Northrop Alumnae who are Sophomores and the five who are holding up the honor of Vassar’s class of ’26, still feel Northrop’s influence very strongly, and are forever singing her praises. They feel that the training in concentration and in well-divided time received at Northrop has proved invaluable throughout their college course.
The large number of us here at Vassar, set aside as “Northrop girls” feel that we have a great responsibility resting on us. We have a standard to live up to, a standard caused by the good name sent out into the world by Northrop. May we live up to that name, may we carry on the standard of Northrop School.
Josephine Clifford,
Betty Goodell.
MEMBERS OF LEAGUE COUNCIL FOR 1925-1926
| OFFICERS OF THE LEAGUE | |
| Mary Eaton | President |
| Virginia Leffingwell | Vice-President |
| Barbara Bailey | Treasurer |
| Florence Isabel Roberts | Secretary |
| CHAIRMEN OF STANDING COMMITTEES | |
| Marion Hume | Athletics |
| Margaret Louise Newhall | Publication |
| Beatrice Joslin | Entertainment |
| CLASS PRESIDENTS | |
| Evelyn Baker | Form XII |
| Betty Long | Form XI |
| Mary Louise Sudduth | Form X |
| Helen Tuttle | Form IX |
| Eleanor Bellows | Form VIII |
| Jane Helm | Form VII |
| ATHLETIC COUNCIL | |
| Marion Hume | Chairman |
| Josephine Reinhart | Form XII |
| Charlotte Williams | |
| Janet Morison | Form XI |
| Betty Jewett | |
| Jane Woodward | Form X |
| Victoria Mercer | |
| Nancy van Slyke | Form IX |
| Ruth de Vienne | Forms VIII and VII |
| TATLER BOARD | |
| Margaret Louise Newhall | Editor |
| Janet Morison | Business Assistant |
| Nancy Stevenson | |
| Marion McDonald | Form XII |
| Virginia Little | Form XI |
| Martha Jean Maughan | Form X |
| Nancy van Slyke | Form IX |
| Anne Winton | Form VIII |
| Pauline Brooks | Form VII |
| FACULTY ADVISERS | |
| Miss Carse | Miss Brown |
| Miss Bagier | Miss Svenddal |
| Miss Sadley | Miss Pease |
| Miss Ferebee | Miss Lockwood |
| Miss McHugh | Mrs. Armstrong |
THE NORTHROP LEAGUE
It hardly seems necessary in this, the sixth year of the League’s existence, to explain its purpose. I think it is sufficient to say that the League is an organization which, under Miss Carse’s sympathetic guidance, has come to control the student activities of the high school and the seventh and the eighth grades. It is true, of course, that the League is governed by its officers, but the League itself is what the large body of the girls make it. The pledge, an expression of its standards, seeks to hold each girl to a high sense of honor, loyalty, and self-improvement. This, briefly, is the purpose. As nearer perfection is reached, in the struggle for this goal, the League gains in power. Thus it is that the League is the result of the effort of every member.
Mary Eaton.