Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA)

 - Class of 1988

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 216 of the 1988 volume:

DORMS ... ACTIVITIES SPORTS SENIORS PATRONS ro) . Seroaee be 7 Chat” Oa ine Ws WHEATON THROUGH THE YEARS ..-. A TRADITION OF CHANGE 1834-1988 DEDICATION The yearbook staff is proud to dedicate the 72nd edition of the Nike to Bernice Wilner. For nine years she has devoted herself to helping the students at Wheaton coordinate extra-curricular activities. Many students are unaware of the talents Bernice contributes toward making functions and groups successful. She assists students with everything from balancing a budget to reserving a building. It is because of the inspiring personal support Bernice contributes to the Wheaton community, organizations, and individuals, that this yearbook is dedicated to her. Without her special zeal as our advisor, the Niké 1988 may not have materialized. Thank you, Bernice, for everything you have done for the Nike and Wheaton. Jennifer Seery Editor-in-Chief Nike 1988 eae a SOUR REE ae aE ae ee AEG EER REE ICE MOSSES TEE EELS LEE ne AGA AIR EETES OGRE, ox ESSER . Bt ae 55 ese pra dill HIATT =- .. WHE NY ANN AAI “UMN ANIM SS = - Me eer Scents 6uticimdatna hs inemnenasmncsteaenitiiecal ee RE RMSE RRA NER IB OE OEE ETO EEE ITE IS TE LOTT LE TEI CLL TS A A LOL AF MN a iN HR RN es GO I SF CUES WHEATON THROUGH THE YEARS ... A TRADITION OF CHANGE The daughter of Judge Laban Wheaton and Fanny Morey Wheaton, Elizabeth Wheaton Strong, died at the age of 39 in 1834. Planning to erect a stone monument to memorialize their daughter, the Judge and his wife were persuaded by their daughter-in-law to act differently. Eliza Baylies Chapin Wheaton, the wife of Laban Morey Wheaton, suggested that the parents create a female seminary in memory of their daughter. The Seminary opened in 1834 and was directly connected to the Wheaton family until the death of Eliza Baylies Chapin Wheaton in 1905. With the help of Mary Lyon, a teacher at the Female Seminary in Ipswich, Massachu- setts, Laban Morey Wheaton and Eliza Bayles Chapin Wheaton were able to create a pro- gram for the students of the new school. Tuition was set at ten dollars for each of the two terms a year. On Wednesday, April 22, 1835, Wheaton Female Seminary opened, with classes held in the newly built Seminary Hall. Eunice Caldwell, another teacher at the Ips- wich school, became the first principal of the new seminary and boarded in Norton homes along with other teachers and the first fourty-nine students. Finding this situation impractical, Mary Lyon convinced Laban M. Wheaton to erect a dormitory, which was begun in December of 1835. A period of great instability which plagued the school from 1837 through the late 1840's was caused by the opening of Mount Holyoke Female Seminary by Mary Lyon. Not only was Mary Lyon unable to help the Wheaton’s run their school, but she took with her to this newer school Wheaton’s Principal, Miss Cald- well, one of Wheaton’s two full-time teach- ers, and several students. After several prin- cipals, a precipitous drop in enrollment, and serious financial problems, Elizabeth Cate be- ARCHIVES INFORMATION PROVIDED BY ZEPH STICKNEY fe ag aed weet eae a fees ig eee Pt Tp ae a tage ee hi a came principal in 1847 and began to turn things around. Laban Wheaton provided des- perately needed financial support during these difficult years and had a gymnasium built. This small building, located between Seminary Hall and the dormatory, may well have been the first separate building con- structed for the sole purpose of use as a gym. Because of the upturn Elizabeth Cate was able to create, more modern facilities were soon needed. Laban Wheaton donated $10,000 in 1848 towards the building of a new Semi- nary Hall, which, dedicated in 1849, served the school well until 1879. This ten year period began shakily for Wheaton Seminary but end- ed in growth made possible only because of the Wheaton family’s commitment to the Seminary. A. Ellen Stanton was a strong and effective principal of the seminary from 1880 to 1897 and was able to boost enrollment to 100 stu- dents in I89I-92. Major changes in women’s education began to occur in the late 1890's, such as the opening of women’s colleges, led to the drop in enrollment at Wheaton to 38 students in the 1896-97 academic year. Semi- naries were quickly becoming stepping stones to college, changing to colleges, or vanishing. In order for Wheaton to stay com- petitive, a college preparatory program was developed upon the recommendation of the trustees. When A. Ellen Stanton resigned in 1896 a replacement could not be found and she was asked to stay on for the following year. It was not until the winter of 1897 that the Rev. Sammuel Cole agreed to become the next leader of the school. In his acceptance speech at his inauguration, President Cole made it clear that Wheaton Seminary would soon be Wheaton College. Mrs. Eliza Baylies Chapin Wheaton, who had remained in the background yet keenly interested in the school’s welfare since her husband’s death, had prompted the trustees to ask Rev. Cole to become the new principal, she named him “president”, and she supported the transi- tion from seminary to college. Both the Rev. Cole and Mrs. Wheaton realized that not only would enrollment increase, and the curricu- lum expand in the change from seminary to college, but the facilities would have to be increased as well. Mrs. Wheaton sold nearly half her property to create the beginnings of Wheaton’s endowment fund, giving the school approximately $60,000, of which only the interest was to be spent. Under President Cole a massive building program was begun that would, by 1912, add seven buildings to the campus. This death of Eliza Baylies Chapin Wheaton at age 95 in 1905 made this construction pos- sible because she left most of her estate to the school she had helped to nurture for over seventy years. As President of the school one of Rev. Cole’s major influences came in the change of administration. Previously there was no separation between faculty and ad- ministrators; the faculty ran the school as well as taught. President Cole began to change this policy by hiring the first Regis- trar-Librarian who did no teaching. The tran- sitory period of the school was academically chaotic with students at all different levels, often needing individual attention and sche- dulinug of lessons. By having the first two years of the seminary move to the “House in the Pines” school across the street, and re- structuring Wheaton’s program to be strictly collegiate, the school was ready to end its’ seminary years and become Wheaton College. On February 12, 1912 Wheaton was granted its’ college charter and the first freshman class was admitted in the fall. Five years later . Mg me Ee aa enrollment had risen to approximately two a ee ff FROM MAINE TO ICELAND | hundred students, a steep climb from the one | : | i i OFFICIAL CHRISTMAS TREE hundred enrolled in 1905. World War | had ae. @ for Ine Boys IN ICELAND apparently little effect on enrollment which was more than four hundred in 1925, compel- ling the school to add more housing. During these early years as a college, many traditions developed, a student government was formed, and more social events planned. President Cole’s death in 1925 suddenly end- ed his twenty-eight years of leadership and guidance of Wheaton, transforming it from seminary to college. Unlike previous years, the loss of the school’s leader did not result in a crisis. President Cole had created a sys- tem at Wheaton that served both the present and the future. With a stable administration and faculty established, there was less oppor- tunity for problems to develop that could threaten the school’s future. In 1926 Rev. John Edgar Park became Whea- ton’s second President. President Park worked toward continuing and modernizing the school President Cole had worked so hard to develop. Faculty increased under President Park, as did enrollment and funds, even during the Depression. World War Il, however, did slow the building of additional facilities and created a drain on employees. Students organized themselves and filled in the gaps left open around the campus. In 1944 President Park retired and was suc- ceeded by A. Howard Meneely. Under this President, salaries for faculty were increased and the administration expanded. President Meneely was sharply aware that the Baby Boom of the 1950s would put great strains on the present facilities as the number of stu- dents rose. Several additions to existing buildings were made and new dorms were built. Dr. William C. H. Prentice became Whea- ton’s next leader after President Meneely died in 196]. The expansion of the campus continued and included the building of the Watson Fine Arts Center, a building desired by the community for many years. In the early 1970s students became politically active and vocal regarding the conflict in Vietnam and in 197! the decision to remain an all wom- en’s school was made by the trustees. The first female President of Wheaton was inaugurated in 1975, and Alice F. Emerson has continued to lead the College in a progressive manner. As under her predecessors, Presi- dent Emerson has increased the campus fa- cilities and enrollment of students. Mary Lyon was renovated and the Balfour-Hood Center was opened recently, as well as many other inprovements being made. The most recent and controversial change to occur since 1912 was the decision in 1987 by the trustees to begin to admit men as candidates for the Bachelor of Arts degree beginning with the class of 199. Wheaton, thus, has not remained a strictly traditional school, but has changed according to the needs of its students and society. The continuous changes Wheaton has experi- enced over the last 153 years have been to insure the survival of the school and consis- tantly provide an excellent education to the students. We should look at this latest change as part of this “Tradition of Change” which was begun with the founders of the school. ree oe Tex lal HOR WSLS Ps THE SEM 3 HOWARD ST. (1834): Originally built on the site where the north wing of Mary Lyon Hall now stands, “The Sem” served as the original classroom building for Wheaton Female Seminary. Between 1849 and 1933, it has been moved three times across Howard St., and has stood in three different locations. Original- ly called Seminary Hall, the building has also been used as a straw hat factory (on Howard St., beginning in 1850), tenement, rented meeting hall, laundry (begin- ning in 1868 when it was attached to the rear of Old Metcalf Hall), gymnasium (prior to 1903), post office, infirmary, bookstore (between 1904-1933), student ac- tivities building (beginning in 1933 when it was moved to its present location on Howard St. and named by Pres. Park), dormitory (1956-1957), and home for faculty and staff (on the second floor, beginning in 1933, on both floors since 1958). PRESIDENT’S HOUSE (1829): Built by Laban Morey Wheaton for his bride Eliza Baylies Chapin, the house became the College President's residence upon the death of Eliza Wheaton in 1905. Laban M. Wheaton and his wife were the moving forces behind the founding of the Seminary; he was a trustee from 1834 until his death in 1865. The original three-story structure consisted of nine rooms, with an east wing containing a dining room, kitchen, pantries, and servants’ living quarters. The house now contains fifteen rooms, five bathrooms, and five hallways. There are three stairways in the house and one in the carriage house, more than eighty win- dows, twenty-three closets, and six entrances to the house. OLD METCALF HALL (1838): The first building used for student housing, the dormitory received several additions, which created a long, rambling wood frame structure parallel to Main St. The original section housed forty students and staff and contained the common dining room until Emerson Hall was built in 1908. The first addition, similar in size to the original building, was built in 1857 and ells off the back included The Sem from 1868 to 1933. At one time, the library and many administrative offices were housed in Old Met- calf. In 1922, Metcalf housed 90 people. Its first floor was nearly entirely devoted to administrative offices and public rooms. The original eastern portion of the building was called the “Boarding House,” and the western section the “New House” until in 1900 the name “Metcalf Hall” was given to the whole. Lucy Larcom occupied room number 48 on the second floor in the northwest corner of the “New House,” overlooking Mrs. Wheaton’s gardens. Each hall had its own name, including Seventh Heaven, Trag- edy, Comedy, Seminary, Eliza, 1933, Purga- tory, Paradise, and Broadway. The infirmary was in one of the ells, and when student rooms replaced the infirmary, that hall was named Tragedy Alley. Old Metcalf was de- molished in phases, beginning in 1932, to make room for the building complex of Met- calf Kilham Hebe and Park Hall. GYMNASIUM ADMISSIONS CENTER (1903): A tem- porary top floor placed on the gym provided music practice rooms. The first swimming tank was in the basement and opened in 1913 (possibly the first swimming pool at any women’s college in the U.S.). In the mid 1930s, all apparatus was removed from the gymnasium and new dressing rooms were arranged. The new swimming pool wing opened in 1936. The pool is 26’x 60’ with a maximum depth of 9’, and has 144 spectator seats. The roof was tiled and used as an outdoor promenade (sundeck) in fall and spring. A locker system and separate dressing room and shower for men were installed in 1937. The building was converted to the Admission Center in 1966, when Clark Recreation Center opened. The Psychol- ogy Department laboratories were located on the second floor until recently. om EES H ye HRP oA Alen es) The Alumnae Association was begun by the class of 1870, during their senior year, and the first meet- ing was held on Graduation Day, July 13, 1870. MARY LYON HALL SEMINARY HALL (1849, 1878): Originally called Seminary Hall, the building was renamed in 1910 for Mary Lyon, a pioneer in American education who acted as a consultant to the Wheaton family at the founding of the Seminary and established the curriculum. The original building consist- ed of the current north wing, plus an addi- tional ca. 10 feet at the back. It was enlarged to include a science wing (south wing), gym- nasium and library (west wing), additional classrooms (east wing), grand stairway and cupola in 1878. The ground floor of the west wing was used successively as the gymnasi- um (until 1903, when the new gymnasium building was completed), the physics labora- tory and the biology laboratory (in 1913). The new gymnasium, opened in 1903, included space for music practice rooms, and the space used for that function in Mary Lyon Hall was devoted to a supervised quiet study hall. The Library was removed to the Chapel basement in 1918 19, and the Art Department moved to Mary Lyon Hall in the same year, When the attic of the north wing was opened and finished as a studio. The building was renovated in 1930: the east wing rooms were rearranged, new electric fixtures installed, floors refinished, the entire building re- painted, and 1500 Ibs. of succotint used on the walls. In the upstairs assembly room, the woodwork around the arch and the “fancy plaster ornamentation in the corners” were removed. Mary Lyon Hall was th oroughly renovated and slightly changed in 1982-83. At that time, an elevator, offices and semi- nar rooms were added, the lower stair hall was widened, and several of the rooms were named, including the Woolley Room, through a gift from Mabel Tingley Woolley W1925; the Larcom Room, named in honor of Lucy Larcom and made possible through a gift from her great grand niece Lois Larcom Horn W1I928 and her class; The May Room, named in honor of Elizabeth Stoffregen May, Professor of Econom- ics and Dean of the College from 1949 to 1964 and acting president from 196l to 1962; and the Holman Room, giv- en by Phyllis Holman Larsen Moerman WI933 in honor of her mother Ida Hagar Hosmer Holman WI1907. CHAPIN HALL (1900): The first brick building built at Wheaton, this dormitory was named for Samuel Austin _ Chapin, brother of Mrs. Wheaton, and a trustee from _ 1889-1890. The interior was rebuilt in 1934 (repiped, re- wired, replastered, repainted, refloored). In 1986 it ceased to be a dormitory, and became offices for the Center for Work and Learning. HEBE (1884): Mrs. Eliza Baylies Wheaton gave the original lead statue fountain of Hebe to the Seminary for its fiftieth anniversary in 1884. The fountain was placed outside Mary Lyon Hall, be- tween the west wing and Old Metcalf. It was moved in the fall of 1932 to a location in Hebe Court (thus the name of the Parlors and the court- yard). It was repeatedly damaged in attempts to steal the statue, and at one time had an electrical alarm installed inside it. The statue was removed in the 1970s, and restored in 1980 by Fritz Cleary, husband of Hope Kielland Cleary WI944, and fa- ther of Catherine Cleary WI982, who made casts of the original, and reconstructed the statue. The current statue is the bronze casting made by Mr. Cleary. KNAPTON HALL SCIENCE HALL (I9Il): Originally de- signed as a Science and assembly hall. Science Hall was constructed on the site of an apple orchard where stu- dents spent Sundays when not allowed to leave campus. The cornerstone-laying ceremony held for Science Hall was apparently the first such ceremony held at Wheaton. The basement held Botany and Biology labs. The first floor served as a chapel until Cole Chapel was built in 1917, when it was divided into recitation rooms, having been de- signed and built with this in view. The second floor held Physics and Chemistry laboratories and a lecture room with a sloping floor. The third floor was used by the Art Department. When smoking was first allowed at Wheaton in 1932, a temporary smoking room was fitted up in the Science Hall, until a smoking room was established in Hebe Parlors. In 1933 part of the basement was converted into a science library. A wing was added in 194] (opened in 1942) to provide more and modern laboratory space. In 1971, Knapton was rebuilt to create a center for the social sciences. Science Hall was renamed Knapton Hall in honor of Dr. Ernest John Knapton, a member of the history department from 1931 to 1969. EMERSON DINING HALL (1908): Named for Alfred Emerson, trustee from 1872 to 1893 and treasurer from 1880 to 1891, and his wife, Martha Vose Emerson, princi- pal from 1842 to 1849. The Dimple was graded at this time because plans called for a reflecting pool (the depression was formed when a stable barn was sold and removed in 1905). Appeared in Good Housekeeping Magazine as one of the most beautiful dining halls in the U.S. The open porch from which diners watched plays performed in the Dimple was roofed over and glassed in ca. 1927. New kitchen equipment was installed in the 1930s. Rooms over the dining hall, originally residences for kitchen help, were used as faculty offices for some years before 1971, when they were converted to student residences (faculty offices were created in the renova- tion of Knapton Hall). In 1950, the Faculty Dining Room was added, the kitchen and bakery enlarged, and base- ment rooms finished for food preparation. “Crum’s Closet” is a former coat closet off the Faculty Dining Room made over into a small meeting room, and offi- cially named for Sarah Crum, the Coordinator of Cam- pus Events from 197] to 1987 at her retirement party. In 1984, an electric carillon was added to Emerson, witha gift from Madeleine Clark Wallace WI934. The keyboard is in the faculty lounge, and the speakers are in the cupola. MADELEINE CLARK WALLACE LIBRARY (1923): Wheaton’s library began in a room in Old Metcalf Hall, was moved to the gymnasium building in 1869, and to a specially designed room in Mary Lyon Hall in 1879. The library continued to grow until it occupied Rooms 7, 9, and 10 in Mary Lyon Hall, and it was finally removed to the Chapel basement in 1918-19, where it remained until the current building opened in 1923. The Library was dedicated at Commence- ment in June 1923, but the books could not be moved to their new home until a few days before the open-| ing of college in September 1923 due to the general disruption caused by the installation of a new steam distributing system. In 1933, the science library was moved from the overcrowded library to a large room in the basement of the Science Hall (Knapton). Grow- ing use and storage of periodical literature contrib- uted to the space problem. The Henry Clay Jackson Wing, added in 1941 (formally opened in Jan. 1942), was made possible by a gift from the Paul Wilde Jackson Fund of Boston. It included a Browsing Room, new books area, periodical room and stacks for bound periodicals. The Laila Raabe collection of early American glass was displayed in specially-built exhibit cases in a hallway outside the Browsing Room (transferred to Watson in 1982). In 1961, when the Periodicals Wing was added, floors were placed across the atrium to create more stack space (seating and stack space were doubled). In 1979 80 another addition to the Library restored the atrium and created a sky-lighted Stair Tower and underground stack area to join the Library to the Science Center. An Archives Reading Room was also created. The Library was named for Mrs. Wallace W1934 in 1984, when she made Wheaton College her residuary legatee on the occasion of her 50th reunion (ca. $1.2 million). GYMNASIUM (1844): Originally located between the north wing of Mary Lyon Hall and Old Metcalf Hall, this is believed to be the first freestanding gymnasium built at any women’s college in the U.S. In 1869 it was remodeled, and the Seminary Library was moved into this building. When addi- tions were made to Mary Lyon Hall in 1878, Mrs. Wheaton donated the building to the Trinitarian Congregational Church for its vestry. At first, the vestry was attached to the rear of the Church, facing south. The former gymnasium was moved to its present position at the southern end of the Church’s current horseshoe shape in 1963. at. . we ten Se, 3 Pr Se os ge BON Se Et PIR ck 2 BOWLING ALLEY (1884-85): This building had two alleys and stained- glass windows. It was first mentioned in the catalogue of I90I-O2, and last mentioned in 1907-08. It was later razed. Cole Memorial Chapel (1917): The chapel was named in 1926 for the Rev. Samuel Valentine Cole, Trustee from 1893 to 1925, and College President from 1897 until his death in 1925. The original seating capacity of ca. 900 was expanded in 1934. 19 DOLL’S HOUSE OLD POWER HOUSE LAUNDRY TOWER HALL (1904-5): This building served first as the power house and laundry, providing all of the light, power and heat for the college plant until 1925, when a new power plant was con- structed. The old power house was re- modeled and a third floor added to house thirty people, including eleven women of the staff. A new steam distribution sys- tem was installed throughout the campus during the summer of 1923. When the power house was remodeled into a resi- dence, a contest was held to name the building, which was being called “Tower Hall,” but by 193l, it was commonly re- ferred to as the “Doll’s House.” It was converted into a classroom building in 1934, housing the Economics, Sociology, Psychology and Education Departments. In the basement, the Zoology Dept. kept an “animal room,” and the Physics Dept. an “apparatus room.” In 1935 “The Cage” or small gymnasium was added to the lower level. The Cage gained a snack bar in 1962-63, and was completely renovated in 1968-69. The Dolls House was remodeled into the bookstore and offices in the 1960s. When Knapton was renovated in 1971, offices on the second floor of the Doll’s House were used to expand the Bookstore. In 1972, the building housed Buildings and Grounds, SAGA, and Security offices. The Doll’s House was again remodelled in 1978, when the Book- tae soehiatty A asesagt T =} sebcbcist, agrgaeeerieccee store was moved to the old Everett Dining Hall. In 1980, The Cage was remodelled and renamed “The Loft.” Since 1982, the Doll’s House housed Financial Aid, Registrar and Dean’s offices. PEACOCK POND (1929): Marsh excavated and transformed into pond. Not spring fed. In its first years, the pond was used for swimming, boating and skating, and was considered to be an integral part of college activities. Seniors first successfully floated their candles on it in 1930. A contest to name the pond resulted in “Peacock Pond” or “Peacock Mirror” because the Chapel weathervane is reflected on its surface. The Greek Temple on the pond’s western shore was constructed in 1935 using pillars from the porch of the original section of Old Metcalf Hall. 20 HEBE PARLORS HEBE COURT (1933): Originally contained one large and twelve small parlors, in which students could entertain their guests. The parlors connected through arched doorways with Metcalf and Kilham Halls, and were named to commemorate dates and people important to Wheaton Seminary and halls in Old Metcalf: Laban, 1835, Seventh Heaven, Tragedy, Comedy, Seminary, Eliza, 1933, Purgatory, Paradise, Broadway, Boarding House. In 1947 Hebe was remodelled into three small faculty apartments, and finally into offices. a i . a _ “a ita. ALUMNAE GUEST HOUSE NURSERY SCHOOL (1931): This md vata building was the original Nursery School, founded by Elisabeth Amen. Built entirely by college workmen under the direction of Mr. Cutler, in cooperation with the Education and Psychology Departments for $10,400. It ws enlarged in 1937, when a one-way vision observation screen was installed. The building served as a history office building after the building of the Elisabeth Amen Nursery School in 1966 until the Social Sciences Hall was placed in Knapton in 1971. At that time, the former nursery school was converted to the Alumnae Guest House. } Ree . hy Me PARK HALL (1934): The admin- istration building, named in 1954 for J. Edgar Park, President of the College from 1926 to 1945. Originally contained administra- tive offices, the post office and bookstore, admission offices, and living quarters for 25 staff members (on the second and third floors) who would work in the building. The roof was used for sunbathing. Park Hall was ren- ovated in 1963, when all living quarters were made into offices. Ye. METCALF TEMPLE OR PILLARS (1935): “Here stand the pillars of Olde Metcalf.”” Porch columns from the original section of Old Metcalf were erected in a Greek Temple on the western shore of Peacock Pond as ‘a memorial of Olde Metcalf and will guard the East side of campus while the Sem guards the West side.” tad ) ¥ THE CAGE THE LOFT (1935): low- er level addition to the Doll’s House, originally built as a gym. It became a snack bar in 1963. Remodelled in the summer of 1980 and now called “The Lol POTATOE CELLAR (ca. 1936): constructed to store large quan- tities of potatoes raised on col- lege land in the mid 1930s. Hf ili Hf i I HH} f H j H) Hi if f iL STUDENT ALUMNAE BUILDING BALFOUR- HOOD CENTER (1940): Built with funds raised by alumnae and students beginning in 1928, this building was the first of truly modern design on campus. Plimpton Hall, one wing of SAB, was the gift of Herbert M. Plimpton, of the Plimpton Press in Norwood Ma. and a trustee for 28 years, in memory of his mother, Priscilla Guild Lewis Plimpton WI835. SAB was altered in 1968- 69. A Sesquicentennial project to modernize and expand this building filled in the courtyard with an atrium, and joined SAB to the Admis- sions Center and the Loft. Plimpton Hall was turned into office space for various student activities and the balcony end became the Me- dia Center. The Trustees named it the Balfour- Hood Center on 30 May 1986 in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Balfour and the Gilbert Hood family (Trustee and alumnae wife and daugh- ter) as a result of two major donations to the project from the Balfour Foundation and Emily Hood WI953. The Balfour-Hood Center was dedicated on 8 Nov. 1986 on Mothers’ Weekend. PEACOCK POND BRIDGE (1957): De- signed by Howard L. Rich, Rich Tucker Assoc., this cement and brick bridge re- placed the wooden bridge built in the 1930s. The location was shifted north from its original location closer to the rocks. U.S. POST OFFICE (1957): Built of Wheaton land with Wheaton funds, and leased to the U. S. Postal Service. Until this time, the town’s post office had been in Pratt’s Store. The building was doubled in size in 1968-69. CHASE HALL (1959): The dining hall named for William F. Chase, treasurer of the College from 1936 to 1960. Chase Square was added in 1964 to accomodate the increase in student enrollment. MENEELY HALL (1959): The Hu- manities Building was named in 1962 in honor of Dr. A. Howard Meneely, president from 1944 to 1961. WATSON FINE ARTS CENTER (1962): Made possible by a gift from Jeannette Kittredge (Mrs. Thomas J.) Watson, Sr. WI902. Mr. Watson was the founder of International Business Machines (IBM). CLARK RECREATION CENTER (1965): Named for Mr. and Mrs. Brackett H. Clark. Their daugh- ters graduated from Wheaton, Virginia in 1953 and Helen in 1960. Mr. Clark was a trustee from 1960 to 1975 (when he was voted Trustee Emeritus), and his dona- tion made the center possible. ee ge . Sat ste ag wo “ a POSSESSION bar | « In 1912 the student body consisted of 225 students from 25 states. 28 ELA ARONA! 5] SCIENCE CENTER (1968): One wing is named for Charles Anderson Dana, prac- tical scientist, builder and benefactor, in honor of a donation to the building from the Charles A. Dana ‘ Foundation. Chath wren mach sh seb jet wevdetd, = a? F goes pce tomas es fare sree Stowe easiganes me Kegon. oes oi. Dien ae ELMS, BITTERSWEET, LINDENS (1972): Purchased from Middlebury College when the House in the Pines closed in 1972. Elms was leased to a private in- dividual for use as a small elementary school in 1987. THE RICHARD P. CHAPMAN CAMPUS (1977): Rock and plaque outside Chase Round dedicated on 2 1 October 1977 in honor of Mr. Chapman, who was a member of the Board of Trustees from 1939 to 1970, and its Chairman from 1947 to 1964. He had overseen many additions to the campus, including all of the construction east of Peacock Pond. The Chapman Campus includes all of lower campus. Students could not re- ceive visitors on Sundays until 1906. 32 Notice by Order of the Faculty ( 903-I905) Don't leave your window open Don't go to store with out permission Don't eat between meals Don't put candles on gym floor Don't forget exercise reports Don't get up early Don't stay up late Don't whistle Don't laugh aloud Don't talk to your roommate in study hour Don't run Don't walk fast Don't walk slowly Don't make any noise Don't borrow things Don't go without hats Don't question anything you are told to do Don't go to English class if you don’t know your lesson Don't laugh in church Don't get up before 6:30 A.M. Don't get up after 7 A.M. Don't forget to take a bath at 6:30 A.M. Don’t sit up after 9:30 P.M. Don't go to library without permission (permission given only on rare occasions) Don't open window except at 8 A.M. Don't forget to close it at 8:10 P.M. Don't eat candy Don't have any boxes sent from home Don't wear thin dresses in cold weather Don’t throw apple cores on the lawn Don't look out your window (you might shock someone) Don’t go to car without permission (permission will not be given) Don't run a bill at the store (Mr. Waterman lost $4.00 on a girl once) Don't dance on top of the gym (seen for miles around) Don't sing in corridor Don’t talk in corridor Don't walk arm in arm in corridor The Stanton basement was originally a 75 person capacity dining room and a kitchenette, and was used as such until 1926 when Everett Dining Hall opened. For some time in the 1940s, the base- ment held three classrooms. Bath Schedule 7.30:7,50 en | SOS 8.10-8.30 8.30-8.50p.m. tuesday | CK atherine | Sidr aM A bbiemteae| a Ce Thursda Abbie Fridaye= 2 aa| ee May I, 1918 My dear Florence, The Board finds that your chapel attendance is very unsatisfactory. You are reminded that regular cha- pel attendance is a rule of Student Government. Please see that your record is improved, so that it will not be necessary for us to take any further measures. The Board teen Ff. F. Sec.) In 1912 the tuition and board was $450 for the year. Ten years later it cost $650 to attend Wheaton. In 1932, in the midst of the Depression, a year of college was $850. During World War Il $1,000 paid the bill for a year at Wheaton College. By 1952 the cost of schooling had risen to $1650, and jumped another one-thousand dollars ten years later. Students attending Whea- ton in the 1972-73 school year paid $4150. Since the beginning of the college tuition and board has increased by $15,020.00. 33 36 THE HEAD OF THE CHARLES NARVEST WEEKEND SECRET SOPHOMORE SISTER VEG GAGSEERIIINNE | FRESHMAN INITIATION - [916 UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE Can not go to the Inn Can not walk on the terrace before Emerson No church cuts No entering Larcom and Cragin Parlors without permission of a sophomore Enter and leave campus by back roads of Cragin and Chapin Call Sophomores “miss” No earings or jewelry No hair-curlers Make Sophomore and Senior beds Do not walk on the terrace-repeated- FOR THE REST OF THE YEAR Carry laundry and exercise slips for all upper classmen Show proper deference to upper classmen, and faculty, with special reference to I919 (Sophomores) Hold all doors open ‘till upper classes are in. By Order Of The Sophomores 38 MOTHER'S WEEKEND Mothers Weekend | October 30, 31 and November 1, 1987 THE VALENTINE SEMI.FORMAL WOMEN'S HISTORY WEEK WOMEN'S HISTORY WEEK MARCH 6 - 10 Sunday, March 6 The Embellished Form: Women's History Through Fashion Presented by Leslie Balazs, New York fashion consultant and antique clothes — collector. Models from the Wheaton community Holman Room, Mary Lyon, 7:00-8:30 PM Women's History Week Reception May Room, Mary Lyon, 8:30-9:30 PM Monday, March 7 American Feminists View Simone de Beauvoir Video: Remembering Simone de Beauvoir Moderator: Jeanne Whitaker, Associate Professor of French, Wheaton College 1962 Meeting Room, Balfour-Hood Center, 6:00-8:00 PM Tuesday, March 8 International Women's Day Film: Watson Lecture, 7:30-9: 00 PM Moderator: Jeanne Wilson, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Wheaton College Wednesday, March 9 Medieval Women: Sources of Power Moderator: Mary Skinner, Assistant Professor of History and Religion, Wheaton College Attitudes Towards Power and Religion: Women in France and Italy Lecture by Itala Rutter, Assistant Professor of Italian, Wheaton College Excerpts from the play Julian by J. Jandra (the story of a fourteenth-century mystic) Performed by New York dramatst, Margo Nagle Wolley Room, Mary Lyon, 7:30-9:00 PM Thursday, March 10 The Continent of Our Bodies: Constructing Race and Gender iilade by Fran White, Wheaton Alumna (1971) and MacArthur Chair (Third World Studies) at Frek hah College ey Room, Mary Lyon, 7:30-9:00 PM Sponsored by: Department of Histo’ On Committee on Public Events, Provost's Office, Student Government Association, Educational Council, Balanced Curriculum Project, Student Activities Office, Student Affairs, Women's Voice 43 FATHER'S WEEKEND Fathers Weekend April 8-10, 1988 Wheaton College Norton, Massachusetts SG 6 Pog O Pee Ao Ae A) ee oe ih : 3 44 said ete ae ee | t Se: pwd GONERIL AND REGAN WRITTEN BY PROFESSOR RICHARD PEARCE INTERNATIONAL WEEK 7 koa) “I see ranks, colors ... civilizations. I go among them, I mix indiscriminately. And I salute all the inhabitants of the earth.” - Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass j T et Fe 7 er £ INTERNATIONAL WEEK APRIL 4-8, 1988 WHEATON COLLEGE 3A GHEE: Gnd Boo we MIDNIGHT BRUNCH 47 SPRING WEEKEND FACULTY AND PRESIDENT ALICE F. EMERSON PROVOST HANNAH GOLDBERG DEAN OF STUDENTS 2 2 = “ae Ly ACADEMIC DEANS ANNA COMBS THOMAS BROOKS 54 DEAN OF STUDENTS OFFICE PRESIDENTS OFFICE ADMISSIONS OFFICE COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE FINANCIAL AID OFFICE CENTER FOR WORK AND LEARNING STUDENT ACTIVITIES HEALTH CENTER In 1835, when Wheaton first opened as a Seminary, the classes women enrolled in the school were able to take depended largely on the teachers available. Arithmetic, English and History were standards, as were religious courses, including ‘‘The Evidence of Christ”. In the first years after Whea- ton became a college in 1912, there were sixteen academic departments. A woman could obtain her Bachelor of Arts in areas ranging from German to Household Economics. Currently, as Wheaton concludes its [53rd year, there are twenty-one departments, allowing students to major in areas such as Art History or Physics. TENNIS IN 1914 WHEATON IN THE 1800’S THE CREAM OF WHEATON OUT FOR MEMBERS OF THE CLASSES OF 1921-1924 A RIDE - 1925 LESLIE BRUBAKER ROBERTA OLSON - CHAIR ANDREW HOWARD TIM CUNARD 38 VAINO KOLA ANN MURRAY THOMAS MCCORMICK BIOLOGY EDMUND TONG - CHAIR BARBARA BRENNESSEL BETSEY DYER LISA FLOYD-HANNA JOHN KRICHER CHEMISTRY STYLIANI PASTRA-LANDIS NORMAN WELLS 6| CLASSICS DOROTHEA WENDER PAMELA BONGAS KAREN WHITE EDUCATION FRANCIS MAHER - CHAIR CHRISTINE LELAND 62 ECONOMICS JOHN GILDEA CHAIR HILDA KAHNE JOHN MILLER GORDON WEIL JOHN WALGREEN 63 ENGLISH BEVERLY CLARK EDWIN BRIGGS SAMUEL COALE - CHAIR RICHARD PEARCE CURTIS DAHL SUSAN CLARK 64 ENGLISH SHEILA SHAW FRANCES SHIRLEY SUE STANDING STEVEN STRANG JAN SUSINA KATHLEEN VOGT 65 FRENCH i | EDWARD GALLAGHER - JANET LETTS JEANNE WHITAKER CHAIR GERMAN HISTORY The Semire Woiten as, celebration: of Yeh 4 Centeweal year, thes he he ronctis and developement of Wikvciow doen a ‘ 73 years ns a semammary sted comiluahen wih 4 8 Un OAS grain! asd corey Plawonrd traci. fs ll colloge shat Founded in onder thet youry wemcn onksht cba a Sew of peimitan ners scuslibte why ab colleges ler mem, Wikowlon Female Seweinary and it fastory srovabe insu phis i $90 century attitindes eegundins (he eeoper Place of women in middle-class swiety amd tiie onserogerinie Merwe: thew edistion: hockd ASTA LEPINIS - CHAIR ASA ELDH PAUL HELMREICH - CHAIR 66 HISTORY ALEX BLOOM VIPAN CHANDRA TRAVIS L. CROSBY NANCY NORTON JOANNE SCHNEIDER CAROLYN STEFANCO 67 MATH COMPUTER ROCHELLE LEIBOWITZ - JOHN BUONCRISTIANI CARLOS CURLEY CHAIR NORMAN JOHNSON FRED KOLLETT GEORGE RICHARDSON 68 CHARLES FASSETT - CHAIR SETA DER HOHANNESIAN POZZI ESCOT CARLTON RUSSELL E. ANN SEARS 69 ALYS TERRIEN-QUEEN GUY URBAN PHILOSOPHY a a ROSALIND LADD - CHAIR GERALD GLASER KENNETH WINSTON | 70 PHYSICS ASTRONOMY PHILIP TIMOTHY BARKER - HARRY M. PASTRA-LANDIS PHILIP WILSON CHAIR POLITICAL SCIENCE DAVID VOGLER - CHAIR DARLENE BOROVIAK 7I POLITICAL SCIENCE JAY GOODMAN JEREMIAH MURPHY JEANNE WILSON PSYCHOLOGY DAVID WULFF - CHAIR MARY GRACE BARON BIANCA CODY MURPHY 72 PSYCHOLOGY al 4 r ad eeeenseraocs a DEREK PRICE MARYLYN RANDS GERALD ZURIFF PAUL SPROSTY TRUDY VILLARS ns RELIGION CHARLES FORMAN - MARY SKINNER JEFFREY TIMM CHAIR RUSSIAN NINA GOLOUB - CHAIR NANCY CONDEE 14 SOCIGLOGY ANTHROPOLOGY JOHN GRADY - CHAIR IRA GERSTEIN WENDY WEISS KERSTI YLLO fe SPANISH ITALIAN ROBERTO RUIZ - CHAIR MATILDE FRANCIULLI MELINDA LEHRER ITALA RUTTER 76 IN MEMORIOM THOMAS MOTT OSBORNE Il Professor Thomas Mott Osborne Il died on September 12, 1987, at the age of sixty-four. Professor Os- borne taught sociology and served as department chairman at Whea- ton for 24 years. He came to Wheaton in 1964 as a sabbatical replacement for sociolo- gy Professor Sidney Forsythe. Jean Osborne, the late Professor’s wife, said that he ‘always thought he came to Wheaton accidentally” as a substitute, but he loved Wheaton and stayed when he was asked to become an assistant professor. During his years at Wheaton he re- ceived the William Isaac Cole Pro- fessorship of Sociology and sat on numerous committees before retir- ing last year. Professor Osborne called himself a ‘utility infielder,” according to Professor Forsythe, because he taught the courses that others in the department were less interest- ed in teaching. Mrs. Osborne said “the courses he always enjoyed teaching the most were criminolo- gy and courses dealing with the sit- uations of minorities, and he en- joyed teaching introductory courses to get people interested in the field.” Professor Osborne’s interest in sociology may have begun in his childhood. His great-great aunt was Lucretia C. Mott, a famous suf- fragette and abolitionist during the 1800's. His grandfather, Thomas Mott Osborne, was a well known penologist in New York and a lead- er in prison reform. Professor Os- borne chaired the Osborne Associ- ation, (named in honor of his grandfather), which supports pris- on reform. He was also active with the North Conway Institute for Al cohol and Drug Abuse and the Bos- ton Half-Way Houses. He was also on the board of trustees at Avon Old Farms prep school, from which he had graduat- ed in 1941. He later attended Wil- liams College and received his doc- torate from Boston University. He liked to play the piano, collect stamps, travel, golf, and “was at one time the best tennis player on the faculty,” said Professor For- sythe. Before his death, Professor Osborne was writing a book, enti- tled The Bedside Sociologist, be- cause “he always felt that sociolo- gy was misunderstood,” said Mrs. Osborne. Wheaton students will remember Professor Osborne for his enthusi- asm: he loved his work and he had found, at Wheaton, a second home. ae 2 See: . . a a 1918 THE FLOOR UNDER YOUR BED IS DIRTY. DO NOT LET IT HAPPEN AGAIN! KEEP YOUR SOAP DISH CLEAN. THE MAID HAS HAD TO CLEAN IT THREE TIMES! HOUSE-KEEPER lili Wr : 5 ent | Ptamiet ooe euunT UTHON aor ee ww 8 Game Aneto ¢ ' ' N oi Mos or ton y Hf Rone Pour ter os frre Monday fe sore Lucy Larcom LARCOM Larcom was constructed in 1908 and named in honor of Lucy Larcom who taught writing, literature, and history at Wheaton Seminary. While here she founded the Psyche Club and Rushlight, which is still in publication. Dorm Staff 8I Cragin was built in 19 1 and named for Mary Jane Cragin who taught math and science at Wheaton Seminary for eight years. She was known throughout New England for teaching Geometry without a text. Dorm Staff Mary Jane Cragin | 82 I So Stanton was erected in 1921 and named in honor of A. Ellen : Stanton who was a teacher at Wheaton Seminary for twenty- six years and principal for seventeen. A. Ellen Stanton Dorm Staff 83 Everett was built in 1926 and named for Ida Josephine Everett, a faculty member for twenty-nine years and Whea- ton College’s first Dean. Students room circa 1899 Ida Josephine Everett 84 AILAAM Kilham was constructed in 1932 and named for Annie M. Kilham a graduate of Wheaton Seminary in 1870, and a teach- er at the college for five years. In addition she was the Secretary of the Board of Trustees for nineteen years. Ey pot ert meen Annie M. Kilham Dorm Staff 85 ETCALF —_—- Metcalf was built in 1933 to replace Olde Metcalf Hall. The dormitory was named in honor of Caroline C. Metcalf, principal _. | of the Seminary for twenty-six years. The pillars of Olde Met- : . calf now form a gazebo near Peacock Pond. x a a ee ee —— = Dorm Staff Caroline C. Metcalf 86 YOUNG in 1957 and named for Sarah Belle trar at Wheaton for thirty-six years. Young was constructed Young; 1s the reg Dorm Staff Sarah Belle Young 87 88 PA inh. itt MCINTIRE MelIntire was built in 1959 and named for Doctor Walter Oscar McIntire who was a Professor of Philosophy at Whea- ton for twenty-seven years. Ly, dl Ny Sith ghia, 4 ‘y ahah! Dr. Walter Oscar Mclntire OP —_ Se ee ea a an a — __ —eE— = lS ee eee Ee a ee ae Kate Upson Clark Clark was erected in 1960, completing what is now affectionately called the “YMCA” complex. The dormitory was named in honor of Kate Upson Clark, an alumna from the Wheaton Seminary Class of 1869, and a member of the Board of Trustees for twenty-eight years. rh we? gt ee Ki i wet wih Wy yew Oh 3 | ia 4 3 IN Student’s room circa 1899 89 MEADOWS - MEADOWS NORTH MEADOWS EAST aun oN The Meadows Complex under construction. MEADOWS WEST The Meadows Com- plex was completed in 1964 and named in honor of Sylvia Meadows, a graduate of the Class of 1918, and a member of the Board of Trustees for forty-two years. 91 92 LINDENS NOUSES EMERSON Emerson was built in 1908 and named in honor of AI- fred Emerson, a _ trustee from 1872-1893 and treasur- er from 1880-1891, and Mar- tha Vose Emerson, his wife, who was principal of Whea- ton Seminary from 1842- 1849. _ - WHITE HOUSE White House was origi- nally owned by the Whea- ton family and became part of the Seminary in 1905 as housing for the male help. In 1927 it became “La Mai- son Blanche’’, a french speaking dorm, and was re- _ modeled. Today it remains a student run house, but has no language speciality. HOUSES Naylor Photo Unavailable Residents for 1987-88: Debra Butt Sheila Cosgrove Tyra Goodman Jennifer Trenholm Marie Wilcox NAYLOR HOUSE Naylor House became part of the Wheaton Cam- pus in 1941, and was named in honor of Annie M. Naylor from whom the house was purchased. 93 BURSA ARG RC Ait) Wheaton Orchestra i915 : ‘ eae 5 HIS oy ig ol books 5 GOVERNMENT College Hearing Board e Chairwoman: — Maria Pepe : Vice Chairwoman: Mary Rockwell Secretary: _ Janice Portent Member-at-Large: any, Pad, gett : Founded circa 1950 The Judicial Branch at “ Whealon. Coleg is divided into two sections: College Hearing Board and Appellate Board. The purpose of the judicial branch is to maintain — the honor code. Any student accused of violating an academic or social regulation has — the right to appear before a two-thirds quorum of a duly constituted judicial body. The judicial bodies perform their functions according to the procedures outlined in the Wheaton College Constitution in order to ensure due process and justice. College Hearing Board consists of four elected students, the Dean of Students, and two faculty members. The Procedural Advisors are assigned to the accused, accuser, and their witnesses in order to help all those involved by explaining the procedures involved in a case, by assisting a party in preparing a written statement, and most importantly, by providing moral support to her party. Although they are not members of the Board, the advisors are an integral part of the system and are selected by members of the College Hearing Board. 99 e ee ee + emcees a 5 entemmtemmmmmmmnnet 3 Mi 5 9 mementos 102 ASIAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION _ Founded circa 1987 The Wheaton Asian Students Associ- ation, established in the fall of 1987, was created to function as a political and social organization to create cultural di- versity on campus, with an intent to encourage an understanding and inter- est in different Asian cultures. Its main _ objective is to open students to the dif- ferences and contributions of Asian cul- _ tures in the world. We would like to maintain the presence of Asian students n the Wheater Campus as well as es- blish some physical representation of our cultural experiences. We hope to hold many events and accomplish as much as we can, in our first year, in fulfilling our goals and purpose for the creation of W.A.S.A. — CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP a Founded circa 1917 eA 4 nigne CHE rs Rs on —_ ll) Mla) lla. les: he PMs Os Es or ower oe | dated hore wr ewe A Alin dn. stn hYs RA Rs Tides Tas ow oe | FAN. MS “ | A A Alin a | PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Founded circa 1947 The Psychology Club has been de- signed to inform its members about the field of psychology and to an- swer questions that members might have. President Nancy Schoenewolf tried to generate a feeling of enthu- siasm and interest in the club by _ organizing activities that are fun and stimulating. Some of these ac- tivities included speakers and pre- sentations, a film festival that we hope will continue into future se- mesters, and an alumni dinner in April. The club is always open to anyone who wishes to join. Secre- tary Courtney Petter, and Advisor Professor Price helped with their excellent ideas and presentations. We hope to see all old members again next year. Founded circa 1965 - During first semester, The Russian club Photo Not Available began by hosting a reception for renown Political Observer of the Soviet Union, Club Members: Vladimir Pozner. The club also organized President: Debra Budek the ‘Red Square Festival” in the Balfour Vice Pres.: Sheila Spillane Hood Atrium which featured exhibits and Treasurer: Jenika Forslund, Beth O’Neill _ music. They continued their activities Secretary: Sarah Regan, Dawn Holzrichter into second semester with a Russian po- Ann Walsh etry reading. A trip to a Russian monas- Ann Corbett tery was made to celebrate the one-thou- Tanya Miller _sandth year anniversary of Eastern Melissa Hickey Orthodox Christianity. A Ukrainian Egg Natasha Jatoi Festival was held in the spring. Also, a Christine Lloyd Russian Day was included as a part of the Beata Lozinski Asian Clubs’ Cultural Week. Throughout Sondra Goratski the year, the club ran a movie series in Advisors: Professors Condee, Perkins, and Goloub the media center. The goal of the Russian Club is to promote community awareness about Slavic cultures, and it is open to non-Russian speaking students. ee seansrani BSUS: a ae Ce aka x THE WHEATONES Founded circa 1949 The Wheatones have been an active singing group since 1949, and had never had such a great audition turnout. With six new members we began an eventful _ fall which included several off-campus _ invitations from various colleges and in- _ Stitutions. Presently, we have been ex- panding our repertoire which ranges from ballads of the 40's to upbeat show tunes of the 80's and includes humor, _ skits and fun. A tentative tour of the east coast, a few jamborees and other opportunites have filled our spring cal- ender. We are looking forward to the return of old members and the auditions of new members. na on ines from aint to am, yhere the jocks can choose their own music. — This free-format programming allows the _ jocks to air a diverse mix of music, although WCCS is predominantly a progressive music station. This year, they have repaired their portable equipment, so now they are able to deejay at parties and other functions. The station has also worked hard to establish re- cord service from many major companies and has been very successful - Columbia has put WCCS on their record sendout list! During the spring semester, their priorities were to up- date old equipment and install a new training program that will enhance the sound of WCCS. lo THE WHEATON WIRE Founded circa 1922 The Wheaton Wire, the college's stu- dent run newspaper, reports school news and related outside events. The Wire is a twelve page, biweekly publica- tion that provides the campus with im- portant information. The editorial pages allow students, faculty, and administra- tors to air their views on events and — subjects that occur at Wheaton or that _ effect the community. The newspaper’s _ editorial board works closely together brainstorming, editing and laying out each issue. Reporters and photogra- phers also contribute their work. Editor- in-Chief Meg FitzPatrick and Managing Editor Susan Haigh oversee the entire Wire staff. However, each editor is re- sponsible for her own department. This year the Wire introduced computers — into their operation. The staff now does — their editing and layout on a compute - Founded circa 1948 year wth cally one goal in mind: to regain or establish our i eo on cam, se anniversary year, bu rebuilding yea as well, we think we pretty well reached | our goal. We sang at numerous campus functions throughout the semester, ine cluding, but not limited to, atrium acts — and brunch performances. We also sang. for numerous womens groups in Taun- ton and Attleboro. We ended first se- mester by traveling to the Universit y of — New Hampshire as invited guests to sing at the UNH Gentlemen's annual Christmas concert. Second semester was a smashing success, the highlight being when the Yale Whiffenpoofs came to Wheaton to be our guests at the Whim’s Annual Champagne Jambo- ree. In addition we sang with the Brown Jabberwocks, and visisted the Universi- ty of Vermont to sing with the distin- guished UVM Topcats. re. egal ASKETBALL a Began circa 1896 Wheaton basketball ended its sucessfull sea- son with a record of fifteen wins and eleven losses. Coach Del Malloy said that most of the credit for the sucess of the season could be attributed to the hard work and effort of each individual player. Highlights of the season include watching the only senior, Allison Yelle, reach the one- thousand point mark, thus becoming the third woman at Wheaton to ever reach this goal. A positive aspect of the season was how well the new players blended in with the older players both in playing on the court and off the court. This can be credited in a large part to the fine leadership of Captain Sharon Morrisseau (89). 116 CROSS COUNTRY Began circa 198] Head Coach Annemarie Gower and Assistant Coach Mark Marino led the Cross Country Team to a successful finish of the 1987-88 season. Highlights of the season included Wheaton’s 2nd Place finish in the Wheaton Invitation- al, and a 3rd Place finish in both the Connecticut Invitational and MAIAW Championships, hosted by Wheaton. No runner will soon forget the snowy conditions at the NCAA Regional Championships either! The team has always been known as a unique bunch, and 1987-88 was no exception with se- niors Julie Hoogeveen, Karen Malme, and Kelly Maloney as Tri-captains! Bm HEATON id _ eR. wie whid GEOL Fs ae Ba DANCE COMPANY Began circa 1936 The 1987-88 Wheaton College Dance Company was made up of nineteen dancers under the direction of Cheryl Mrozowski, and was led by President Maria Scalomoni. Auditions are were held in the fall and members were selected on the basis of their combined ability in ballet, jazz, and modern dance. The Annual Spring Perfor- mance was the culmination of the Dance Compa- ny’s work. The dancers performed a variety of ballet, modern and jazz pieces, choreographed by either themselves, or their director. The Dance Company also performed at Mother’s Weekend and Father’s Weekend. Ils FIELD HOCAEY Began circa 1916 The 1987-88 Wheaton College Field Hockey Team got off to a great start with five consecutive wins. They finished the season with a nine wins, seven losses record. The team’s success was greatly due to the spirit, talent, and determina- tion of the new as well as the re- turning players. The team ended its season with fourth place in the New 8 Tournament at Smith College. The team never let their spirit down and fought straight through to the end of the season. The team was led by Coach Heidi Pike, and Tri-captains Sarah Fraser, Samantha Hersey, and Maureen Reynolds. LACROSSE : Began circa 1968 The 1988 Wheaton Lacrosse team had a very challenging year indici- tive by their win loss record. They finished their season with a record of one win and thirteen losses. Despite the losses, Coach Heidi Pike was very pleased with the team’s discipline and poise in overcoming adver- sity. Adversity came in the form of a lack of players, inexperienced players, injuries, and bad weather. The lack of experience is attributed to only four of the eighteen players having played collegiate varsity lacrosse before. Moreover, two varsity and four junior varsity players had no previous lacrosse experience, and six players on the varsity team had never played in a collegiate varsity lacrosse game. ; bn PPP cet Fe 12h difsarsinyy 32% HFHE |, SOCCER 122 SOFTBALL Began circa 1963 The 1987 Softball team had a very successful season with a winning re- cord of 10-5, and qualified as the num- ber one seed for the NIAC Tourna- ment. The team’s success was largely due to the training and fun it had in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, during Spring Break, and to the great unity and enthusiasm each member brought to the team. The 1988 team went once again to Myrtle Beach to train, and returned to a full schedule of twenty- two games, the most games ever scheduled. The team was successfully led by co-captains Karen Malme, and Beth Perry. a la ge —. SS ee TENNIS Began circa 1925 The Varsity Fall Tennis team’s 1987-88 season was not Wheaton’s most successful, although there were wins over the University of Lowell, Mt. Holyoke, SMU and Clark University. The team had two close matches where both Bates and Bowdoin edged Wheaton in a 5-4 contest. Standouts for the season were 1 singles player, sophomore Meghan O'Sullivan, and 4 singles player, junior Sarah O'Brien. Other top players included Leeann Perry, Lynda Tocci, Karen Donnelly, and Sarah Wikenczy. 123 TFRITONS Began circa 1942 The Wheaton College Tritons are a team of eleven women and one manager who specialize in synchronized swimming. Their season traditional- ly opens with preparation for a performance on Mother’s Weekend and ends in April with a per- formance on Father’s Weekend. The Tritons are headed by Coach Fran Simeone-Tocci who is in her sixth year as head coach. The veteran swimmers began practice in Sep- tember and after the addition of four new mem- bers in October the Tritons had only three weeks to prepare for the Mother’s Weekend perfor- mance on October thirtieth. The Tritons were forced to practice much of this time without the guidance of Coach Tocci who was coaching the volleyball team. The team was led by the two Presidents Melissa Namiot (88) and Jennifer Cic- carelli (89), and Vice-President Kimberly Wie- busch (89). Although Tocci was mainly a sideline coach at this time, the members of the team were able to choreograph a new routine to perform for Mother’s Weekend. Starting off second semester was a Faculty Staff Synchro Clinic. Then on February 27th Wheaton held the first annual combined Synchro- nized Swimming Show with Smith College. This show consisted of an individual figure meet as well as an exhibition show with three routines performed by each school. This event was the first combined show with another college and will be held on alternate years at Wheaton. Ending the Tritons season was the annual Triton Spring Show on March 29, 30, and 3lst, and finally the Father’s Weekend performance on April 8 and 10. ee ee a RF ag ee me A a a ie asa a eS god 124 VOLLEYBALL Began circa 1943 Under Coach Tocci’s guidance over the past few years, the Lyons have improved their overall team wins by 33 percent each year. This year’s Tri-cap- tains, Wendy Brakenridge (88), Mi- chele L’Heureux (88), and Carolyn Soper (88), provided the team with outstanding leadership as well as supe- rior volleyball skills. This year’s team faced an intense schedule competing in twenty-seven matches and two eight-team tourna- ments. The season ended with a re- cord of 23 losses and 10 wins. 126 1S len GE ea I op eteentedpeapecd 3 + ESECRAA EKG ER) ote nathertenpedpmpecnede Suhair Abderrazzaq International Relations Andrea Alexis Sociology Elizabeth $. 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Woloohojian Anthropology Anthropology Sociology t 4 i , 4 a if Allison Yelle Chemistry Rosie B Sociology Julie Baron Economics Elisabeth Barron Economics Marianne Cal Christine Cash Music Jo-Ann Clynch Mathematics Jenica Forslund Russian Studies Mary Ginty Political Science Collins Guyton Economics Nancy Hallett Donna Leclerc Religion MISSING: Beth McKechnie Psychobiology Lisa Oliver Art History Elizabeth Perates Sociology Mary Psychoghios Physics Suzanna Richer International Relations Kathryn Salo Political Science Russian Studies Aisha Saunders Political Science Karen Sennett Studio Art Elisabeth Stitt English Literature Jennifer Trenholm Kristen Tyszkowski Biochemistry Courtney Wagstaff English Literature Elizabeth Ward Philosophy Cynthia Welch English Literature Jennifer Whaling Psychology Sonja Wiedenhaupt Michelle Wilson Psychology and Sociology Roberta Zwecker Sociology UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL FACULTY OF ARTS SCHOOL OF HISTORY ee SS nna poem ae i i BALLOON BLAST OFF 178 THE BOSTON SEMI : EE Ee oes eacakins MONEE AT Fideaiieesienclns nme ETO scien cseke a BOOZE CRUISE eRe: Me be oe ers os rs oa ‘se Bae Segececessse a r xy) KE ROSECLIFF 3 . a rele at, | eu: L ro f i WHITE GLOVE BUNCH 2 Bivins ehoehih FHiRD EIGHT MASSACHUSETTS SATURDAY MAY TWENTY.FIRST NINETEEN HUNDRED EIGHTY COMMENCEMENT THE CLASS OF 1988 WHEATON COLLEGE NORTON, ONE HONDRED FIFTY President Emerson with Special Award Recipient Catherine Filene Shouse ‘18 187 AWARDING OF HONORARY DEGREES MARIAN WRIGHT EDELMAN DOCTOR OF LAWS You call yourself a “determined opti- mist.” Confronting squarely some of the most heartwrenching aspects of human misery- the fear, hunger and sickness of children- you insist that there are real solutions to what seem like impossible problems. As founder and president of the Children’s Defense Fund, you have created a powerful voice for the chil- dren of America, who cannot vote, lob- by or speak out for themselves. Sena- tor Edward Kennedy has called you the “one hundred and first senator of chil- dren’s issues,” because you are so re- lentlessly effective in keeping before the Congress and the public our re- sponsibility to protect and nurture this nation’s children. Under your leadership, the Chil- dren’s Defense Fund has exerted since 1973 an extrao rdinary influence on a wide range of problems: improving health care for thousands of poor women and children; expanding day care centers and child health clinics; improving foster care programs; es- tablishing kindergartens. You argue el- oquently for such initiatives in Fam- ilies in Peril: An Agenda for Social Change, a book that emerged from your experience as the 1986 W.E.B. Du Bois Lecturer at Harvard University. Clearly, the full impact of your efforts will not be felt for years to come, played out in the lives of children who are able to break a seemingly endless cycle of poverty and despair. A graduate of Spelman College, you received your law degree from Yale University in 1963 and went on to be- come the first black woman admitted to the Mississippi Bar Association. You have broken many barriers and achieved many honors since, including AANND ADDRESS LEON A. GORMAN DOCTOR OF LAWS BEVERLY SILLS DOCTOR OF FINE ARTS opening the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund Office in Jackson, Mis- sissippi; being elected to the Yale Cor- poration; and being named one of the hundred most influential woman in America. We applaud your influence, your role as a champion for the needs of chil- dren. The urgency and integrity of your mission reminds us of the true goals of education and of our own abili- ty to be teachers and learners. In ad- dressing problems that others may term hopeless, you have taught us that we need not accept such judgments as accurate or final. Marian Edelman, your courage, your determined opti- mism have inspired our minds and ig- nited our hearts. SENIOR DIREC TORY Suhair Abderrazzaq 81 Newberry Street Apt. 1 Somerville, MA 02144 Elizabeth Adams 94 Hollis Street Holliston, MA 01746 Lisa Aleman 30 Belcher Avenue Brockton, MA 02401 Andrea Alexis 142 Holyrood Avenue Lowell, MA 01852 Emily Allyn | Jewett Lane South Hadley, MA 01075 Marcela Alvarez 31 Highland Avenue Claremont, NH 03743 Diane Anci 1 Eton Road New Hyde Park, NY 11040 Saw Lin Ang ll-A Jalan Siput Remis Tanjong Tokong Penang Malaysia Dana Archey 30 Reynolds Street Lenox, MA 01240 Julie Asadorian 279 Grandview Road East Greenwich, RI 02818 Christine Audet 78 Ralph Chapman Road Swansea, MA 02777 Pamela Aulisi RD 1 Box 418 Northville, NY 12134 Bliss Austin 48 Avon Hill Cambridge, MA 02140 Rosie B 70 Beach Street Foxboro, MA 02035 Julie Baron 54 Aaron Avenue Bristol, Rl 02809 Elisabeth Barron 253 Prospect Street Norwell, MA 0206] Lisa Barsoomian 33 Porter Street Watertown, MA 02172 Emily Becnel 7512 Tanglewild Drive Raleigh, NC 27612 Julie Bedford 819 George Wythe Commons Dayton, OH 45459 Gloria Berlanga © Jerry Lane North Kingstown, RI 02852 Lisa Birrittieri 8 Everett Street Dorchester, MA 02122 Marie Blaney 32 Richardson Avenue Norton, MA 02766 Martha Bloomer Boardman Hill West Rutland, VT 05777 Mary Botelho 4 Herbert Street Taunton, MA 02780 Lisa Boucher 636 Howland Street Berlin, NH 03570 Kathleen Bowen Mad Tom Road East Dorset, VT 05253 Wendy Brakenridge 8 Tipping Rock Road Stonington, CT 06378 Jessica Britt 24 Concord Street Maynard, MA 01754 Kerry Broe 55 Winfield Street Norwood, MA 02062 Deborah Budek RFD 2 Box 1925 Turner, ME 04282 Mary Cabaniss 3812 Forest Glen Drive Birmingham, AL 35213 Marianne Cal 29 Verplanck Avenue Stamford, CT 06902 Maura Callahan 105 Woodland Road Chestnut Hill, MA 02167 Kate Carretta Il Mariot Circle Wallingford, CT 05492 Christine Cash 332 Setucket Road Dennis, MA 02638 Maureen Cavanaugh 42 Windsor Road Norwood, MA 02062 Tracy Chace 2I Maniton Drive Portsmouth, RI 02871 Sally Chi 120 East Madison Avenue Cresskill, NJ 07626 Farieha Chughtai 28B-2 Gizri Boulevard Defence Society Karachi Pakistan Leah Clayton 7908 Rambler Road Elkins Park, PA I9II7 Melissa Cleaves 124 Emery Street Apt. 1 Portland, ME 04102 Jo-Ann Clynch 903 Ridge Road Wethersfield, CT 06109 Elizabeth Coburn Il Woodchuck Hill Road West Simsbury, CT 06092 Patricia Collins 684 Grove Street Norwell, MA 02061 Sheila Cosgrove Main Street Northfield, CT 06778 Anne Cote I8B Old Orchard Road Old Orchard Beach, ME 04064 Sydney Coutts 624 Swamp Road Doylestown, PA 18901 Anne Cromer 3 Barclay Drive Pennsville, NJ 08070 Marjorie Crowe 38 North Worcester Street Norton, MA 02766 Cynthia Cullen 60 Harrington Street East Falmouth, MA 02536 Hillary Cullen 29 South Street Goshen, NY 10924 Tracy Curley Tom Nevers Road Nantucket, MA 02554 Hayley Dalton 171 Chestnut Street Lynnfield, MA 01940 Jennifer Danks 14 Apache Street Dover, NH 03820 Cheryl Delacono 215 Washington Street Pembroke, MA 02359 Joan Defalco 925 Main Street Shrewsbury, MA 01545 Elizabeth Demarco 31499 Fairview Drive Chargin Falls, OH 44022 Pamela Desanto 8 Sylvan Glen East Lyme, CT 06333 Christina Dibona 169 Washington Street Wellesley Hills, MA 02181 Sarah Dickinson 88 Riverside Avenue Riverside, CT 06878 Lynn Digioia 17 Turtle Bay Drive Branford, CT 06405 Christina Dimarco 24 Locust Avenue Yardville, NJ 08620 Carrie Dixon | Whittier Circle Holyoke, MA 01040 Ashley Doran 0 Byron Street New Bedford, MA 02740 Susan Dunn 60 Hillside Avenue South Portland, ME 04106 Jean Economos 142 Candy Lane Brockton, MA 02401 Sylvia Escobar PO Box 4083 Bogota Columbia Suzanne Evans 39 Prince Henry Drive East Falmouth, MA 02536 Elizabeth Fay PO Box 171 Hancock, NY 03449 Diane Felix 515 Eaton Way West Chester, PA 19380 Nicole Fell 60 Cabin Ridge Road Chappaqua, NY 10514 Ellen Ferris 838 Williams Street Pittsfield, MA O1201 Heidi Fish 75 Kings Grant Drive Saunderstown, RI 02874 Stephanie Fisher 33 Turkey Shore Road Ipswich, MA 01938 Meg Fitzpatrick 60 Chestnut Ridge Road Saddle River, NJ 07458 Jenica Forslund 34 Holly Ridge Road South Sandwich, MA 02563 Diane Foster 7028 Coventry Road Alexander, VA 22306 Bonny Fraser 8 Saunders Avenue White River Junction, VT 05001 Sarah Fraser | Woodhill Lane West Boxford, MA i885 Gina Freiberger 14 High Point Drive North Smithfield, RI 02895 Mary Freitag Butternut Lane Norwalk, CT 06851 Cheryl Frye 62 Royal Street Wollaston, MA 02170 Jennifer Gagne {! Harold Avenue Biddeford, ME 04005 Maria Ganong 15 Hawthorne Drive Sudbury, MA 01776 Katheryn Garan 26 Edgemere Road Gross Point Farms, MI 48236 Anita George 28 Stanley Road Medway, MA 02053 Mary Ginty 365 Westfield Road Holyoke, MA 01040 Dana Goclowski 88 Bittersweet Circle Guilford, CT 06437 Janet Godina 48 High Valley Road Ridgefield, CT 06877 Nancy Gogan 17 Threadneedle Lane Centerville, MA 02632 Brooke Goldstein 52 Ryan Road Stoughton, MA 02072 Cristina Gomes 78 Cross Street Norwood, MA 02062 Tyra Goodman 36080 Smithfield Road Farmington, MI 48024 Tracy Goulart 12 Northwood Drive Walpole, MA 02081 Angelle Graceffa 108 Cottage Street Norwood, MA 02062 Margarette Grandoit 294 Prospect Street Cambridge, MA 02139 Kristin Grecco 216 East Street Hanover, MA 02339 Tracy Greenwald 102 Ann Mary Brown Drive Warwick, RI 02888 Ruth Grossman ll Sheffield Lane Turnersville, NJ O8012 Pamela Grover 196 Scout Road Southbury, CT 06488 Bettina Grzybowski (OW Cherokee Road Scotia, NY 12302 Maryann Guerra 39 Chestnut Drive Brockton, MA 02401 Collins Guyton 4l Bering Street Tampa, FL 33606 Susanne Hall 83 Normal Avenue Upper Montclair, NJ 07043 Nancy Hallett 4803 Falmouth Avenue Santuit, MA 02635 Jane Hamilton RR 2 Box 1258 New Gloucester, ME 04260 Nancy Hannan 30 Ayles Road Hyde Park, MA 02136 Robin Hannon 243 Palmer Avenue Warwick, RI 02889 Ann Hardaker 32 Beacon Avenue Holyoke, MA 01040 Debra Hawks Davenport Road Washington, CT 06793 Jennifer Hayden 16 Bradford Court West Warwick, RI 02893 Alene Hayman 160 Strathmore Road Apt. 23 Brighton, MA 02135 Marion Heller 94 Maple Street Stow, MA 01775 Rebecca Hemperly 42 North Pearl Street Wernersville, PA 19565 April Hendrick 44 Eagle Ridge Drive Gales Ferry, CT 06335 Samantha Hersey Great Meadows Farm New Boston, NH 03070 Leeann Hickey 25 Middle Street South Dartmouth, MA 02748 Kimberley Holmes 6 Hart Avenue Branford, CT 06405 Elisabeth Hooe 374 Westfield Street Dedham, MA 02026 Julie Hoogeveen 75 River Street Humarock, MA 02047 Cathryn Hufford 40 Sanborn Street Reading, MA 01867 Carol-Ann Hurley 33 Gale Road Belmont, MA 02178 Carla James 39 Susan Lane North Haven, CT 06473 Sandra Jex 97 Chestnut Street Cooperstown, NY 13326 | Martha Johnson 31 Weed Avenue Norwalk, CT 06850 Grace Karl 2W Leith Walk Conneaut, OH 44030 Jane Kelleher 19 Mayfair Street , Norwood, MA 02062 iy 1 Christina Kennedy Seminary Avenue Manchester, VT 05254 fy Lisa Kerzner 226 Blackstone Boulevard Providence, RI 02906 ' Zen Zee Khor 9, Solok Tembaga Empat 1600 Penang Malaysia Christin Kim 3 Princeton Place | Haverhill, MA 01830 ' Lee Kiszonas 020 Addison Street | Philadelphia, PA 19147 Ribera Kroitzsh | HCR 50 Box 70 _ Plymouth, VT 05056 Lesley Kuo 9 Peace Avenue _B F Flat D, Forum CT ) Kowloon Hong Kong ‘: | Mary Kwesell PO Box 415 Humarock, MA 02047 | _ Michele L'Heureux : 94 Roosevelt Avenue Somerset, MA 02726 : Jean Lachowski 14 Fernwood Drive Wilbraham, MA 01095 Kathryn Lammert 37 Andrea Lane Scarsdale, NY 10583 Caroline Lawless 1 Linden Avenue Glencoe, IL 60022 Lindsay Lawrence 21 Pine Ridge Road Saco, ME 04072 Olivia Lee 327 Sha Tsui Road 2 F Flat A Tsuen Wan Hong Kong Donna Leclerc -Andover-Newton Theological School Herrick Road | Newton Centre, MA 02159 Kimberley Lockhart RR 1 5 Uncle Barney's Road West Dennis, MA 02670 Deborah Macheski 25 Millstone Road Wilton, CT 06897 Denise MacDonald 90 Azalea Drive | Norwood, MA 02062 | Christine MacKenzie RD 1 183 Main Street Brewster, MA 02631 | Kara Mackey 155 Dumbarton Drive Delmar, NY 12054 _ Dawn Maddison | 3 Gordon Road _ Ho Ho Kus, NJ 07423 Alyson Mahony 52 Pine Bluff Brewster, MA 02631 Karen Malme 25 Rockwood Road Hingham, MA 02043 Kelly Maloney 276 Old County Road West Holyoke, MA 01040 Julia McCarthy 15000 Village Green Drive 47 Mill Creek, WA 98012 Anne McClure 437A Golf Course Road Jerome, ID 83338 Kim McCraw 151 Paluding Road Ludlow, MA 01056 Stacey McDonald 13 Hillside Drive Whitinsville, MA 01588 Beth McKechnie 70 Rodney Street North Attleboro, MA 02760 Nadja Meyer ill Muttontown Road Muttontown, NY 11791 Ellen Moran 144 Glendale Road Amherst, MA 01002 Linda Morgan 87 Dutton Road Sudbury, MA 01776 Stephanie Mullen Pequot Road Vinalhaven, ME 04863 Brenda Murphy 1458 Beacon Street Newton, MA 02168 Suzanne Murphy 271 East Bradford Avenue Cedar Grove, NJ 07009 Melissa Namiot RFD 3 Box 206 (Alford.) 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Brazil Carolyn Soper 2809 Colfax Street Evanston, IL 60201 Shela Spillane 182 Plymouth Street Middleboro, MA 02346 Sabrina St. Louis 38 Furbush Road West Roxbury, MA 02132 Ann Steele 36 Galston Drive Robbinsville, NJ 08691 Donna Stevenson ll Garden Drive Riverside, NJ 02915 Elisabeth Stitt 1274 Bay Laurel Drive Menlo Park, CA 94025 Lynne Studley 72993 Manana Drive 29 Palms, CA 92277 Amber Swope PO Box 49 Perkasie, PA 18944 Amy Thompson 41 Overlook Drive Sidney, NY 13838 Denise Tomasello PO Box 194 Somerville, MA 02145 Jeanne Trabucchi Pine Hill Road Box 92 New London, NH 03257 Jennifer Trenholm 48 Elm Street Dennis, MA 02638 Elizabeth Trewhella 34 Aurora Lane South Yarmouth, MA 02664 Teresa Tschudy 564 Maple Street Winnetka, IL 60093 Catherine Tsolis 580 Stonehill Drive Orange, CT 06477 Betty Tyler Holmes Road RFD 3 Rome, NY 13440 Kristen Tyszkowski 159 Wheeler Avenue Cranston, RI 02905 Tara Velsmid Hickory Lane North Walpole, MA 02081 Courtney Wagstaff 35 Chestnut Street Boston, MA 02108 Sharon Walter 271 Edgewater Drive Needham, MA 02192 Elizabeth Ward 79 Meadow Hill Road Barrington Hill, IL 60010 Cheryl Watson 154 Cherry Street Cambridge, MA 02139 Suzannah Weiss 1025 Waverly Place Schenectady, NY 12308 Cynthia Welch 15 Fieldstone Lane Attleboro, MA 02703 Amy Westerman 15 Lowell Road Wellesley Hills, MA O2I18! Jennifer Whaling 13 McLaughlin Rye, NH 03870 Sonja Wiedenhaupt Mountview Lane Bernardsville, NJ 07924 Marysa Wilcox 14 Intervale Road Granby, CT 06035 Michelle Wilson 12 Cedar Street Cranston, Ri 02910 Lisabeth Woloohojian 66 Mauran Street Cranston, RI 02910 Allison Yelle RTE 126 Box 760 Barnstead, NH 03225 Roberta Zwecker RFD | Box 1540 Rockland, ME 04841 193 WHEATON SEMINARY. FOR YOUNG WOMEN. on for any College. Thorough Preparatl school graduates and others not ull college course. Advanced courses for high ecial courses: wishing 4 f Also SP Twenty-eight miles from Boston. ATION HEALTHFUL LOC RFECT SANITATION. AND PE EC 398. fourth year begins September 4, | rcular and illustratio [2V2 COLE, President, ssachusetts. Sixty- ns address For ci REV. SAMUE Norton, Ma _,. OUR FINANCIAL SUPPORTERS - - - 194 WHEATON INN NORTON: MASS. We Solicit Patronage of Week-End Guests DINNERS LUN CHEONS HOME COOKING Large Assortment of High Grade Candies and Confections We Carry Angofleece Yarns tisfaction WRIGHT DITSON “LEADS THE WORLD IN SPORTS” fe eg Headquarters for Athletic Equipment and Clothing for all sports TENNIS GOLF Sport Clothing and Shoes in our (Send for Springs Catalogue) Women’s Departments Second Floor. ADVERTISING RATES FOR THE? Seopa nee eee One inch, - - 50 cents pet month. One halepese: - $3.00 One page - - _ ° $5.00 For 3 months’ snsertion, 19 per cent dis- count; for 6 months’, 20 per cent., etc- to take with you He will see all you do and pring home a better record of it. A. J. BARKER CO. TAUNTON 195 Mansfeld to Norton, $1.50 Boston, $14.00 ALL CLOSED CARS The Albert A. Waterman Co. TAXI SERVICE Day or Night Phone: Office 158-J; Res.: 379-M = “THE TYPEWRITER OF TRIPLE SERVICE” It Writes, Types Cards, and Bills! HINK of the tremendous advantage of one machine for all of these various uses—one typewriter with the combined advantages of many—no attachments! The stenographer can now turn instantly from the letter she is writing to ‘‘ bill-and-charge,’’ loos e-leaf indexing, or the most com- plex card-typing, without stopping for a second, or changing to a “ special’’ machine. The New Royal Master-Model 10 has every standardized improvement: Tabulator, Back-Space Key, Bi-Chrome Ribbon and Automatic Reverse, and many brand-new Royal Features. ROYAL TYPEWRITER COMPANY Inc. Royal Typewriter Building, Broadway, New York Price $100 Ay, In Canada $125 teas bageed taap D M TENNIS RACKETS are made of special selected stock, beveled frame, large playing sur- face, and strung with finest Amer- ican and English gut. $1.50 to $8.00 i Bd Ny Nese 1S Imported Championship Balls, 35c, $4 doz. banal eee The Pierce Hardware Co. iis rit Vali itil iit iiss Role ejotaietaistsistsl= tals ais 15] i) DOW WO WAN El Eee If so, and you desire fashionable writing paper and envelopes at reasonable prices, ASK YOUR STATIONER for BOSTON LINEN, BOSTON BOND. or BUNKER HILL LINEN. These papers have gained an unprecedented success in every state and territory in the Union. If your stationer does not keep them we will send our complete samples on receipt of three two-cent stamps. SAMUEL WaRD Oo. (Incorporated), Paper Merchants, Stationers, Engravers and Printers, 184 Devonshire St., Boston. Chucek ant DHentre. “COLUMBIA” Women’s Gymnasium Suits The only paper published in Norton; issued on the 10th of every month; has reports of concerts, lectures, entertainments, etc., at the Seminary, and other items of interest to all alumne, pupils, and friends The Apparel of Excellence of Wheaton. - : } : Hygienically made The July number will contain a full report of the Anniversary ex- ercises. A Deserving National Favorite Terms, 50 cents a year, in advance; 5 cents a single copy. COLUMBIA GYMNASIUM SUIT CO Subscriptions should be sent (fractions of a dollar in 1 or 2 cent stamps) to Actual Makers LANE BROTHERS, Publishers, BOSTON, Mass. NORTON, MASS. C. E. Gegenheimer, Supt. E. S. Hamblen, Mgr. WAYHS GIRBeODR=. Norton Power Electric Company LIVERY “ SEABLE: Electricity for Light, Heat ——CONNECTED WITH THE—— and Power }TANSION . HOUSE. NORTON, MASS. Norton 100 NORTON. Telephones Franklin 273 PATRONS William and Clementine Alexis Mr. and Mrs. Bruce L. Baker Philip and Cynthia James Kathryn Lammert = Sana Dr. and Mrs. Charles C. Mackey Jr. Seaman Mr. and Mrs. Charles |. Malme Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. McCraw Karen Minutella Robert M. Namiot M.D. SOUTHERN VALVE Mr. and Mrs. John E. Perry MACHINE WORKS, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Russell eee i ieee Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Seery a aa ate ccee, | (040 Dr. and Mrs. Robert White The Sample Shoe Shop Company 496 Washington Street, Corner Bedford Street. Over Riker-Janes’ Drug Store Take Elevator WE SHOW ONLY THE LATEST STYLES OF LADIES’ FOOTWEAR Why pay $3.50 to $5.00 to exclusive shoe dealers for your Boots, Oxfords and Dress Slippers when we sell the same styles for $2.50, $2.85 and $3.00 Price $3.00 Ask for our Coupon Book, and get your next pair of Shoes FREE. fC PRATT Ji@lsy iejahounb ates Dealer in ; Programmes, Flyers, Tickets, Circulars, Envelopes, Note and Choice Family Groceries Dry and Fancy Goods Bill Heads, Cards, Orders, ete., printed at low prices. Estimates fur- nished on application. Satisfaction guaranteed. Fancy Crackers and Confectionery a Specialty NORTON, MASS. LANE BROTHERS, Norton‘ _—————E——EE BARON STAGE CURTAIN FLAME RETARDING CO. Serung YOU For Ouer 50 Yeare MANUFACTURERS DESIGNERS OF STAGE CURTAINS ORAPERIES COMPLETE STAGE RIGGING AND TRACKS FOR: e Stage Curtains e Acoustic Treatments ¢ Hospital Cubicle Curtains ¢ Window Shades e Audio Visual Blackout Venetian Blinds Draperies Flame Proofing To Code Cleaning Repairing Of Curtains Draperies Of All Types Crowd Control Posts Rooes For Banks, Theatre Auditorium Lobbies ¢ Stage Lighting Equipment ¢ Sole Representative For Automatic Devices Co. For Track Hardware! SPECIAL SERVICES: e Architect General Contractor To Assist You In 3 2 7 = 6 0 8) 2 Equipment Layout Orawings Detaits. e Penodic Inspection Of All Stage Curtains, sone Peet Window Draperies, Track Rigging 91224 - 119 3 Mrs. Elizabeth Slanker President Best wishes There Is A Dingley from all of US at In Your Future BayBank. Best Wishes Nikka BayBank: Best Wishes To The Class Of ’88 THE WILSON FAMILY Palos Verdes, Ca. HASKINS PHARMACY 46 W. Main St. Norton, Ma. 02766 Congratulations To The Class Of 1988 BRISTOL TRAVEL, INC. Best Wishes To The Class Of 1988 Congratulations And Best Wishes To Beth And The Class Of 1988 - The Fay Family Congratulations to you the Graduating Class of 1988 H L BLOOM BUS LINES “You have just begun” MANSFIELD CO-OPERATIVE BANK Charter Service lO Oak St. Taunton 823-8976 “Your Community Bank” 80 North Main St., Mansfield, Mass. 339-2901 Ctliott Hersey 10 West Main St., Norton, GENEALOGIST Mass. 285-9761 Deposits Insured In Full. Member F.D.1.C.-SIF 252 BUNKER HILL RD. NEW BOSTON, NH 03070 (603) 487-5563 GREAT MEADOWS FARM 200 Dear Susie, On your graduation day we want to express our pride in all your accomplishments. As always, we wish you a future full of success, health and happiness. We love you Mom, Dad Billy WILLIAM L. HALL ASSOCIATES architects contractors 202 x STUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Wheaton College Norton, Ma. 02766 CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1988 from Student Government Association 1987-1988 President-Katy O'Toole ’88 Vice President-Pam Aulisi ’88 Secretary-Jill Finkelstein ’90 Treasurer-Nikki Couloumbis ’89 ‘Chair, College Hearing Board-Maria Pepe ’88 Chair, Programming Council-April Shackley-’89 Chair, Educational Council-Wendy Nilsson-’88 Congratulations JANET And The Class Of 1988 Mr. And Mrs. Godina Telephone 235-4862 LAWRENCE B. DiBONA, B.S., D.DS., PC. Practice of General Dentistry 169 WASHINGTON STREET WELLESLEY HILLS, MASSACHUSETTS 02181 Office Hours By Appointment compass MARKETING ASSOCIATES INC. PROMOTIONS ® SPECIALTY ADVERTISING GIFTS FULFILLMENT Excellence Our only Standard Congratulations JANE Love Mom, Dad, John + Linda O’Callaghan TYFAS CLUB Dean’s Office Derek Price Vaino Kola Joan M Silva (Trudi ’81) Thank You Faculty And Staff For Your Support And Generosity 203 NIKE - 1988 ... WE BUILT THE BOOK ... The 1988 Staff: Mary Boluch, Robin Conlon, Donna Deer, Tiffy DiMarco, Kerry Fitzwilliam, Tracy Little, Elisa Macone, Jenny Mayer, Camila Mier-y-Teran, Melanie Patenaude, Kim Sousa, Kiki Vagianos, and Gretta Zettergren Special Thanks to: Bernice Wilner, Nancy Bianchi- Norton, Lydia Carswell, Zeph Stickney, Tracy Hutchins, and Anne Coté 204 + ©. ed. ae. : | all SG


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

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

1983

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

1985

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1987 Edition, Page 1

1987

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1989 Edition, Page 1

1989


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