WELLESLEY COLLEGE
Wellesley, Massachusetts
LEGENDA
Class of 1945
Courage, gaiety, and a Quiet MM.., "
At Baccalaureate Vespers last May, Captain McAfee
spoke of these three things. We hope to show in this
book that we have come a little closer to the under-
standing and attainment of them, and thus to prove
that our time has not been wasted. We were not sure,
many of us, that we should stay in college during these
war years; we were not sure that we should spend
either the time or the money. But now, as we approach
the end, we feel that we were right to stay, that these
four years are worth whatever they cost.
E
''^■'->
Zo Our Parents
Who have given us, among
other things, these four good years.
V
Kemcmber JrcshmaH Week?
...and how strange it all was when we first arrived.
Some of us were feeling anything but courageous, our gaiety
was perhaps a bit forced, and we weren't even sure we had minds!
Our first Physical
They always knew
....iiiw^'j. , — -
...%W^*^^^'
We stocked up for toils to come
Old Indispensables
Scene of everything from proms to Mock Academic Council and Mass Meetings
■V f'f^^''-
CW '^L '
n
Fresfiman Vaudeville — we met the college
11
INDEX
We ^eglM to
Ceam
Where things were, and why;
how to get from Green to
Founders with a minimum of
confusion, and how to get
back to the Vil in time for
lunch.
12
We Did the Z kings
ThatWellesley Frosh have always
done. We picnicked, and partied,
"caught crabs" and were hazed,
elected our first class officers, and
gradually grew a little less green.
Our name and number
Easy all, and look
at the sunset
i
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■
■
IS
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35
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1111
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14
. . . A^(i then, all of a sudden
it was December 7th, and our new-found ivory tower began
to rock. Some of us had to learn about courage in a hurry,
but we proved we could learn, and could adapt ourselves, not
only to double deckers and war work, but to co-education as
well! We lost our President, but gained our Captain and some
hundreds of the gentlemen on her team. We learned to wait
on ourselves, and to do Useful Things during vacations, and
we became increasingly aware of our own good fortune.
15
We sewed and rolled bandages at Workroom
Labs took on new importance
We Wmt to War
not over there, but here in our
own back yard, where we found
a few small things we could do.
We practiced First Aid
16
Blackout
We had to learn what to do in
case we were bombed, spent long
hours on hard floors, and tried to re-
member to keep our shades down.
Home Front Heroes — the Air Raid Wardens
17
Simpson acquired a new addition
Freshman year, and some of us
learned to be nurses' aides here
and elsewhere.
:>^,
/
I
The Placement Office
liad some good ideas
We reverted to Sliank's Mare
Sophomore year we had the Long
Vacation. A lot of us got jobs, and
all of us learned about rationing.
19
We became war bond conscious, set up a booth
in front of the El table to sell bonds and stamps,
and held auctions of everything from cigarettes
to dates with the faculty.
20
but also entertained us
Zke J^avy Jmaded
Junior year, and took over half of the
Quad. Wellesley shattered all prece-
dents by becoming co-ed, and we grew
used to the sound of marching, count-
ing cadence, and a male chorus.
21
%WliWWihnJ^'''
Zkere were some
In the good old days, we slept in lux-
urious beds (?), put on glamour for our
shiny pillared ballroom, and put on pounds
at our juke-box haven, the nearby Well.
All's welL.,
mPtges made
But come Junior year, behold the Double-
Decker!...we slept in layers. Our ball-
room became the Navy Mess, and our Well
served as the Galley, while we ate in AKX.
that ends welL
We took war courses
in the hope of becoming Useful
as well as Educated females.
We went to school at night and
struggled with cartography,
report writing, typing, and
even elementary Russian. Some
of us actually acquired a little
practical knowledge.
Mechanics class taught us theories . . .
which we applied in the field ,
and at home.
24
' ^— '• ■\-:^
We domed blue jeans
(anybody want to make something of it?)
to work on farms — some of us full time
during the summer, and many of us part
time, to pick apples in the fall and plant
potatoes in the spring. They say we're
still eating the proceeds of our labors.
B. Schoonover — well camouflaged
Piggy-back ride
25
2i
J^ot even a War
could deprive Wellesley of its gaiety, and we had
our lighter moments... traditional and otherwise!
We danced, and sang, and gamboled on the
Green, and had more than our share of laughs.
27
Our first Zree Day
was a big success. Some of us helped to
produce "Peter and the Wolf," and the
rest of us sat on the hill watching, and
waiting for the signal to start running.
Needless to say, we beat the Sophs, and
at long last we got to cheer our own
cheer and sing our class song.
Victory
Before the fray
'r'""^ y'WM
28
The black of dawn
May T)ay
when we arose at an unseemly hour
to capture coveted places on Tow-
er Hill for our Big Sisters. After the
race we all marched to Chapel, then
went through our blotter routine,
and sang and cheered back and forth.
Roll, sister, roll!
As it looked to us
29
Zhe Winters
seemed long and cold, especially to
the Southern Belles among us, but
when there was snow or ice, things
picked up— even if we fell down. We
had winter sports carnivals, made
snowmen deluxe, and argued the
relative merits of Severance andObserv-
atory Hills.
30
^^^
^?.:;ie^^"^
\-
■^
i-^
^^-^
V^'v. .. "vvlS
Our favorite sport
^4
But come Spring. . .
life took on a new glow— and we did
our best to do likewise. We sunned
ourselves whenever and wherever
we could, and sometimes even went
as far as the Cape.
This can't be Waban!
31
Hiss McAfee
At home
Tuesday, January thirtieth
Eigbl o'clock
Recital of Peo aad Piano Portraits
by Florence Fraser
Zke social whirl
on campus: we went to concerts and re-
ceptions, and to teas to meet celebrated
visitors, to chat with members of the
faculty, and to discuss Major Issues.
Weekly house tea
32
We weM a- jo urn eying
by train, in the good old days, for distant
weekends. On dreary Saturday nights we all
went to the movies — by hook or by crook,
and at all times, for business and pleasure, to
Boston by bus.
Tickets home
Just practicing
■*^*»-**-»J** * >'
Here It comes
33
'I ^fl^
^umr Show. . .
Our magnum opus, slightly nautical, but nice.
Wellesley invaded the peace conference and, with great
originality, prescribed love to cure the world's ills.
Officers and crew
The only living picture of the greatest show on earth
faculty Show.
we came, we saw — we had hysterics. For three solid
hours we laughed as we never had laughed before.
The performance had been seven long years in coming,
but it was worth the wait. Its theme evolved around
the idea that the play's the thing with which to prove
the faculty is human. They convinced us!
35
Jumor Prom
our first dance since freshman year, was a tremendous
success. We tripped the light fantastic in Tower's
Great Hall, sat on the floor to watch a super floor
show, and refreshed ourselves in the candlelit dining
room below.
Winnie Herman — dancer extrordinaire
The Harvard Octette
Chief executive Clair Phillips)
Dancers ordinaire
SlectioH Parade
was the culmination of months of feverish argument and occa-
sional battles royal. Ginny Guild took the part of Socialist
candidate Norman Thomas; Mary Townsend was Tom Dewey,
and Cissy Lee was F. D. R. The college, in a mock election,
voted overwhelmingly Republican, but the seniors — many of
whom were able to cast real ballots — favored Mr. Roosevelt.
37
1^
Zree 'Day. . .
our senior year was presided over by Pat O'Brien Weisiger, assisted by
B. A. Childs, Florrie Henderson, Mary Marchant and Helen Marchese.
38
Step Singmg. . .
where we sang "the songs we love to
sing on the old Chapel step. ' ' When we
were frosh we felt that this was really
college, and as we moved across, and
up, and finally to the steps, we still
kept some of this special feeling.
We walked away...
but we won't forget
.:'V'.
40
Zke Quiet M'md
was by no means wholly neglected. We often remembered
the real reason for coming to college, and spent quite a
few hours with the books — though we'd never admit
it. We delved deep into the past, trying to understand the
present, and to equip ourselves to cope with the future.
41
Dreams of glory
M(i(iemic Pwcessm
aroused in us our thirst for knowl-
edge. At our first Chapel, we heard
with wonder and admiration the ac-
complishments of the upperclassmen,
and we hoped one day to do as well-
Of course some of us did — and to them,
three cheers — and some of us didn't,
but we all learned the meaning of the
word student, and eventually we all
donned cap and gown and marched in
the procession ourselves.
■m Miini^t
'?'« 'imr
lajtp***
*^T~A
% ^.^ «i5i:*r^''*<TR ■* »J»" ^"^ ■"' vw-'KM^-'^
^^ii!Si«iiifx'^khi
Zke JUbmry. . .
hall of virtue; unenticing when we had to go, but comfort-
able and sometimes surprisingly agreeable once we got there.
8ack Season
had its own beauty, but we found it much
easier to stay inside with the books in
winter than in spring, when we were
lured outside to skip rope, play baseball,
or just bask. We were even occasionally
tempted to let the mind become a little
too quiet.
January
>^
5!<- ,'
May
44
An eager beaver
Tower East takes time out for tea
^f
»^n,^
H
.*.Ny
J^r™"-'
-n
Qardeners
of Botany 101 practised farming on a small scale and undoubtedly
proved invaluable to their home victory gardens. They some-
times had ideal labs — taking walks around the campus to study
leaves and trees. They grew their own radishes and brightened
their rooms with their own flowers, and even occasionally
helped to produce food for tlie college.
'«.
*. /> 'Zs^ ^v j^
46
Dear old Billings.
where we listened for 206.
and had music lessons
Sage
Zke Malls
of learning, where we culti-
vated the mind in a more or
less formal way, struggling
to take in most of the time;
struggling harder to give
out twice yearly (not count-
ing incidentals like quizzes,
roll calls and papers).
Mere we spent
our serious hours in listening
to lectures on everything from
poetry to politics, or in after-
noon labs in scientific inquiry,
or in conference over the solu-
tion of knotty problems like
that last quiz.
or a lady Luther Burbank.
or something
Perhaps another Madame Curie in the making here .
49
50
Jt takes all kinds
to make a world, or a college, or a class, and '45 has samples
of most, capable of performing a wide variety of tasks from
government to radio broadcasting. We point with pride to
those we chose to represent us in all such fields our senior year.
51
House Presidents' Council, presided over by Cora Parce, includes Nancy Heath,
Jean Philbrick, Barbara C. Dunlap, Betty Anne Metz, Meredith A. Davis, Janet
Hahn, Louisa Hagner, Sidney Burke, Betty Apollonio, and Alba B. Jameson.
College QomnmeHt, . .
Caroline Hadley, President of C. G.
Cora Parce, Chairman of H. P. C.
52
Marianne C. Moore,
Senior Vice-President of C. G.
Bebe Reppert Wilmerding,
Chief Justice of Superior Court
Vil'Juniors, willilSuianne Carreau as chairman, supported by Jean Benneyan, Marian McCuiston,
Patricia Smith, Phyllis Kaempfer, Anne Demorest, Betty Ann Martin, Eleanor Piatt, Patricia Brown,
Margaret Torbert, Katherine Warner, Alice Dodds, Barbara Whitall, Elizabeth Davidson, Anne
Tichener, Ann Osgood, Jane Gile, Sarah Binford, and Mary Edith Buckley.
53
:^fT
M^'^s Cucy Wilson
Dean of students in general and, for three
years, of 1945 in particular. Her firm hand
guided some of us through physics, and most
of us through crises of one sort or another. Her
amiable smile and her unfailing interest in our
affairs made it a pleasure to meet her office
hours, or to visit with her and Daisy-May
and the parrot at Oakwoods.
54
Planning one of the many services C. A. gives
Julie Burnet, President
Christian Msociation
In an off moment at Freshman Vaudeville. Officers, headed by Julie, are Doris King,
Ann Demorest, Elinor Peck, Mary Alice Ross, Margo Downing, and Sally Powell
55
Barbara Whitmore, Chairman
W. A. C. in action
War Mt'mtlcs Committee
has worked hard to enable every girl in college to make some contribution'to the war effort.
Its members include Whit, Judy St. Clair, Sally Stetson, Chorale Cook, Jo Lamb, Nancy
Keegan, Eileen Quigley, Helen Peck, Carter Catlett, and Gloria Downs.
56
Grace Morey, Chairman
Collecting money, perhaps to ba
distributed to Yenching
Service Jund
with Grace as senior chairman, has on its board Irene Peterson, Alice Meeker,
Betty Bremer, Kathy Thayer, Frances Capron, Joyce Gulick, and Elizabeth Chalmers.
57
Jorum
in this year of elections, brought us pre-
election speakers representing the major points
of view. Members canvassed Boston to get the
maximum voting power to the polls. Second
semester we began to study some of the prob-
lems facing returning veterans.
Barbara Scott, President
Making posters For a coming lecture
The officers of Forum: Scotty, Marguerite Tatu.Ti, Alice Horton, Nayantaral. Pandit, Susan Finke, Nan Willits,
Virginia Guild, Mary Ann Lewis, Jeanne Garcelon, Elizabeth Stevenson, Evelyn Wakefield, and Keith Freyhof.
A0ora. . .
this year under the guidance of President Pat Southard and Vice-
President Caroline Burnquist, is the meeting place for discussion
of things political — and otherwise.
A scene from "Kind Lady," with Edith Glassenberg, Naomi Bucholz, Dee Stempf, and members of the Men's Acting Committee
Bamswallows
for the past three years under the direction of A.
Eldon Winkler, has run up a record of striking
performances to brighten our college career: The
Barretts, Liliom, Yellow Jacket, Watch on the Rhine,
Kind Lady, Importance of Being Ernest, Hotel Universe,
and Pygmalion, as well as several freshman pro-
ductions.
Eunice Stunkard, President
An industrious committee builds
scenery for the next production
60
Zeta Mp^d
with Margaret Johnston and Sally Russell presiding, gives its
members the opportunity to exercise their dramatic talent,
latent or otherwise, in the presentation of modern plays.
AMetic MsociatioH
offers almost as wide a variety of choice as
there are people to choose, with all the
facilities of the lake, the Rec Building, and
the playing fields right here on campus.
For those who seek a further range, there
are the assorted kinds of expedition spon-
sored by Outing Club.
Karol Musa, President of Outing Club, outing on
Severance Hill
Jumping for a high one in Mary Hemenway
Lucile Peterson, President
Submarine view of the
Davenport Pool
The A. A. Board: Lu, Karo
Musa, Marilyn Peterson, Dorothy
Winchell, Camilla Chandler,
Mimi McCulslon, Sue Cassell,
Marjory Lent, Emily Hobart,
Helene de Lone, Margaret
Wyont, Mary McCrea, and Betty
Ann Chllds.
63
Orchestra
under the baton of George Brown, has given delightful concerts. Its officers ore Lucile
Wetherbee, Marcia Morse, Ida Harrison, Patricia Smith, Marilyn Hoopes, and Jacqueline
Pressey.
Choir
satisfies the college thirst for choral singing with Fall, Christmas, Spring, and Baccalaureate
vespers on its own, and at other times in collaboration with Orchestra. Peggy MacDonald
conducts,- Floranne Henderson, Mary B. Morrison, Mary Merchant, Shirley Smalls, Claire
Phillips, and Mary Gove Griswold ore its officers.
64
r. z. s.
under the direction of President Margaret Williamson and Vice-
President Liz Jones, provided an outlet For the talented and
enjoyment for the laymen with its living pictures and informal concerts.
W. B. S.'s ambitious schedule of pro-
grams, made possible largely by the
enthusiastic work of President Allaire
Urban and the heads of committees,
brought Radio the honor of major-
organization status in our senior year.
Press Moard
For thos3 many reports of our college escapades found In the home town
paper (to the delight of our fond parents) we may thank Gloria Gallic,
Chairman of Press Board, and her super-sleuthing associates.
6}
Shakespeare
Those who yearned to portray Lady Macbeth, Juliet, or even Hamlet, but Feared Broadway
might overlook their talents, found opportunity for expression in Shakespeare Society.
There, under President Bobbie Withrow's supervision and Vice-President Dee Stempf's
direction a merrie companie performed.
J^ews
under the eagle eye of Editor-in-ChieF Pat Lauber, kept us posted on events, both local and
world, raised issues for our consideration, and gave us a chance to express our own opinions.
We
with Editor-in-Chief Alice Clark in charge, enabled us to air our views in a slightly different
manner, as well as to see some of our precious magna opera put before the public.
68
Pki Sigma
this year under the direction of President Helen Morchese and Vice-President Isabel
Luther, delves, in its more academic moments, into the changing Fields oF modern literature.
M^s. ^eorge Justice Swing
Mrs. Ewing was elected honorary member of '45 in our junior
year, just before she retired. Although best known as Wellesley's
understanding and cheerful Dean of Residence, she is also a
member of the Wellesley class of 1898. Since that time she has
held positions in America and abroad, working with the Ameri-
can Red Cross during the last war at a tubercular hospital in
Passy and later at a relief station m Rumania. Returning to
Wellesley in 1921, she became a head of house, and then Assis-
tant Dean of Residence. Her genuis became apparent to all when
she managed to squeeze four hundred Navy men onto tlie already
full campus. We are happy to Inave Mrs. Ewing on our steps.
70
Alpita Kappa Cki
President Gloria Downs and Vice-
President Bebe Fichgrund were phil-
osophical and modest in answer to
praise for A. K. X's generous dona-
tion of their house to the Well while
the Navy was with us. Moving may
have had little to do with their study
of Greek influence in our culture,
they say, but it certainly was good
domestic training.
!, ft.
^ I.
A,.
J
.t
CLASS
CLASS
CLASS
OF 19 48
OF 1947
OF 19 46
Officers
Class of 1948
President Nancy Bartram, Vice-President Ansley Coe, Mary Alice Cary, Betsy
Romig, Muriel Pfaelzer, Sandra Clark, Carol Bailey, Dorothy Turnbull, Barbara
Hunt, Jean Abrams, Jane Parker, Phyllis Arit, and Mary Snelling.
Officers
Class of 1947
President Hope Wilson, Vice-President Betty Lee Tucker, Kalherine Thayer,
Elizabeth Sullivan, Doris Getsinger, Rosalind Morgan, Mary Alice Ross, Camilla
Chandler, Hester Spencer, and Mary McQuiston.
74
Officers
Class of 1946
President Judy Atterbury, Vice-President Nancy F. Dunn, Marie Bransfield,
Caroline Southworth, Sally BinFord, Phyllis Kaempfer, Elizabeth Somerville, Elizabeth
Tucker, and Barbara Chapline.
Officers
Class of 1945
President Elizabeth Slaughter, Vice-President Anne Colcord, Laura Lou Bauer,
Marian Moore, Mary Marchant, Sally Russell, Margaret Schlegel, and Hildegard
Bair.
75
Stone-Davis court
Where we I'm...
There were dorms to suit all tastes; Tower Court, with
its regal Tudor-Gothic architecture, the more homey
Quad of simple Tudor, Munger, reviving the spirit of
Flemish and Dutch building, and Stone-Davis, favoring
the modern day with a Gothic Twentieth Century style.
Decisions would have been simpler if we hadn't had to
choose also between the convenient closeness to the bus,
and the coveted view of the lake. But wherever we
landed automatically became the place to live.
The Quod
Munger
Stone entry
and why. .
The Tower Court group
Campus Clubs
Those of us who were interested in
the other countries and languages of
the wide, wide world and wanted to
practice what was preached to us,
worked with M. de Messieres in Le
M.isanthrope or presented The Frogs
at the Rec Building pool in the
classical manner. We sang Spanish
songs on Monday evenings, or con-
sumed exotic dishes prepared for us
by the foreign members of Cos Club.
Cosmopolitan Club
Alliance Francaise
78
Deutscher Verdn
President, Mary Louise Mayger
Circob Jtaliano
President, Alba B. Jameson
Classical Club
President, Esther B. Clenott
Mo^or Students of the Class of 1945
Elected in Their Junior Year
DURANT SCHOLARS
Alice Barradale ^BK
Joan Caughran fI>BK
Marjorie Frances Goodman <t>BK
Joyce Gulick ^BK
Jane Ingley
Eleanor Kojassar <I>BK
Sarah Jane Manley <I>BK
Jean Preble <I>BK
Arlene Roshkind <I>BK
Joyce Rubenstein <i>BK
Jean Rubin «t>BK
Allaire Urban ^BK
Barbara Whitmore
WELLESLEY SCHOLARS
Gloria Bradley
Eleanor Brown
Harriet Brown
Frances Capron
Esther Clenott
Jean Devereaux Doten
Elaine Elkins
Gloria Gallic
Jeanne Garcelon
Nancy Heath
Eleanor Herz
Dorothy May Hughes
Mildred Dorothea Keil
Patricia Knapp
Lenore Lehn
Gloria Levy
Joy Cohen Levy
Jean Malmstedt
Alice Meeker
Marian Neal
Gabrielle Peters
Anne Pettingell
Carol Ruback
Kate Senior
L. Elizabeth Slaughter
Josephine Stancisko
Dorothy Swearingen
Elected in Their Senior Year
Gloria Gallic <1)BK
Eleanor Herz <i>BK
Lenore Lehn f^BK
DURANT SCHOLARS
Gloria Levy <I'BK
Joy Cohen Levy <I'BK
Alice Meeker ^BK
WELLESLEY SCHOLARS
Anne Adams
Elizabeth Barber
Mary Alice Burgess
Sidney Burke
Helen Hughes Cahill
Anne Colcord
Anne Davis
TiNKA DeRECKTOR
Jean Edwards
Christine Ferguson
Inez French
Louisa Hagner 'PBK
Helen Hall
M. Elizabeth Jones
Patricia Lauber
Selma Levine
Margery Miller
Constance Elizabeth Nangle
Hadassah Ruth Shapiro
Patricia Southard
Florence Gloria Trencher
Elizabeth Underwood
80
The Class of 1945 takes pleasure in announcing the marriages of.
Esther Berman
TO
Cpl. Martin Clenott
Constance N. Campbell
TO
Ens. Richard E. Sprague
Barbara Chapin
TO
S/Sgt. Wallace P. Dunlap, Jr.
Joy Agnes Cohen
TO
Lt. (jg) Marion Levy
Rosemary Crandall
TO
John P. Warter, Jr., U.S.N.R.
Helen Hughes
to
Lt. (j°) Edward James Cahill
Elizabeth A. Kuhn
to
Lt. Richard D. Robinson
Katherine M. Reese
TO
Lt. Thomas C. Peebles
Mary Virginia Reppert
TO
John Van Dyke Wilmerding, U.S.N.R.
Mary Louise Rose
TO
Capt. Wayne M. Parks
Irene Schiff
to
Lt. Cjg) Robert Grodan
Alice Sze
to
Dr. Chiu-An Wang
Lucille Van Slyke
TO
Capt. Martin Harter
O. Elizabeth Williams
to
Lt. Clinton C. Kemp
and the engagements of.
Grace Barish
TO
Paul Sagalyn
Betty K. Brown
TO
Lt. Frederick Hollister Campbell
Gloria Campbell
TO
Lt. Louis Maringo
Joan Caughran
TO
Ray E. Miller
Elizabeth Chapin
TO
David Heath, F. A. U.
Cynthia Doane
TO
Donald E. Nickerson, U.S.N.R.
Janet Dressler
TO
Lt. 0*^) Charles A. Lister
Eve Wilma Grodnick
TO
Lt. Arnold Harold Schunman
Marion Groot
TO
Lt. Com. John M. Waters
Jean M. Kineke
TO
Lt. David T. McLaughlin
Caryl Krieger
TO
Lt. Martin Horwitz
Marjorie Lent
TO
Pfc. Sterling Garrard
Jean Malmstedt
TO
Lt. Cjg} Robert E. Sweeney
Mary P. Marchant
TO
Lt. Nelson Campbell
Sheila G. Murphy
to
Lt. John G. Fox, II
Carolyn Nickerson
TO
Cpl. Charles E. Kitchin
Natalie M. Pierce
to
Ens. William F. Welles
Carol Ruback
TO
Dr. Sanford Lewis
Sally Russell
TO
Pfc. William Shorey
Heather Sayre
TO
Lt. Rowland C. W. Brown
Jane Seddon
TO
Lt. Cjg} ^- Harry Willson
Shirley Smails
TO
Dr. John F. Pruden
Nancy B. Smith
TO
Lt. Philip Cole, Jr.
Katherine Sue Spencer
TO
Sgt. Bradley D. Harris
Mary Helen Steinheimer
TO
Lynn McQuiddy, U.S.N.R.
Ann Steuer
TO
Gilbert E. Klein
Dorothy J. Sw^earingen
TO
Carroll Hunnewell
Betty Underwood
TO
S/Sgt. Keith Mosley
81
The people to blame
Cegenda for 1945
Linda Bolte, Editor
Peggy Bonsai, Business Manager
— the all too quiet mind
82
Ccgctida acknowledges with heartfelt thanks the
invaluable cooperation of...
the ^(X\iox'\a\ Staff
Junior Editor Marian Campbell
Associate Editor Margaret Brown
Associate Editor Doris C. Powers
Assistant Editor Margaret L. Williamson
Art Editor Anne Newbery
Photographic Editor Frances Cooke
Assistant Virginia Koch
Assistant " . Betty Shorey
the Business Staff
Junior Business Manager Margaret Wyant
, , . . , _ Adelaide Crawley
Advertising Managers ......,, .
Helens de Lone
Circulation Manager Jean Rubin
Publicity Manager Virginia Stewart
as well as
Laetitia Dickinson, for her sketches, and Mary A. Lee, for her
caricatures;
the Publicity Office, for making its photographs available to us;
students who have contributed snapshots;
the Information Bureau, and others, for information;
Sargent Studio;
Leo Hart Co.;
and Mr. Peter S. Gurwit, of the Jahn & Oilier Engraving Co., with-
out whom there would probably have been no book.
Linda Bolte, Editor
Margaret Bonsal, Business Manager
83
mm
iiiittil
m
Miss McDowell
Miss Overacker
Mr. Pilley
Miss Helen Jones
Miss Manwarlng
Mr. Procter
our guiding
lights
h/r. Lehmann
Mere we are
after four years which seem, now, to have been very short.
We have acquired good friends, a little knowledge, and plenty
of dreams and theories, so look out world, here we come!
85
Ina S. Burnes
60 W. Cedar St., Boston, Mass.
Sociology
Elizabeth A. Gourdin
68 Waumbeck St., Roxbury, Mass.
Chemistry
J945-A
Dorothy M. Hughes
Wyman Park Apartments, Baltimore, Md.
Zoology
86
*»
I \^ \
Mary R. Hyde
111 Clark St., Newton Centre, Mass.
Psychology
Marion J. Kerr
109 Gainsborough St., Boston, Mass.
Psychology
Faith Lasser Schwarz
79-12 19 Road, Jackson Heights, N.
Economics
Rosemary Makinson Franz
3303 Macomb St. N. W., Washington, D. C.
French
87
Patricia Lewis
2031 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Chemistry
Anna Meister
315 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y.
Chemistry
Susan Rosenthal
148 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass.
Chemistry
88
Anne Hale Adams
321 Vernon Avenue West
Fergus Falls, Minn.
Zoology
Calliope Anes
87 Church Street
North Adams, Mass.
Zoology
Betty M. Anderson
4050 Woodland Avenue
Western Springs, 111.
Psychology
Elizabeth Ann Apollonio
10 Louise Road
Belmont, Mass.
Mathematics
Jane de Beer Aufsesser
570 Providence Street
Albany, N. Y.
Physics
Mary Phyllis Arbuckle
7118 Washington Street
Saint Louis, Mo.
English Compositiofi
1945
89
HiLDEGARD BaIR
22 Cornell Street
Scarsdale, N. Y.
Sociology
Elizabeth Frances Barber
102 Euclid Avenue
Waterbury, Conn.
Zoolory
Carol Banks
Saw Mill Lane
Greenwich, Conn.
History
Harriet Hope Barding
825 20th Avenue
East Moline, 111.
English Literature
Alice H. Barradale
178 Kilburn Place
South Orange, N. J.
Spanish
Grace Barish
995 Fifth Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Art
90
Laura Lou Bauer
154 Lakeview Terrace
Highland Park, 111.
Econoffiics
Elizabeth Polk Benson
10 West Underwood Street
Chevy Chase, Md.
English Composition
Lucy Morris Beman
262 East Quaker Street
Orchard Park, N. Y.
Chemistry
Alice Glenn Bixler
2316 Canterbury Road
University Heights, Ohio
Political Science
Helen Keturah Bogart
110 Sylvan Drive
Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
English Literature
Barbara Opal Blick
15 Sylvan Avenue
Pleasant Ridge, Mich,
Sociology
91
Evelyn Marie Boise
21 Glen Oaks Avenue
Summit, N. J.
Political Science
Margaret Jane Bonsal
288 Upper Mountain Avenue
Upper Montclair, N. J.
Art
Patricia Jane Boland
9 Montclair Avenue
Montclair, N. J.
Mathematics
Gloria Bradley
109 Richmond Avenue
Worcester, Mass.
Political Science
Elizabeth Ann Brierley
99 Wooster Street
New Britain, Conn.
Economics
Helen Marie Bradshaw
1315 Beechwood Boulevard
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Sociology
92
Eleanor Upton Brown
57 Chestnut Street
Dedham, Mass.
Zoology
Harriet McAfee Brown
159 Chapin Street
Binghamton, N. Y.
History
Elizabeth K. Brown
7 Warren Place
Montclair, N. J.
English Literature
Margaret Hamilton Brown
2^Park Lane
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
English Composition
Barbara Buckley
20 Bassett Road
Brockton, Mass.
English Literature
Naomi Bucholz
6610 Prairie Road
Omaha, Nebr.
English Composition
93
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Mary Alice Burgess
72 Fairmount Avenue
Chatham, N.J.
Political Science
Julie Ann Burnet
Deephaven
Excelsior, Minn.
Biblical History
Sidney Gerard Burke
43 Amherst Road
Wellesley, Mass.
Political Science
Caroline Burnquist
Warden Apartments
Fort Dodge, Iowa
Economics
Bonita Jean Buttrey
70 Gladstone Avenue
Aurora, 111.
Economics
Mary Tylor Burton
930 Forest Avenue
Glendale, Ohio
Sociology
94
Gloria J. Buzzell
607 Lafayette Boulevard
Long Beach, Long Island, N. Y.
English Composition
Rebecca Calechman
101 Colony Road
New Haven, Conn.
Economics
Helen Hughes Cahill
160 Aycrigg Avenue
Passaic, N.J.
Political Science
Constance Noble Campbell
Emerson Road
Longmeadow, Mass.
Spanish
Frances Margaret Capron
41 Bradford Avenue
Upper Montclair, N. J.
Physics
Gloria Campbell
Washington Avenue
Bayville, Long Island, N. Y.
Political Science
95
Catharine Carter Catlett
Nuttall Post Office
Gloucester County, Va.
History
Elizabeth Chalmers
140 West 58th Street
New York, N. Y.
History
Joan Caughran
5136 North Capitol Avenue
Indianapolis, Ind.
Mathematics
Elizabeth Chapin
290 Pine Street
Lowell, Mass.
English Composition
Betty Ann Childs
106 Broadmead
Princeton, N.J.
History
Constance Chenoweth
959 Hereford Drive
Akron, Ohio
Political Science
96
Dona Chumasero
50 Midwood Street
Brooklyn, N. Y.
English Composition
Elizabeth Turner Clark
534 Summit Avenue
St. Paul, Minn.
Economics
Jean Beverly Clarin
4715 Delafield Avenue
Riverdale, N. Y.
Economics
Alice Anne Clarke
139 Sixth Avenue
La Grange, 111.
English Composition
Joy Agnes Cohen
1718 31st Street
Galveston, Texas
Mathematics
Esther Berman Clenott
Bangor House
Bangor, Maine
hatin
97
Anne English Colcord
1105 Park Avenue
New York, N. Y.
English Literature
Frances Irene Cook
2193 Cottage Grove Drive
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
History
Margaret McNeill Conroy
701 Glenburn Road
Clarks Summit, Pa.
English Composition
Jean Esther Cram
19701 Shelbourne Road
Shaker Heights, Ohio
Chemistry
Adelaide Crawley
101 Ivy Way
Port Washington, N. Y.
Political Science
Rosemary Squire Crandall
73 Morgan Place
Arlington, N. J.
Physics
98
Janet Patricia Crooks
"Goyard," Cape Haitien
Haiti, West Indies
French
Annabel Danhof
19381 Stratford Road
Detroit, Mich.
French
Christine Curtis
21 Gammons Road
Waban, Mass.
Economics
Anne Logan Davis
552 Union Street
Rahway, N. J.
Zoology
Charlotte MacLean Day
21 Klebart Avenue
Webster, Mass.
Geology
Meredith Alice Davis
4901 North Lake Drive
Milwaukee, Wis.
Sociology
99
Therese Rita-Louise deGrace
399 Silver Lake Street
Athol, Mass.
English Comp. dT Lit.
TiNKA DeRECKTOR
4 Sycamore Lane
White Plains, N. Y.
Psychology
Helene deLone
6419 Drexel Road
Philadelphia, Pa.
Zoology
Harriet Louise Dicke
180 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, Mass.
Geology
Betty Dixon
308 West 2nd Avenue
Gastonia, N. C.
English Composition
Laetitia Shelby Dickinson
2 Maryland Avenue, Cooper Apts.,
Annapolis, Md.
Art
100
Cynthia Gilbert Doane
112 Roby Road
Madison, Wis.
Chemistry
Jean Devereaux Doten
70 Page Road
Newtonville, Mass.
English Composition
Janet Marcia Donnet
26 Clifford Avenue
Pelham, N. Y.
English Composition
Gloria Downs
2145 East 38
Tulsa, Okla.
Political Science
Barbara Chapin Dunlap
29 Hundreds Circle
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
Music
Janet Albin Dressler
3316 Daleford Road
Shaker Heights, Ohio,
English Composition
101
Carol Schuyler Edgelow
17 Oxford Street
Springfield, Mass.
English Literature
Elaine Elkins
3545 Biddle Street
Cincinnati, Ohio
Chemistry
Jean Seaver Edwards
202 Reedsdale Road
Milton, Mass.
Geography
Martha Grace Ellis
Lake Road
Basking Ridge, N. J.
Zoology
Ruth Ferguson
1818 Washington Street
Canton, Mass.
Economics
Christine Ferguson
1818 Washington Street
Canton, Mass.
Chemistry
102
Bebe Marian Fischgrund
2303 University Avenue
Canton, Ohio
Psychology
Mary Jane Foster
4150 Grassmere Lane
Dallas, Texas
English Composition
Jessie L. Foster
Muskoka Lodge, Chippewa Trail
Medford Lakes, N.J.
French
Inez French
2205 Madison Road
Cincinnati, Ohio
Art
Gloria Fade Gallic
29 Wilton Road
Windsor, Conn.
English Composition
Dorothy Martha Freyer
501 Linden Avenue
Oak Park, 111.
Chemistry
103
Jeanne Garcelon
86 Falmouth Road
Arlington, Mass.
Mathematics
Jane Godley
18 Clarendon Road
Albany, N. Y.
Sociology
Marilyn Jane Garfield
31 Ray Street
Manchester, N. H.
History
Dorothy Going
Amherst
New Hampshire
Economics
Eloisb Joy Grawoig
4759 Greenwood Avenue
Chicago, 111.
Economics
Marjorie Frances Goodman
70 Remsen Street
Brooklyn, N. Y.
English Literature
104
Eleanor Mead Griesemer
115 West Underwood Street
Chevy Chase, Md.
English Composition
Marian Prince Groot
26 Vine Brook Road
Lexington, Mass.
Geology
Irene Schiff Groban
211 South Cassingham Road
Columbus, Ohio
Economics
Joyce Merriman Gulick
35-20 77th Street
Jackson Heights, N. Y.
English Composition
Louisa Harrison Hagner
1702 Park Avenue
Richmond, Va.
English Composition
Caroline Scranton Hadley
9 Pearl Street
New Hartford, N. Y.,
Art
105
Helen Kohar Hagopian
23 Fiske Road
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
Zoolo^
Faith Mary Halfyard
1056 Beacon Street
Brookline, Mass.
Economics
Janet Ruth Hahn
887 Greyton Road
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
English Literature
Helen Hall
22 Andrew Street
Everett, Mass.
Biblical History
Virginia Hall
80 Fairway Avenue
Rye, N. Y.
Mathematics
Rachel Hall
5619 Fair Oaks
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Art
106
Elizabeth Ann Handy
126 Crafts Street
Newton ville, Mass.
Economics
Martha Hatcher
College Grove
Tennessee
English Composition
Lucille Van Slyke Harter
Cornwall-on-Hudson
New York
English Composition
Nancy Elder Heath
1611 Harris Road
Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.
Sociology
Winifred Teme Herman
333 Hawthorne Terrace
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Art
Floranne Henderson
Box 578
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Art
107
Eleanor Martha Herz
211 Deer Path Drive
Lead, South Dakota
English Composition
Ann R. Hoffman
1530 East Jefferson
South Bend, Ind.
Political Science
Sarah Ann Hill
1136 East 25th Street
Tulsa, Okla.
Chemistry
Alice M. Horton
417 Riverside Drive
New York, N. Y.
Political Science
Jean Hoskins
Quaker Road
Chappaqua, N. Y.
Zoology
Janet Van Rensselaer Horton
10 Elm Street
Geneseo, N. Y.
English Comp. & Lit.
108
Jane Ingley
165 Gilpin Street
Denver, Col.
Sociology
Alba Bernardi Jameson
6 Sessions Street
Wellesley, Mass.
Italian
Emiko Ishiguro
449 Walnut Street
Milton, Pa.
Chemistry
Anna B. Johnston
6310 Ridgeway Road
Richmond, Va.
English Literature
Mabel Elizabeth Jones
580 Prospect Street
Maplewood, N. J.
Chemistry
Margaret E. Johnston
505 Waverly Road
Highland Park, 111.'
Chemistry
109
Ann Jordan
19 Hanson Street
Greenwood, Mass.
Economics
Jean Elizabeth Kennedy
Old Mystic
Connecticut
Vsychology
M. Dorothea Keil
4705 Riverdale Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Political Science
Jean Marie Kineke
28 Oakland Road
Maple wood, N.J.
Economics
Naomi Ruth Kislak
927 Hudson Street
Hoboken, N. J.
Economics
Doris Jane King
15 Fern Street
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Biblical History
110
Patricia Ne\vmaker Knapp
11 Verback Street
Warren, Pa.
Economics
Virginia Harriet Koch
325 White Oak Lane
Winnetka, III.
Chemistry
Jane M. Knickerbocker
256 South Main Street
Torrington, Conn.
Eco?iomics
Eleanor May Kojassar
213 Hazelwood Avenue
Bound Brook, N. J.
French
Elizabeth Ann Kuhn
1150 Berkshire Road
Grosse Pointe, Mich.
Psychology
Caryl Krieger
60 Plaza Street
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Art
111
Edith Moore Kynor
560 North Laurel Street
Hazleton, Pa.
Geology
Patricia Grace Lauber
Sasqua Hills
East Norwalk, Conn.
English Composition
Marcia Lane
6 Woodland Road
Westfield, Mass.
Zoology
Mary Louise Lawrence
30 Stockton Street
Bloomfield, N.J.
Zoology
Lenore Lehn
34 North Eighth Avenue
Highland Park, N.J.
Chemistry
Mary Attaway Lee
Emerson Road
Park Hills, Covington, Ky.
Biblical History
112
Marjory Lent
1821 Second Street
Peru, III.
Spanish
Gloria Levy
3111 Avenue O
Galveston, Texas
Mathematics
Selma M. Levine
331 Winthrop Avenue
New Haven, Conn.
Political Science
Phyllis Marian Lipsky
357 Center Street
Bangor, Me.
En zlish Composition
Isabel T. Luther
1530 Mahantongo Street
Pottsville, Pa.
Psychology
Harriet Harling Lothrop
149 Pleasant Avenue
Portland, Me.
German
113
Mary Frances Lyons
4141 Glenwood Street
Little Neck, N. Y.
History
Jean Malmstedt
61 Avon Place
Amityville, N. Y,
Econo9nics
Despina Malakos
501 Main Street
Haverhill, Mass.
Physics
Sarah Jane Manley
1039 Murrayhill Avenue
Pittsburgh, Pa.
French
Helen Kathryne Marchese
53 Palmyra Street
Springfield, Mass.
Economics
Mary Priscilla Marchant
75 North Quaker Lane
West Hartford, Conn.
History
114
Barbara Martin
4975 Riverdale Avenue
Riverdale-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Psychology
Mary Louise Mayger
Shanghai,
China
German
JocELYN Enid Mason
Morningside Drive
Greens Farms, Conn.
English Composition
Mary Alice McGough
5121 Irving Avenue, Sourh
Minneapolis, Minn.
Botany
Betty McLain
4015 '2 Garden Avenue
Los Angeles, Calif.
English Composition
115
Alice Ayres Meeker
19 Northview Avenue
Upper Montclair, N.J.
Biblical History
Linda Bolte
370 North Maple Avenue
Greenwich, Conn.
English Corn-position
Elizabeth Anne Metz
2800 Espy Avenue
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Political Science
Shirley Fried Meyers
16 Beaver Hill Lane
New Haven, Conn.
English Literature
Margery W. Miller
9 Elm Street
Springfield, Vt.
English Composition
Janet Miller
Beldon Hill Road
Wilton, Conn.
Zoology
116
Marilyn E. Miller
4274 Fullerton Avenue
Detroit, Mich.
Art
Martha Jeanne Montgomery
c/o Col. Ray C. Montgomery,
Camp Hood, Texas
English Composition
Norma Elaine Miller
3 Fowell Avenue
Nashua, N. H.
Chemistry
Marian Moore
1431 Wood Avenue
Colorado Springs, Colo.
Sociology
Grace Elizabeth Morey
69 East 82nd Street
New York City, N. Y.
Political Science
Marianne Craig Moore
34 Chittenden Avenue
Crestwood, N. Y.
English Cotnposition
117
Sarah Terrill Morris
505 Center Street
Eustis, Fla.
Psychology
Sheila Griffiths Murphy
1 Clark Street
Brooklyn, N. Y.
English Composition
Marcia Morse
11 Seaver Street
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
English Composition
Karol Davis Musa
42 Oakdale Boulevard
Farmingdale, N. Y.
Psychology
Ellin Naumburg
Croton-on-Hudson
New York
Economics
Constance Elizabeth Nangle
8409 113th Street
Richmond Hill, N. Y.
Chemistry
118
Marian Neal
14 Park S:reet
Tenafly, N. J.
Political Science
Monica D. Newmark
523 West 121st Street
New York, N. Y.
Political Science
Anne Edwards Newbery
160 Highland Avenue
Ridgewood, N. J.
Art
Carolyn Lucie Nickerson
2198 Massachusetts Avenue
Lexington, Mass.
English Comp. & Lit.
Louise Haven North
32 Badeau Avenue
Summit, N. J.
Biblical History
Nancy Jean Nill
403 Cherry Road
Syracuse, N. Y.
Geography
119
Marjorie Olsen
34 Randolph Street
Passaic, N. J.
Sociology
Cora Warrant Parce
160 Oak Lane
Rochester, N. Y.
Sociology
Chandralekha Pandit
Anand Bhawan,
Allahabad, India
Political Science
Mary Louise Rose Parks
136 Filbert Street
Hamden, Conn.
Art
Gabrielle Jayne Peters
55 Greendale Road
Scarsdale, N. Y.
English Composition
Nancy Ford Pelgrift
61 North Main Street
West Hartford, Conn.
Mathematics
120
Margaret Crawford Peters
20 Elm Street
Concord, Mass.
Music
LuciLE Peterson
Locust Avenue
Rye, N. Y.
Psychology
Christine Peterson
11 Kneeland Avenue
Binghamton, N. Y.
Economics
Anne Pettingell
40 Temple Street
Belmont, Mass.
Mathematics
Claire Tancre Phillips
3124 North Surrmit Avenue
Milwaukee, Wis.
Psychology
Becky Pfouts
133 Summit Avenue
Summit, N, J.
Chemistry
1i1
Natalie Pierce
5 Webb Rd., Sleepy Hollow Manor,
North Tarrytown, N. Y.
Psychology
Doris Cooper Powers
1359 Hill Drive
Los Angeles, Calif.
English Literature
Priscilla Ogden Plumb
Marilla Park
Streator, 111.
Chemistry
Jean Muir Preble
471 Rivard Boulevard
Grosse Pointe, Mich.
Chemistry
Katherine Merle Reese
93 Lakeview Avenue, N. E.
Atlanta, Ga.
English Composition
Patricia Winifield Proctor
Winfield, Westview Avenue
Nashville, Tenn.
Chemistry
122
Esther Louise Remick
632 Hinman Avenue
Evanston, 111.
Sociclogy
Joan Reville
7 Northway
Bronxville, N. Y.
Economics
Mary Virginia Reppert
1630 Mount Eagle Place
Alexandria, Va.
English Composition
Ann D. Robbins
1 Prospect Street
Southbridge, Mass.
French
Marilyn E. Romer
6712 North Talman Avenue
Chicago, 111.
English Composition
Elizabeth A. Robinson
144 Hancock Street
Auburndale, Mass.
Art
123
Shirley Rosenblum
229 Buhl Boulevard
Sharon, Pa.
Physics
Carol Deborah Ruback
356 Grove Road
South Orange, N. J.
Psychology
Arline Roshkind
110 35th Street, South East
Washington, D. C.
Political Science
Joyce Rubenstein
581 Richmond Avenue
Buffalo, N. Y.
Economics
Barbara Jane Rudolph
228 Rockingham Street
Toledo, Ohio
English Literature
Jean Rubin
1120 Park Avenue
New York, N. Y.
Economics
124
Joy Rushmore
971 Kensington Avenue
Plainfield, N.J.
Art
Sara Anne Russell
9 Hill Crest Circle
Waban, Mass.
Art
Janice Ethel Russell
280 Main Street
Easthampton, Mass.
Art
Kathleen Heather Sayre
Orangeburg, R. F. D.
New York
Sociology
Elizabeth Scheer
1655 Fifth Avenue
Huntington, W. Va.
English Composition
Pauline Schaaf
Split Rock Road
Boonton, N. J.
Psychology
125
Margaret Ann Schlegel
1040 Reading Boulevard
Wyomissing, Pa.
Zoology
Betty Simmons Schoonover
600 Eighth Avenue
Fort Worth, Texas
French
Judith Adele Schlenger
57 Mayhew Drive
South Orange, N. J.
M.athematics
Elizabeth Jane Schroeder
1114 Forest Avenue
River Forest, 111.
Economics
Jane Halsted Seddon
Rivoli Drive
Macon, Georgia
Psychology
Barbara Alma Scott
1260 Irving Street, North East
Washington, D. C.
Political Science
126
Edith Shapero Seligmann
56 Clinton Place
Newton Centre, Mass.
Chemistry
Marjorie Alice Severy
165 Atlantic Avenue
Marblehead, Mass.
Mathetnatics
Kate Senior
5612 Kenwood Avenue
Chicago, 111.
Philosophy
Hadassah Ruth Shapiro
2045 East Fifth Street
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Economics
Elizabeth Dun Shorey
601 North Euclid Avenue
Oak Park, 111.
History
Caroline Marshall Shelly
148 Bethlehem Pike
Ambler, Pa.
Economics
127
Ann Silvers
Richlands
Virginia
Economics
Shirley Smails
5115 Lafayette Avenue
Omaha, Nebr.
Biblical History
Lillian Elizabeth Slaughter
4511 South Sixth Street
Louisville, Ky.
M.athematics
Alice Roberts Smedley
Penncrest
Media, Pa.
Psychology
Nancy Barney Smith
Franconia
New Hampshire
Art
Barbara Ann Smith
38 Westview Terrace
West Newton, Mass.
Zoology
128
Priscilla Doane Smith
Lighthouse Drive
Grosse He, Mich.
Sociology
Patricia Ann Southard
1070 Abbieshire Avenue
Lakewood, Ohio
Greek
Jane Reid Sonenfield
2141 Arthur Avenue
Lakewood, Ohio
English Composition
Virginia Ann Spake
2000 Oakland Avenue
Kansas City, Kan.
Art
Myrtle Claire Srochi
843 Springdale Road
Atlanta, Ga.
History
Katherine Sue Spencer
117 Marvel Road
New Haven, Conn.
Physics
129
Josephine Morgan Stancisko
126 Babcock Street
Brookline, Mass.
English Literature
Mary Helen Steinheimer
539 South 52nd Street
Omaha, Nebr.
Economics
Margaret Whitney Stanley
329 Lawn Ridge Road
Orange, N. J.
Mathematics
Dorothy Elise Stempf
38 Vine Road
Larchmont, N. Y.
Psychology
Ruth Merilyn Stevens
Ocean Avenue
Kennehunkport, Me.
Sociology
Ann Steuer
2900 Glengary Road
Shaker Heights, Ohio
Chemistry
130
Cynthia M. C. Stewart
Hotel Fourteen, 14 E. 60th Street
New York, N. Y.
History
Priscilla Storer
Waldeboro
Maine
Zoology
Virginia Anne Stewart
Shoreham
Vermont
Psychology
Eunice Stunkard
5000 Waldo Avenue
Riverdale, N. Y., N. Y.
German
Elizabeth Summers
37 Headlcy Place
Maplewood, N. J.
History
Barbara Sullivan
35 Hammond Road
Belmont, Mass.
French
131
Pearl Sun
Dorothy Swearingen
Chungking
40 Fernwood Road
China
West Hartford, Conn.
Psychology
Jean Sunderlin
1674 Highland Avenue
Rochester, N. Y.
Zoology
Folttical Science
Alice Chiacheng Sze
2400 16th Street, N. W.
Washington, D. C.
E?2gli.fh Composition
Marion McIntosh Thompson
The Manse
Bedford, Mass.
Geography
Marguerite Mary Tatum
309 Summit Avenue
Wayne, Pa.
French
132
Avis Dornin Thomson
Dillsburg
Pennsylvania
Philosophy
Maria Jean Thornton
Fort Fairfield
Maine
History
Elizabeth Ann Thornton
92 Beacon Street
Boston, Mass.
Spanish
LuciLE Spaulding Titus
Binghamton
New York
Political Science
Gloria F. Trencher
145 Wellington Avenue
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Economics
133
Elizabeth S. Underwood
54 Gates Circle
Buffalo, N. Y.
English Literature
Betty Vadner
126 Dartmouth Road
Cynwyd, Pa.
Botany
Allaire Urban
745 Parker Street
Newark, N. J.
English Literature
Barbara Van Tassel
111 Concord Street
Waterbury, Conn.
Physics
Virginia Ann Volcker
1301 Longfellow Avenue
Teaneck, N. J.
Political Science
Mary Elizabeth Vogel
405 North Fullerton Avenue
Upper Montclair, N.J.
Political Science
134
Megan Vondersmith
344 Resor Avenue
Cincinnati, Ohio
Political Science
Lois-May Waters
5 Parkinson Street
Needham, Mass.
Latin
Anne Johnston Waring
910 Gaylord Street
Denver, Colo.
Sociology
Marjorie Sturtevant Webb
163 Sycamore Avenue
North Plainfield, N.J.
Political Science
Patricia O'Brien Weisiger
946 Boylston Street
Newton Highlands, Mass.
Sociology
Nancy Beatrice Webb
Apt. 115, 1625 East Avenue
Rochester, N. Y.
German
135
Eleanor Louise Weisman
Park Plaza Hotel
St. Louis, Mo.
English Composition
Thora Westergaard
43 Summit Road
Port Washington, Long Island, N. Y.
Sociology
Mary Joan Welker
114 Wyllis Street
Oil City, Pa.
F^conomics
LuciLE Aramantha Wetherbee
Lyndonviile
Vermont
Music
Barbara Lin Whitmore
140 Remington Road
Manhasset, N. Y.
Economics
Marjorie Virginia Wheatley
200 Ashland Street
Abington, Mass.
SociologJ
136
Olive Elizabeth Williams
15 Rokeby Place
Staten Island, N. Y.
Chemistry
Nan Willits
La Tourelle
Haverford, Pa.
Political Science
Margaret L. Williamson
206 East Joppa Road
Towson, Md.
English Cotfip. iT Lit.
Elise Kidder Wishar
3025 Toledo Avenue
Coral Gables, Fla.
E?zglish Comp. & Lit.
Kathryn Ellen Wolf
Mount Wolf
Pennsylvania
Economics
Bobbie Withrow
2256 Robinwood Avenue
Toledo, Ohio
Mathematics
137
E. Kay Wood
8 South Part Street
Lebanon, N. H.
French
Alice Marie Ziegler
1040 Wilbert Road
Lakewood, Ohio
Economics
JacquelynJ. Young
Annandale
Newport, R. I.
English Corn-position
Esther C. Toms
1629 Marion Street, North West
Washington, D. C.
Psychology
138
ToBE Friedman
159 Ruthven Street
Roxbury, Mass.
Zoology
Betty A. Golden
17115 Lomond Boulevard
Shaker Heights, Ohio
Political Science
Eve W. Grodnick
2 Clifton Terrace
Weehawken, N. J.
Economics
J946-A
Ruth Anne Lewit
55 Warren Court
South Orange, N. J.
Art
Amy M. Munson-Barkshire
130 East 75th Street
New York, N. Y.
Chemistry
Jane Marks
17 Merrielees
Great Neck, N. Y.
Economics
139
Marilyn A. Murphy
3384 Norwood Road
Shaker Heights, Ohio
Greek
Nancy J. Postmantur
563 Richmond Avenue
Buffalo, N. Y.
Sociology
Joan P. Piper
186 Burns Street
Forest Hills, N. Y.
Philosophy
Phyllis J. Rosenthal
41 Quincy Street
North Adams, Mass.
Sociology:
140
THERE GOES
MY NEW HAT!
It doesn't take long for the expense of accident or
sickness to click up a total that will dissolve plans for a new hat or much
more than that. And yet a Wellesley student who has a Student's Reim-
bursement Policy through Connecticut General has such expenses largely
taken care of for her.
Probably your family have signed up for you and you have this protec-
tion, but if they haven't, it would be a good idea to do it now. In case
of accident or illness it's a big help to have on insurance company pay-
ing your bills.
Members of the graduating class . . . you may join the large group of
Wellesley alumnae who continue their accident and health protection
through individual Connecticut General policies after leaving college.
There are Connecticut General representatives in almost every large com-
munity who will gladly help you.
CONNECTICUT-GENERAL
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
HARTFORD, CONN.
141
ADVERTISING INDEX
Page
Agora, Wellesley College 1 47
Alpha Kappa Chi, Wellesley College 1 47
American Silk Mills, New York City, New York 1 48
Boston Pipe and Fittings Co., Inc., Cambridge, Mass 1 44
C. Crawford Hollidge, Ltd., Wellesley, Moss 144
Campus Pharmacy, Wellesley, Mass 1 51
Clyde's, Wellesley, Mass 1 45
Connecticut General Life Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn 1 41
Dieges & Clust, Boston, Mass 1 45
Filene's, Wellesley, Mass 1 51
Fredley's, Wellesley, Mass. 1 50
Glenview Market, Wellesley, Mass 1 46
Granville Leatherwood, Wellesley, Mass 1 44
Gross Strauss, Wellesley, Mass. 1 51
Hathaway House Bookshop, Wellesley, Mass 1 46
Helen Moore, Wellesley, Mass 1 43
Hill and Dale, Ltd., Wellesley, Mass 1 43
Hinckley & Woods Insurance Co., Boston, Mass 1 46
John & Oilier Engraving Co., Chicago, III 153
Jennings Linen Co., Boston, Mass. 1 43
Le Blanc Taxi Co., Wellesley, Mass 1 43
Makanna, Inc., Wellesley, Mass 1 50
Morris' Tailor Shop, Wellesley, Mass 143
Music Box, Wellesley, Mass 1 51
Ola, Boston, Mass. 1 46
Phi Sigma, Wellesley, Mass 1 47
S. S. Pierce Co., Boston, Mass 1 49
Sargent Studio, Boston, Mass 1 52
Schrafft's, Boston, Mass 143
Shakespeare, Wellesley College 1 47
Sigrid's, Wellesley, Mass 1 46
Talcoff' s, Wellesley, Moss. 1 44
Tau Zeto Epsilon, Wellesley College 147
Viking Restaurant, Boston, Mass 1 45
Walker Gordon, Charles River, Mass 1 45
Wellesley Inn, Wellesley, Mass 1 44
Wilbar's, Wellesley, Mass 1 49
Wool Shop, Wellesley, Mass. 1 49
Zeta Alpha, Wellesley College 1 47
142
"BIBS" Sommerville wearing a
HELEN MOORE negligee
Tel. Wellesley 3696
HILL and DALE Ltd.
Sportswear, Hosiery and Accessories
Juniors and Misses
37-39 CENTRAL STREET
WELLESLEY, MASS.
Wei. 3427
MORRIS*
TAILORS • CLEANERS
62 CENTRAL STREET
WELLESLEY, MASS.
Phone— Liberty 4267-4268
Jennings Linen Company
76 Essex Street
BOSTON
for Fine Quality
Bed and Table Linens
LE BLANC
TAXI
Wei. 1600
'^AND SO DO THE ^dC^^^^l^f
THE z(MMii4. *^
that's right— not only the men,
but their whole families prefer
schrafft's restaurants, cakes and
candies.
ScHrafft's
FRANK G. SHATTUCK COMPANY
Sew York • Boston • Syracuse • Phihtddpljia • Neuark
143
if *'J
^\i]
Qmmlk Jleatherwood
GIFTS
575 WASHINGTON STREET
WELLESLEY, MASSACHUSETTS
SHOES
COLLEGE
CLASSICS
o
BEAUTIFUL
FOOTWEAR
Eileen
McGuire
in a
63A Central St.
Wellesley
C CRAWFORD
HOLLIDGE
Evening
Gown
144
1944 • 1945 • 1946 • 1947
CLASS RINGS
made by
DIEGES S CLUST
Specialti) Jewelers
BOSTON 8, MASS.
73 TREMONT ST.
hand sewn
moccasins
5.50
Clyde's
67A CENTRAL ST.
WELLESLEY
WELLESLEY COLLEGE
DINING HALLS
serve
WALKER-GORDON
CERTIFIED MILK
Form Located Three Miles from Wellesley
in
CHARLES RIVER, MASS.
Keep Your RED CROSS
At His Side
V
II
Shirley Smails and fiance Jack Prudden dining at the VIKING
145
The MISS and MRS.
HAT SHOP
81 CENTRAL STREET
WELLESLEY, MASS.
M^ Stafford
Norwegian
Resfaurani
Behind fhe Iron
"Smorgaasbord'
OLA
14 CARVER STREET
BOSTON, MASS.
luncheons • Dinners • Open Sundays
GLENVIEW MARKET
595 WASHINGTON ST.
WELLESLEY, MASS,
DRESSES
SUITS
'That are Different'
Sigrid's
COATS
WELLESLEY
MASS.
(X3
Fire... Liability ...Automobile. ..Burglary and
Every Description of Insurance at Lowest Rates
HINCKLEY & WOODS
INSURANCE
40 BROAD ST. BOSTON
— Business Established 1668 —
Nancy Steffens,
Pat Siegburt,
Pat Patterson
and Lee Tucker
browsing in
HATHAWAY
HOUSE
BOOKSHOP
146
^ BUY WAR BONDS^
Agora
Phi Sigma
Zeta Alpha
Shakespeare
Alpha Kappa Chi
Tau Zeta Epsilon
147
One of a series of "Lucky prints-
in American Silk Mills' crisp, cool, wrinkle-resistant Peek-a-Boo rayon mesh.
^
/X^tven^e^v*^ Qj0io IVll^ u
V BUY WAR BONDS
00 BROADWAY • NEW YORK 18, N,Y.\ FOR VICTORY
148
Compliments of
BOSTON
PIPE & FITTINGS CO, INC.
149 SIDNEY STREET
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
Jean Sunderlin wearing a three piece
suit from the WOOL SHOP
^$^
Jean Beaverson tries on a moccasin in
WILBAR'S, Wellesley
boston's distinctive store
C7amous
throughout the nation for
Good Cjfoods &' 'De/icacies
S. S. PIERCE CO.
BOSTON
Stores i>i Boston, Behnont,
Bi'ookline & Newton
Mail and Telephone Orders
149
Lucille and Marilyn Peterson dressed in suits from
FREDLEY'S, Wellesley
TROUSSEAUX • BRIDAL ENSEMBLES
HAND MADE LINGERIE
GIFTS FOR ENGAGEMENTS, WEDDINGS, SHOWERS
MAKANNA, Inc.
The Trousseau House of Boston
54 CENTRAL ST.
WELLESLEY
150
Helene de Lone, Margy Williamson, and Adelaide Crawley
shopping at the CAMPUS PHARMACY
Compliments
of
0
/-the: -TEIU. 1174
\
[^ MUSIC ^
K BOX ^
V^ ySS CENTRAL SX. jrsiC. |
«
in WELLESLEY
We're not
Forgetting...
Four years is a long time . . . but when
it comes to saying "goodbye," it seems
like only yesterday when you came
through our doors exploring the "Vil"
for the first time. Remember how we
helped you solve your problems then
. . . Our Branch Shops and Main Store
will look forward to continuing to serve
you in the near future.
Nancy Penson in an evening gown from
GROSS STRAUSS
Don't you
forget US!
151
Complete Photographic Service
to the
1945 LEGENDA
1^
SARGENT STUDIO
BOSTON • CAMBRIDGE
152
153
x<
'" ""ii« mill 11 III nil