![]() It is quite remarkable to observe the results she obtains with a minimum display of effort. 32 Judith ld ]ar aret sdnclreS Judith subscribes to actions rather than words. Unfailingly prompt answers in class showed us Maryruth as a scholarly, clear-thinking student, as well as a sought-after entertainer and an invaluable friend. Whether it was our Junior Show, a class party, or an entertainment for a club meeting, four years of experience has taught us that she is a zealous cooperator for the success of any cause. Treasurer President Kdythe Iimnehan I ice-Presidenl Secretary Gertrude Lyons Treasurer Marian Meyer I VFjcin rii th - lL earn Artistic hands caressing the piano keys in deep purple harmonies, dancing feet jitter -bugging across gleaming floors, and infectious happi- ness, and here comes Maryruth, a social asset to any gathering. Vice-President Mother Thomas Aquinas, Ph.D. Irene Wight wick OFFICERS OF A O M 1 IN’ I ST It AT I O X Right Reverend Monsignor Francis W. Higgins Frank Sinnott Martin Con boy Nelson Hume Luke D. ![]() BRENNA! ! 26 czr= OAKII OF TRUSTEES John Greene. Charlotte Ryan Nancy Morgan vru r epcirL X ment ancfuacje Mother Therese, A.M. diLorenzo, R.A Antony Guerrera SlEGMUND GrOSSKOPF Warner M. masters of the repartee COMMERCI AL HOLIDAY " " TO SUM IT ALL UP - ” n usic Mother Clothilde, A.B. I 1 la lli em a I i cS an cl Science m rt in cn I J. ourn a iism St) e pci A m on M rg a r et Cosse Richard, M.S. Phyi ica ID, rain in a Edna Meyer Ostertag Alice I. jf h iloAoph ij J epartment Reverend John F. Mother M ary Robert, A.IL COULD WE HEAR IT, TOO?» WINNETKE OR DALTON torij £)epartm en t Anna T. BEFORE the draft fin ij fish If) e pci rtm en I Mother M. ![]() Loyola, A.IL Mother Roberta, A.IL TRIPLE ENTENTE FORM A LLY - TH E FACl LTY AFTER HOURS LES PROFESSEURS ARTISTIQUES commerce ft)epcirtm en t Louis F. Thompson Marie Stier Mark Robinson (Classical Slue lies epar i imet Mother M. Even when 011 start getting ready at 8:30 you’re not half readv when it rings - that’s right, there goes that bell! I ' ! 2 ), epci ' tment Ernest Thorne Thompson Florence M. The frenzied scramble to find that evanescent notebook, the reck- less dash to return reserve books. The most har- rowing five minutes of anyone’s day. |T It A ONLY THE BEGINNING ' mm i : J ■ tf r f I V Xime lor classes- just a couple ol minutes lo grab those books, rush to the post and arrive breathless at that nine o’clock class. In the harrowing search for a theme for our book we could find nothing more appropriate than that the custom which divides our days should form the theme of our book the hell from the Castle l ower tolling the Aneelus. ROLOGVE The custom which impressed us so much when we were Freshmen has become one of ’41 ’s most beloved traditions. And now understanding completely for the first time we must thank you once again. How could we doubt in the face of such assurance? But in the two years you have been gone our love has doubled. You were our first contact with New Rochelle - " We know you ' ll love it, " you said in your first letters. When you left the day after Commencement we thanked you very much for all you did - taking us to Tea, soothing our exam jitters, laughing sympathetically at our faux-pas. We thought we would be terribly lost without our " Junior Sisters, " but you told us that it would not be long until our graduation. It is just two years ago that you left New Rochelle. We wish to dedicate this book to one who symbolizes all that we have learned to hold infinitely high - Very Reverend Mother Saint Jean Marlin, 0. The Ursulines were our teachers and our models. We were taught to seek not knowledge but wisdom. We were shown the full mean- ing of intellectual culture the dis- crepancy between Catholic womanhood and mediocrity. Our gratitude for all that has been given us at New Rochelle runs too deep for expression. Text from Pages 1 - 304 of the 1941 volume: “ '
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