Debbie Owen, Pam Roderick, Carolyn Lutz. BUSINESS Circulation Marie Beth, Jo Ann McClennan, Shelley Meltzer, Lorraine Zaratkiewicz, Marty Mueller, Bonnie Walker, Lyn Setapen, Lynn Treinis, Liz Rhoades, Margie MacKay, Kathy Herron, Debbie Owen, Rhona Harris, Marcia Reardon, Ronnie Sokolsky, Kathy Butz, Hattie Kaplan. Advertising Debbie Owen, Alison Grant, Cherry Huested, Sue Meddaugh. Publicity Maida Uhlig, Sue Gibney, Pam Harrington, Ann Reisfeld, Tatty Meyer, Hannah Poole, Louise Flaccus, Whims, Wheatones. Sally Willis, Photography it ' Jean Abounader, Literary OUR SPECIAL THANKS TO: Lynn Johnson for her poetry Jane Zacharias, Assistant Editor Sharon Seeche for her end-sheet design Pam Foss and Shirley Griggs for their photography. Chairmen of Departments for their essays. Charles Aughtry . Louise Keogh . Louise Lynch . Marjorie P. Ford . . LéotaGe Colpitts aa. Bile Sruthee eee Roswell Farnham Michael Dasho and the staff of Lincoln Studios . . @ ee Yearbook Advisor _ Director of Public Information i. Secretary Secretary to the Presiden! oo Dean of Student College Photograp Representative of Wm. J. Keller Inc our publishe our photographet This book printed by VELVATONE, a special process 0 graphic printing. Sole producers: Wm. J. Keller Inc., Buffald No other printing firm is authorized to use the Velvatone a oe i: itttss aii! : : Eibeatasgeieriesestetsagtitttt HI ay i fia inane Seettat Seetitary Heit ee Say Tet a


Suggestions in the Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) collection:

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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