The Dial 1929

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The Dial 1929 'O^W-s4^ 3RMyu ^ V LIBRARY ^ s ^VGHAM^ STATE NORMAL SCHOOL FRAMINGHAM MASSACHUSETTS —— — PROLOGUE "The golden opportunity Is never offer'd twice, seize then the hour When fortune smiles and duty points the way; Nor shrink aside to 'scape the spectre Fear, Nor pause though pleasure beckon from her bower But bravely bear thee onward to the goal." OLD PLAY. 370-7 11*1 I M"S/cv i DEDICATION The Class of 1929 affectionately si£ dedicates the Dial am (Si I to I 1 their good friend and teacher I Corinne E. Hall i3 whose interest and spirit I has made us realize the worth of i i Our Chosen Profession. WHITTEMOR13 LIBRARY Fra; -ge Framingham, Massachusetts MISS CORINNE E. HALL To the Class of 1929 "'The finest things of life can seldom be meas- ured by a tape line or weighed by a pair of scales. Xo scientist can determine how much is added to human happiness by the fragrance of a rose, the beauty of a sunset or the glory of the stars. In like manner poets and painters have exhausted their talents in trying to portray the meaning of home. The elements that enter into its make-up are of such stuff as dreams are made of for home is a matter of feeling, not reasoning. It is the place where one belongs, where one fits in, where one has a right to be because in a peculiar sense it is one's - own. ' QUOTED FROM DEAN RUSSELL. BY MISS HALL. JAMES CHALMERS, A.B., Ph.D., D.D., L.L.D., Principal ' *l£o (..V^ I have selected as most appropriate to your clientele, Chaucer's description of the Oxford student. It is the happiest characterization of a college student that I have ever discovered. I wish every one of my students/ would commit it to memory and repeat it each morning before breakfast. r Dr. James Chalmers. "A Clerk ther was of Oxenford also. That un-to logik hadde longe y-go. As lene was his hors as is a rake, And he nas nat right fat, I undertake; But loked holwe, and ther-to soberly. «.' Ful thredbar was his overest courtepy; For he had geten him yet no benefice, i Ne was so worldly for to have office. p For him was levere have at his beddes heed Twenty bokes, clad in blak or reed Of Aristotle and his philosophye, Than robes riche, or fithele, or gay sautrye. But al be that he was a philosophre, Yet hadde he but litel gold in cofre; But al that he mighte of his frendes hente, On bokes and on lerninge he it spente, And bisily gan for the soules preye Of hem that yaf him wher-with to scoleye. Of studie took he most cure and most hede, Noght o word spak he more than was nede, And that was seyd in forme and reverence. \ And short and quik, and ful of hy sentence. Sowninge in moral vertu was his speche, And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly teche." RUTH H. CARTER, HONORARY CLASS MEMBER Selected for the Class of 1929. "The spice of life is battle; the friendliest rela- tions are still a kind of contest; and if we would not forego all that is valuable in our lot, we must continually face some other person, eye to eye, and wrestle a fall whether in love or enmity. It is still by force of body, or power of character or intellect, that we attain to worthy pleasures." QUOTED FROM ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. BY MISS CARTER. EDITH A. SAVAGE, Dean Greetings to the Class of 1929 Make thy life better than thy work. Too oft Our artists spend their skill in rounding soft Fair curves upon their statues, while the rough And ragged edges of the unhewn stuff In their own natures startle and offend The eye of critic and the heart of friend. If in thy too brief day thou must neglect Thy labor or thy life, let men detect Flaws in thy work! while their most searching gaze Can fall on nothing which they may not praise In thy well-chiselled character. The man Should not be shadowed by the Artisan! QUOTED FROM ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. An Appreciation To Mr. Ried we wish to express our appreciation for his untiring efforts as Chairman of the Activi- ties Committee, and the interest shown in all our endeavors. S>0 ' 1 s £g §5 o c "Ever charming, ever new, When will the landscape tire the view?" COMTCNTS Class Baby . 10 Faculty 21 Seniors 37 Juniors 81 Sophomores 87 Freshmen 03 Hall of Fame 103 Engaged 121 Organizations 123 Sports 143 Dormitories 149 Cut-Ups 157 Alumnae 175 Advertisements 183 1929 DIAL STAFF Managing Editor Elizabeth Chapman Editor Business Manager Doris Kearns Althea Wear Eleanor Hyde . Assistant Editor Beatrice Loverinc Assistant Business Manager Elizabeth Eaton Art Editor Bertha Greaney Assistant Art Editor Ruth Sunderland Faculty Editor Evelyn Johnson . Club Editor Marjorie White . H. A. Statistician Marion Richards Regular Statistician Mary Dugan H. A. Grind Editor Elsie Rimmer . Regular Grind Editor Catherine R. Sullivan Alumnae Editor Marion Barnes . H. A. Historian Ann Wetherbee Regular Historian Harriet Macfarlane . Regular Prophet Jean Bracg H. A. Prophet Harriet Clements . Class Will Dorothy Marble Athletics Sylvia Kuniholm . Dormitories Frederick W. Ried . Faculty Advisor [20] LIBRARY V CLASS BABY HE class of 1929 has chosen Janice Harriette Mayo, the daughter of a former T classmate, for its Class Baby. [21] — — : HE DIAL MARY H. STEVENS 239 Union Avenue, Framingham, Massachusetts French and English Began teaching in State Normal School at Framing- ham in 1891. To the Class of 1929: "He is never alone that is in the company of noble thoughts." Ancient Proverb. FREDERICK W. ARCHIBALD Music Tufts Summer School; Harvard Summer School; Normal Music School. Supervisor of Music, Public Schools of Eastern Massachusetts ; Supervisor of Music, Salem Normal School; Instructor in Boston University Summer School. Baritone Soloist and Chorus Work. Began teaching in State Normal School at Framing- ham in 1898. To the Class of 1929: "To strive ever forward and help others to strive, to grow up into the men and women God meant us to be, that is the aim of life." Edward Howard Grigcs. LOUIE G. RAMSDELL Church Street, Framingham, Massachusetts Geography, Modern European History Diploma, State Normal School, Framingham; Ph.B.. S.M., University of Chicago. Began teaching in State Normal School at Framing- ham in 1912. To the Class of 1929: "There is no war between the old and new The Conflict lies between the false and true." —Henry Van Dyke. r 24 1 — ; nV library *<2 THE DIAL |U#.** EVA E. HEMENWAY 24 Warren Road, Framingham, Massachusetts Secretary and Treasurer Began duties at the State Normal School at Fram- ingham in 1909. To the Class of 1929: "Learning should continue as long as there is any- thing you do not know, and if we may believe the proverb, as long as you live." Spencer. FREDERICK W. RIED 45 Harrington Street, Newtonville, Massachusetts Fine Arts, School Craft, Methods, Activities Diploma, Massachusetts School of Art, Boston; Staff Instructor, U. S. Shipping Board during War; President of Massachusetts Art Teachers Association, 1926-1929; member of Eastern Arts Association, Beachcombers of Provincetown and other organizations ; Lecturer and writer on specialized phases of "Art in Trade" ; Author of "Leather Work." Began teaching in Framingham 1909. To the Class of 1929: "The present may care for itself—look to the future." CHARLES E. DONER Reading, Massachusetts Penmanship Diploma, Zanerian School of Penmanship, Columbus, Ohio; Mettley School of Commerce, Brooklyn; Spen- cerian Commercial School, Cleveland ; Editorial Staff, Business Journal, N. Y. ; Penmanship Association ; Mem- ber of National Commercial Teachers' Federation Zanerian Penmanship Association. Began teaching in State Normal School at Framing- ham in 1909. To the Class of 1929: "We live long only the memorv of men and women." r 25 ] — ; am dial WILLIAM H. D. MEIER 117 State Street, Framingham, Massachusetts Head of Department of Biology Diploma, Illinois State Normal University; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard. Teacher rural schools, principal high schools, and superintendent city schools in Illinois; Instructor Botany, Harvard University; Author "Herba- rium and Plant Descriptions," "Plant Study," "Animal Study," "School and Home Gardens," "Study of Liv- ing Things," "Open Doors to Science" with Otis W. Caldwell, and "Exercises in Science" with Lois Meier. Began teaching in State Normal School at Framing- ham in 1011. To the Class of 1020: "A thankful heart finds blessings." LINWOOD L. WORKMAN 17 Church Street, Framingham, Massachusetts Household Physics, Social Relations A.B., Colby College, 1002; Tufts College Summer School of Biology, Harpswell, Maine; Instructor at Colby Academy, Wakefield High, Watertown High Principal of Higgins Classical Institute ; Principal of Southboro High; Ed.M., Harvard Graduate School of Education. Began teaching in State Normal School at Framing- ham in 1012. To the Class of 1020: "The World War has left national debts amounting to one hundred billion dollars. The interest alone on this huge sum would give an annual scholarship of $1000 to every college student in the world." MILLICENT M. COSS 164 State Street, Framingham, Massachusetts Head of Clothing. Department , Instructor in Household Arts Education A.B., Indiana State University; B.S. and M.A., in Household Arts Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York. Began teaching in State Normal School at Framing- ham in 1014. To the Class of 1020: "All knowledge is lost which ends in the knowing. for every truth we know is a candle given us to work bv." Rvskin. I 26 1 — — THE DIAL MAUDE B. GERRITSON Church Street, Framingham, Massachusetts English Literature, Literature Diploma, State Normal School, Framingham; B.S., Teachers College, Columbia University; A.M., Teachers College, Columbia University.
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