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6016531
The
CDLICD
1936
1
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TI-IE V956
E
AIVXH ERST COLLEGE
Amhevsf, Mosscchuseifs
FOREWORD
The Iunior Class presents the 1936
OLIG, the latest chapter in the un-
dergraduate history of Amherst Col-
lege. A few changes have been
made in an effort to improve this
record, and the editor hopes that the
book will continue as a reminder of
happy days spent at the Fairest Col-
lege among the circling hills.
FACULTY
CLASSES
ERATERNITIES
STUDENT CCVERNIVIENT
CRGANIZATIONS
PUBLICATICDNS
ATI-ILETICS
FEATURE
ADVERTISING
DEDICATICDN
This book is dedicated
respectfully to
PRGF. ARTHUR lOl-lN HOPKINS,
affectionately known to Amherst
rnen for forty years as "Floppy"-a
genial instructor and a distinguished
pioneer in science.
,
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PGQN,
6
FACULTY
johnson Chapel
The Corporation
GEORGE ARTHUR PLIMPTON, LL.D., L.H.D. .............................. New York, N. Y.
President of the Corporation
STANLEY KING, LL.D. ....................................................... .
President of the College
ARTHUR CURTIS JAMES, M.A. ................................... .
CORNELIUS HOWARD PATTON, D.D. ..... .
ARTHUR PRENTICE RUGG, LL.D. .......... .......... .
TGEORGE DUPONT PRATT, M.A. ...........,................. .
FREDERICK I. E. WOODBRIDGE, Litt.D., LL.D. ..... ..
ARTHUR LEE KINSOLVING, D.D. ....................... .
HARLAN FISKE STONE, LL.D., D.C.L. .... ..
GEORGE EDWIN PIERCE, B.A. ................. ..
ROBERT WASHBURN MAYNARD, LL.B. .... .
'EDWARD TUCKERMAN ESTY, LL.B. ..... .
'CHARLES KINGSLEY ARTER, LL.B. ....................... .
1'
.. ....... Amherst, Mass.
..........NeW York, N. Y.
,.......I-Iartford, Conn.
........Worcester, Mass.
.......Glen Cove, N. Y.
........NeW York, N. Y.
...............Boston, Mass.
.........Washinqton, D. C.
...............Boston, Mass.
...........Boston, Mass.
........Worcester, Mass.
.........Cleveland, Ohio
LUCIUS ROOT EASTMAN, LL.B. ..................................... ......... N ew York, N. Y.
,ns
'ALFRED ERNEST STEARNS, Litt.D., L.I-LD., LL.D. ....... ........... D anvers, Mass.
'LOUIS GOLDSBOROUGH CALDWELL, M.A. ....... .
'HENRY SELDEN KINGMAN, B.A. ........................ .
.........Washinqton, D. C.
Minneapolis, Minn.
FREDERICK SCOULLER ALLIS, M.A. ................................... ........ A rnherst, Mass.
Secretary of the Corporation
CHARLES AMOS ANDREWS, B.A. ....................................... ........ A mherst, Mass.
Treasurer of the Corporation
'The Terms of the Alumni Trustees expire as follows: Edward Tuckerman Esiy, 19355
Charles Kingsley Arter, 1936: Lucius Root Eastman, 19375 Alfred Ernest Stearns, l938g Louis
Goldsborouqh Caldwell, 1939: Henry Selden Kingman, 1940.
'fDeceased, Ianuary 20, 1935.
Eight
The Administration
STANLEY KING, LL.D. ................... .
President
THOMAS CUSHING ESTY, M.A.
Acting President tin case of absence oi President?
RICHARD MacMEEKIN, B.A. ........................................... .
Assistant to the President
CHARLES SCOTT PORTER, M.A. ...... .
Dean
WILLIAM IESSE NEWLIN, M.A. ..... ..
Secretary oi the Faculty
GLADYS ALICE KIMBALL, B.S. ...... .
Recorder
FRANK HERBERT SMITH, M.D. ..... .
College Physician
CHARLES HOWARD CADIGAN, B.A., B.D. ....... ...... .
Director of Religious Activities
CHARLES AMOS ANDREWS, B.A. .....,. .
Treasurer
HERBERT GALE IOHNSON, B.A. ....... .
Acting Comptroller
HENRY BANGS THATCHER, B.S., ........................
Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds
FREDERICK SCOULLER ALLIS, M.A. .............. .
Secretary of the Alumni Council
ROBERT STILLMAN FLETCHER, B.A. .... .
Otis Librarian
WALTER ALDEN DYER, B.A. .........,.... .
Director ot the Amherst Press
Nine
.........Cl'iapel
.........Chapel
..........Chapel
..........Chape1
..........Cl'1apel
........Gymnasiurn
.6 Boltwood Avenue
Walker Hall
Walker Hall
......Service Building
I Walker Hall
.................Librar'y'
........l3 Walker Hall
STANLEY KING, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
President of the College.
A.B., Amherst, '03, A.M., Harvard, '06, LL.D., Dartmouth, Wesleyan, Col-
gate, '32, LL.D., Columbia, '33.
Admitted to the Massachusetts Bar, 1906. Business, 1906-17, 1920-27.
Member Committee Supplies, Council of National Defense, 1917, Special As-
sistant to Secretary of War, 1917-18, Private Secretary to Secretary of War,
1918-19, Member and Secretary of President 'Wilsons Industrial Conference,
1919-20. Amherst Alumni Council, 1913-18, Vice-chairman Amherst Centen-
nial Gift, 1920-21, Alumni Trustee Amherst College, 1921-31, Life Trustee
Amherst College, 1931-32. Chairman Massachusetts Special Committee Sta-
bilization Employment, 1931-33. Elected President of Amherst College, April
9, 1932.
CHARLES SCOTT PORTER, Delta Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi
Associate Professor of Mathematics and Dean of the College.
B.A., Amherst, '19, M.A., Clark, '22.
Instructor in Mathematics, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 1919-24. Grad-
uate work at Clark University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the
University of Chicago. Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst, 1924-27, As-
sistant Professor, 1927-29, Associate Professor, 1929-. Dean ot the college,
1931-. Member of the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematical
Association of America.
EDWIN AUGUSTUS GROSVENOR, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Modern Government and International Law, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '67, M.A., '91, LL.D., Wabash, '03, LL.D., Alfred, '04, LL.D., Marietta, '10,
LL.D., William and Mary, '13, Litt.D., Amherst, '14.
Ordained as Congregational Minister, 1872. Professor of French Language and Literature,
Amherst, 1892-95. Professor of History, Amherst, 1895-98. Professor of Modern Government and
International Law, 1901-14, Professor Emeritus, 1914-. President of the United Chapter of Phi
Beta Kappa, 1907-19. Member of the New York Author's Club, Boston Author's Club, and Lon-
don Author's Club.
ARTHUR IOI-IN HOPKINS, Theta Delta Chi
Professor ot Chemistry, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '85, Ph.D., Iohns Hopkins, '93.
Taught at Cotuit, Mass., and at Peekskill Military Academy, N. Y.,
1885-90. Iohns Hopkins Fellow, 1892. Instructor at Westminster College,
1893-94. Instructor in Chemistry at Amherst, 1894-1907, Professor of Chem-
istry, 1907-. Member of the American Association tor the Advancement of
Science, the American Chemical Society, and the Iohns Hopkins Chemical
Society. I
RICHARD FRANCIS NELLIGAN
Associate Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, Emeritus.
Graduate of Boston Normal School of Gymnastics, 1886, Instructor at Y.
M. C. A. Gymnasium at Detroit, 1886-87, at Chelsea, Mass., 1887. Gymna-
sium Instructor at Cornell, 1887-92, at Amherst, 1692-1906, at Vanderbilt Sum-
mer School, 1893, at Harvard Summer School, 1896-97. Instructor in Hygiene
and Physical Education, 1906-10, Associate Professor, 1910-29, Associate Pro-
fessor Emeritus, 1929-. Civilian Director of Athletics, Camp Devens, 1917,
Commissioned Captain, 1918. Retired.
Ten
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PAUL CHRYSOSTOM PHILLIPS, Theta Delta Chi
Parmly Billings Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '885 M.D., Columbia, '955 1v1.P.E., Springfield, '21.
Medical and Athletic Director of the General Board of the Y. M. C. A., Chicago, 1895. As-
sistant Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, Amherst, 18995 Professor of Hygiene and
Physical Education, 1908-295 Professor Emeritus, 1929-. Member of the Council of the American
Physical Education Association and member of American Association for the Advancement of
Science. President of the Society of College Gymnasium Directors, 1902, and Secretary, 1910-20.
JOSEPH OSGOOD THOMPSON, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Physics, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '845 -Ph.D., University of Strassburg, '9l.
Instructor in Park College, 1884-86. Graduate work at Amherst, 1886-87.
Walker Instructor of Mathematics, Amherst, 1887-89. Graduate work at the
University of Strassburg, 1889-91. Instructor in Physics, Haverford, 1891-94.
Associate Professor of Physics, Amherst, 1894-185 Professor, 1918-285 Pro-
fessor Erneritus, 1928-. Fellow of the American Association for the Advance-
ment of Science. Author, "Ueber das Gesetz der Elastichen Dehnung in
Wiedmann's Anna1em," "Fatigue in the Elasticity of Stretching," and "Investi-
gations in Torsion Elasticityf' in the Physical Review. Member of the Ameri-
can Physical Association.
DAVID TODD, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Astronomy, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '755 M.A., '785 Ph.D., Washington and leiferson, '88,
Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Amherst Observatory, 1881-
175 Professor Emeritus, 1917-. Director of National Academy Eclipse Ex-
pedition to lapan, 1887. Chief of the Government Eclipse Expeditions to West
Africa, 1888-90. Director of Amherst Eclipse Expedition to Iapan, 18965 to
Tripoli, 19055 and the Mars Expedition to the Andes, 1907. Member of the
Boston Author's Club, of the Astronomical and Astrophysical Society of
America, and of the Astronomiche Gesellschaft of Germany.
GEOFFROY ATKINSON, Beta Theta Pi
Professor of Romance Languages.
B.S., Amherst, 'l35 M.A., Columbia, '14, Ph.D., '20.
Graduate work at Columbia, 1913-145 1916-175 1919-20. Secretary and
Interpreter, Rockefeller Tuberculosis Commission to France, 1917. Instructor
in Modern Languages, Union College, 1914-16. British and American Ex-
peditionary Forces, 1917-19. Instructor in French, Columbia, 1919-20. Asso-
ciate Professor of Romance Languages, Amherst, 19205 Professor, 1928-5 Dean
of Amherst College, 1929-31. Fellow of the C. R. B. Foundation, Brussells,
Belgium, 1925-27. Author: "The Extraordinary Voyage in French Literature," 2
Volumes, 1920, 19225 "Les Relations de Voyage du 17e Siecle, et l'evo1ution
des idees," Paris, 19245 "La Litterature Geographique francaise de la Renais-
sance," Paris, 1927, in-4to, "Francois Villon," London, 1930. Guggenheim Fel-
lowship, 1934-35.
GEORGE WILLIAM BAIN, Chi Phi, Sigma Xi
Assistant Professor of Mineralogy and Geology on the Edward Hitch-
cock Foundation.
B.Sc., McGill University, '2l5 M.Sc., '235 M.A., Columbia, '235 Ph.D., '27.
Associate of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engin-
eers5 Member of the Committee on Mining Geology. Member of the Can-
adian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. Fellow of the Society of Economic
Geologists. Fellow of the Geological Society of America. Fellow of the
New York Academy of Sciences. Assistant Geologist, Geological Survey of
Canada, 1923-24. Assistant to Vermont State Geologist, 1925. Assistant Pro-
fessor, University of Vermont, 1925-26. Appointed Instructor in Geology at
Amherst, 1926-315 Assistant Professor, 1931-.
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THEODORE BAIRD, Kappa Alpha Society
Associate Professor of English.
B.A., Hobart College, '2lg M.A., Harvard, '22, Ph.D., '29.
Instructor in English, Western Reserve University, 1922-23. Instructor in
English, Union College, 1923-25. Graduate Study at Harvard, 1925-27. Ap-
pointed lnstructor in English at Amherst, 1927-297 Assistant Professor, 1929-
325 Associate Professor, 1932-.
ARTHUR HENRY BAXTER, Alpha Delta Phi
Professor of Romance Languages.
B.A., Iohns Hopkins, '94g Ph.D., '98,
Instructor in Italian, Iohns Hopkins, 1897-98. Master of French and
German, Country School for Boys, Baltimore, 1898-1900. Instructor in Ro-
mance Languages, Amherst, 1900-067 Assistant Professor, 1906-08, Associate
Professor, 1908-227 Professor, 1922-.
RALPH ALONZO BEEBE, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Beta Kappa
Associate Professor of Chemistry.
B.A., Amherst, '20p Ph.D., Princeton, '23.
Second Lieutenant, Infantry, Plattsburg Training Camp, 1918. Graduate
study, Princeton, 1920-23. Instructor in Chemistry, Amherst, 1923-255 Asso-
ciate Professor, 1925-.
CHARLES ERNEST BENNETT, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Kappa
Moore Professor of Latin.
B.A., Amherst, '05y Ph.D., Cornell, '11.
Assistant Principal and Instructor in German and Latin, Nanticok, Pa.,
High School, 1905-06. Sub-master at Washington School for Boys, Wash-
ington, D. C., I906-07. Instructor at Volkman School, Boston, and graduate
student at Harvard, 1907-08. Graduate student and Teaching Fellow, Cornell,
1908-ll. Instructor in Latin, Amherst, 1911-137 Assistant Professor, 1913-147
Associate Professor, 1914-195 Professor, 1919-. Author: "Across the Years."
Member of the Archaeological Institute of America, and the American Philo-
I logical Association.
WILLIAM PINGRY BIGELOW, Chi Phi
Professor of Music.
B.A., Amherst, '89p M.A., 'I2.
Studied Music in Worcester, 1889-90, in Berlin and Dusseldorf, 1890-94.
Instructor in German and Music, Amherst, 1894-l90lp Associate Professor,
1901-06: Professor, 1906-081 Professor of Music, 1908-.
Twelve
PHILLIPS BRADLEY, Alpha Delta Phi
Associate Professor of Political Science.
A.B,, Harvard, '16.
Assistant at Harvard, 1915-16. Instructor in Political Science, Amherst,
1921. Assistant Professor, Vassar, 1921-22. Assistant Professor, Wellesley,
1922-25. Associate Professor of Political Science, Amherst, 1925-. Member
of the American Political Science Association and the American Society of
International Law. Member Executive Board the Social Studies, 1934-7 Mem-
ber Sub-Committee on Personnel American Political Science Association, 1934.
BAILEY LE PEVRE BROWN
Instructor in Mathematics.
B.A., Amherst, '24, M.A., Princeton, '25,
Graduate Student at Princeton, 1924-27. Instructor in Mathematics at
Bryn Mawr, 1927. Appointed Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst, 1927
Member American Mathematical Society,
FAYETTE CURTIS CANFIELD, Phi Kappa Psi
Assistant Professor of Dramatics.
B.A., Amherst, '25.
Appointed Assistant in Dramatics at Amherst, 19265 Instructor, 1927-301
Assistant Professor, 1930-34, Associate Professor, 1934-. Member National
Theatre Conference. Editor, "Plays of the Irish Renaissance," 1929.
IAMES TOUGH CLELAND
Assistant Professor of Religion.
M.A., Glasgow, '24p B.D., '27g S.T.M., Union Theological Seminary, 28
Iarvie Fellowship in New York, 1927-28. Holder of Black and Faulds
Teaching Fellowship at Glasgow. Member of the Divinity Faculty of Glas
gow University, 1928-31. Appointed Instructor in Religion at Amherst, 1931
Assistant Professor, 1932-.
CHARLES WIGGINGS COBB, Theta Delta Chi, Sigma Xi
Professor of Mathematics.
Thirteen
B.A., Amherst, '977 M.A., 'Olg Ph.D., University of Michigan, 12.
Instructor at Albany Academy, Fitchburg High School, New York High
School of Commerce, and Worcester Academy, 1897-1904. Graduate study at
Columbia and New York University, 1904-05, at Clark University, 1907-O97
at the University of Michigan, 1910-11. Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst,
1908-IO: Assistant Professor, 1911-147 Associate Professor, 1914-225 Professor,
1922-. Captain in the Air Service, 1917-18. Arbitrator for the Rochester
Clothing Market, 1922-24.
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FREDERICK STUART CRAWFORD, lr., Theta Delta Chi, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in Greek.
B.A., Amherst, '24, B.A., Oxford, '26g M.A., Oxford, '30.
Simpson
Fellow at Oxford, 1924-26. Appointed Instructor in Latin at
Amherst, 19261 Instructor in Greek, 1927-. Member of the American Philo-
logical Association.
B.
fessor
Syntx
Langu
IAMES FRANCIS CUSICK
Instructor in Economics.
B.A., Amherst, 'Zig M.A., Harvard, 'Z3: Ph.D., Harvard, '34.
Appointed Instructor in Economics at Amherst, 1930-.
HOWARD WATERS DOUGI-ITY, Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Xi, Phi Lambda
Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Chemistry.
Ph.D., Iohns Hopkins, '04g M.A., Amherst, '16g B.E. Extra Ordinem, Iohns
Hopkins, '27.
Proficient in Electrical Engineering, Iohns Hopkins, 1893. Commercial
work, 1893-1900. Graduate work, Iohns Hopkins, 1900-04. Carnegie Re-
search Assistant, Washington, D. C., 1904-05. Instructor in Chemistry, Uni-
versity of Missouri, 1905-067 at the University of Wisconsin, 1906-075 at Am-
herst, 1907-08. Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 1908-095 Associate Professor,
1909-131 Professor, 1913-. Member of the American Chemical Society, Fellow
of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
CLARENCE WILLIS EASTMAN
Professor of the German Language and Literature.
S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, '94g M.A., Ph.D., Leipsic, '98, M.A.,
Amherst, ' 12.
Harvard Summer School, 1894. Instructor in Modern Languages, W. P. I.,
1894-95. Studied at the Universities of Goettingen and Leipsic, 1895-98. In-
structor in German, University of Iowa, 1898-1901p Assistant Professor of
German, 1907. Associate Professor of German at Amherst, 1907-09p Pro-
of German Language and Literature at Amherst, 1909-. Author: "Die
des Dativs bei Notkerf' Editor of German texts. Member of the Modern
age Society of America, the New England Modern Language Society
and the Goethe Society of America.
GEORGE ROY ELLIOT, Phi Eta
Professor of English on the Henry C. Folger Foundation.
B.A., University of Toronto, '04g Ph.D., University of Iena, '08, Litt.D.,
Bowdoin, 'Z5.
Engaged in newspaper work, 1904-06. Study in Germany, 1906-08. In-
structor in English, University of Vtfisconsin, 1909-13. Professor of English
Literature, Bowdoin, 1913-25. Professor of English, Amherst, 1925-. Author:
"The Cycle of Modern Poetry," 1928. -
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THOMAS CUS1-IING ESTY, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Walker Professor of Mathematics and Acting President in case of absence
of President.
B.A., Amherst, '93, M.A., '97.
Graduate work at Amherst, 1893-94. Instructor in Mathematics and
Drawing, Case School of Applied Science, 1894-95. Walker Instructor in
Mathematics, Amherst, 1895-97 and 1898-1901. Studied at the University of
Goettingen, 1897-98. Professor of Mathematics, University of Rochester, 1901-
05. Professor of Mathematics, Amherst, 1905-. Acting Dean of the College,
1920-21. Dean of the College, 1922-29. Member of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science, and of the American Mathematical Society.
FRANCIS HOWARD FOBES, Delta Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Iohn C. Newton Professor of Greek.
A.B., Harvard, '04, A.M., '05, Ph.D., '12, M.A., Amherst, '23.
Instructor in Greek and Latin, Harvard, 1907-13. Assistant Professor of
Greek, Union College, 1915-20. Associate Professor of Greek, Amherst, 1920-
21, Professor, 1921-. Editor, "Aristot1e's Meteorology," 1919.
ROBERT FROST, Theta Delta Chi
Professor of English on the Iohn Woodruff Simpson Foundation.
B.A., Dartmouth, '92, M.A., Amherst, '18, M.A., Michigan, '22, L.I-I.D.,
University of Vermont, '23, Litt.D., Yale, '23, Middlebury, '24, Bowdoin, '26,
New Hampshire, '30, Wesleyan, '31, Columbia, '32.
Engaged in various works until 1906. Teacher in Pinkert Academy, New
Hampshire, 1906-10. In England, 1911-15. Professor of English at Amherst,
1916-20. Poet in residence at the University of Michigan, 1920-22. At Am-
herst, 1923-25. Fellow in English at the University of Michigan, 1925-26. Pro-
fessor of English at Amherst, 1926. Author: "A Boy's Will," "North of Bos-
ton," "Mountain IntervaI," "New Hampshire," and "West-running Brook."
IOI-IN BERNARD FULLER
Assistant Professor of German.
Ph.D., University of Chicago, '27.
Gymnasium, 1902-11, University of Vienna, three semesters, 1911-13. In-
structor in German, St. Mary's College, 1914-16. Instructor in the Classics,
1916-25. Study at the University of Chicago, 1925-27. Appointed Instructor
in German at Amherst, 1927, Assistant Professor, 1930-. Author: "Hilarii
Versus et Ludi."
GEORGE BANKS FUNNELL, Phi Beta Kappa
Assistant Professor of French.
B.A., Amherst, '24, M.A., Harvard, '28.
Graduate work at the University of Chicago, 1924-25, at Harvard, 1927-
30. Instructor in French at Amherst, 1925-27. Instructor in French at Har-
vard, 1928-30. Instructor in French at Amherst, 1930-34. Assistant Professor
1934-. Member of the Modern Language Association. I
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HERBERT PEBCIVAL GALLINGER, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of History.
B.A., Amherst, '93p Ph.D., Leipsic, '98.
Principal of Oxford Academy, Oxford, New York, 1893-95. Student at
University of lena, 1895-961 at the University of Leipsic, 1896-985 at Columbia,
1917-18. Instructor in History, Amherst, 1898-1904, Associate Professor, 1904-
18, Professor, 1918-. Member of the American Historical Association. Author:
"Die Haltung der deutschen Publizistik zu dem amerilcanischen Unabhangig-
keitskriegef' 1900. Collaborated in translation and editing of "Conversation
with Luther," 1915.
STEWART LEE GARRISON, Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Associate Professor of English and Public Speaking.
A.B., Harvard, '12g A.M., '30.
Harvard Law School, 1912-13. Assistant in English, Harvard, 1912-15.
Instructor in English and Public Speaking, Worcester Academy, 1913-185 Head
of Department of English, 1919-20. Associate Professor of English and Public
Speaking, Amherst, 1920-. Ioint Author: "The Essentials of Argument." Editor
of "Macau1ay's Life of Iohnsonf'
OTTO CHARLES GLASER, Phi Chi, Phi Beta Kappa
Stone Professor of Biology.
B.A., Iohns Hopkins, 19007 Ph.D., '04.
Graduate work at Iohns Hopkins, '04. Study at Marine Laboratories,
Beaufort, N. C., Woods Hole, Mass., and Cameron, La.: and at the University
of Budapest. Demonstrator of Biology, College ot Physicians and Surgeons.
Baltimore, and Professor of Biology at the University of Michigan, 1905-18.
Stone Professor of Biology at Amherst, 1918-. Trustee of Marine Biological
Laboratories, Woods Hole, 1922.
t .ALFRED SHEPARD GOODALE, Phi Beta Kappa
l Associate Professor of Botany.
B.A., Amherst, '98.
Acting Registrar, Amherst, 1901, Registrar, 1902-18. Instructor in Botany,
1904-115 Assistant Professor, 1911-135 Associate Professor, 1913-. Member of
the American Association for the Advancement of Science and of the New
England Botanical Club. Fellow of the American Association for the Ad-
vancement of Science and member of the New England Botanical Club.
WARREN KIMBALL GREEN, Theta Xi, Sigma Xi
Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Observatory.
A.B., Harvard, '13g A.M., Harvard, '14, Ph.D., University of California, '16,
Student at the Lick Observatory, 1914-17. Martin Kellog Fellow, 1916-17.
With the U. S. Army Signal Corps, A. E. F., 1917-19. Instructor in Physics at
Yale, 1919-21. Instructor in Astronomy at Amherst, 1921-227 Associate Pro-
fessor, 1922-265 Professor, 1926-. Member of the American Astronomical
Society and the American Physical Society. Fellow of the Royal Astronomi-
cal Society, England. Member of the lnternational Astronomical Union,
Sixteen
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ALFRED FREEMAN I-IAVIGHURST, Phi Delta Theta
Instructor in History.
B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, '25p M.A., University of Chicago, '28g M.A., Har-
vard, '3l.
Graduate study at the-University ol Chicago, 1927-28, and at Harvard,
1929-31. Pacific University, 192829. Appointed Instructor in History at Am-
herst, 1931-.
GILBERT THOMAS HOAG
Instructor in English.
B.A., Haverford, '2Ug M.A., Harvard, '26.
Harvard Business School 1920-21. Brown Brothers and Company Bank-
ers Philadelphia 192123 Parrish and Company Brokers 1924 Graduate
work at Harvard 1924 27 Instructor in Englrsh and Tutor 1n the Division oi
Modern Languages Harvard 1927 28 Appointed Instructor in English t
Amherst 1928
FREDERICK IOT-IN HOLTER S1gma Delta Psi
Instructor in Physical Education
BA CPE Oberlin 29 Summer School N Y U 193234 MA N
U
Acting Physical Director and assistant coach Muskingum College 1930
Edward Hitchcock Fellow Amherst 1931 Assistant in Physical Eclucatron
1931 Instructor 1932 Member of the American Physical Education Asso
ciation and the Society of College Directors of Physical Eclucatlon
LLOYD PAUL IORDAN Stgrna Alpha Epsilon
Associate Professor of Physical Education
BS University of Pittsburgh 23
Director of athletics Ieannette 1925 27 Assistant Football I-lead Basket
ball coach Colgate University 1923 31 Football and Basketball coach
Amherst 1932 Asso tate Professor of Physical Education Amherst 1932
EDWARD GORDON KEITH Chr Phi
Instructor in Economics
BA Amherst 27 MA Harvard 32
ln business 1927 31 Graduate study at Harvard 193133 Appointed
Instructor in Economics at Amherst 1934
Seventeen
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GAIL KENNEDY
Assistant Professor of Philosophy.
B.A., University of Minnesota, '22g M.A., Columbia, '23, Ph.D., '28,
University Fellow in Philosophy at Columbia, 1924-25. Lecturer in Phil-
osophy at Columbia, 1925-26, and Assistant Director, New School for Social
Research, New York City, 1925-26. Appointed Instructor in Philosophy at
Amherst, 1926-317 Assistant Professor, 1931-. Guggenheim Fellowship in
Philosophy, 1929.
MICHAEL IOSEPI-I KENNEDY
Physical Education, 19177 Instructor, 1927.
Instructor in Physical Education and Assistant Director of the Gymnasium.
Assistant in Pratt Gymnasium, Amherst, 1910. Appointed Assistant in
MANFORD VAUGI-IN KERN, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in Latin.
B.A., William Iewell College, 'l8g M.A., Indiana University, '21g M.A.,
Princeton, '30.
Tutor in Latin and Greek, Indiana University, 1919-21. Assistant Protes-
sor oi Latin, William Iewell College, 1921-22. Instructor in Classics, Prince-
ton, 1923. Instructor in Latin, Amherst, 1923-24, 1925-. Member of the
American Philological Association. Absent tor year.
STERLING POWER LAMPRECHT, Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Sigma Rho
Professor of Philosophy.
A.B., Williams, 'llg A.M., Harvard, 'l2p B.D., Union Theological Seminary,
'l5p Ph.D., Columbia, 'l8g University of Poitiers, 'l9.
Instructor in Philosophy at Columbia, 1916-18, and 1919-21. American
Expeditionary Forces, 1918-19. Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University
of Illinois, 1921-257 Associate Professor, 1925-28. Professor oi Philosophy at
Amherst, 1928-. Member of the American Philosophical Association. Editor
of "Century Philosophy Series" and Book Editor of "The Journal of Philosophy."
FREDERIC BREWSTER LOOMIS, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Geology on the Edward S. Harkness Foundation.
B.A., Amherst, '96, Ph.D., University of Munich, '99,
Instructor of Biology, Amherst, 1899-1904, Associate Professor of Compara-
tive Anatomy, 1904-085 Professor of Comparative Anatomy, 1908-165 Stone
Professor of Biology, 1916-177 Hitchcock Professor of Mineralogy and Geology,
1917-31, Professor of Geology, 1931-. Director of Amherst Paleontological Ex-
peditions. Author: "Hunting Extinct Animals in the Patagonian Pampas,"
"Common Rocks and Minerals," and "Evolution of the Horse."
Eighteen
ALBERT ERNEST LUMLEY, Sigma Delta Psi, Chi Delta
Assistant Professor of Physical Education.
B.S., Michigan State Normal College, '25.
Graduate study at Oberlin, 1925-28. Director of Intramural Athletics and
Coach of track at Oberlin, 1925-28. Appointed Instructor in Physical Educa-
tion and Coach of Track at Amherst, 1928-30: Assistant Professor, 1930-.
Member of the Track Coaches Association of America, the Track Coaches
Association of N. C. A. A., and the American Physical Education Association.
RALPH CLELAND McGOUN, Ir., Delta Tau Delta
Instructor in Biology.
A.B., Amherst, '27g M.A., '29.
Assistant in Biology, Amherst, 1927-29. Instructor in Biology, 1929
NEWTON FELCH McKEON, Ir., Chi Phi, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in English.
. B.A., Amherst, '26.
Master at Lawrenceville Academy, 1926-27. Engaged in business in
New York, 1927-31. Appointed Instructor in English at Amherst, 1931. Simp-
son Fellow in English and Research Student at Emmanuel College, Cambridge
University, 1933-34.
OTTO MANTHEY-ZORN, Germania, Erlangen
Professor ot German on the Emily C. Iordan Folger Foundation.
B.A., Adelbert College, Western Reserve University, '01, Ph.D., Univer
sity oi Leipsic, '04.
Graduate study at the University of Erlangen, 1901-02, and the Uni
versity of Leipsic, 1902-04. Instructor in German, Western Reserve University,
1904-05, and the University of Illinois, 1905-06. Instructor in German at Am-
herst, 1906-087 Assistant Professor, 19085 Associate Professor, 1909-18, Pro-
fessor, 1918-. Author: "Iohann Georg Iacobi's Iris," 19057 "Friedr I-Ieinr Ia-
coloi's Home at Parnpelfortf' 1907, "Germany in Travail," 1922. Editor,
Fu1da's "Des Talisman," 1912. Member of the Modern Language Association
and the Society for the Advancement of the Study of Scandinavian Literature.
Nineteen
ALLISON WILSON MARSH, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor ot Hygiene and Physical Education.
B.A., Amherst, '13y M.Ed., Harvard, '25.
Hitchcock Fellow in Physical Education, Amherst, 1913-14. Instructor in
Physical Education, Ohio Wesleyan, 1914-15. Instructor in Physical Educa-
tion, Ohio State College, 1915-17. Graduate Work at Harvard Summer School,
1913-16 and 1920-22. Associate Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education,
Amherst, 1917-247 Professor, 1924-.
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CHARLES HILL MORGAN, II, Delta Kappa Epsilon
Assistant Professor of Fine Arts.
B.A., Harvard, '245 M.A., '265 Ph.D., '28.
John Harvard Fellow, second semester, 1926-27. Study at the American
School of Classical Studies at Athens, Greece, 1928-29. Instructor in Fine
Arts, Bryn Mawr, 1929-39. Appointed Assistant Professor of Fine Arts at
Amherst, 1930-. Member of the American Numismatic Society and of the
Archaeological Institute of America. Visiting Professor at the American
Classical School in Athens, Greece.
DAVID MORTON, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of English.
B.S., Vanderbilt, '09.
Ten years in newspaper and magazine work after graduation. Asso-
ciate Professor of English, Amherst, 1924-265 Professor, 1926-. Author: "Noc-
turnes and Autumnals," "The Renaissance of Irish Poetry," "A Man of Earth,"
"Shorter Modern Poems: an Antho1ogy," "Six for Them: an Anthology" and
"Earth's Processional." Member of the Poetry Society of America and of the
Poets, New York.
WILLIAM JESSE NEWLIN, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Philosophy and Secretary of the Faculty.
B.A., Amherst, '995 M.E., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 'Ulg M.A.,
Amherst, '035 A.M., Harvard, '06.
Walker Instructor of Mathematics at Amherst, 1902-05. Shattuck Scholar
in Mathematics, Harvard, 1905-06. Assistant Professor of Mathematics and
Philosophy, Amherst, 1905-075 Associate Professor, 1907-095 Professor, 1909-.
Student at Oxford University, 1912-13. War Work Council, Y. M. C, A., 1918.
Division Chief, Army Educational Corps, A. E. F., 1919. Director of Educa-
tion, Serbian Relief Commission, 1920. Received Cross at St. Sava from King
Alexander, 1920.
LAURENCE BRADFORD PACKARD, Delta Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Anson D. Morse Professor of History.
A.B., Harvard, '095 Ph.D., '21,
Graduate Student and Austin Teaching Fellow at Harvard, 1909-135
Rogers Travelling Fellow, 1911-12. Instructor in History, University of Roch-
ester, 19l3-l55 Assistant Professor, 1915-195 Professor, 1915-25. U. S. Army
1917-195 served with 78th Division, Military Intelligence and Siberian Expe-
dition. Professor of History, Amherst, 1925-285 Anson D. Morse Professor of
History, 1928-. Visiting Professor at Yale, 1929-30, Wesleyan, 1932. Author:
"Russia and the Dual Alliance," 19205 "The Commercial Revolution," 1927,
"The Age of Louis XIV," 1929. Associate Editor, "The Berkshire Studies in
European History."
HAROLD HENRY PLOUGH, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Xi
Rufus Tyler Lincoln Professor of Biology.
B.A., Amherst, '135 lV1.A., Columbia, 'l55 Ph.D., '17,
Graduate work at Columbia, 1914-17. University Fellow in Zoology,
1916-17. Instructor in Biology, Amherst, 1917-195 Associate Professor, 1919-245
Professor, 1924-. Commissioned Second Lieutenant, Sanitary Corps, and In-
structor in Bacteriology, Yale Army Laboratory School, 1918-19. Research at
Stazione Zoologica, Naples, 1927-28. Author of technical articles on Genetics
in various scientific publications.
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HOMER FRANKLIN REBERT, Kappa Sigma, Phi
Professor of Latin.
B.A., Franklin and Marshall College, '12y M.A., 'l9p Ph.D., Cornell, '23,
Beta Kappa
A. A. G. O., 1916 and F. A. G. O., 1917. Scholar in Latin and Greek,
Cornell University, 1920-21. Combined Fellowships in Greek and Latin,
1921-22. American Academy in Rome, 1922-24. F. A. A. R., 1924. Appointed
Associate Professor of Latin at Amherst, 1927-307 Professor of Latin, 1930-.
College Orqanist and Choir Master, 1929-33. Author: "Oui and Cum Clauses
in Se-neca's Moral Epist1es," "The Temple oi Concord in the Roman Forum,"
CLARENCE DANA ROUILLARD, Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Beta Kappa
herst, 1927-. Fellow of the C. R. B. Foundation, Brussels, Belgium, 1930-31.
and "Virgil and Those Others." Orqanist, 1934-.
ELLSWORTH ELLIOTT RICHARDSON, Alpha Delta Phi
Instructor in Physical Education.
B.A., Amherst, '27g M.A., '32.
Edward Hitchcock Fellow in Physical Education, 1927-29. Appointed In
structor in Physical Education at Amherst, 1929-.
Instructor in French.
B.A., Bowdoin, '24g A.M., Harvard, '25,
Instructor in French at Harvard, 1925-27. Instructor in French at Am-
WILLIAM TINGLE ROWLAND, Kappa Alpha tSouthern1
Professor of Latin.
B.A., Kentucky Wesleyan, '02y M.A., Vanderbilt, '077 Ph.D., Columbia, '18,
Assistant in Greek, Vanderbilt, 1907. Principal of Private School, Texas,
1907-09. Professor of Latin, Polytechnic College, Texas, 1910. Instructor in
Classical School of Education, University of Chicago, 1910-127 Graduate study
at the University of Chicago, 1910-135 at Columbia, 1913-15. Instructor in
Latin, Hunter College, New York City, 1915-17. Assistant Professor of Greek.
Oueen's University, 1918-19. Associate Professor of Latin, Amherst, 1920-267
Professor, 1926-.
Twenty-one
WALTER ARTHUR RUDLIN
Visiting Lecturer in Political Science and Economics on the Iohn Woodruff
Simpson Foundation.
Graduated from the London School of Economics of the London Uni-
versity, 1931. Research Assistant to Prof. Laski at London School of Eco-
nomics, 1931-32. Research work at Royal School of International Affairs,
1932-34. Appointed Visiting Lecturer in Political Science and Economics on
the Iohn Woodruff Simpson Foundation, 1934-35. Published: "The Growth of
Fascism in Great Britain."
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EDWARD DWIGHT SALMON, Delta Upsilon
Associate Professor of History.
B.S., University of Rochester, 'l7g A.M., Harvard, '23, Ph.D., Harvard,
1934.
Graduate student at Harvard, 1922-28. Served in U. S. Army in A. E. F.,
First Lieutenant, A. G. D., Division Headquarters, 78th Division, 1917-19. As-
sistant in History, Harvard, 1923-257 Instructor of History, Harvard, 1925-265
Instructor of History, Amherst, 1926-295 Assistant Professor, 1929-345 Associate
Professor, 1934-. Author: "Imperial Spain," 1931. Member of the American
Historical Association.
ANTHONY SCENNA, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in German.
B.A., Amherst, '27y M.A., Columbia, '29.
Graduate study at Columbia University, 1927-29, and the University of
Frankfort, 1929-30. Instructor in German, Columbia University, 1927-29, and
the University of Buffalo, 1930-31. Appointed Instructor in German at Am-
herst, 1931-.
OSCAR EMILE SCHOTTE, Sigma Xi
Assistant Professor of Biology.
D.Sc., Geneva, '25.
Graduated from Imperial Russian State Gymnasium, 1913. Licencie es
sciences, Geneva, 1920, D. Sc., 1925. Instructor at the Institut de Zoologie et
1 d'Anatonomie Comparee of Geneva University, 1920-28. Rockefeller Founda-
, tion at the University of Freiburg, 1928-31. Research Fellow at Freiburg,
1931-32. Research Fellow at Yale University, 1932-34. Appointed Assistant
Professor of Biology at Amherst College, 1934-. Member of the Societe Suisse
de Zoologie and of the American Zoological Society. Member of the Cor-
poration of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole. Research papers
published in fields of Regeneration and of Experimental Embryology.
CHARLES LAWTON SHERMAN, Phi Beta Kappa
Associate Professor of Latin.
A.B., Harvard, '17g Licencie-Lettres, Grenoble, '20p Ph.D., Harvard, '28.
Lieutenant in the Engineering Corps, American Expeditionary Forces,
1917-19. Associate Professor of Greek and Latin, Ohio Wesleyan University,
1920-22. Instructor in French, Harvard, 1922-23. Instructor in Greek and
Latin, 1923-29. Appointed Associate Professor of Latin, Amherst, 1929-.
FRANK HERBERT SMITH, Phi Delta Theta
Parmly Billings Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education.
B.A., Amherst, '93p M,D., University of Pennsylvania, '98.
Practiced medicine in Hadley, Mass., 1900-29. Appointed Parmly Billings
Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education at Amherst, 1929-. Member of
the Massachusetts Medical Society and the American Medical Society.
'Twenty-two
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HARRY DE FOREST SMITH, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Class of 1880 Professor of Greek.
B.A., Bowdoin, '9lp A.M., Harvard, '96g M,A., Amherst, '12,
Taught at Rockland, Maine, 1891-1895. Graduate Work at Harvard,
1895-96, and at the University of Berlin, 1896-97. Instructor in Greek at the
University of Pennsylvania, 1897-98. Instructor in Ancient Language, Bow-
doin, 1898-995 Assistant Professor of Greek, 1899-1901. Associate Professor
ot Greek, Amherst, 1901-037 Professor of Greek, 1903-.
THEODORE SOLLER, Gamma Alpha, Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa
Assistant Professor of Physics.
B.A., Oberlin, '22g M.A., University of Wisconsin, '24g Ph.D., '3l.
Graduate Assistant in Physics, University of Wisconsin, 1923-25 In
structor in Physics, 1925-28. Appointed Instructor in Physics at Amherst
1928-31p Assistant Professor, 1931-.
ATI-IERTON HALL SPRAGUE, Delta Upsilon
Associate Professor of Mathematics.
B.A., Amherst, '20g M.A., Princeton, '23,
Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst, 1920-22. Graduate Work at Prince-
ton, 1922-23. Instructor in Mathematics, Amherst, 1923-24. Graduate work at
Princeton, 1924-25. Instructor in Mathematics, Amherst, 1925-26. Associate
Professor, 1926-. Dean of Freshmen, 1928-33.
WILLARD HARRIS STEARNS, Alpha Delta Phi
Instructor in French.
B.A., Amherst, '32p M. A., Columbia, '33.
"Assistant d'Anglois" at Nimes, France, 1933-34.
WILLIAM WARREN STIFLER, Gamma Alpha, Sigma Xi
Professor of Physics.
Twenty-three
B.A., Shurtleff College, '02, M.A., University of Illinois, '08g Ph.D., ll.
Fellow in Physics, University of Illinois, 1906-07, and 1910-11. Professor
of Chemistry and Physics, Ewing College, 1902-06. Instructor in Physics,
Columbia University, 1911-17. Head of Department of Physics and Dean of
Pre-medical School, Peking Union Medical College, China, 1917-22. Visiting
Professor of Physics, Canton Christian College, China, 1922-23. Research
study, Harvard, 1923-24. Acting Professor of Physics, Williams, 1924-25. As-
sociate Professor of Physics, Amherst, 1925-315 Professor, 1931-. Fellow of
American Physical Society and Fellow of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science. Author of articles on Physics in the Physical Re-
view and other scientific iournals.
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GEORGE ROGERS TAYLOR
ssociate Professor of Economics
Ph.B., University of Chicago, '2lp Ph.D., '29
Instructor, Department of Economics of the University of Iowa, 1921. Act
ing Professor of Economics, Earlham College, 1923. Instructor in Economics at
Amherst 1924-27' Assistant Professor 1927-29- Associate Professor 1929
IOI-IN RICHMOND THEOBALD
Instructor in English
BA Oxford 25 MA 28 STM Union Theological Seminary 29
Graduate study at Oxford 1925 28 English Fellowship to the Union
Theological Seminary, 1928-29. Lecturer in English at Oueen's University
1929-30. Instructor in English, Amherst, 1931-. Published poems in the Ox
ford Poetry Magazine and the Oxford Outloos. Winner of the Oxford Outlook
Prizes 1928
FREDERIC LINCOLN THOMPSON Delta Kappa Epsilon
Winkley Professor of History
BA Amherst 97 MA Harvard 07
Instructor in the Pennsylvania Institute for the Blind 189293 Kings
School Stamford Conn 1893 95 in Sachs Institute New York City 1895
tory at Harvard 1906 07 Associate Professor of History at Amherst 1907 09
Professor 1909 Director Foyer du Soldat 1-irst French Army 191819
Member of the American Historical Society and the American Political ScxenCe
Association Fellow of the American Geographical Society Officer de lIn
struction Publique de la Republigue Francaise
CHARLES'1-IANSEN TOLL, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Philosophy and Psychology
BA Hamilton 04 AM Harvard 05 PhD Freiburg 1 B 09
Graduate work at Harvard 190406 Iohn Harvard Fellow 1906 08
Graduate study at the University of Berlin and Freiburg, i. B., 1907-09 A
sistant Professor of Philosophy at Amherst, 1909-125 Associate Professor 1912
23' Professor 1923-. Commissioned First Lieutenant and later Captain Sant
tary Corps. Chief Psychological Examiner, Camp Custer, 1918. Major Sam
tary Corps Res., 1922
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1903. Graduate study in Paris, 1903-05. Harvard, 1905-07. Assistant in His-
. - , D sl
FREDERICK KING TURGEON, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa
Assistant Professor of French.
B.A., Bowdoin, '23g A.M., Harvard, '24g Ph.D., '29,
Instructor in French at Harvard, 1924-26. Appointed Instructor in French
at Amherst, 1926-305 Assistant Professor, 1930-.
Twenty-four
COLSTON ESTEY WARNE, Kappa Delta Rho, Artus
Associate Professor of Economics.
B.A., Cornell. '2Og M.A., '2lg Ph.D., University of Chicago, '25.
Instructor in Economics at Cornell, 1920-21: University of Pittsburgh,
1921-22. Assistant in Economics at the University of Chicago, 1922-25. As-
sociate Professor of Economics, University of Denver, 1925-26. Assistant Pro-
fessor of Economics, University of Pittsburgh, 1926-29. Associate Professor of
Economics, Amherst, 1930-. Author: "The Consumers' Cooperative Movement
in lllinois," 1926.
ALFRED GEORGE WHEELER, Phi Delta Theta
Associate Professor of Physical Education.
B.A., Oberlin, '22.
Instructor and Coach at Manual Arts High School, Los Angeles, California
1923-24. At Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa, 1925-26. Instructor in Physical
Education at Amherst, 1927-295 Associate Professor, 1929-.
GEORGE FRISBIE WHICHER, Theta Delta Chi, Phi Beta Kappa
Samuel Williston Professor of English.
B.A., Amherst, '1Oy M.A., Columbia, '11, Ph.D., 'l5.
University Scholar in English, Columbia, 1911-127 University Fellow, 1913.
Instructor in English, University of Illinois, 1913. Associate Professor of Eng-
lish, Amherst, 1915-225 Professor, 1922-. Editor of the Amherst Graduate
Quarterly, 1919-32. '
ROBERT BYRON WHITNEY, Delta Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma X1 Phi
Lambda Upsilon
Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
B.A., University of Minnesota, '24p Ph.D., '27,
Research Assistant and Instructor in Chemistry at the University of Mm
nesota, 1927-28. Instructor in Chemistry, Northwestern University, summer
session, 1928. Instructor in Organic Chemistry and Research, Harvard and
Radcliffe, 1928-30. Instructor in Chemistry at Amherst, 1930-. Member of the
American Chemical Society and of the American Association for the Ad
vancement of Science.
RALPH COPLESTONE WILLIAMS, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of French.
B.A., Iohns Hopkins, 'O8p Ph.D., '17,
Twenty-five
Instructor in French, Ohio State University, 1918-19, Assistant Professor,
1919-21. Assistant Professor of French, Iohns Hopkins, 1921-25. Associate
Professor of French at Amherst, 1925-27, Professor, 1927-. Author: "The Theory
of the Heroic Epic in Italian Criticism of the Sixteenth Century," Chicago,
19207 "The Simplified Essentials of First Year French," 1924, "A Bibliography
of the Seventeenth Century' Novel in France," 1931, "The Merveilleux in the
Epic," 1925. Articles in Romantic Review, Modern Philology, Modern Lan-
guage Notes.
SAMUEL ROBINSON W LlAMS, Theta Xi, Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Physics on the Eliza I. Clark Folger Foundation.
'l6g D.Sc., Grinnell, '28' M.A. at Amherst '34,
Graduate work at the University of Nebraska, 1901-031 University of
Berlin, 1903-057 Columbia, 1905-06. Private Research Assistant and Instructor
Barnard College, 1906-08. Professor and Head of Department of Physics
Oberlin, 1908-24. Professor of Physics, Amherst, 1924-. Civilian Appointed
as Engineer in the Bureau of Air Craft Production 1918. Fellow of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science and of the American
Physical Society.
FREDERICK SCOULLER ALLIS, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Secretary of the Alumni Council and Secretary of the Corporation.
B.A., Amherst, 931 M.A., 25.
Graduate study at Law School of Harvard University. Admitted to the
Pennsylvania bar, 1897. Practiced Law at Erie, Pa., and in New York:
engaged in business in the West until 1913. Appointed First Secretary of
the Alumni Council at Amherst 1914-.
CHARLES AMOS ANDREWS, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Beta Kappa
Treasurer of the College.
B.A. Amherst '95,
Taught school, Latin and French, Holyoke High School, 1895-98. With
Penn Mutual Life lnsurance Co. Boston 1898-1907. Member of Massachusetts
House oi Representatives, 1904-06, where he was a member of the Committee
on Codification of Railroad Laws and a Special Commission on Taxation.
Deputy Commissioner of Corporations and Taxations, Commonwealth of
Massachusetts 1907-15. In commercial business 1915-21. Connected with
investment banking, 1921-1. Treasurer of Amherst College, 1931-.
CHARLES HOWARD CADIGAN, Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Director of Religious Activities.
B.A., Amherst, '27g B.D., Virginia Theological Seminary, 30.
Assistant Coach oi Football, Episcopal High School, Alexander, Va.
1927-287 Coach of Basketball, 1927-28. Student Secretary, National Student
Council ot the Episcopal Church, 1928-29. Rector of Grace Church, Amherst
1930-. Appointed Director of Religious Activities at Amherst, 1930-.
ROBERT STILLMAN FLETCHER, Chi Psi
Otis Librarian.
B.A., Amherst, '97,
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Ph.B., Grinnell, 'Ulf M.A., University of Nebraska, '03, Ph.D., Columbia,
Connected with the Buffalo Libraryg the Carnegie Library, Bradford, Pa.,
the Brooklyn Libraryg and The Carnegie Library, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1898-1908.
Assistant Librarian, Amherst, 1908-115 Otis Librarian, 1911-.
Twenty-six
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Assistants on the Faculty
HARMON IARVIS KELSEY, Reg.P. ........ ......... A ssistant in Chemistry
GEORGE WILLIAM LOW, Ir., M.A. ........ .......... A ssistant in Chemistry
WALTER CHARLES MARKERT, B.S. ...... ........ A ssistant in Botany'
CARL EMIL MEYER, M.D. ................. ....... A ssistant in Biology'
SYLVAN MERYL ROSE, B.A. ..... ........ A ssistant in Biology
HENRY HUNTER SMITH, M.S. ...... ....... A ssistant in Physics
Teaching Fellows
CHARLES KILBOURNE BUMP, Ph.D. ...... ........... T eaching Fellow in Chemistry
RICHARD DALE HUMPHREY, M.A. ............................ Teaching Fellow in History
ARTHUR ROBERT SAYER, M.A. .... Teaching Fellow in Physics and Astronomy
HENRY FRANKLIN WILLIAMS, M.A. .......................... Teaching Fellow in History
Twenty-s ven
Fellows
FREDERICK CHARLES BARGHOORN, B.A. ...... ........ H arvard University
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
RICHARD OLIPHANT DIEFENDORF, B.A.
Iohn Woodruff Simpson Fellow
WOOSTER PHILIP GIDDINGS, B.A. ........ .
Iohn Woodruff Simpson Fellow
.........Columbia University
University
PHILIP TRUMAN IVES, M.A. ............................ California Institute oi Technology
Rufus B. Kellog University Fellow
EDWARD TUDOR LAMPSON, M.A. .............. .
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
, ...,... Harvard University
WINSTON BARNES LEWIS, B.A. ............... .................,............. H arvard University
Amherst,MemoriaI Fellow in History, and Roswell Dwight Hitchcock
Fellow
CLIFFORD LEE LORD, M.A. ............................ .
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
. ....... Columbia University
CHARLES KING MCKEON, B.A. .................................,. ....... U niversity of Virginia
Forris Iewett Moore Fellow in Philosophy
WALTER IOSEPH MURPHY, B.A. ........................ ....................... A rnherst College
Edward Hitchcock Fellow
GEORGE FRANKLIN NOSTRAND, B.A. ..... ....... U nion
Iohn Woodruff Simpson Fellow
Theological Seminary
PHILIP POTTER, B.A. ...,.......................................... ........ H arvard University
Forris Iewett Moore Fellow in History
ROBERT OSHER SCHLAIFER, B.A. .............. .
Special Fellow in History
LUTHER ELY SMITH, Ir., B.A. ................ .
Iohn Woodruff Simpson Fellow
IOSEPH ANTHONY VARGUS, Ir., B.A. ............ .
Iohn Woodruff Simpson Fellow
PAUL LANGDON WARD, M.A. ....................... .
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
HAROLD LAWSON WARNER, Ir., B.A. ..... .
Iohn Woodruff Simpson Fellow
........Harvard University
University
.Cambridge University, England
.... . ...Harvard University
.......,Yale University
DAVID WILLCOX WOODWARD, B.A. .............. ........ H arvard University
Forris Iewett Moore Fellow in Chemistry
Twenty-eight
CLASSES
4 Hifcbcock Field
En E
gf: Wfi4L
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ALBERT F. WINSTON
President
JUNICDRS
a-- -un Y -.
Thirty
Officers of the Class of 1936
ALBERT FLANAGAN WINSTON ......... .......................... P resident
WALTER BUTLER MAHONY, Ir. ....... ........... S ecreiary-Treasurer
CHARLES EDGAR PHRAENER, Ir. ...... ...................... C horequs
Thirty-one
ALLEN ABERCROMBIE. AAG
Turners Falls, Mass.
"Ahern is What they call him, cmd he is the
mighty atom of his delegation. Being of a re-
served nature we don't hear about what Allen
does, but all those who have lived with him
know him to be dependable and capable, and
willing in an unassuming way to do more than
his share in all house and college functions.
GEORGE KELBY ALLISON. QPKNI'
Brooklyn. N. Y.
lt is evening and a lean lad shuffles into the
living room with a troubled look. This is Allison,
and he is busy managing something. It he looks
glum it is because he is in training for track
and this suppresses him. However, he is always
glad to put aside business when a chance pre-
sents itself to gripe about things.
THEODORE IOHN ALBERTOWICZ
Northampton. Mass.
"Albie", Arnherst's largest embryonic doctor,
besides being a good student, has distinguished
himself by his noble efforts to arrive in Amherst
daily to grace the benches of several varsity
squads to which he belongs. Despite his size,
women instill him with so much fear that he has
not yet made use of Northampton's advantages.
We are sure that the future will hold much of
and for him.
IOHN FISHER ARMSTRONG. IR.. QEFA
San Antonio, Texas
From San Antonio, "Where the sunshine
spends the winter" and Armstrong spends the
summer, came the most recent reincarnation of
Don Quixote. He has kept up an unrelenting
search for a Sancho Panza to accompany him
every place-'from the Greeks to Mexico. After
hearing a partial history oi his varicolored ad-
ventures, We never hope to understand this
paradoxical bloom of Southern chivalry.
I
Thirty-two
CHARLES KINGSLEY ARTER IR ALI'
Lyndhurst Ohxo
An Arter IS a useless luxury Not so the
or1g1nalArter large generous 1ll shaven spend
mg elghteen hours a day eatmg and sleeptng
crowdmg much 1nto baggy tweeds and the Oth r
S1X hours Thmgs closest to h1s heart are hxs
stomach and Cleveland whence come many
Arlers and letters tn Vlolel hand Nonchalant
ly he rambles through H1story reports ready for
bed at mne thxrty
Momstown N 1
He collects anythlng from numlsrnahc varxetles
to phonograph records fexcept occasxonal small
personal debtsl I-hs favonte occupatton IS bull
mg about baseball wxth Iohn Sh1elds and trymg
to show thls conhrfned Hooverle why the Re
publ1cans are lost tn a fog but lxke all Soc1al1sts
cannot be understood He used to exercxse o
the Frosh ball team but was not appreclat d
there
I-'RITZ WALTER BALDWIN AAG
Bradenton I-'la
Baldwm the man of two worlds present some
tlmes 1n body but h1s spmt 1S down Souf where
tt 15 always 78 and clear A potenual m1l1tary
gemus from Culver Frltz tn odd moments quxte
odd mxght even run through a manual ot arms
for us Whose arms we shall dlscreetly leave
unsald Hes a thoroughly likeable gentleman
athletlcally mclmed though not a scholar
O11 Cxty Pa
Ice appears to hop and sk1p about 1n a per
petual fog due both to his eternal quest for a
Joke that others besxde hzrnself wtll laugh at and
h1s longmg o be once agam Wxth h1s beloved
partners 1n crxme the Alpha Delts He has a
dehmte llterary bent a flare for wrmng on the
Lookmg back on those grand old days at Deer
held pattern
Thtrty three
GEORGE PETER BARBAROW. IR.. ATA IOSEPH WILSON BARR. IR.. AKE
DONALD LORD BARTLETT, IR.. AACD
New Britain. Conn.
There are many who work hard and talk
about ity there are many who work little and
talk about ity there are few who work hard. It
is in this last group that Don fits. The talking
is reserved for some of the most humorous sar-
castic remarks possible, remarks which, though
continual, are given and to be taken lightly,
coming from a most likeable fellow.
HERMAN KISSAM BEACH. IR.. QFA
Bridgeport, Conn.
"Popeye" the sailor man spends most of his
time down at the Chem. Lab. Nevertheless, he
has given us plenty of opportunity to know him.
You should hear his tales of the factory picnics
in the Bridgeport Metal Works. He is quiet and
industrious, with an infinite love of practical
jokes-inspired by his roommate-as his sole
virtue.
EDWIN BORTHWICK BARTOW. QAG
Northport, N. Y.
A head of unruly, blond hair, a boyish gleam
of rnerriment in his eyes, introduces Ed Bartow,
most busy over nothing-and most worried over
doing it. His many achievements in class and
on campus mark him for success. A weakness
for spelling, dates at both colleges, misplacing
coats, and a quaint vocabulary make Ed a most
entertaining, yet thought-provoking chap.
ERNEST ANTON BECKER. IR.. XID
Bristol. Conn.
"Ernie" arrived in town with a suitcase in
each hand, a look of innocence in each eye, and
a large halo around his head. This year, "Ernie"
is taking "Bug" under the guiding genius of
Professor Glaser: consequently the halo has
slowly but surely diminished into an almost im-
perceptible flicker. Rumor now has it that Ernie
indulged in the telling of a dirty joke-tafter all,
Erniell
Thirty-four
RONALD STEWART BECKETT. ATA
Purchase. N. Y.
"Captain Hoii-nann", the ascetic of the Delt
House, lives on a reputation established fresh-
man year when he ordered root beer at Rahar's.
Besides stretching his lengthy limbs as leader of
the Harriers, Ronny dashed down from Vermont
this October, setting a new low time from
Burlington to South Hadley. And it his hours
spent in Labs were laid end to end, they would
add up to two science majors.
ROBERT CARY BIELASKI. ATA
Great Neck. N. Y.
Name: Robert Cary Bielaski iThe Greatl. Pro-
fession: Student ot the social sciences, and junior
partner of the firm, Hecht G Bielaski. Athletics:
Accomplished racketeer, amateur boxer lsee
Hickeyl. Claims to Fame: Renders "There's
Something about a Soldier" exquisitely: charter
member of "Man bite the Dog Club"-Hecht's
thoroughbred Achilles was the victim.
MARCUS GILBERT BEEBE. AY
Wakefield. Mass.
"Beeb" is the type of fellow that one cannot
help liking. His Wellhbalanced personality is not
only known to his classmates, but also seems to
attract considerable attention in Haven House.
Besides being a reliable authority on big league
baseball and pro hockey Knot to mention the
"Boost Boston Club"l he is an ardent supporter
of basketball. He is a true friend.
LEWIS MIDDLETON BLACK. BGTI
Great Neck. N. Y.
Not a commonplace individual, Midcly has a
way of enjoying movies and talking in his sleep
all his own. He shouts with glee when Minne-
sota Wins at football. This seems strange, but
numerous letters, post-marked Minneapolis, from
the most beautiful girl of all, explains ity also
his studying harder, having an Ec paper printed,
and being deemed the most efficient secretary
Beta ever had prove it.
Thirty-tive
t
HOWARD BROOKS BOSWORTH. X112
Auburn. R. I.
Radio has its "Wanna buy a duck" person-
ality, while here we have "Wanna bet" Bos-
worth affectionately known below the Notch as
"Brooks" or "Howie." Hts establishment of a
ward at the Bellevue Hospital stamps him as a
coming humanitarian and philanthropist. Happy-
go-luclcy he was, is, and always will be.
WILLIAM STERETT BOWMER
Louisville. Ky.
Bill is an April child, gay today and sad to-
morrow. When he is in a welter of dejection,
he is as sociable, as Swift in a homocidically,
misanthropic mood, though when his spirits are
exalted he is as amiable as Saint Francis. His
potentialities are immeasurable, and his caustic
Wit is inexhaustible. Someday he'll retire and
create the greatest novel of the language.
IOHN BOWDITCH. III, ATA
Poland. Ohio
When you pour a scrappy end, a conscientious
and successful student, a member of Mrs. Clark's
switchboard crew, an Amherst night-watchman,
and a Grade A-l poker player this lone vicel
into a stein and shake well, the mixture com-
bines to give one a pretty fair portrait of lohnny
Bowditch. His seriousness, thoroughly likeable
in him, is certain to produce success for him
wherever he goes.
THEODORE CHILDS BOYDEN. NPY
Deerfield. Mass.
This scion of an ancient, honorable, and con-
servative family came to us a meticulous and
scrupulous person, both as to finances and to
morals. But Ted soon discovered that soft collars
were better than stiff, and that the lighter side
of life offered its attractions. Ted soon became
House manager, member of the Sphinx and Lib-
eral Clubs, and a budding, young, argumenta-
tive Socialist.
Thirty-six
IOSEPH PATRICK BOYLE ARE
East Mauch Chunk Pa
There was ease rn Caseys manner as he slept
lnto h1s place
There was pnde tn Casey s bearmg and a smxle
on Caseys lace
Ernest Thayer s lmes become doubly srgnlhcant
as we percetve ln them a perfect portraxt of Ioe
Boyle a scrappy and phtlosophtc son of Erm
Not only does loe shrne on the d1amond but also
upholds a 300 battmg average wh1le Jugglmg
d1shes mn the Deke Cafetena
ALLEN BROWN XII?
Nashua N H
Al has upheld the standards of good old
Nashua New Harnpshrre and tn case you dont
know they are pretty hrgh Prxmarlly he IS a
student of the old school studies Latm and ren
ders lt par excellence l-le IS very steady one
of the best qualxtles tn thxs good gent
GEORGE TREAT BRISTOL IR AY
Mountcnnvxlle N
One of these llttle mighty men George
known to h1s colleagues on the Student
Scoop When he came to College he was all
newspaper and stzll 1S but now he has gradu
ated to w1eld1ng the Brxstol pen rn edltorxal lash
ron We remember hun best bendlng over hrs
typewnter green v1sor upon h1s brow-sa plcture
fellow
RAYMOND KEITH BRYANT QKXP
Lockport N Y
From the left bank of the good old Ene Barge
Canal came our Rayray our Cutes our person
al1ty boy complete wrth an adorable srnlle curly
hart and sparkhng eyes To the dtsmay of most
of the womens colleges 1n the country he pre
fers romance v1car1ously via the s1lver screen
Recently he overcame h1s bashfulness and
blazed a comet lrke tra1l across the Masquers
honzon
Thxrty seven
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ALLAN R. BUCKMAN. IR.. AAQ
Summit. N. I.
Three years ago this blond Apollo slid down
from the Summit cmd flashed his archaic smile
on 'Amherst We liked it-to say nothing of
those blond Venuses in Smith. But this transi-
tional movement enabled us to come into con-
tact with a personality versatile in every line,
and We shall all regret the day that he returns
to his towering perch in Summit.
GEORGE BRINTON BURNETT. IR.. QIPTA
Amherst, Mass.
Below we have the handsomest man in the
Fiji House, and a geology major, at that. George
has succeeded in securing for himself a posi-
tion as manager of track, while striving to throw
the hammer at the same time. Blessed with a
good bass voice, George has quickly earned the
esteem of his classmates, and is regarded a
leader in his fraternity.
WILLIAM AUSTIN BUECHNER, AKE
East Orange, N. I.
Governor Dummer produced Bill, but it is
doubtful if said Academy is responsible for his
unbounded enthusiasms and his endless re
sources of energy. Since freshman year he has
been devotedly absorbed in swimming, and as a
result recently scored eight points against Army
in the distance swims. His activities do not
cease here, for he is running Dave out of busi-
ness with his laundry trade.
PARKE WOLCOTT BURROWS, AAKID
Davenport. Ia.
Six feet three-wide as he is high, and like a
lamb in spite of it all, for which the brothers
have called him "Pee-Wee," he came to us from
Grinnel College, Where he was just as devastat-
ing-as he seems to be in these parts. Among
his activities are Glee Club, football, and track,
in the last of which he holds several college
records.
I
Thirty-eight
EDWARD LADD BUTLER X111
Dedham Mass
Noble and Greenough havmg taught our
Smed the art of hattng women he turned to
the Lord lei! for an outlet Lxkeable popular
cmd a swell fellow Laddte stlll hasnt started
h1s new regxme at Hamp or the Hole Perser
verance cmd ftght have brought results far from
Amhersts socml cxrcles true love A good
man to know lLots ot success Srned D
ROGER CHARLES CARMIEN IR
Iackson Hexqhts N Y
Roger 15 cx brtght boy but somewhat gtven to
unrestramt he lures and drshkes too well But
Roger has o m1nd long nurtured and cultwated
constantly givlng b1rth to good wrt and bltte
satxre Roger has an unsatxable thust for un
derstandmg but the weaknesses of the llesh are
obstacles mdeed But wxthal he IS a philosopher
of eth1cs and ccmnot tolerate atfectahon
l
ROBERT HENRY CARLSON ARE
Hxqqonum Conn
We offer you Wearie W11l1e whose lnter
rmttent bursts of energy dxrect themselves to
cleanmg up the room graspmg the broadest
concepts ot phtlosophy hrstory and geology
wlthout the customary scholastu: annoyance of
detcnl Hts more art1st1c nature 1S expressed by
hls pen fcnr ladles professors etc on notebook
borders when he sleeps not beneath the pro
DANIEL BURT CAUDLE AKE
Rochester N Y
Cosrnopohte ond knowledge quester at present
lmmersed 1n Fords frutt flres photography and
Funnells French self appomted conotsseur of
hqueurs and vlctuals Cawdlell IS noted tor
ctrcurnlocutory valedrctlons and equally verbose
maledxchons on those thmgs that please cmd
dxspleose hrs surpnsmgly acute tastes
Thlrty mne
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IOHN BUSBY CHAMBERLIN, X111
Cambridge. Mass.
This lanky goon known as Buz, the Dip, was
poured from Kenyon College to this institution
two years ago. Once established, he lost no
time in procuring a pair of suede shoes, a sickly
grin, cmd a true zest for knowledge. "Girls,"
he remarked, raising his nose from a dusty vol-
ume and turning his face into the north wind,
"have no place in my life but to serve poster-
ity." fWould you like to Housebreak him?l
PHILIP HYDE CLARKE. AACD
Southbridge. Mass.
Popularly known as "Phil" but privately as
"Little Atlas," he is one of the most widely
known men in our class. In the Fall and
Spring he is found among the first on the grid-
iron or diamond, not a natural athlete, but one
of the most conscientious. His one weakness is
the feminine sex, whose hearts can be numbered
from Boston to "Geojah."
EDWARD CHANDLER. GFA
Brookline. Mass.
"HaI Hal Ha!" cackles the Bar Harbor society
editor with his torrid socks when he tells his
friends about the Damrosches and the A. Atwater
Kents' numerous yachts. But this is not Ed's
ideal in life: he dreams of a Utopia in which
are hung canvasses by Gauguin and Van Gogh
and where echo the strains of Debussy. In the
world of reality, Ed shouts, "Down with ideals."
HAROLD WARREN COBB. B011
Great Neck. N. Y.
"Cobby," man of a thousand moods, came
from the peaceful old halls of Deerfield a guiet
easy-going lad-but now? Well, what could you
expect after being under the studied tutelage of
Burr-his shipmate? "Cobby" sings, aye, verv
well and some day he probably will become a
staid old fellow with a family and those same
peaceful habits of by-gone days.
Forty
HORACE COATES COLEMAN IR APY
Nornstown Pa
The sound of heated argument IS usually en
dence that a wellmtenttoned crowd lS aqam
endeavormq to change a few of lhlS fellows
fxxed xdeas Rock bound prmctples however are
relxeved by h1s abtltty to get along W1th any
one He IS qtfted w1th htgh mtellrqence a sens
of humor and athlettc abtllty 1I1d1cat1ons of a
SHELDON MCGIRR COLLINS
Spnnqheld Mass
Shelly 15 a poet He 15 blessed Wtth all th
vtrtues of such wrthout betnq laden wtth thetr
weaknesses What else but the thrtll of romance
would lead h1m to the Hole and often to
Sprmqfleld on successwe Saturday n1qhts'P lt IS
rumored that somewhere tn Sprrngtleld ltes
Shellys tdeal Love of adventure placed
sptkes on Shellys ne-ophyte feet and spurr d
h1m over the c1nder path
IAMES ROBERT COLLARD ATA
Belchertown Mass
Late to bed and early to nse for sleepznq to
Inn 15 only a nu1sance so he avolds tt as much
as posstble Eatmg too he regards as a neces
sary waste of ttme Itms most lmportant rule 1S
to maxntam hlS mdtvtdualtty h1s ptpe and hts
sm1le Autopszes and s1r1g1ng he emoys The
latter he rehearses regularly 111 Delta Taus t1le
CHARLES WARREN COMBS ATA
Sprmgfxeld Mass
Modest about rt Charley known as Chooch
IS an art1st and guztar player of no mean talent
and may be found anywhere between Sprmq
held and West Hartford the home of the one
woman 1n hrs ltfe Qu1ck on the reparte
occas1onally pulls a good one Thts potenttal
Latin and Greek scholar must do all h1S deep
thmkmq IH dreams consxdermg h1s early to b d
theory
Forty one
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EDGAR LOEWER COON. KIJFA
Woodhaven. N. Y.
Out of Long Island came the pride of the Coon
family with unlimited suavity, a weakness for
the social aspects of life, and fifty suits. His
sojourn in milder climes, envied by his suffering
friends in the North, proved only the "pause that
refreshes" when his acquaintances in this and
colleges nearby welcomed the return this Fall
of the living Esquire.
HENRY CARTER CORSON, GAX
Oakmont. Pa.
Two-hundred pounds of fighting wild-cat-meat:
"da Pittsburgh Kid". "Coach" came to us out of
the snrolce three years ago, and since then We
have heard nothing but Pitt and Weinstock. No
mean football player himself Henry pushed his
way to his numerals, but a knee injury has put
him out of varsity competition. "Coach" is a
friend indeed in his own elephantine way.
RICHARD LAWLOR COOPER. WY
Montclair, N. I.
Seldom is our little college on the hill able to
boast of nurturing such a tried and true youth
as Coops. Broken legs, misplaced vertebrae are
but trivial in his eventful existence. He claims
the unique honor of being the only person with
authoritative proof that he has a brain. We feel
that the family law firm will heartily Welcome
the last edition of the Coopers.
FRONEFIELD CRAWFORD. WY
Wayne, Pa.
This bland, affahle, discreet, young man of un-
ruly locks two years ago left the stringent city
in favor of our fair college. The Fishe's meteo-
ric rise to fame began when he qualified for the
Vendor's Committee. Other spheres of activity
have been the Amherst Bridge Club, stellar cop-
tain of the House eleven, and a record of no
dull moment in his scholarly pursuits.
Forty-two
WILLIAM HENRY CREAMER. Xviv
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Iirnminy Crickets! The problem child! We
hope that the disadvantages of coming from
Brooklyn will be erased by our child's glorious
smile. His only concrete accomplishment is the
pursuit of higher mathematics. Alas, he will
spend the remainder of his college career en-
deavoring to overcome a natural shyness for
the fair sex. Really a good gent at heart.
WILLIAM MERRIAM CROXTON. AAG?
Evanston, Ill.
"Smilax" is his nick-name. Boy, how it fits!
Bill is just one big smile most of the time. Un-
derneath that blushing face of his is something
far greater, however. Even-tempered, convivial,
and hard-working best describe his personality.
While at Amherst he has won the lasting
friendship and respect of all those with whom
he has come in contact.
PAUL NISBET CRITCHLOW. WY
Sewickley. Pa.
Critch may best be depicted by the single
word-versatility. In the Fall on Pratt Field he
gives his all for the football team and in the
spring, Nibby may be found playing a stellar
game on the tennis courts. Except for the fact
that he insists on overcutting, Critch stands in
well with the Administration, in spite of the dif-
ficult pre-med course he is pursuing.
IOHN C. CUSHMAN. IR., AAQ
Upper Montclair. N. I.
The first two years of Iack's sojourn here were
spent gaining a name for himself, not only
among the activities of this college, but also bY
his astute manner of keeping his several fair
ones in complete harmony and ignorance of one
another. This year, however, due to a sudden
aspiration for knowledge or something, we have
been unable to budge him from his desk.
Forty three
KIMBALL DAVIS, GJAX
Boston. Mass.
The genial "Duke" is the possessor of many
talents. Despite his prominent positions on the
Business Board of the Student and the College
Press, "Felix" finds time to visit a certain party
across the river. The bard of Roxbury Latin
School and Freshman Latin prize Winner is also
an authority on orchestras. "Best prizes come in
small packages."
LLOYD PILLSBURY DODGE. AKE
New York. N. Y.
"Give me a wet sheet and a flowing sea" is
the credo of Amherst's amateur yachtsman.
Fortunately, however, fewer obstructions present
themselves on the sea to Llloyd's craft than on
land, as the fenders of his car attest. Fleet oi
foot, fast in I-lamp, flashy in the classroom:
speed is his keynote, for in every respect he is
a "natural."
GUILD DEVERE, X41
Auburn. R. I.
"I-low you mug?" reechoing through the halls
of Phi proclaims that Guild has returned from
another ,weekend, and then begins the tale.
"Whotta woman - - -." Our powerhouse, the
Deb's delight, scatters broken hearts from lames-
town to Washington continually looking for new
fields to conquer. Guild's motto and boast is
"Veni, vidi, vici." As "yes-man" he should be
a success on the stage.
WILBER NOYES EARL. AA-lv
Oneida. N. Y.
No, this isn't an automobile race or a machine
gun corps having target practice, Rabbit is iust
demonstrating, in his own inimitable manner
with gesticulations, antics and sound effects, his
extensive repertoire before an awed audience.
Bi1l's spontaneous humor is the source of infinite
amusement to his brothers, but when the occa-
sion demands he can be a very conscientious
worker.
Forty-four
ALLEN HENRY EHRGOOD, IR., APY
Lebanon, Pa.
lntroducing in this corner the champ "Light-
horse Harry" Ehrgood at 217 pounds. He has
four ambitions at present, namely: to outwrestle
Londos, to own an airplane in order to fly down
to Duke for weekends, to get his hands on the
latest magazine, and to study in graduate school,
Harry is one of the best-natured fellows to ever
hit Amherst and is sure to be successful.
ROBERT DWIGHT PENN, AAQ
Meriden, Conn.
Bob's varied accomplishments and his daily
letter from "home" are envied but not wondered
at by his many close friends. For his natural
ability has been equally matched by true sin-
cerity of purpose and diligent application. "Phi
Bete's" contagious laughter will always remind
classmates of his ever-present, unsophisticated
sense of humor. His is truly a delightfully re-
freshing personality.
WILLIAM PNEUMAN ELLIS, Xtlf
Kingston, Pa.
Here we see "Pneun1ie," the Chi Psi gnome.
His tousled blond hair is his naturalism cropping
out, his sense of humor is borrowed, we think
from the New Yorker: but that smile is his own.
With days of toil behind him spent in Working
for the Masquers, we hope he is started on the
way to contribute his bit to his great love, the
stage.
REGINALD FITZGERALD, AKE
Worcester, Mass.
"Fitzie"-rotund, amiable fellow, sadly in need
of breath and hirsute adornrnent, verbosely re-
lates interminable and indescribably intricate
theories in his sanctum on Mt. Sinai. Typical
Babbitt, he prefers title of "Love Professor,"
wishes it were as broadcast as his reputation for
tippling. His hypotheses are familiar, from Buf-
falo to Boston, on every subject, varying from
insurance to goons.
Forty-tive
OLIVER MEREDITH FLANDERS. ATA
Worcester. Mass.
He and Iohn Shields get along together, main-
ly because they rassle occasionally and wreck
the place. He is on the grunt and grab squad.
but eats too well to make the weight, except as a
good comedian in the Masquers. His answers to
the query, "Little man, what now?" varies, but
is usually confined to some biting remark about
nothing of especial consequence.
RICHARD COLLINS FORMAN. XXII
Alpena. Mich.
Presenting Bull-thrower "Krausi", the brawn
from Alpena Cby cracky!J who prefers the boom
of a symphony's kettle drum to the charms of
Vassar Women. lWell, almostl. His biggest weak-
ness is beating his neighbors unmerciiully at the
movies, especially when a comely blond hoves
to on the screen-they do that to him! Mr. For-
man says, "I like blondesg they are so clean
looking."
EDMUND LITTLETON FOOTE
Montclair, N. I.
From Bates to Amherst-truly a meteoric rise.
But man being an adaptable creature, Ed fell
easily into a routine life of super-squash, Geol-
ogy labs, hard theatre seats, and dial-twisting.
Several forays across the river failed to impress
Ed so he hibernated for the Winter. For further
information apply at the Coffee Shop between
5:30 and 6:00 P. M.
CHARLES HOWELL FOSTER, XID
Nozthhampton, Mass.
Behind the glasses we have Charles Howell
Foster who came to Amherst heralded as one of
the coming poets of our generation, but who
became a geologist and lover "pleinpotentaire."
"Chick" stole a march on us by finding a wo-
man at South Hadley and hurried off to Hoboken
to marry- Why Hoboken, nobody has discov-
ered, but he has now settled down to the life
of a home-loving New Englander.
Forty-six
ROBERT HARRY GARDNER ATA
oak Park m
Last fall an auto stopped before lhe Dell
house and R H G extrrcaled hrmself from a
heap of luggage and zntroduced hrmself Harry
had returned Srnce lhen he has proved lo ihe
brethren ihat he rs slreamlrned mentally for lhe
lrberal educatron and the Sludent shrfts are
handled wrihout fuss yet there rs always trrne
for relaxalron
NORMAN HAROLD GERSON
10 Downrng Street has nothmg on 29 Marn
For here resrdes Professor Garrsone advrsors to
Therr Mcuestres the Ec Department Amrd the
tarnted arr of radrcalrsrn Norm rnarnlams wrth
abnormal courage hrs vrrgm conservcxlrsrrr Norm
rs also versatrle on the dramond and asrde
from other proclrvrlres he can always be counted
on lo provrde a pretty pennys worth of per
mcrous puns
DANIEL GERSEN
Elrzubethtown N Y
Hrs mdrvrdualrty and hrs conscrenscrousness
made Gerk a man of promrnence soon aiiet hrs
arrrval here He delrghts rn hrs experrrnenfrng at
lhe Chem lab and also rn wresllrng wrth mln
cate math problems In hrs spare hours Dan
profrtably uses hrs analytrcal rrrrnd at the brrdge
lable but rn more secluded moments he can
often be found alternplrng to trrsect an angle
ROBERT EWALD GIESE AAG
Bob 1S a good New Englander of the Coolrdge
siamp shrewd and sparrng of speech Wrth a
flair for accomplzshlng easrly whatever rs asked
oi hrm Asrde from frllmg a number of assrgn
ments on Intramural leams he manages as a
rule to drsconcert hrs rrvals rn tenrrrs and squash
whrle cr hrgh average of course bespeaks hrs
rntelleclual actrvrty
F oriy seven
1 A,
Haverhill- MUS5- Wellesley Hills. Mass.
IAMES P. B. GOODELL, WY
Iamestown, N. Y.
From the Wilds of the State of New York came
this gifted youth, staggering under the tremen-
dous handicap of three given names. But de-
spite this he has managed to struggle through
and set up a rather enviable record scholastic-
ally as Well as in extra-curricular activities. The
latter include first presidency of the class and
president of the pre-medical club.
EDWARD NUTE GOODWIN, IR.. AY
Montclair. N. I.
At first we thought it was Hlocomotor ataxia."
but later discovered it to be only an overdevel-
oped case of shuffle-foot. Superficial diagnosis
emanating from Surgeon Sigmund Freud noted
premises for a fine job of empirical metatarsal
metaphysics. Knute bears all this equally dis-
tributed upon his rugged shoulders and man-
ages to be equally blase.
WILLIAM EDWARD GOODMAN, ATA
Warren. Ohio
Bill is potentially an athlete and a scholar, hut
up to the present writing he has preferred to
spend most of his time playing casino and sleep-
ing. Undisputed champion of the house in both
of these, he has also made many friends, who
feel that "Buen Hombre" is no misnorner.
CHARLES PLATT GOSS. XYI'
New Britain. Conn.
How Appleiaclc Abner finds time enough be-
tween "The Saturday Evening Post," "Cosmopoli-
tan," and his homemade radio to do enough
studying to establish himself firmly on the mag-
ical Dean's list is a source of amazement to his
Chi Psi brothers. But that he has, and our hats
are off to this long and lanky gentleman.
Forty -eight
STANLEY MERRILL GOWER. IR., AY
Skowhegan, Maine
Although he isn't a bit "back-woodsy," the
boys make much of Skowy's home town. But no
one can prevail against his inherent good na-
ture, not for a minute. This good looking fel-
low Wastes little time in bantering. His lessons
come first-after that its music. He is abso-
lutely incorruptible, but in no way prudish-an
excellent roommate.
MINOT GROSE. AAG
Great Neck. N. Y.
If he isn't flying or riding horseback, he may
ne seen putting around in his latest acquisition
-Gwendolyn. In the fall Nat is one of the
more important cogs of the soccer team as well
as being an integral part of the band. Anyone
knowing him will agree that he is one of the
best liked and most respected members of the
class.
ALVIN GREIF. IR.
Baltimore, Md.
Al has accomplished the feats of memorizing
quantities of Shakespeare and more recently, the
forty-eight states and capitals. He finds re-
laxation between studies in frequent jaunts to
Wellesley, and in various bull sessions. Anyone
who has the misfortune to fall into an argument
with Al will find himself subject to a devastat-
ing flow of "Greifian illogic."
FRITZ OTTO HAAS, WY
Haverford. Pa.
Mule is one of the Episcopal Accxdemy's
noblest products and the perfect gentleman. His
generosity and good nature are renowned. He
has a habit of taking the most difficult courses
in college and yet coming through without turn-
ing into a grind. We feel sure that his per-
severance and ability will bring him great
success in his chosen field of Chemistry.
Fort y-nine
WILLIAM EWELL HALL. fIvI'A
Newton. Mass.
Biggest Worry in life: Living down the fact
that he comes from conservative Newton. Fa-
vorite Indoor Sport: Sitting on the floor of Emer-
son House surrounded by its bevy of beauties.
Pet Peeve: Girls who call him by his last name.
Customary Pose: Brooding over a piano. Re-
marks: One of the most likeable of fellows and
a staunch friend.
DANIEL BERRIEN HALSTEAD. SAX
Brooklyn. N. Y.
A cloud of bolts, screws, and nuts, the grind-
ing of three cement mixers and "Smokey" and
"Chickadee" are with us again. School Work
comes easily enough to this budding architect
to allow ample time for frequent unpremeditated
journeys to New Haven. "Berries" is possessed
of one of those rare personalities which will take
him a long way when the occasion arises.
WILLIAM HALLER. IR.. AY
Leonia. N. I.
Three years of college have affected a great
change in this extreme intellectual and staunch
supporter of the Third International. At the start
a boisterous horse laugh stamped him with the
name, "Wild Bill." Then it was Rachmaninov
and finally Herzog. Now our Bill has become a
smoothie. A collar clasp is essential. Though
a woman hater thus far, we tear he'll weaken
soon.
GEORGE BURTON HAMILTON. BGJII
Peoria. Ill.
Besides being an ardent fan of Hal Kemp and
Earl Hines, Harnmy is a crackerjack basketball
player, playing on the house team, as well as
touch-football and baseball teams. He will ar-
gue with anybody over the supremacy of the
Middle West in general and Peoria in particular:
and winning that argument, George is off to the
movies or to grind on astronornv or Italian.
Fifty
RICHARD BRUCE HARDING. IR.. BGJH
Brookline. Mass.
A wrestler of some note, poor joker of much
note, man with a Ford, large anatomy, glasses.
and a meaningless laugh. Dick, Brookline's
pledge of innocent security, is staunch, true, and
will give "his last cigar." Generous, affable and
loyal, Dick will carve his way and we wish
him the best o' luck.
EDW. WOODBERRY HARRISON. 1I1KiIf
Indianapolis. Ind.
Ned, the genial cynic, the moderating influ-
ence on our Iunior delegation, the unappreciated
appreciator of Shakespeare. He is beset with
philosophic doubts, especially as regards the
girls' college which should claim his allegience.
Witness his avid correspondence with Smith.
Bryn Mawr, and Bradford I. C. He is prepared
to ride out any storm so keep that sheet anchor
to windward, Mate!
IAMES WILEY HARKER. BGH
Horton. Kansas
Early last fall some of the Brethren were at-
tracted to the music room at the House by the
fast and furious ripples, runs, and fill-ins of the
jazz of one lim Harker. That was how we met
lim. A transfer from Kanas, today, lim is a
well-known figure on the campus, being an ac-
complished actor-and the only pride of Mr.
Theobald's Public Reading class.
HORACE WILSCN HEWLETT. X111
- New Haven, Conn.
In spite of being an activities man, Horace is
actually rather livable if not lovable-but none
of that here. With the long, long years of med-
ical training ahead, "Bud" can't pay an awful
lot of attention to the palpitating feminine hearts
in spite of that perfect profile-which is really
unfortunate for said hearts.
Fifty-one
RUSSELL WILLIAM HIGGINS, X112
Northampton. Mass.
Here We have Russell, "what a man" Higgins.
Russ really had a jump on the rest ot us be-
cause of the hypnotic power emanating from a
big, black pipe. There is not a single woman
who can keep her sangtroid when face to face
with those fumes from Hades. However, Smokey's
chief claim to fame is his stellar play on the
Phi touch-football team.
WILLIAM FOSTER HOMILLER. II. QIJAG
Bryn Athyn. Pa.
Bill came to Amherst as a transfer from the
University of Alabama, and is wont, on occa-
sions, to discourse on the advantages of a
Southern exposure. Alter enjoying the leisure of
the South, Bill was surprised to find that Am-
herst men have to work, but with his usual
adaptability he settled down and his industry
has been suitably rewarded, especially in the
line of sports.
WILLIAM LUNDY HITCHCOCK. GAX
Dedham. Mass.
You would never guess to look at him that this
pachyderm from Dedham swims the 440. He
does, and does it well, too. "Hitche's" other ac-
tivities are enrolled in his amours, and this
means many week-ends to Boston and Dedham.
Bill was once a Chem major, but now is headed
for an honest C?J law practice. I-le should be
goody he argues beautifully.
HERBERT LEONARD HORN
Newburgh. N. Y.
Ever elsewhereing elsewheres or fluttering ner-
vously between his "Nurse from Panama" and
his "Fear" this latest short stories! this high-
pressure romanticist waxes Goethean. Herb has
a quick mind, a facile pen, ever ready laughter,
and a bed four feet too big for him. When not
reading Schopenhauer, he is generally to be
found solving this generation's problems with
"Little Dick".
Fifty-two
GEORGE TAYLOR HOWARD
New York, N. Y.
Hey, fellows, it's Skippy! A nasal holler waits
its way across the campus and up roars Camera
loe with the latest dope on members of this and
nearby institutions. Skippy has come, has seen,
and has got the negative. If anything is hap-
pening, you can count on his being there-if he
can't make it, a couple of his "Stooges" will
cover it.
CHARLES EDWIN HULICK. IR.. XXP
Easton. Pa.
Charlie, the friend of all, the Beau Brummel of
Amherst, is not the light-hearted philanderer you
would expect him to be. Instead, we find him
constantly in pursuit of his desire to solve inter-
national problems, groping through the stacks of
Converse or bending over his desk. This ad-
mirable perseverence will no doubt result in his
gracing a foreign court in ambassadorial knee-
britches.
CRESCENS GARMAN HUBBARD. QKWI'
White Plains. N. Y.
Above, gentlemen, is the portrait of C. G.
Hubbard, a smooth man and a thinker. Look not
for him in the usual dens of vice favored by the
rest of the class, go rather to the nearest radio,
and there find this youthful philosopher, con-
templating the infinite, or explaining to an alas-
too-ignorant audience the merits of somebody or
other's trombone section.
WILLIAM SUMMER IOHNSON. AY
Belleville. N. I.
Bill is right in his element when he's tooting
away on his sax, coaxing out smooth, synco-
pated rhythm. It's not every fellow who can
play his way around Europe, just ask him about
it some time. He's also found time to knock off
a very respectable average placing him on the
Dean's list and an all time berth in the Chem
lab.
Fifty-three
VINCENT KING KEESEY, IR.. NPY
York. Pa,
Vin is one of the most likeable fellows there is
-with always a pleasant smile. l-le is a man
with many accomplishments, a good student, a
versatile athlete with honorable mention in bas
ketball and tennis, and the possessor of a swell
sense of humor. He says he likes good rnusc
but we think he's just dreaming of down Harris-
burg way.
IOHN PEASE KING. QAX
Detroit. Mich.
Three years in Amherst have established
Johnny as an expert in Shakespeare, French and
the art of getting a full night's sleep under dif-
ficulties. I-le accomplishes prodigious feats of
writing although the strain almost gets him ai
times Geez tellers, l'rn a quivering wreckll.
Despite these handicaps, he manages to roll up
a substantial average, and even breaks into the
social whirl.
MATTHEW ARNOLD KELLY. 'PY
New York. N. Y.
Multitudinous activities, interests, and the
Dean's list confront the one who would "bio-
graphize" our Matthew-participating in the
social life, captainships, aquatic records, scho-
lastic prizes and class honors. Yet with all this
there seems to be time to "set and chin," for
behind the rosy countenance and New York
accent there lies a desire to give and take the
best.
ARTHUR KLEIN
Woodbridge. N. 1.
A blond head oi hair atop six feet-two of
stature is a mere physical description of artful
Art, who may be found at the Bug Lab at 10
P. M. cutting open some sweet-smelling cat or
dogtish. But then we can't overlook Art's trips
across the river with A netftel full of good ideas
Cwe hope? at the wheel of an old Ford.
Fifty-four
RAY BROWDY LANDIS
Amherst. Mass.
Not only in dress but also in actual cultural
pursuits does this "smoothie" justify his title as
a gentleman of taste. Experience and observa-
tion give him a very cosmopolitan outlook, an
understanding totally individual to himself. His
pleasing personality and tolerance, an irrefutable
philosophy and reasoning powers will undoubt-
edly conduct this "Amherstonian" to great
achievement.
ALFRED SEYMOUR LAPIDUS
New York. N. Y.
"Put on the sweatshirt," comes Tug's command,
and our diminutive diver knows he is in for an-
other session with the dreaded two-and-a-half.
However, "Lappy" remains Arnherst's ace diver.
The golf links and touch-football gridiron also
attest to Al's prowess as an athlete. His great-
est problem is wrestlingf-with Political Science
and his roommate, neither of which he seems
able to down.
FREDERICK STANLEY LANE, Znd. GJAX
Foxboro. Mass.
"From organ pumper to journalist", sums up
the career of this editor masquerading behind the
above homespun countenance. The boys marvel
at Fred's ability to get A's along with writing
editorials, Wiring news blurbs for the press and
arranging Intramural schedules. In private life
Fred gets a kick out of stopping flying pucks in
winter and bothering Bro. Meyer in all seasons.
EDMOND PETER LARKIN
Northampton, Mass.
Being studious by nature and a commuter by
necessity explains Eddie's absence from Am-
herst's nocturnal and fraternal liie. A North-
ampton lad he found little attraction in the near-
by dens of iniquity, Smith, Mt. Holyoke a:d
Rahar's. His amorous activities extend far and
feminine hearts in Boston and New Iersey have
reacted favorably. His residence in the Chern
and Bug labs precedes a career in Medicine.
Fifty-tive
ROBERT LAWREN
New York, N. Y.
There's an atmosphere of purpose about Bob
that is positively upsetting. He Was, we have
heard, a philosopher, but seems now to prefer
changing the world to being more gentile and
abstract. Otherwise-and that's rather the wrong
word to use, because one of the best things
about Bob is his consistency-he is chiefly occu-
pied in tearing the respectable covers oft Eng-
lish Literature.
IAMES ROGERS LEECH. GAX
Providence. R. I.
This social lion from Providence overwhelms
his Brethren with his abundance of invitations to
deb parties, etc. Despite being Circulation Man-
ager of the Lord left he has found time to corn-
pile an index of his "acquaintances" at Smith
and Vassar-not to mention Pine Manor. How-
ever, we know lim will succeed in the future as
a doctor.
ROBERT EDWARD LEARY
Holyoke. Mass.
What lies beyond those calm features unruffled
by any outside influence? Ah, but we know
that there is a means ot shaking him into a
smile, said "means" making her abode in the
Well known town of Holyoke. His conquests.
however, don't stop merely with the opposite sex,
for "Roby" has the reputation ot being a pretty
fair scholar and is a likeable chap,
EDWIN PAUL LEPPER. GE
Springfield. Mass.
"McGuirk," as he was christened soon after
his arrival in Amherst, is a blond youth whose
first love was painting, adorning the walls of
his friends' rooms with his works of art. When
he is not engrossed in his botanical studies, "El"
may be found engaged in whatever intramural
sport is in season, for he is a most enthusiastic
and proficient supporter of them all.
Fifty-six
STANLEY LEWIS LEVIN
Waterbury. Conn.
When Stan is not proclaiming the benefits of
his Waterbury abode, or attending the nearby
cinema, he may be found in the History Seminar
seated cornplacently under one of Prof. Packard's
700 page assignments. For two years his com-
fortably furnished Pratt residence has been the
scene of many a bridge game and bull-session.
and long remembered hospitality and good fel-
lowship.
NORMAN EDWIN LIMBERG. X111
Leonid, N. I.
"Norm," through the machinations of Roxy,
became a member of the class oi 1936, a for-
tunate break for us. In order to attain all that
Amherst offers in curricular activities, "Norm"
has decided to take phys. Ed. and chorus his
senior vyear. "Norm" has been very happy of
late, and we wish him and "Wish" all the luck
in the world.
IOSEPH SIDNEY LILIENTHAL
Pottsville, Pa.
'Twas on a misty night that there came to me
the booming sound such as that of a vessel lost
at sea. But no-it was the voice of "The Ice,"
intoning the drowsy verses of Keat's "Ode to a
Nightingale" from the majestic pulpit of Iohnson
Chapel. A pleasing sound, indeed. May it
sway the hearts of jurors as it has swayed the
hearts of Smith.
PAUL GEORGE LUND, GFA
Methuen, Mass.
Quiet unless grappling with some willing
brother, studious unless swatting the celluloicl
pellet, indulgent in cream puffs in spite of being
in training for cross-country or wrestling: thus
might that jolly "Fiji" "Cream Puff Luke", be
described. You would think him a bachelor but
some call it fidelity. So a swell gent sticks
with us 'till that end.
Fifty-seven
IOHN PIPER LUTZ. CDFA
Drexel Hill. Pa.
Our pal Iohn leads a very Well rounded life:
activities alone are lacking. With the Four
Horsemen he is unsuppressible. Although an
asset in stag company, Iohn never gives the
feminine hearts a chance to flutter. Seemingly a
quiet lad, he can, however, be characterized by
his deep, hearty laugh. Anyway, he is a
swelled gent.
RICHARD ELMORE MCCORMICK. WY
Manchester. Conn.
Although practically from that metropolis,
Hartford, Mac has not the drugstore spirit, but
that of the great out-of-doors. The result is that
he is a member of the Amherst Ski Club, often
seen digging his Way down Chapel Hill, having
acquired the art of skiing briefly and thoroughly.
This spirit of accomplishment prevacles also from
the classroom to the little ladies in Hamp.
GEORGE THOMAS MCCLELLAND
Larchmont. N. Y.
lt was With some misgivings that George left
Larchmont to come to Amherstf for there was the
Larchmont Volunteer Fire Department which was
almost enough love tor one man to have. But
once with us, George found compensations:
there were Smith and Mt. Holyoke to visit. He
has come to believe that Religion and History
classes under Croc Thompson are worth staying
awake for.
GEORGE E. MCPHERSON, IR.. LDFA
Belchertown. Mass.
Holy Smoke! What a commotion out back of
the Fiji House! Our fire-eating grounds chair-
man has caught another salesman walking on
the grass. Mac is on the job always. A loyal
supporter of the fire department, he is always
oft with the first sound of the alarm. He is
also "oft" for ct couple of other points, namely:
Mt. Holyoke, Simmons, etc.
Fifty-eight
STEPHEN EDWARD MAGILL. XXI'
Holmes. Pa.
From misogynist to social hound in three
years-that is what Amherst has done to Steve.
When he arrived in this quiet village no one
had warned this muscleman what sweet dangers
awaited him in the Connecticut Valley. Hesi-
tantly at first, but with increasing abandon,
Gilly found out for himself and has earned a
reputation as a gentleman, scholar, and good
judge of women.
RAE IAMES MALCOLM, Xfb
Holyoke. Mass.
"Local Boy makes good",--that sums up the
college career of "Rae-Rae" Malcolm, the pride
of Holyoke. Rae is not only a good athlete, but
also a conscientious student and a "swell gent".
His cheery smile has made many friends on all
three campuses. Rae has aquarian interests
such as boathouses and the shores of Paradise.
How about it, Rae?
l
WALTER BUTLER MAHONY. IR., AKE
Scarborough. N. Y.
Cerulean-eyed tennisite, Mahoney by birth,
Maynee by choice, "Pinkie" by us, gliding
through college with astounding ease and am-
biguity. Roseate countenance, cherubic boy-
scoutisrn adapt this dapper gillaroo to clean-life
Christianity, serioso student-councilisrn, sardonic
soccer, sartorial perfection, and Clark House fem'
ininity with equal iacility and studied dissem-
blance.
EDWARD W. MAYNARD. IR.. AAQD
Edqemoor. Del.
Ed "The face that launched a thousand hips"
is a faithful exponent of the proverbial "don't
let your studies interfere with your education,"
and yet he seems to have the ability to do
considerably more than "get by" in his work.
Soccer player extraordinary, bridge player con-
tinually, movie-goer incessantly, and college pro-
fessor twornan'sJ regularly, Ed is a gentleman,
scholar, and athlete.
Fifty-nine
ANDREW B. MELDRUM. IR.. AND
Cleveland. Ohio
One of Cleveland's best, Andy has attained a
high standing on campus, not confining his abil-
ity to any one thing or his personality to any
one group. Numerous activities and accomplish-
ments have made him a wide group of friends.
From touches of light-hearted sarcasm to mo-
ments of deep and mature thought, Andy has
always shown us a personality of infinite var-
iety.
GEORGE STANLEY MOSS
Brooklyn. N. Y.
George spends much of his time splashing
through the waters of Pratt Pool, swimming he-
ing his favorite sport, though he boasts of edu-
cated soccer feet and a left jab of Hyrcanian
ferocity. His next great love is for good litera-
ture. George is aiming at law school and anx-
iously awaits the day when he can utilize his
oratorical ability in the legal profession.
HENRY SPAULDING MEYER, GE
Kew Gardens, N. Y.
Hank comes from the vicinity of Forest Hills,
home of tennis players. He himself plays, and
in the summer his waking hours are spent in
the pursuit of his favorite sport. During the col-
lege year he spends so many evenings at the
"Hole" that he is known to practically the entire
college and his entrance into S. A. H. is greeted
with a chorus of "Hello, Hank".
GILBERT HORTON MUDGE. AKE
Brooklyn. N. Y.
A few flourishes with the pen in his geology
notebook. "What's that, Bert?" we ask, viewing
a googoo-eyed monster. "That's a Plynocaplia-
lian Pocoloceratops, somewhat akin to the Elo-
there Ankylosaurus of the late Neo-Ornithi-
schian age." But this isn't the only reason Bert
is a potential Frankenstein, for his Mephesto-
phelian wooing of the fair Derinda gives him
more than his share of fame.
Sixty
BERTRAN D LAYHEE MULLEN
Saranac Lake, N. Y.
"Let's do something" is a password with him.
W'hether it be to Van's, the movies or a bridge
game, his support is usually enthusiastic. He
has an abundant amount of energy which he
tries to consume in various activities. He is a
potential Tihbett, being one of the few who are
in all the singing organizations of our "Fairest
College" and will burst forth into song at the
slightest excuse.
ALAN CRAWFORD NEILSON. AA111
Worcester. Mass.
Al's strongest trait is a propensity for bad
puns. He is fond of social functions, but com-
plains that he spends all his time explaining to
Smith girls that he is not related to the President
of their Alma Mater. In spite of his good time.
however, he keeps up his marks, is a good
athlete, and above all a fine friend.
GEORGE ALBERT NAGLE. IR.. QIJFA
Hollis. N. Y.
Presenting George "Stoop" Nagle, our country
gentleman. li not eating squash pies or telling
unsuspecting freshmen pointless stories fof which
his collection is unlimitedl one is sure to find him
discoursing on the merits of rural life. By those
not knowing of such minor vices of his as New
York week-ends, intriguing waitresses, and Iohn
O'Hara, he is considered quite a moralist.
PAUL IOHNSON NEWLON. BGDII
Charleston. W. Va.
Paul is a serious hard-working chap who takes
on two men's work and gets its done. Torn
between medicine and law he has finally de-
cided on the latter and grinds away at his Poly
Sci. A second George Long, Paul stays aloof
from the wiles of this world-except after the
Williams games--all in all Paul is one of the
most respected men in his delegation.
Sixty-one
ROBERT CHILDS NOWE. CDAX
A Amboy, Ill.
Heigho! Thou are sloth. Thou wast begotten
on a sunny bank. Heighol I'll not speak one
word to thee. Will Guppy fathered me and
Emily Dickinson did the rest. Fie on the world.
Let men buzz in their aimless way. I will drift
forever over mountain trails and through His-
tory's checkered ways. Disperse, ladies, if you
will.
WALTER HART OLDEN, IR., GJAX
Princeton. N. I.
Walt talks in his sleep, but we like him any-
way. His nocturnal jabberings are most en-
lightening. Between putting up scenery for the
Masquers "Oldie" finds time for frequent com-
munications to Dana Hall. He doesn't go down
there much, because rules, regulations, and
chaperons get in his hair. Despite the fact that
he rooms with Davis his marks are good.
ANTHONY F. O'DONNELL, MCI'
Norwood, Mass.
No one ever thought of calling him Anthony.
He's been Tony ever since he first came here
and will probably remain as such ad iniinitum.
Galloping down the gridiron with the pigskin.
tearing around the Cinder path, and portraying
further ability as business manager of the OLIO
are all alike to Tony-all to be taken in his
stride along with the O. S. W.
GAYLORD LORD PAINE. AKE
East Hartford, Conn.
Tarzan, Tillie, Twinkle-call him what you will,
it's still Gay by name and nature. He grapples
with fellow-students, scholastics, and fluffy fem-
ininity with studied assurance and a born ease.
Sad to say, his soul is not his own because his
inate generosity and good nature subject him to
female wiles and make him the willing catspaw
of his fellows.
Sixty-two
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ERNEST PALMER, lR., 11113.
Springfield, Ill.
My God, cards again! So you will find
Ernie if he isn't off to the movies. He has
classes and gets his work done. But when?
Deprived of his outlet in the Student business
board he languishes. A few times a year our
Ernie again joins his North Shore crowd, but it's
not the same.
SANBORN PARTRIDGE, AND
Proctor, Vt.
Sandy, sometimes referred to as the "owl" or
the "night-hawk" by the brothers, has won a
definite place in college and fraternity activities.
Conscientious worker and good naturecl are the
best words to describe him. Since his arrival
from the wilds of Vermont, he has Won for him-
self through his enthusiastic personality many
close and lasting friendships.
JAY ANDREW PARR, AAG
Springfield, Ill.
That Amherst and the A. D. house would be
blessed with a real zoo was a vague' ambition
until Brother Parr brought a baby crocodile into
our midst. Quoted as the leading authority on
crocodiles in the Connecticut Valley, Jay does
not confine his knowledge to these animals.
Whether it be the present situation across the
river or Poly Sci., I. P. is the man to turn to.
STANLEY PAYMER
Iumaiccx, N. Y.
Stan emerged from Iamaica with ambitions of
sleeping with windows open and blanketless on
every winter night. But playing soccer and be-
ing Amherst's prime broad-iumped soon counter-
actecl this desire so that he merely became an
"A" student. His main hobby is deceiving fresh-
men, so just imagine what he will do to the
juries.
Sixty-three
RAYMOND SMITH PEARSALL. 1116.9
Freeport, N. Y.
Between studying Botany and working for the
Masquers, Ray has little time for trifling matters
like dates and bridge. He can usually be found
roaming the house around two and three in the
morning making sure all is well. A mutual aver-
sion for chapel and Women and a flair for the
finer things in life, namely music and religion,
distinguish Ray.
IOHN HOLBERTON PETERSON. 'DFA
New Rochelle. N. Y.
"Pete" is a dashing be-derbyed-eligible-bache
lor-of-New-York-society type. Besides this, he is
an industrious student tsix subjectsl, track man-
ager, and Fiji. Among his unexplicible eccen-
tricities might be listed a five-day cruise by him-
self and his propensity for platonic affiliations.
GEO. THOMAS BECKWITH PERKINS
Wellesley. Mass.
And then there is Perkins, that Tory from
Wellesley, whose internal worl-:in's get all shot
to-Wellesley on such a mere drop, and he
flies all to flinders and desires to pop both his
shoes through your Winders. He's up on The-
ology, he's studied at Ha'vud, he'1l tell your
psychology, then paint your cla'buds: thou'llt
find him unflinching, son of old Amherst.
WALTER GEORGE PFEII.. IR.. ATA
Passaic, N. I.
Picture, if you can, a man who dabbles in
politics, soccer, and Casino, who knows almost
as many females as males, and who still goes
through life saying "So what?" with phenome-
nal vehernence and frequency. ln this you have
Walt "Funny Mans" Pfeil, cr handy man to
know if you ever get stuck in Passaic.
Sixty-four
CHARLES EDGAR PHREANER IR XXI'
Hanover Pa
Mtgawd its back' Boys here we go again'
And 1n reels big bottomed hip swinging C1g
qie butt Phreaner with a Steig qrm spread over
mance from Student to sex etc This baton
wielding romeo leaves many broken hearts be
hind If this continues much longer hell leave
broken mmds among the brothers
SAMUEL FRANZ POTSUBAY IR GAX
Eusthampton Mass
Sam sa1ls through college on the current of a
str1ct1y Carpe diem philosophy which recks
not of the future This unbounded optimtsm has
resulted 1n popularity both fraternal and social
In the middle of his course formerly marked by
scholastic and Lord leff brilliance Sam burs
out as the young man about Theta Delt and
new liomzes all social occasions
ALBERT HEISEY PIKE IR . QAGJ
Katonuh N Y
Coming to college at a tender age Al lost
whatever 111us1ons he may have had when he
and his roommate tried the Un1vers1ty W1nslow
he has acqutred an uncanny abzhty to put oxt
until tomorrow what should be done today
shows mterest tn rehqton and dancmq
HAROLD IOSEPH RABY QAGJ
Max-naroneck N Y
Up and down the floor he paces his hands
tearing frantlcully at waving locks A mamac?
No Just Hal trying to formulate an EC paper
When he arrived from Mamaroneck with hts
trumpet under his arm Hal had lots of radical
rdeas now he Just declares himself aqcnnst
everythlng He does admit that Mt Holyoke hath
charms to soothe the savage breast
Sixty tive
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his face' Then WS fmwhing from feqlllif to TO' system and got their signals mixed. Since then
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PAUL HEATON RAIDY, Xi?
New York, N. Y.
We give you the Beetle, who for two years
spent his time capturing the hearts of fair
damsels "across the river" and making Cellint
look like a piker. It seemed that he would
never get over the Smith fever, but this year his
desk blossomed out with the picture of a blond
"menace" from New York-you can never tell
about beetles.
FRANKLIN LUTHER REED, IR., AY
Westfield, N. I.
Tall, straight-laced, and most dignified is our
"Luther". After supporting this sobriquet for
two years, he has set out to disprove the in'
sinuation. Frank's primary interests in college
are Chemistry, baseball, and dance bands. I-le's
a hard worker, easy to get along with, and is
possessed of a genial personality-someday sen-
ator trom New Iersey.
CARL IOSEPH RAYMOND, emf
Lockport, N. Y.
With the slight hint of a swagger, Carl the
Thespian enters the room from the wings on the
left, lights a cigarette with studied nonchaiance,
and permits himself to he seated in the chair at
the right front. He is acting the part of a
student. Carl the Man, however, exists offstage
on February 29ths only, and we have never
been around on those occasions.
NELSON BRADFORD REPSOLD, CIJKNP
Chicago. Ill.
Pile Ossa upon Pelion, and what have you?
Our Nell! This immense man regrets that the
average day yieldsto him but seventeen waking
hours, making it impossible for him to devote
sufficient time to his affairs. His ltalophile pro-
clivities assert themselves in his enthusiasm for
the Italian classics and for dates with Florentine
rnarchionesses.
t
Sixty-six
WILLIAM MORRISON RIDER IR ATA
Amherst Mass
The small college scores aqaml Morry trans
ferred to Amherst from Syracuse UH1V9IS1lY
brxnqmg w1th hlm a hkmg for dramahcs whrch
the Masquers soon recogmzed as ablhty Morry
doesnt need to go to the rnov1es he can do
hrs own actxng Polrtxcal Sc1ence IS hrs pen
chant rn the academxc held
LEWIS LOCKS ROSEN
Mt Vernon N Y
Mszeu le maestro hxmselfl Volla the only
man ln Amherst who hves ln three places the
Octagon the EC Semxnar and Srrnth and occa
s1ona1ly the left Even hts best frrends dont
know whether th1s mystery man 1S an ernbryomc
Valentmo General Iohnson or Paderewskx-or
Just a lounge lizard wrth h1s successful musxcal
cornposmons and that swell cueball l1a1rcut
ALBERT KARL ROEHRIG GJAK
Auburndale Mass
Tlns strong s1lent man from Auburndale
turned from so cer IH h1s freshman year to 1n
creaslng hls knowledge of Greek and to read
mg Gertrude Stern Karl has amazed the boys
w1th hrs humorous platxtudes and brts of phxl
osophy HIS concentration IS such that nothlng
short of an earthquake could arouse hrm
GERSHON SALHANICK
Fall Rxver Mass
Gersh beheves m the luxury of domq good
Hes never aroused the displeasure of man or
beast and IS good natured but f1end1sl'1 at pmq
pong ,An mhabltant of the Chemlstry lab h
lS also one of Professor Schottes d1SC1PlGS 1n
Anatomy H cuts up cats w1th krnves chtsels
saws tweezers and other deadly mstrurnents
h even knows where your hemrazygos veln TS
Stxty seven
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ARTHUR TURNEY SAVAGE, AY
Westtield, N. I.
"What's the Cold Dope, Fellows?" Whenever
you hear this phrase in the D. U. House, you
may be sure that it comes from none other
than "Dave" Savage. Dispensing cold dope in
bull sessions is probably Dave's favorite sport,
outside of sleeping on everyone else's day bed.
In spite of it all, Dave manages to get there,
and as a lawyer he should do well. At least
he talks continuously.
MAN DAL ROBERT SEGAL
Worcester, Mass.
As a good scholar Manny uncovered his-
torical, economic, and social interests: in Eco-
nomics he leads bull-sessions on comparative
economic orders: in the Lord Jeff he writes
"puny" humor: on the platform he debates con-
vincingly to Win a Little Three title: for the
Model League he settles international problems.
WALTER AMSON SCHLOSS
Flushing. N. Y.
Walt came to Amherst determined to be back-
stroker on the swimming team. But alas, be-
tween Bug Lab and the A. A. ottice, he has
hardly enough time to eat. And then, of course,
there's that professor's daughter across the river
-His attitude toward lite is briefly, "I don't
think l'rn a socialist, but there's certainly some-
thing screwy somewhere."
GEORGE CURRY SEWARD, QIJAEJ
Altoona. Pa.
The deftness with which George has tackled
the ever-pressing problem of being a student at
Amherst is a source of both admiration and
dismay to most of us poor mortals who still
flinch before hour tests and 7:5D's. Nothing
seems to daunt this sage from Altoona, who,
whether in pursuit of intellectual attainment or
other things, exhibits great zeal and thorough-
ness.
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Sixty-eight
IOHN MUSSELMAN SHIELDS ATA
St Iohnshury Vt
A sturdy Green Mountam Boy who comes
from Vermont and everyone knows 1t A ball
ian who roots for Boston but knows enough to
realzze how sad both Beantown teams are Thi
IS a real accomplishment A ruqqed 1nd1v1d
UGl1Sl and complete Republxcan as all Vermont
ers are but unhke most Repubhcans he can
stop a Democrat cornmg through tackle
ANTHANASIOS D SKOURAS QA8
Eccentrrcztxes are excusable 1n a gemus so
We dont become worrxed about h1s gorng on a
date when he has three tests the next day or
h1s brddmq hve hearts Wrth only tour to the
queen Our money 15 on Thanos for hrst dtca
tor of the Balkan confederahon Wtth h1s com
brnatxon of hrxlliance and hard Work he 1S sure
to get what he goes after
SOLOMAN HAROLD SKOLNICK
Woonsocket R I
'Woonsockets contrlbutron to basketball can
best be descrxbed as Pratt Gyms best ire
quenter for Saturday afternoon ftnds Solly shoot
mg long ones from the srde or captammg a
toss up game Though not mterested rn Smrth
lasstes at present We suspect genlal modest
unadulterated szlent Sollys 1HlI'Od'llCllOH across
the r1ver any day now
RALPH HERBERT SLEICHER W1
A foster chrld of the class of 1936 Slexch has
made h1story smce h1s return from Rollms Hrs
achxevements range from Weekly recogmtron 1U
the Srruth tablord to the buymg of a partnerslfup
m cr mce bustness ln I-lamp He has also ac
compltshed the combmanon of h1ql'1 scholarsh1p
and overemphas1s on athlencs especlally squash
bemg one of the natlons best
Sxxty nme
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Rye, N. Y. Montclair. N. I.
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FREDERIC BAKER SMEAD. AKE
Toledo, Ohio
Gleek, hide your watches, here comes Hcxrpol
The embryonic surgeon who should split the
Midwest wide open, if we don't miss our guess,
is also that self-same timber-topper "who has
caused so much woe among Sabrina rivals."
An eminent psychologist, I-Iarpo is the originator
of that well-known tenet, "Don't let business in-
terfere with your pleasure."
WILLIAM LLOYD SNYDER. IR.. X411
I Shamokin. Pa.
Untainted by the coal dust of dear old Sham-
okin freally there is such a placel, Lloyd, mystic
and lover of the beautiful, has become a part
of the best at Amherst. Connoisseur of good
wine, good clothes, good music, literature, and,
alas, women, our dreamer, at heart, really
means to be a gentleman.
HAROLD LADD SIVHTH, IR.. AY
Proctor. Vt.
Hal might well be called the man With the
multi-track mind. He not only can, but does
carry a phenomenal number of things in his
head, which is very convenient for the rest of
us. When we can't do our Math, he'll do it for
us lbeing very generous in that respectl, and
still he does his own Chemistry, History, runs
the OLIO and what have you.
BERNARD FRANK STALL. IR.. QJKWI'
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Undoubtedly a descendant of Aristophanes,
this young man stands foremost among those
who "Love a joke that hands him a pat on the
back while it kicks the other fellow downstairs."
Iudging from his life in the classroom, he prom-
ises to be one who, without labor, will earn
his way with wit.
Seventy
HERMAN VAN DIEN STEWART IIIY
Rndgewood N I
Bub worshxppe of motor boats and member of
the racmq select of the East has found hrne
durxnq the season when racmg IS not 1n 1lS
prune to attend Amherst and acquxre a famous
reputatxon not only as Captaln of the Relay
team but also as a learned man 1n he realms
of Phny and Botany and as one of the Oatley
pnze serenaders
WM DENGLER STROHMEIER AAG'
Monson Mass
The Governor arrrved at college freshman
year wrth an armful of saxlmg trophtes and full
of wmqed aspxrahons Smce then versanlxty
effxcxency and a hearty laugh have character
mzed hun whether at txller desk or lordan House
Flymg tnps occas1onally tear the Baron away
but he returns convmcmg all wxth mnurnerable
tales that the Ace 1snt such a bad lad after
all
IAMES WILLIAM STOUDT ATA
Reading Pa
Last year somehme Teddy shot a questron
about Shakespeare at IIHIIIIIG Iunmte d1d not
retalrate and Teddy knew he was llcked lun
rme 15 one of those szlent men who always
comes through when most needed-and Wllh the
greatest of ease too He lS always a perfect
gentleman and that 1snt such a bad rdea after
a
DONALD N SULLIVAN fIwK1If
Cortland N Y
Presentmg Don Juan Bmq Crosby Tex Rrck
ard Floyd G1bbOnS and One eyed Connolly
rolled lnto one Thxs IS Donald N Sulhvan who
sprang mio the mxdst of Amherst socral life vra
Cortland and Deerheld Sull wlll be rnanag
mg the freshman football next year wxth com
plete success xf he can restram h1s best punters
from playmq anagrams wrth the Mount Holyoke
qlrls
Seventy-one
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ERIC EDWARD SUNDQUIST, AY
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Dear Gracie:-Your letters might be a little
less sour if l enumerated once and for all the
avocations which limit my week-ends. A hand
in managing the basketball team, the responsi-
bilities of the Dance Committee, and the frater-
nity engage every moment. There's tennis, too,
and I'm still taking five courses. There goes
the telephone-. In haste, Ricky.
ROMAN LEON TREMBICKI, Xfb
New Haven. Conn.
From the steppes of Siberia and the plains of
Poland comes Roman, the slithering, scintillating
Slav. If everyone in Russia is as easy to get
along with as Roman, perhaps Lenin has the
right idea after all. And so to bed, but you
ought to see him when he wakes up-all of
which makes little or no sense-but Roman is a
good fellow and a gentleman.
i
WRIGHT TISDALE, AAKIJ
Taunton. Mass.
"Efficiency" is Wright's middle name. Among
the fellows who know him well Manager Tisdale
shows unbounded enthusiasm and dependability
in any task that he may undertake. Whole-
heartedly interested in managing athletics, he is
equally good in business administration, and
during his course Wright has won the lasting
friendship and respect of every A. D. brother.
GARRETT REZEAU TUCKER. IR.. X111
Ridgewood, N. I.
"Hey, where's the Re-zeau?" You may be
sure this stalwart youth will not answer the
call unless the voice be at a very close prox-
imity. This New World Adonis has a foolproof
schedule: Pratt Gymnasium from 3 to G to main-
tain that body beautiful: 7 to ll at the well
known "Hole"g and 12 to l2 pounding the
pillow, and yet he makes the Dean's list.
Seventy-two
EARL ARTHUR TURNER, ARE
Holyoke Mass
Here he ts the mxghty atom of Amhersts ath
letrc teams Tmker or Snooks as he IS var
lously known brought a reputatton from Deer
held m baseball and basketball that he has
amply Justmed To h1s Irxsh nature we altrxbute
act1v1t1es Hes our candldate for sometlme Sup
erlntendent of Schools m Massachusetts
MILTON ALLEN USHMAN
Newburgh N Y
A man of many vxces and ahases Came to
Amherst to conquer remamed to scoff Varxous
ly known by many pseudonyms 1n several C1l1GS
of th1s faxr Connectxcut Valley but whats m Cl
name The more manly passxons have rrungled
m h1s breast smce he came to Amherst but re
cently hes been taken down a peg Qulte G
man The Ush
CLINTON WHITE TYLEE IR SAX
West Newton Mass
Gosh Im losmg sleep tomght' cues thls
stolcal zealot as he dxves mto bed at 10 p rn
Ive got to get some work done now he wcnls
after wasting two mmutes enthusmg about
fnends 1n Worcester We ve got to hurry
curve Well may We ask as does Clmt Whats
the score?
WARD HYDE WAIT
Hood River Oregon
Crossmg the contment to attend Amherst only
11'lC1fGd Ward to tramp over most of the New
England peaks smce comxng here Not the least
of h1s several accomphshments has been Wards
eftlclent management of the busmess end of the
Masquers It wont be long before Oregon
apples wrll be as well known rn Amherst as
the many scenrc wonders of the Great Northwest
Seventy three
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his love of clogs and his Crumored?l summer he mumbles as he slows down to 70 on a sharp
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ROBERT PACKARD WALBRIDGE. AAIII
Scarsdule, N. Y.
Besides being a skier of note and a repre-
sentative of Amherst at the Dartmouth Winter
Carnival, Bob is a mechanic and electrician of
no mean ability, as the system of Wires and
cords in his room will testify. He will also
engage in an argument with anyone at any
time and on any subject.
FREDRIC PORTER WELLER. AKE
Lynbrook, N. Y.
Graduating from Andover cum laude and
voted the most natural athlete in his class,
Fred is taking Amherst in his stride, doing the
four years in three. Nevertheless, he still has
managed to uphold high scholarship as well as
making Weekly trips to Providence. A great
friend, and always to be counted upon when
the going is hardest.
NIEL ALEXANDER WEATHERS, WY
Short Hills. N. I.
An outstanding scholar, a real leader, the
possession of a spirit of accompanying a fellow
two miles if only asked to go one, coupled with
a marvelous sense of humor, all help to make
this brother one of the most admired and re-
spected fellows in the Gammy. And yet-he
has his weaknesses-caught sneaking off on
mid-Week dates, he only grins.
EDWARD IRELAND WERSEBE, B H
Washington. Conn.
Aside from Ed's "spontaneous" word-combina-
tions, he is a really likeable fellow. His likes
are Mount Holyoke above all-she's a very nice
girl-brunettes, the West, Glee Clubbing, Casa
Loma, and bananas and cream. But we can't
think of Ed without thinking of those inspired,
far-into-the-night arguments with Hamilton and
Black about sex, life, and things in general.
1
H
Seventy-four
IOSEPH THOMAS WEST. IR.. 112-FA
Crestwood. N. Y.
Ioe is a self-confessed "diddler"y-diddles in
sciences as evidenced by many courses in As-
tronomy, Psychology, and Chemistry:-diddles
at perpetuating the existence of the notorious
"Lizzievitch"g-diddles with lights as chief elec-
trician for the Masguers tnote "Yellow lack"J.
However, he isn't diddling when it comes to
Love, Friendship, Better Living, and Roaming,
RUSSELL ELIOT WHITMYER. WY
Providence. R. I.
Russ is one ot those fortunate fellows who
has the unusual combination of athletic ability
with excellence in scholarship. For two years
he has been one oi the mainstays on the toot-
ball and baseball teams, and this year he also
starred as captain of the house quintet. To
round out his activities he is one of the founders
of the Gammy's socially elite "Monday Morning
Club."
STEPHEN EMERSON WHICHER. AAG:
Amherst. Mass.
Steve, a versatile and cultured gentleman, is
one of those rare fellows happily combining
scholastic and athletic ability. His work in
English shows creative ability. He has a very
enviable average, swims, plays tennis, and
soccer to boot. Steve makes a keen debater
and aids the Glee Club with a booming bassg
drarnatics, too, claim some of his time.
BENIAMIN WILLIAMS. AKE
Los Angeles. Cal.
Californian by birth, schooled in England, Ben
has rapidly become, by adoption, one of Am.
herst's favorite sons. No dogmatic Babbitt, he
never claims California climate is "lune in
Ianuary." Cocktails, cars, and crack quarter.
miling compose a competent commentary on his
collegiate capers. Says little, but it's worth your
while to listen when he does.
Seventy five
ALBERT FLANAGAN WINSTON. AACIP
Evanston. Ill.
Amherst gives you "The Great Winst," pre-
senting himself armed with an irresistable smile
and a spirit more than agreeable but also
persistent and accomplishing. Al's contributions
to the college have been numerous-witness
many campus honors. And when he "gets out
of this trap" and Mills around across the river
his achievements are also brilliant.
DANA FRANCIS WOODMAN. IR.. Xilf
Rye, N. Y.
In almost any argument Dana may be heard
to say, "lt must be the truth: Plato said so."
Arguing is Dana's pet indoor sport, one at
which he is a past master. In spite of the fact
that this pole-vaulting philosopher talks of love
in terms of economics, we suspect his attitude
toward the iair sex is just a pose.
RICHARD SIMS WISNER, Xfb
Summit. N. I.
Richard "Shanghai Dick" Wisner came back
from Columbia this fall letting it be known with
optimistic assurance that his worries were over.
This, however, is not the case, for when he's not
worrying about marks, driving permission, or
women, he's Wondering about the chances of
breaking 25 seconds flat, as he swims grace-
fully through the 50 yard free style.
IACOB LOUIS YAMINS
Fall River. Mass.
Iacob Uackl Louis Yamins. revered as "Uncle"
by freshmen and beloved as "goolekantz" by his
intimate friends, came from Fall River, a cultured
Greek scholar. But he ended up as a "me and
Einstein," incorporating in his being huge vol-
umes oi Physics, Mathematics, and every Chem
course in college. Nevertheless genial, "Bounc.
ing lake" has blown up hydrogen generators.
Seventy-six
Burr Cartwr1ghtBrundage BOII Buffalo N Y
Calvert Bernard Lmdquest BCDH Omaha Nebr
Morr1s Kn1ghtW1nborn BOH Brrmmgham Mlch
Former Members of the Class of 1936
Glenn Seven Allen Ir
Stuart Edward Barton
Eugene Wemple Baxter
W1ll1am Vandlvert Bernard
Edward Fernald Brlstol
Edwln Fredenc Brown
LOUIS Brown
W1ll1am Srdley Chapman
Tsunegoro Chlba
Nelson Perley Cotfrn
Joseph Walter Davrs Ir
W1ll1am Carter D111
Robert Francrs Donovan
Robert Harold Dunn Ir
Thomas Kelly Evans
Charles Hastmgs Gamage
Iohn Edward Ge1senhoff
George Forrest Glllett
Vernon Hall Ir
Davld W1ll1S Holmes
W1llard Henry Hurd
lohn Cecll Kelley Ir
Wlllldm Patton K1nsey
Fernand Goodrlch Leon
Morrls Levrlott
Hewlett W1th1ngton LGWIS
Dav1d Lmdsey
Kenneth Everett Matteson
Franc1s Stephen McArthur Ir
Robert Glbson Mcllroy
Rlchard Kenneth Murdock
Rrchard Vlberts Pelton
Fredenck Starr Pendleton Ir
Charles Andre Perron
Robert Morgan Powell
Charles IGIVIS Schauffler
Edward Lawrence Scott
Robert Arnold Slmon
Stanley Srmon
Kenneth Campbell Stewart
Robert Reynolds Stone
Robert Haven Wllley
Roger Robert Wunderl1ch
Seventy seven
I H u u
Raymond Ioseph Brodeur William Sanford Lewis
KENDALL B. DeBEVOISE
President
...nf-y
SENICDRS
Qin
Six
ig
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Seventy-
?-
Qfficers of the Class of 1935
KENDALL BUSH DQBEVCDISE ......
JOHN NASH MCLAREN ...........
DAVID BICKNELL TRUMAN ........
WILLIAM WYMAN CROSBY ...........
ARTHUR ROBERTSHAW ENGLISH ..
WILLIAM GRISWOLD PHELPS ......
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Seventy-nine
---x
Members ot the Class ot 1935
l..SO1'1CIId lsaac AllDGI'lS Ngrthgmptonl Mags,
Commons Club.
Frederick Scouller Allis, Ir., WY Amherst, Mags.
Freshman Soccer, Freshman Swimming, Varsity Soccer 12, 3, 43, G'ee Club 11, 2, 3, 43,
Christian Association 12, 3, 43, President 143, lnteriraternity Council 13, 43, President oi
Phi Beta Kappa 143: Cotillion Club 13, 43, Sphinx Club 13, 43, Scarab.
Robert Elmer Anderson, XXI' Orrtqrioville, lll.
Freshman Swimming Squad, Student Editorial Board 12, 3, 43, Cotillion Club 13, 43.
Robert Patton Anderson, B911 Worcester, Mass.
Freshman Soccer, Varsity Soccer Squad 12, 33: Manager of Inter-Scholastic Track Meet
133, Manager of Track 143: Winged "A" 13, 43, lntertraternity Council 13, 43, Sphinx Club
13, 43.
Frank Anker Brooklyn, N. Y.
Freshman Track, Freshman Soccer, Spectator Board 123, Porter Admission Prize, Walker
Math. Prize 113, Freshman Latin Prize 1second3, Hygiene Prize 113 1second3, Pre-Med.
Club, Commons Club.
Wilbur Fuller Arnold, ATA Berkeley, Cal.
Choir 12, 43, Liberal Club 12, 3, 43.
Charles Averill, QE. Methuen, Mase,
Student Board 12, 3, 43, Permanent News Editor 13, 43, Pre-Med. Club 13, 43, Phi Beta
Kappa 13, 43.
EIIIOTY BCI1'1CfOfl, X111 Wellesley Hills, Mass.
Freshman Swimming, Swimming 12, 3, 43, Captain 143.
Reed Ebersole Bartlett, AY Cincinnati, Ohio
Freshman Soccer, Freshman Tennis, Freshman Banquet Committee, OLIO Board 123,
Business Manager 133, Assistant Manager of Baseball 133, Manager 143, Cheerleader 12,
3, 43, Council oi Fraternity Presidents 143, Cotillion Club 13, 43, Sphinx Club 13, 43, Scarab.
lohn Peddie Batterson, lr., AKE New Rochelle, N. Y.
Student Editorial Board 12, 3, 43, G-lee Club 11, 2, 3, 43, Sphinx Club 13, 43.
ludson Everett Benjamin, GAG Marnaroneck, N. Y.
Masquers 12, 3, 43, Secretary 13, 43.
Richard Blanc Springfield, Mass.
Liberal Club 12, 3, 43, Secretary-Treasurer 133, Vice-President 143, Dramatics 12, 43, Pres
Med. Club, Commons Club.
Dwight Bradford Blossom, FDPA St. Louis, Mo.
Freshman Soccer, Soccer 123, Soccer Team 13, 43, Golf Squad 12, 33, Business Board of
Spectator 123, Glee Club 133.
Iohn Cary Boyden, 1IfY Deerfield, Mass.
Secretary-Treasurer of Freshman Class, Glee Club 11, 23, Choregus 123, Assistant Manager
of Football 133, Manager of Football 143, Cotillion Club 13, 43, Sphinx Club 13, 43, Presi-
dent of Sphinx 143, Scarab 143, Secretary-Treasurer of Scarab 143.
Edward Richard Moos Brehm, BGII Sandusky, Ohio
Freshman Football, Freshman Basketball, Freshman Baseball, Football 12, 3, 43, Bas-
ketball Squad 123, Baseball 123, Student Council 143, Sphinx Club 13, 43.
lohn Graham Broomell, ANP Chicago, Ill.
Freshman Football Squad, Freshman Track, Freshman Tennis, Freshman Debating,
Football Squad 123, Track 12, 3, 43, Relay Team 133, Editorial Board of 1934 OLIO, Man-
aging Editor ot 1935 OLIO, Editorial Board of Student 1l, 2, 3, 43, Managing Editor of
Student 143, Winged "A" Club 13, 43, Cotillion Club 13, 43.
Edward Otis Brown, lr., Xfb Nashua, N. H. 1
Manager of Freshman Basketball 13, 43: Sphinx Club 13, 43.
Stanley Reynolds Bryant, AY Greene, N. Y.
Freshman Cross-Country, Sphinx Club 13, 43.
Eighty
lohn McDowell Burrows LXAQ1 Davenport Iowa
Freshman Track Busrness Board ot Student C17 Tracl-' Team C7 3 47 Wrnged A Club
C? 3 47 Presrdent of Wrnged A Club C47 Cotrlhon Club C3 47 Presrdent ot Cottllron
Club C47
loseph Parker Chapman O North Haven Conn
Freshman Baseball Baseball Team C2 .J 47 C A Cabrnet C47
Wlllrarn Rogers Chappell tlfl Whrte Plalns N Y
Freshman Football Freshman Banquet Cornmrttee Pre Law Club C3 47 Cottlhon Club
C3 47 Sphtnx Club C47
Robert Baxter Clark 41.30 Sprrngheld Mass
Chorr C2 37 Glee Club C3 47 Lord left Serenaders C3 47
Robert Stanley Yates Clrlton 11113. Patchoque L 1 N Y
Freshman Soccer Captaxn Freshman Soccer Freshman Track Freshman Tennrs Soccer
C2 3 47 Relay C3 47 Tenms C2 47 ASSOC1GlG Edrtor 1934 OLIO C27 Photographrc Ed
rtor 1935 OLIO C37 Sophomore Hop Commtttee C27 Cotrllzon Club C3 47 lnterfraternrty
Councrl C3 47
Terence Anglln Cordner X111 Cranford
Freshman Football Freshman Baseball Baseball Squad C27 Baseball C3 47 Sphmx Club
C3 47
Donald Wrllrarn Crarg CMA Metuchen N 1
Freshman Football Squad Freshman Swrmmmg Swrrnrnrng Squad C2 37 Advertrsrng
Manager of Amherst Spectator C37 Amherst Student C7 3 47
Glyndon Harry Crocker lr AMD Cortland N Y
Wrllrarn Wyman Crosby XXI Woburn Mass
Feshman Football Squad Freshman Wrestlxrtg Wrestlrng Squad C2 37 Manager of
Freshman Football C3 47 Charrman of Comrmttee on Commrttees C47 Councrl of Frater
nrty Presrdents C47 Secretary C47 lnterfraternrty Councrl C3 47 Prestdent C47 Treasurer of
Class C47 Sphmx Club C3 47 Scarab
Freshman Football Captaxn Freshman Swrmmmg Captarn Freshman Baseball Football
C2 3 47 Swrmmxng C27 Baseball C27 Presrdent of Class Cl 47 Secretary Treasurer of
Class C27 Student Councrl C3 47 Vrce Presrdent C47 Sabrma Committee C2 3 47 Samuel
Walley Brown Scholarshrp C27 tumor Prom Commrttee C37 Secretary Treasurer Phr Beta
Kappa C3 47 Sphrnx Club C3 47 Scarab Pres1dentC47
George Iulrus Drttmar Ir AKE Freehold N I
Freshman Swrmmmq Freshman Track Student Busxness Board Cl 27 Student Advertrsxng
Manager C37 Student Busrness Manager C47 Assrstant Pubhcrty Manager of Musrcal
Clubs C37 Pubhcxty Manager C47 Assocrate Edrtor 1934 OLIO Glee Club C47 Charrrnan
Soph Hop Commrttee C27 Chatrrnan College Dance Committee C47 Presrdent Councrl of
Fratermty Presrdents C47 Sphrnx Club C3 47
Wlllram Rrchard Donaldson lr 'ITA Douqlaston N
Pre Med Club C3 47
Arthur Robert Douglass QAGJ Brooklyn N Y
Freshman Basketball Freshmat Baseball Glee Club C3 47
Warren Fales Draper Ir QAQJ Cherrydale Va
Freshman Cross Country Swrmmrng Squad C2 37 Outrng Club C1 2 3 47 Pre Med
Club C47 Phr Beta Kappa C47
Arthur Bobertshaw Enqhsh Pulf Medra Pa
Freshman Football Freshman Basketball Freshman Track Co Captarn Football C2 3 47
Basketball C3 47 Track C3 47 Secretary 'Treasurer Class of 1935 C17 Presrdent C2 37
Marshall C47 Student Councrl C2 3 47 Preszdent C47 Co Holder of Samuel Walley Brown
Scholarshxp C3 47 Sphrnx Club C3 47 Scarab C47
Edward Arnold Evans XHI' Home N Y
Freshman Football Squad Golf Squad C2 47 Edrtor of Student Handbook C27 Glee Club
C47 Cot1ll1on Club C3 47
Frank Brooke Evans, lll AY Wynnewood Pa
F eshman Track Student Board C2 37
Rrchard Dudley Ewald WY Whrte Plarns N Y
Freshman Swrrnmrng Swrmmtng Squad C27 Sphtnx Club C3 47
Erghty one
I A I
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Ralph Stanley Field, fplixp Rochester, N, Y,
Freshman Swimming Squad: Swimming Squad C235 Business Board of Student Cl, 2, 3, 435
Outing Club C3, 43.
Ierold Bacon Foland, WY Geneseo, N, Y,
Freshman Cross Country5 Wrestling Squad C235 Band C335 Associate Editor of i934 OLIO
C335 Assistant Manager of Glee Club C33, Manager C435 Cotillion Club C3, 43, Secretary-
Treasurer C435 Sphinx Club C3, 43.
Philip Iones Forbes, Ir., CDAQ Danbury, Conn.
Glee Club C2, 3, 43.
Hugo Frederick Frederickson, fbliilf Norwood, Mass.
Indoor Track Squad C235 Choir Cl, 2, 335 Outing Club C235 Glee Club C3, 43, Accompanist
C3. 43, Vice President C435 Masquers C2, 3, 43, Business Manager C43.
Douglas Millison Hutchings Frost, AX Brooklyn, N, Y.
Freshman Soccer5 Soph Hop Committee C235 Assistant Manager of Intramural Sports C33,
Manager C435 C. A. Cabinet C33, Secretary C335 Cotillion Club C3, 43.
George Francis Fusco, GE Medford, Mass.
Freshman Basketball5 Freshman Baseball, Captaim Basketball C2, 3, 43, Co-Captain C335
Baseball C2, 3, 43, Captain C435 Soph Hop Committee C235 Intertraternity Council C3, 435
C. A. Cabinet C33.
Allen Austin Gilmore, GAX Wrentharn, Mass.
Theodore Freeman Goldberg Swampscott, Mass.
Freshman Cross Country5 Freshman Track5 Track C235 Pre-Med Clubg Commons Club.
Mathew Goldstein Allston, Mass.
Freshman Soccer5 Freshman Basketballg Liberal Clubg International Relations Club5
Pre-Med Club5 Commons Club, Director of Athletics.
Seymore Goldwasser Northampton, Mass.
Liberal Club.
Murray Harlow Green, B011 Rockville Center, N. Y.
Freshman Soccer Squady Freshman Basketball5 Basketball C2, 3, 435 Business Board of
Student C235 Amherst College Sports Correspondent C3, 435 Sphinx Club C3, 43.
Kingman Nichols Grover, ATA Rutherford, N. I.
Freshman Cross Country5 Liberal Club C3, 435 Poetry Society Cl, 235 Armstrong Poetry
Prize.
Leonard Kent Guiler, Ir., AKE ' Pittsburgh, Pa.
Glee Club Cl, 2, 3, 435 Lord Iefi Business Board C2, 3, 435 Exchange Editor C43, Editorial
Board C2, 3, 43, Senior Editor C435 College Band C2, 43.
Bryant Mower Harroun, AACIP Summit, N. I.
Freshman Football5 Freshman Baseball5 Temporary Chairman of Freshman Class Cl35
Varsity Baseball C2, 3, 435 Cotillion Club C3, 43.
Richard Stevenson Hawkey, WY Boothbay Harbor, Me.
Freshman Soccer5 -Freshman Track5 Debating Team C135 Drum Major of Band C435 Track
Team C2, 3, 43, Co-Captain C435 Lord left Serenaclersg Glee Club C2, 3, 43, President C435
Phi Beta Kappa5 Scarab.
Iames Hight Hayford, CDE Montpelier, Vt.
Phi Beta Kappa C43.
Sydney Baer Hechler Springfield, Mass.
Freshman Cross Country5 Outing Club Cl35 Williston Hygiene Prize Cl35 Poetry Society
Cl. 235 Kellogg Speaking Prize C235 Hutchins Greek Prize C335 Commons Club5 Phi Beta
Kappa C43.
George Traver Hecht, ATA Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Alexander Iulian Hemphill, ll, fDKiIf Upper Montclair, N. I.
Freshman Soccer: Glee Club C335 lnteriraternity Council C3, 435 Iudicial Committee C43.
Lee Blanchard Henry, Xi? South Norwalk, Conn.
Band C3, 435 Cotillion Club C3, 43.
Iohn Bartholomew Hickey, lr., CDAG Brookline, Mass.
Freshman Football5 Freshman Wrestlingg W'restling Squad C235 Football Squad C2, 33:
Amherst Press.,
Eighty-two
Hiram David Hilton, :PY Lincoln, Neb
Freshman Track: Pre-Med. Club.
Iarnes Robert Hopkins, QE Meriden, Conn.
C. A. Cabinet 13, 43: Pre-Med. Club 143.
lohn Prentice Howe, fl1FA A North Amherst, Mass.
Freshman Football Squad: Freshman Wrestling: Cross Country 123: Hockey 123: Football
Squad 133: Wrestling 13, 43.
Arthur Sandmeyer Huey, AKE Tulsa, Okla.
Football 12, 3, 43: Swimming 123: Wrestling 13, 43: Glee Club 143: Sphinx Club 13, 43.
Stuart Churchill Hurlbert, AY Hyde Park, Mass
Freshman Football Squad: Football Squad 123: Wrestling Squad 12, 33.
George Lewis Ingalls, GJE Brooklyn, Conn.
Debating 12, 33: Glee Club 123: Phi Beta Kappa 143.
lohn Wells lreys, NPY Minneapolis, Minn.
Freshman Soccer: Soccer Squad 123: Glee Club 13, 43: Cotillion Club 13, 43: Sphinx Club
13. 43.
Robert Lincoln Iohnson, CDKXP Waltham, Mass.
Freshman Swimming Squad: Business Board of Student 1l, 2, 33: lnterfraternity Council 133.
Donald Montgomery Iones, KIJPA Natick, Mass
Freshman Football Squad: Lord Ietf Serenaders 1l, 2, 3, 43: Dance Committee 133.
lohn Christopher Kehoe, Ir., Xfb Pittston, Pa.
Freshman Football: Freshman Basketball: Football 12, 3, 43, Captain 143: Wrestling 123:
College Boxing Champion 11, 33: Sphinx Club 13, 43: Scarab.
Robert Emerson Keith, XCD Campello, Mass
Electrician for Masquers 13, 43: Model League of Nations 12, 3, 43, President 143.
Richard King, AKE Amherst, Mass
Freshman Soccer: Freshman Hockey: Freshman Track, Captain: Soccer 12, 43: Track 12,
3, 43: Winter Track 12, 3, 43: Winter Sports 12, 33: Winged "A" 12, 3, 43: C. A. Cabinet
12, 33: Chest Drive Chairman 143: Flying Club President 133: Sabrina Committee 12, 3, 43:
Band 143: Cotillion Club 13, 43: Sphinx Club 13, 43, Secretary-Treasurer 133, Vice-President
143: lnterfraternity Council 13, 43, ludical Committee 143: Representative of Interfraternity
Council at National Convention: Scarab.
Paul Franklin Kirby, SAX Bethesda, Md
Freshman Swimming: Football Squad 133: Wrestling Squad 123.
Fred Harlen Klaer, Ir., Xitf Philadelphia, Pa
Freshman Soccer: Freshman Track: Soccer 12, 3, 43: Cotillion Club 13, 43.
Seymour Milton Klotz, AY Paterson, N. I
Freshman Football: Freshman Swimming: Student Board 123: Soph Hop Committee 123:
Assistant Manager Track 133: Manager ot Relay Team 133: Student Council 13, 43: Class
Secretary-Treasurer 133: lntertraternity Council 133: Treasurer of Masquers 12, 3, 43: Sphinx
Club 13, 43: Scarab.
Charles Iohn Kulikowski North Hadley, Mass
Donald Louis LaBarre, X112 Shenandoah, Pa
Freshman Swimming Squad: Swimming Squad 12, 3, 43: Assistant Manager of Debating
133, Manager 143: Model League of Nations 143.
Charles Francis Ladd, q".l5.Nlf Worcester, Mass
Freshman Football: Freshman Baseball: Glee .Club 123: College Choir 12, 43.
Robert lohn Landry, ATA Ogdensburq, N. Y
Assistant Manager oi 1934 OLIO 133: lnteriraternity Council 12, 3, 43.
Sumner Carter Lawrence, APY Northampton, Mass
Freshman Football: Freshman Track: Football 12, 3, 43: Wrestling 12, 3, 43: International
Relations Club 13, 43.
Iohn DeLong Leinbach, KDAGJ Philadelphia, Pa.
Soph Hop Committee 123: Interfraternity Council 13, 43.
Ralston Caldwell Lewis, AY Stratford, Pa.
Freshman Football: Freshman Tennis: Football Squad 12, 3, 43: College Squash Champion
123: Wrestling Squad 133: Manager of Freshman Basketball 133: C. A. Cabinet 133.
Eighty-three
Victor Lamar Lewis, SAX Oak Park, Ill,
Freshman Track, Track Squad CZ, 3, 41, Assistant Manager ot Swimming C31, Manager
C41, Interfraternity Council C3, 41, Cotillion Club C3, 41, Phi Beta Kappa C3, 41.
Henry Herbert Liebrich, lr., fltiitlf North Attleboro, Mass.
Freshman Football, Glee Club C3, 41.
lohn Robert Lindberg, GAX Westfield, N, I.
Lord left Board CZ, 3, 41, lnterfraternity Council C31, Cotillion Club C3, 41.
George Washington Long, BQJFI Haddonfield, N. I.
Freshman Baseball, Editorial Board of Student CZ1, Assistant Editor C31, Feature Editor C41,
Sphinx Club C3, 41.
William Woods Long, 1IfY New Castle, Pa.
Freshman Track, Track CZ, 3, 41, Golf Team CZ, 3, 41, Captain and Manager of Golf
C41, Cotillion Club C41.
Alan Bronson Lyman, AY Dowagiac, Mich.
Freshman Football, Football CZ, 31, 1933 OLIO Board CZ1.
Chester Wilson McClelland, BE New Rochelle, N. Y.
John Nash McLaren Hudson, N. Y.
Vice President Class oi 1935 C41,
Charles Raymond McNeill, f1,FA Erie, Pa.
Freshman Cross Country, Freshman Banquet Committee, Debating Council Cl, Z, 31,
President C41, Pre-Law Club CZ1, Delta Sigma Rho C31, President C41, Council of Fraternity
Presidents C41,
Francis loseph McTernan, Ir., AY W'hite Plains, N. Y.
Freshman Track, 1933 OLIO Board CZ1.
Thomas Arnold Mainwaring, AY Brooklyn, N. Y.
Freshman Track, Wrestling CZ, 31, Track CZ, 31, Soccer Squad CZ, 3, Winged "A" Club
C31, Lord left Board CZ, 3, 41, Editor-in-chief C3, 41, Manager of Freshman Track C41, C. A.
Cabinet CZ, 31, Sphinx Club C3, 41.
Edward Marcus Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Freshman Swimming, Pre-Med. Club, Commons Club.
Herbert Edwin Mayer Brooklyn, N, Y.
Freshman Debating, Debating Council C41.
Edgar deNoailles Mayhew, fI11'A Glen Ridge, N. I.
Masquers C3, 41.
Henry Rogers Mayo, lr., Xtl' Lynn, Mass.
lnteriraternity Council C31, Cotillion Club C3, 41.
Ioseph Dicus Messier, WY Springfield, Ohio
Freshman Basketball, Freshman Baseball, Soph Hop Committee, Pre-Med. Club CZ, 3, 41,
Sphinx Club C41.
Walter Charles Meyer, CDAX Hempstead, N. Y.
Freshman Cross Country, Freshman Track Squad, Student Edltorial Board CZ, 3, 41,
Lord left Board CZ, 3, 41, Editorial Board of 1934 OLIO C31.
A. Milton Miller Chester, Pa.
Lord left Business Board Cl, 2, 3, 41, Circulation Manager CZ1, Assistant Business Manager
C3, 41, Band CZ, 31, Liberal Club CZ, 3, 41, President C41, Pre-Law Club C31, Council of
Fraternity Presidents C41, lnteriraternity Council C41, Commons Club, President C41, Chair-
man of Continuations Committee of Connecticut Valley Students' AntieWar Conference
C3, 41.
lames William Miller Brockton, Mass.
Freshman Baseball, Soccer C3, 41.
lames Selden Miner, AY Owosso, Mich.
Freshman Cross Country, Captain, Cross Country CZ, 3, 41, Business Board of Student
CZ1, Circulation Manager C31, Merchandising Manager C41.
Iohn Minnick, B911 Great Neck, N. Y.
Freshman Track, Track C2, 3, 41, Co-Captain C41, Cross Country CZ, 3, 41, Captain C411
Relay Team C3, 41, Winged "A" Club C3, 41, Masguers C41, Sphinx Club C3, 41.
Eighty-four
Frederlck Franklm Moon Ir X92 Syracuse N Y
Freshman Football Squad Freshman Track Hockey C21 Track C2 3 41 Wznged A
C3 41 Vxce Presldent C41 Cottlhon Club C3 41
Robert Keen Moses XJ, Montclalr N I
Freshman Football Freshman Basketball Co Captam Freshman Baseball Football C2
3 41 Basketball C2 3 41 Captam C41 Soph Hop Commlttee C21 Councrl ot House Presr
dents C41 Sphmx Club C3 41
Equrnn W1ll1am Munkelwrtz BOH Sayvrlle N Y
Masquers C3 41
Henry Walter Perlentern O Iersey Crty N I
Freshman Basketball Freshman Soccer Soccer C2 3 41 Phr Beta Kappa C41
Wrlltam Grlswold Phelps fbi If Dedham Mass
Freshman Football Baseball Squad C21 'vtfrestltng Squad C31 Class Choregus C3 41 Col
lege Choregus C41 Manage1 of Band C31 Drrector of Band C41 Sphmx Club C3 41
Wlllram Presson TAG Gloucester, Mass
Masquers C2 3 41
Ioseph Vrncent Benzonr Waterbury, Conn
Iohn Thomas Brcks Aki Plandome L I N
Freshman Soccer Glee Club C11
Brchmond Malley Budden All Hartford Conn
Arthur George Schaffer Eagle Br1dge
Ionathan Wtllram Sch1ller Brooklyn
Masquers Cl 2 3 41 Nlusrc Correspondent and Crtttc for Student C3 41 Band
Sunday Evenmg Musrc Lecturer C3 41
Eugene Bernard Schwartz Iersey Crty N I
Soccer Squad Cl 21 Assoc1ate Edrtor l935 OLIO Pre Med Club Commons Club
Srdney Schwartz Revere Mass
Debatmg Council C31 Phl Beta Kappa C3 41
Freshman Soccer Freshman Basketball Sauad Soccer C? 3 41 Tennrs Cl 21
Armand Edwards Srnger Detrort Mrch
Outrng Club Cl 4 Addrson Brown Scholarshrp C41 Pht Beta Kappa C3 41 Commons Club
Boland Hoyt Sloan Ir XAGD New Brlghton S I N
Freshman Football Cot1ll1on Club
Donald Farnsworth Smlth B011 Schenectady N
Freshman Soccer Squad ASSISCQDI Manager of Cross Country C31 Manager C41 Wmged
A C3 41 Ph1 Beta Kappa C41
Probert Craft Smrth NIA New Orleans La
Freshman Football Advertrs ng Manager of Lord Iezf C41 Asststant Busmess Manager
C41 Clee Club C2 3 41 Cot1ll1on Club C41
Ioseph Sprelman South Orange N I
Swrmmmg Squad Cl 2 31 Lrb ral Club C31 Commons Club
Allen Martrn Stemhardt Mount Vernon N Y
Freshman Basketball Basketball C2 3 41 Freshman Tennrs Tennxs C21
Boy Shearrng Stuckless AX Yonkers N Y
Edrtorxal Board of Student C2 31 Assrstant Manager of Soccer C31 Manager C41 Sphxnx
Club C3 41
lames Monroe Taylor ARL Klamath Falls Qregon
Glee Club C2 3 41
Allan Buck Temple KW Readmg Mass
Freshman Basketball Squad Freshman Baseball Baseball Squad C21 Cot1ll1on Club C3 41
Henry Wolcott Thomas lr X19 Babylon N Y
Freshman Football Football C2 3 41
Irvmg G1lbertThursby ARI Brooklyn N Y
Freshman Soccer Freshman Track Track C2 3 41 Sphmx Club C3 41
Erghty fly e
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Samuel Trescott Tisdale, AAG? - Taunton, Mass,
Football Squad 12, 3, 43: Pre-Law Club 13, 43, President 143: Freshman Baseball Manager
133: Manager of Basketball 143: Cotillion Club 13, 43.
ThO1'UCIS Toby, XXI' Glen Ridge, N. I.
Hockey' 123: Soph Hop Committee 123: Assistant Editor 1935 OLIO 133: Cotillion Club
13, 43, Vice-President 143.
Charles S. Torem Pqtefsonl N, I,
Model League of Nations 13, 43: Debating Council 13, 43: Vice President Debating Council
143: Phi Beta Kappa 143.
David Bicknell Truman, AAfD Evqnstgn, Ill,
Freshman Football Squad: Glee Club 11, 23: Student Council 143: Interlraternity Council
13, 43: Council of Fraternity Presidents 143: Secretary 133: Vice-President of International
Relations Club 143: Editorial Board of Student 1l, 2, 3, 43, Editor-in-chief of Student 143:
Cotillion Club 13, 43: Scarab.
William Peter Van Fleet, ATA Rochelle Park, N. I.
Freshman Swimming: Choir 12, 43: Glee Club 143: Cotillion Club 13, 43: Pre-Med. Club 143.
Donald Cramer Waite, Ir., X111 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Freshman Basketball Squad: Freshman Baseball: Soccer Squad 133: Baseball Squad 12, 3,
43: Cheerleader 13, 43: Associate Editor 1935 OLIO 133: Interfraternity Council 133: Sphinx
Club 13, 43.
Guilberi Quincy Wales, XG? West Newton, Mass.
Ffeshman Soccer: Soccer Squad 133: Business Board of Student 1l, 23.
Harry Hawkins Walsh, lr., AY Forest Hill, N. Y.
Freshman Track: Track 12, 3, 43.
Philip Hebard Ward, 1bKXIf Baldwinville, Mass.
Freshman Soccer: Freshman Swimming: Freshman Track: Soccer 12, 3, 43, Captain 143:
Track 12, 3, 43: Relay Team 13, 43: Assistant Manager of Tennis 133, Manager 143: Glee
Club 12, 3, 43: Associate Editor l934 OLIO 123, Editorein-chief 1935 OLIO 133: C. A. Cabinet
13, 43: Outing Club 1l3: Winged "A" Club 12. 3, 43: lohn Sumner Runnells Prize: Walker
Math Prize 1second3 1l3: Sphinx Club 13, 43: Phi Beta Kappa 13, 4': Scarab.
Iohn Cushman Warren, CDFA West Roxbury, Mass.
Freshman Cross Country: Freshman Track: Cross Country 123: Freshman Cross Country
Coach 13, 43: Winged "A" Club 12, 33, Secretary-Treasurer 143: Vtfrestlinq 133: Classical
Club 13, 43: Phi Beta Kappa 143.
Lee Simon Wasserman Newton, Mass.
Freshman Football: Football Squad 12, 3, 43: Wrestling 12, 3, 43: 155 Lb. Boxing Champion
123, Runner-up 11, 33: Freshman Hockey: Pre-Med. Club.
Gardner Fairfield Watts, ATA Suffern, N. Y.
Freshman Tennis: Liberal Club 13, 43: International Relations Club 143.
Ernest Alphonse Wedge, CDTA Greenfield, Mass.
Classical Club 133, President 133.
Iohn Warren Whitney, GE Brooklyn, N. Y.
Freshman Tennis Squad: Phi Beta Kappa 143.
Leonard Daniel Wickenden, QDFA Manhasset, N. Y.
Masquers 12, 3, 43, Vice-President 143: Phi Beta Kappa 143.
William Clarence Wickenden, X117 Cleveland, Ohio
Freshman Soccer Squad: Assistant Manager of Wrestling 133, Manager 143: Cotillion Club
13, 43.
Robert Iordan Willoughby, QSKQ' Warren, Ohio
Freshman Football: Freshman Swimming Squad: Freshman Baseball: Baseball 123: Soph
Hop Committee 123: Council of Fraternity Presidents 143,
Frank Cullens Wilson, B911 Iacksonville, Fla.
Masquers 12, 3, 43, President 13, 43: Sphinx Club 13, 43.
Donald Chandler Young, fbliilf Springfield, Mass.
Freshman Soccer Squad: Indoor Track Squad 123: Masquers 13, 43: Assistant Stage
Manager 133, Stage Manager 143: Outing Club 1l, 23.
Frederick William Zink, QAX Rockville Center, N. Y.
Freshman Soccer: Advertising Manager of 1935 OLIO 143: Lord Ietf Board 12, 3, 43,
Business Manager 143.
Eighty-six
Former Members oi the Class oi 1935
Wayne Alderman
Lewis Allen Barlow
Jefferson Kiel Barnekov, lr.
loel Scott Branham
Sevellon Brown
Iohn Case Bush
Lawrence Whitfield Churchill, Ir.
Richard loseph Clure
Evert Dyckman Cobb
Milton Allen Cohen
Milton Billings Cook
Edgar Loewer Coon
Richard Cady Crocker
Edward William Wendell Dodge
William Redfield Drury
Charles Olaf Engels
Edwin Baily Fisher
Robert Harry Gardner
Cyril Heiman Grady
William Waldo Grose
Arthur William Hagis
George Burton Hamilton
Stuart Sedwick Healy
lose Luis Hernandez
Thomas Arista Hoge
Robert Vaughan Hulse
Harry Dickey lones
William Thomas lones, lr
William McConkey Keller
Kenn Forcey Kreder
Norman Edwin Limberg
Sherman Simeon Lurie
Stuart Elliot McClure
lohn Edward Marshall
Henry Spaulding Meyer
Richard Miller
Bertrand Layhee Mullen
Robert Childs Nowe
lsaac Patch, lr.
George Thomas Beckwith Perkins
Carl Joseph Raymond
Iohn MacBeth Richard
Iohn Wilson St. Clair
William Edwin Selby, lr.
George Alexander Selvin
Harold Chester Sidga
Ralph Herbert Sleicher
Lowell Clark Spring
Archibald Lachlan Stuart
Frederick Stanley Tener
Harmon Albertse Veder
Morris Knight Winborn
Eugene Wolman
Iohn Suarez Wright
Frederick Stanley Robinson, Ir.
Eighty-seven
1913 - 1934
..,.Y J.. .1
as! W
Q ji.. -.
- .'u..., ,.,.?.!
M. TILGHMAN WEST
President
SCDPHGMORES
Eighty-eight
Qfficers of the Class of 1937
MATTHEW TILGHMAN VVEST ......... ........................ P resident
KEITH PRUDDEN PATTENGILL . .......... ......... S ecretcrry-Treasurer
DOUGLAS RICHARDS KENNEDY ......... ........................ C horequs
- ..----1 . -vw-...f
',- ,.
Eighty-nine
Members at the Class ot 1937
Steven l. Allen, CDKNP
Holyoke, Mass.
Raynold A. Arcuri
David W. Brewer, AY
Syracuse, N. Y.
Melbourne C. Browning,
Mt. Vernon, N. Y. I1-.I qfy
lames B. M. Arthur, Ir
Philadelphia, Pa.
., AY'
lackson Heights, N. Y. Norman S. BL1ClCl1'1ql1Ct1T1,
Harold S. Atwood, lr.,
4bKNIf
Montclair, N. I.
Benson M. Austin, SAX
Brooklyn, N. Y.
George R. Bacon, GAX
Providence, R. I.
Edgar A. Baird, lr., B011
Omaha, Nebr.
Thomas G. Baker, B011
Philadelphia, Pa.
William D. Baker, B011
Philadelphia, Pa.
Harry W. Barber, SAX
North Attleboro, Mass.
Laurence N. Barrett, AKE
Katonah, N. Y.
Randall Barton, AAG'
Poxboro, Mass.
Howell A. Bates, B611
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
Gordon L. Becker, 411011
Amsterdam, N. Y.
Robert A. Bendheim
New York, N. Y.
lohn R. Berryman, ATA
Westfield, N. l.
lohn K. Best, B811
Ieannette, Pa.
Richard E. Bodkin, GE
New York, N. Y.
David C. Bole, lr., AAG?
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
Robert N. Bonnett, B011
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Dudley C. Bostwick, Xi:
New York, N. Y.
George F. Bower, Qlillf
Madison, N. I. -
Charles E. Bradley, lr.,
- AKE
South Bend, Ind.
William B. Braman, ATA
Windsor, Conn.
Robert T. Breed, WY
Lynn, Mass.
.ATA
Milford, Conn.
lohn C. Bush, AX
New York, N. Y.
Robert G. Calder, Ir., WY
Tuckahoe, N. Y.
William N. Chambers,
AALIJ
New York, N. Y.
Angus W. Clarke, Ir., 11113.
Utica, N. Y.
William H. Claus, 4213.
Erie, Pa.
Robert I. Close, ll'Y
Sandusky, Ohio
Charles N. Coe, fbKtIf
New Britain, Conn.
lohn S. Coey, ll, NPY
Glen Ridge, N. I.
Edwin B. Colburn
Stafford, Conn.
Thomas M. Colton, B911
Montpelier, Vt.
Lucian I. Colucci
Medford, Mass.
Philip H. Coombs
Holyoke, Mass.
Fairman C. Cowan, AAG?
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
George A. Craig, AAflb
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
George F. Cramer
Amherst, Mass.
lohn A. Dietze, XKP
Maplewood, N. l.
Archibald G. Douglass,
B H
St. Louis, Mo.
Iames C. Edgell, AY
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Stephen T. Ellen, QAX
Douglaston, N. Y.
Ernest E. Ellert, GE
Holyoke, Mass.
lohn V. Elmer
West Springfield, Mass.
Robert W. Elmer
Springfield, Mass.
lohn O. Epple, ATA
Ridgewood, N. I.
Gordon H. Ewen, XYP
Evanston, Ill.
William E. Fairley, GJAX
Flushing, N. Y.
Paul V. Fa're'l, B911
Long Beach, N. Y.
Horace B. Fay, lr., QDKNV
Shaker Heights, Ohio
Iohn U. Fehr, ATA
Reading, Pa.
Samuel B. Feinberg
Brookline, Mass.
lose W. Fenderson, QDAQ
Parsonsfield, Maine
Henry G. Fernald
Cambridge, Mass.
Robert S. Fichtel, QIDFA
Pittsburgh, Pa.
lohn E. Field, lr., X111
New Haven, Conn.
Hugh P. Fleming, AKE
Winnetka, lll.
Robert W. Crawford, AKE Charles H- Fooiel .yy
Lakewood, Ohio
Buell Critchlow, AAG:
Buffalo, N. Y.
East Cleveland, Ohio
Osmun Fort, XNP
Plainfield, N. I.
William N. Dawson, AKE ph Alexander Frank
Louisville, Ky.
Kenneth l. Deane, AY
Cornwall, N. Y.
Philip M. Deisroth, GQKXII
Hazelton, Pa.
Robert L. DeWitt, AKE
Auburn, N. Y.
Iackson Heights, N. Y.
Hans H. Frey, Xilf
Kingston, Pa.
Richard S. Furbush, ATA
St. lohnsbury, Vt.
Robert E. Garton, Xfb
Sheboygan, Wis.
Ninety
Harry L. Gott, GAG
Newton, Mass.
Benjamin F. Goodrich, Ir.,
CIJAO
Duxbury, Mass.
Harry F. Gray, Ir., GE
Bronxville, N. Y.
Edward P. Green, ATA
South Windsor, Conn.
Herbert E. Greenstone,
South Orange, N. I.
Roger P. Gregory, B011
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Daniel P. Griggs, Ir., B911
Adams, N. Y.
William A. Grouse, ATA
Danbury, Conn.
Sheldon G. Grubb, 1111011
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
Iohn O. Hall, ll, AAKD
Scarborough, N. Y.
Philip F. Hall, Ir., X111
North Cohasset, Mass.
Harvey H. Hatheway, 1IfY
Newburgh, N. Y.
Donald E. Hedden
Norristown, Pa.
Franklin H. Hemphill,
QPKNI'
Upper Montclair, N. I.
Robert B. Hevenor, ATA
Salt Point, N. Y.
Henry C. Higginbottom,
Xxfl
Allahabad, India
David W. Holmes, B011
Fremont, Ohio
Iean P. Iones, Ir., AAITJ
Texas City, Texas
Horace W. Iordan, B011
Chicago, Ill.
Winfield Keck, GTE
Haddon Heights, N. I.
Iean R. Keith, XLD
Campello, Mass.
Roger Keith, Ir., X115
Brockton, Mass.
Douglas R. Kennedy, 11fY
Larchmont, N. Y.
Thomas A. Kennedy, Ir.,
Robert C. McKinstry, WY
Doylestown, Pa.
Alan A. Mahanke, ATA
Westfield, N. I.
Stuart A. Maher, AKE
New York, N. Y.
Arthur V. Marshall, KIJKXP
East Orange, N. I.
Seth R. Martin, Xtlf
Worcester, Mass.
George G. Mason, AALIJ
Larchmont, N. Y.
Robert K. Massey, AY
AKE Worcester, Mass.
Lincoln Park, N. I.
Aaron L. Kingsberg
Amsterdam, N. Y.
Kenneth D. Kraeger, 11213
Belle Harbor, N. Y.
Louis B. Kraemer
Newark, N. I.
Iohn G. Lamb, AKE
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
George S. Lambert, NPY
Elkins Park, Pa.
Iohn H. Lancaster, AKE
Baltimore, Md.
Charles M. Matzinger, X111
Denver, Colo.
Earl T. Maxon, Ir., AY
Greene, N. Y.
'Wellwood H. Maxwell, Ir.
Xtlf
Westfield, N. I.
Leonard S. May, B011
Washington, D. C.
Leonard C. Meeker, AAG?
Upper Montclair, N. I.
Clement F. Merrill, APY
Warwick, N. Y.
Robert D. W. Landon, AY Richard A. Merritt, AAfIv
Vestal, N. Y.
William N. Larkin, X111
Shelton, Conn.
Daniel C. Lawton, XXI'
Larchmont, N. Y.
Dwight W. Lee
Northampton, Mass.
Andrew R. Linscott, AY
Swampscott, Mass.
U
Carl F. Holthausen, Jr., xIfYr rederic B. Loomis, lr.,
Palisade, N. I.
Duncan M. Holthausen,
WIIY
Palisade, N. I.
Henry C. Howell, Ir., B011
Westfield, N. I.
Walter A. Hoyt, Ir., AAG,
Akron, Ohio
Henry S. Hughes, AAQ1
New York, N. Y.
Ward Humphrey, Ir., 11113
Maplewood, N. I.
George A. Iackson, AY
l Q-VT U? Sandy Hook, Conn.
Warren T. Iohnson, XXI'
r Woburn, Mass.
Ninety-one
BOH
Amherst, Mass.
Gordon L. Lundwall, X111
Gardner, Mass.
Charles G. McCormick,
X111
New York, N. Y.
Iohn S. McDaniel, Ir.,
ATA
Stamford, Conn.
Iohn R. McDermott, GE
Methuen, Mass.
Thomas I. McGurl, Ir.,
BGJIT
Minersville, Pa.
Daniel L. McKallagat, Xfb
Lawrence, Mass.
Reading, Mass.
Iones W. Mersereau, X111
New York, N. Y.
Albert F. Miller, Ir., CIPFA
Moorestown, N. I.
Daniel C. Minnick, B611
New York, N. Y.
G. Henry Mundt, Ir., WY
Chicago, Ill.
William N. Mustard, GE
Willimantic, Conn.
Robert E. Newcomb, Ir.,
WPY
Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.
Albert T. Nice, B011
Iackson Heights, N. Y.
Gunther E. Otto, AY
New York, N. Y.
Leo I. Pagnotta
Brockton, Mass.
Lewis H. Palmer, AY
Syracuse, N. Y.
William M. Palmer, III,
TY
Parma, Mich.
l
.....,i,1?
.ECE
A...
ft. 5 R f f- -3,--T?
Keith P. Pattengill, AAG,
Lansing, Mich.
Ierome F. Peck, Ir., GJAQD
Binghamton, N. Y.
Frank A. Peltier, Ir., QJTA
Dalton, Mass.
Clement R. Phippen
Belmont, Mass.
George H. Phreaner, Xi?
Hanover, Pa.
Iohn I. Plante, Ir., fI1l'A
Worcester, Mass.
Ben K. Polk, WY
Des Moines, lowa
Edward E. Poor, IV, APY
Passaic, N. I.
Iames T. Rainey, KIJAG
Chicago, lll.
Philip N. Reltert, CDAG
Frederick, Md..
Horace C. Reider, WY
York, Pa.
William W. Reilly, 'PTA
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Melville E. Reiner, ATA
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Westby P. Richards, AKE
Llarnerch, Pa.
Iames S. Schnepel
Vtfhite Plains, N. Y.
William L. Schoff, ATA
Bala'Cynwyd, Pa.
Winfield E. Scott, AACIJ
Meriden, Conn.
Iames M. Selby, QFA
Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.
Walter L. Seligsberg
New York, N. Y.
Edward M. Shepard, GE
Roselle Park, N. I.
William B. M. Tracy, Ir.,
APY
Philadelphia, Pa.
George S. Trees, AY
Chicago, lll.
Proctor C. Twichell, QDAGJ
Glens Falls, N. Y.
I. B. Millard Tyson, B911
Lebanon, Pa.
Cornelius Vanderbreggen,
Ir.
Norwood Station, Pa.
Carl D- Sh9DI3UIOl. lf-. APY Kenneth M. Walbridge,
Akron, Ohio
AAG?
Clement M. Simmons, Scmsdale, N. Y.
East Hartford, Conn.
Charles B. Skinner, ATA
Yonkers, N. Y.
Stuart D. Walker, Ir. AY
Summit, N. I.
Irving Waltman
Girvan N. Snider, Ir. BGJTI Hertford, Conn.
White Plairts, N. Y.
Alfred A. Snowball, QAX
Niles, Ohio
Reuben W. Snyder, X62
Shamokin, Pa.
Robert P. Snyder, WY
Albany, N. Y.
Charles C. Stafford, AY
Ioseph W. Richmond, GTA Morrisville, Vt.
Providence, R. l.
Iesse I. Ricks, AKE
Plandome, N. Y.
Rowland V. Rider, ATA
Amherst, Mass.
Francis L. Rose, ATA
Camden, N. I.
Richard C. Rotherham,
lI1l'A
Revere, Mass.
Edwin C. Rozwenc
Northampton, Mass.
Leland P. Russell, Ir.,
CIIKWII
Maplewood, N. I.
Iohn P. Saul, lll, BSU
Salem, Va.
Charles I. Schauiiler, WY
Nantucket, Mass.
Charles D. Schilling
Glen Cove, N. Y.
Walter G. Schmitt
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Iohn B. Stearns, AAIID
South Orange, N. I.
Arthur l. Strang, Ir., CPISXT'
White Plains, N. Y.
David P. Sullivan
Boston, Mass.
Iohn A. Swainbank, GTA
Ware, Mass.
Thomas K. Taylor, WY
St. Louis, Mo.
Benjamin P. Terry, XNP
Melrose, Mass.
William I. Thompson, Ir.,
AY
Montclair, N. I.
Roy E. Tilles, Ir., QJTA
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Eben D. Tisdale, AAG1
Taunton, Mass.
Charles L. Tocker, AY
St. Louis, Mo.
Lewis Wardell, Ir., X111
Norwalk, Conn.
William A. Warner, AKE
Cleveland, Ohio
William H. Webster, Ir.,
AAIIP
Bronxville, N. Y.
Durbin H. Wells, AKE
Northampton, Mass.
Matthew T. West, XXII
Port Washington, N. Y.
Walter H. Whitehill, Ir.,
TAO
Newburgh, N. Y.
Charles S. Whitman, Ir.,
AAG?
New York, N. Y.
Iames P. Wilkerson, lll,
CDKWI'
Colonia, N. I.
Edward D. Williams, f1vK1P
White Plains, N. Y.
Robert H. Williams, CPKW
Cleveland, Ohio
Edward A. Wilson, Xtlf
I-lot Springs, Ark.
Stanwood Wollaston, ATA
Montclair, N. I.
Richard S. Zeisler, QE
Chicago, Ill.
Ninety-two
F ormer Members of the Class of 1937
Steven Harry Bamberger
Charles Edmond Baumheckel, Ir.
lacob Waldo Bond
Bradford Barnes Brown
Iohn Robert Burke
Timothy Francis Burke
Charles Russell Corwin, Il
Thomas Niblo Creed
Edward Everett Fenton
Iohn Haldane Flagler
Bernard Friedman
Carlton Everett Greenwood
Theodore Parker Harding
Charles Henry Hechler, Ir.
Dexter Wright Hewitt
George Frederick Hinchcliffe
lohn Todd Laurent
Donald Alfred Leet
Donald Babson Mayo
lames Patrick McGrady, lr.
Walter Harrison Mclntosh, Ir.
William Franklin Pfeiffer, lr.
Willard Wroath Roberts
Vincent Scofield
Morihiko Takami
lohn Dayton Willard
William Vincent Wilson
Dexter Wright Hewitt
N inety-tht ee
1915-1934
Q75 ,. iii f i ij
Egg- , MJ
ll- l, 4. A D
FRESHMEN
Qfficers of the Class of 1938
ERNEST LATHAN ESTES, IR. ........ ........,...............,. P resident
IOHN BUSKIRK PALMER ........ .......... S ecretctry-Treasurer
RENSLOW DREW SHERER ....... ......................... C horequs
l ,
Ninety-five
Members of the Class ot 1938
Robert S. Alexander, B011
Upper Montclair, N. I.
Verner Alexanderson, IPAQ
Schenectady, N. Y.
Franklin G. Allen, Ir., X113
Baltimore, Md.
Homer E. Allen, GTA
Narberth, Pa.
I ohn M. Allman
Birmingham, Mich.
Paul I. Andrews
Northumberland, Pa.
Iohn W. Atherton, AY
Bronxville, N. Y.
Benjamin P. Atkinson, fIJK1If
Warren, O.
Henry L. Avery, Ir., fI1KNIf
Charlemont, Mass.
Robert A. Badenhop, QIJAQ
Newark, N. I.
Howard F. Balme, AKE
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Paul Barton, AKE
Waterbury, Conn.
Austin L. Beach, XID
Providence, R. I.
George N. Beecher, Ir., 'DFA
Evanston, Ill.
Martin Bennett, BCBII
Elmhurst, L. l., N. Y.
Max A. Berns, Ir., CIJAGJ
River Forest, Ill.
Kellogg G. Birdseye, ATA
Gloucester, Mass.
Iarnes C. Bishop, X111
Southampton, N. Y.
William K. Blair, KPY
Toledo, O.
Chester B. Bland, ATA
Reading, Pa.
Robert K. Bodensten, ATA
Staatsburg, N. Y.
Cornelius Bodine, Ir., AAID
Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.
Robert M. Boltwood, GAX
Buffalo, N. Y.
Iohn A. Bookhout, fIvI'A
Oneonta, N. Y.
David R. Boyd, ATA
Leonia, N. Y.
Frank R. Bruel, SAK
Bridgeport, Conn.
George E. Bria
Waterbury, Conn.
Iohn N. Broughton, Ir., AAIIJ
Norwell, Mass.
Allyn S. Brown
Cleveland Heights, Ohio
William H. Brownell, GJAX
Northampton, Mass.
Lester G. Bruggemann, Ir.
South Hingham, Mass.
Robert F. Buehler, 'IJIQI'
South Orange, N. I. '
Leo C. Bullinger, X111
Hollywood, Ill.
Gordon W. Campbell, XNP
Plainfield, N. I.
Nelson H. Caplan
Brighton, Mass.
Dick A. Clarke, B811
Omaha, Nebraska
Richard G. Cole
West Bridgewater, Pa.
Homer Crawford, QAX
Bronxville, N. Y.
Philip G. Creese
Danvers, Mass.
Clyde P. Cristman, Xflb
Ashland, Mass.
George L. Cullen, Ir., Xilf
Harrisburg, Pa.
Waldo B. Cummings, GE
Springfield, Mass.
Richard H. Custer, GAX
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Iohn L. Davis, Ir., APY
St. Louis, Mo.
Kenneth Massey Davis, Ir., fI1I'A
St. Louis, Mo.
Thomas M. Davis, B011
Holclrege, Nebraska
Robert O. Diephouse, 4711A
Webster Groves, Mo.
Charles L. Dostal, AAG:
Glencoe, Ill.
lohn R. Doty, Xtlf
Tuinucu, Cuba
Kenneth B. Drake
Brockton, Mass.
Mac V. Edds, lr., AY
Caldwell, N. I.
Richard H. Eisenhart, Xrlf
Rochester, N. Y.
Ernest L. Estes, lr., AACD
Wilmette, lll.
David S. Evans, AY
Wynnewood, Pa.
Leonard Farmer, WY
Amherst, Mass.
Maurice L. Farrell, Ir., AAKIJ
New York, N. Y.
Philip Feldman
Fall River, Mass.
Paul P. Felt, QDFA
Auburndale, Mass.
Lester N. Fillis
New Rochelle, N. Y.
Royal Firrnan, Ir., AY
New York, N. Y.
I. Henry Francis, lr., B611
Charleston, W. Va.
Bryant M. French, KIDAGJ
Woburn, Mass.
Thomas Y. Funston, BGII
Upper Montclair, N. I.
lohn F. Garde, Ir., AALII
Merion, Pa.
Iames T. George, ATA
St. lohnsbury, Vt.
lohn D. Gerhard, fIr1'A
East Orange, N. I.
Frank S. Giese, AAID
Wellesley Hills, Mass.
Ross Gilpatric, AY
New Britain, Conn.
Ninety-sev en
Benjamin I. Glasgow, QAGJ
Iackson, Mich.
Robert C. Good, AKE
Waterbury, Conn.
George W. Goodell, 1IfY
lamestown, N. Y.
David F. Goodnow, lr., Xi'
Pelham, N. Y.
lames D. Gowing, fIvA6
Walpole, Mass.
Paul W. Graff
Blairsville, Pa.
Iohn I. Graves
Newton Upper Falls, Mass.
Ellis Iackson Green, NYY
Providence, R. I.
Ralph W. Greenlaw, lr., QIJKKII
W. Englewood, N. I.
lohn R. S. S. Greenwood, X411
Rydal, Pa.
Iohn Perry Griffith, lr.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Thomas O. Grisell, Ir., GJAX
Oil City, Pa.
Benjamin E. Haller, AY
Leonia, N. I.
Marston A. Hamlin
Lynbrook, N. Y.
Francis A. Hardy, X111
Barrington, Ill.
Henry S. Harvey, AAIIJ
Chestnut Hill, Mass.
Edwin H. Hastings, Ill, GAX
West Englewood, N. l.
Charles E. Hills, AKE
Windsor, Conn.
Schuyler V. V. Hoffman, Ill, AAQI'
Larchrnont, N. Y.
Roy C. Hopgood, lr.
Glen Ridge, N. I.
Peter N. Horvath, QAX
Washington, D. C.
Richard M. Howland, WY
Ke-nnebunkport, Maine
Ralph B. Hurlbutt, lr., GDAX
Greenwich, Conn.
Robert W. Hyatt, BSU
Moorestown, N. I.
Iames W. Hyde, AKE
Portsmouth, Ohio
Alexander F. Imlay, BSH
Montclair, N. I.
Iohn Ieppson, WY
Worcester, Mass.
Victor S. Iohnson, Ir., SAS
Oak Park, Ill.
Waldo M. Iohnson, BSH
Webster Groves, Mo.
Charles E. Iones, AAS
Peoria, Ill.
Harry F. Iones, Ir., AACP
Riverton, N. I.
Willard E. Iones, SAX
Brooklyn, N. Y.
William F. Kazlauskas, SE
Waterbury, Conn.
Christian Keedy, Xi,
Amherst, Mass.
Iohn I. Keep
Jamaica, N. Y.
Horace S. Keesey, APY
York, Pa.
Thomas H. Kelley, AKE
Chicago, Ill.
William W. Kelly
New Castle, Pa.
Bruce H. Keppel, AY
Bloomfield Hills, Mich.
Iason S. Kobler, SAX
New York, N. Y.
Harry I. Koster, AKE
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Edward G. Kothe, CDFA
Hollis, N. Y.
Melvin Kranzberg
St. Louis, Mo.
Norman F. Lacey, AY
Arlington, Mass.
Richard S. Landry, ATA
Ogclensburg, N. Y.
Stoddard Lane, Ir., AAS
Des Moines, lowa
Paul W. Leak, SE
New York, N. Y.
Iohn E. Lehman
West Orange, N. I.
Thomas L. Lewis, KIPAS
Waban, Mass.
Orrin H. Lincoln, Ir., SFA
Greenfield, Mass.
Allen Lindberg, SAX
Westfield, N. I.
Abe K. Lipsitz
St. Louis, Mo.
Arthur E. Long
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Iohn M. Lutz, XXI'
Chicago, Ill.
Iames P. MacCain, Xfb
Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
Richard M. McClellan, Xqf
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Robert S. McCollum, QKXII
Denver, Colo.
Iohn K. McDowell, SAX
New York, N. Y.
Donald R. McGeorge
Summit, N. I.
Iohn F. McGrath, SAX
New York, N. Y.
Donald A. MacHarg, fIDKXIf
Albany, N. Y.
Thomas V. McKeon, SPA
Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Arthur E. Mace, Ir.
Long Beach, Calif.
George R. Marsh
Coxsackie, N. Y.
Ioseph W. Marshall, 4IvI'A
New York, N. Y.
Frederic B. Mayo, XNP
Lynn, Mass.
Arthur F. Mercer, Ir., LIJFA
Detroit, Mich.
Iohn C. Merritt, WPY
Larchmont, N. Y.
Ninety-eight
Bennett R Meyers
Hartford Conn
Charles W Mrchell 1IfY
Syracuse N Y
Albert A Mlller Ir AY
St Lours Mo
Cornelrus F Mrller X111
Asbury Park N I
Nathanrel M1lls Ir
Mount Vernon N Y
Fredenc F Moore Ir RKP
Nutley N I
Edwrn H Morse
Bronxvxlle N Y
Iames H Moses ARL
Chxcaqo Ill
Robert C Myers ARE
Lakewood Ohlo
Earle W Newton B611
Cortland N Y
Wrlham R Okre Ir CI1K1If
Berwyn Pa
Edwm L Olander Ir 1I1K1If
Northampton Mass
Iohn B Palmer NIIX
Parma M1Ch
Iohn C Parker Ill
Brooklyn N Y
Robert H Parker ATA
Dorchester Mass
Rrchard W Parsons
North Amherst Mass
Lyman Phrllrps BGJH
New Haven Conn
Eugene M Plurnstead CHJAX
Wrlmmqton Del
Rrchard W Poor IIY
Passcnc N I
Thomas F Power Ir QIIFA
Worcester Mass
Wrlham VV Prlce ARE
Westerly R I
Dav1d B Proctor B011
Sprmqheld Mass
Iohn C Ouady B011
Omaha Neb
Nmety nlne
Wrllrarn T Rathbun lr AAfD
South Orange N I
Rtchard C Reed X411
Brockton Mass
Dorran F Rerd AFA
New York N Y
Gordon S Reld
Brooklyn N Y
Robert O Relder WPY
York Pa
Henry W Rers lr
Pelham Manor N Y
Rrchard W Reuter fI1R1If
Queens Vlllaqe L I N Y
Robert W Rremer QJFA
Norwood Mass
Breen Rlnqland fblxxp'
Oswego N Y
Walter O Roberts AY
West Brrdqewater Mass
Wlllard W Roberts X111
Bloomfreld N I
Theodore S Rowland Ir fIvI'A
Ph1ladelph1a Pa
Charles D Sager Ir
Washmgton D C
Edward M Salley Ir
Iersey Crty N I
W'arren F Sawyer BGII
Gardner Mass
Pl'nl1p Scarpmo
Mount Vernon N Y
Fredenck S Schauffler WY
Nantucket Mass
Frederrck O Schwe1zer ARE
Lakewood Ohro
Nauman S Scott ARE
Alexandrra I..
George M Shay Xif
Highland Park Ill
Renslow D Sherer
Hlqhland Park Ill
Edwrn F Sherman Ir KERRY
Barrrnqton R I
W1ll1am H Sherwood Ir Xfb
Ardmore Pa
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Andrew B. Simpson, Xflb
Narberth, Pa.
Robert E. Simpson, ATA
Ridgewood, N. I.
lohn R. Sindlinger, Ir., QKXI'
Norwalk, Conn.
Henry H. Skillings, X111
Amherst, Mass.
George O. Slocum, ATA
Ardsley, N. Y.
Hudson A. Smith, AKE
Syracuse, N. Y.
William H. Snow, AY
New Canaan, Conn.
Milton Spielman
South Orange, N. l.
Edward D. Steinbrugge, AY
Summit, N. I.
William A. Sturgis, Ir., AKE
Manhasset, N. Y.
Richmond M. Sutherland, AY
Bronxville, N. Y.
George W. R. Sykes, f-DKXII
Conifer, N. Y.
Edgar F. Taber, Ir., IIJTA
New Bedford, Mass.
Iohn W. Thompson
Watertown, Mass.
Merrill H. Tilghman, Ill, ATA
Wayne, Pa.
Walter D. Van Doren
Westfield, N. I.
Peter C. Van Dyck, APY
Schenectady, N. Y.
Heath Wakelee, X1If
Maplewood, N. I.
Robert F. R. Walker, QDAX
Waban, Mass.
Elvin H. Wanzo
Toledo, Ohio
Robert K. Warner, AKE
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Wilbert D. Wear
Harrisburg, Pa.
Donald Wedel
Tucson, Ariz.
Chester A. Weed, ATA
Torrington, Conn.
Richard L. Weinstein
New York, N. Y.
Iacob A. Weisman
Lynn, Mass.
David H. Wells, AACIJ
Evanston, Ill.
Raymond M. Wetrich
Hempstead, N. Y.
Daniel C. Whedon, ATA
lamaica, N. Y.
Harry O. Whipple
Montpelier, Vt.
George G. Whitehead, X111
New Haven, Conn.
Albert N. Whiting
Iersey City, N. I.
Frank C. Whitmore, Ir., 'EXW
State College, Pa.
Thomas P. Whitney
Toledo, Ohio
Elmer W. Wiggins, Ir., AAQ
Edgewood, R. l.
Leon S. Wiles, XXI'
Huntington, W. Va.
William E. Wilkening, AKE
Lansdowne, Pa.
Iohn H. Williamson
New York, N. Y.
Iohn R. Willoughby, 1IDK1If
Warren, Ohio
Don Wilson, fI2I'A
New York, N. Y.
Iohn W. Wilson, Ir., QKAI'
Albany, N. Y.
Melvin S. Wilson, AKE
Natick, Mass.
David Winslow, GQAG
Meriden, Conn.
Iames L. Woodress, lr., CDAX
Webster Groves, Mo.
Leverett L. Wright, QDTA
Bridgeport, Conn.
Randall H. Young, X111
Providence, R. I.
Robert B. Young, XXI-'
Great Neck, N. Y.
One Hundred
Aw
FRATERNITIES
Iohn G. Broomell
Iohn M. D. Burrows
Allen Abercrombie
Fritz W. Baldwin
Donald L. Bartlett, Ir.
Allan R. Buckman, Ir.
Parke W. Burrows
Philip H. Clarke
William M. Croxton
Randall Barton
David C. Bole, Ir.
William N. Chambers
Pairrnan C. Cowan
George A. Craig
Buell Critchlow
Iohn O. Hall, ll
Cornelius Bodine, Ir.
Iohn N. Broughton, Ir.
Charles L. Dostal
Ernest L. Estes, Ir.
Morris L. Farrell
Alpha Delta Phi
PRATRES IN COLLEGlO
CLASS OF 1935
Bryant M. Harroun
CLASS OF 1936
lohn C. Cushman, Ir.
Wilber N. Earl
Robert D. Penn
Robert E. Giese
Minot Grose
Edward W. Maynard, Ir.
Andrew B. Meldrum, Ir.
Alan C. Neilson
CLASS OF l937
Walter A. Hoyt, Ir.
Henry S. Hughes
lean P. Iones, Ir.
George G. Mason
Richard A. Merritt
Leonard C. Meeker
CLASS OF 1938
Iohn F. Garde, Ir.
Frank S. Giese
Henry S. Harvey
Schuyler V. V. Hoffman, Ill
Charles E. Tones, Ir.
Samuel T. Tisdale
David B. Truman
lay A. Parr
Sanborn Partridge
William D. Strohmeier
Wright Tisdale
Robert P. Walbridge
Stephen E. Whicher
Albert F. Winston
Keith P. Pattengill
VVinfield F. Scott
Iohn B. Stearns
Eben D. Tisdale
Kenneth M. Walbridge
William H. Webster
Charles S. Whitman, Ir.
Harry F. lones, Ir.
Stoddard Lane, Ir.
William T. Rathbun, Ir.
David H. Wells
Elmer VV. Wiggins, Ir.
One Hundred
and Two
1g.1!"'.i" R 1 IM
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"'i'iiK'sN"' 13 4325
Amherst Chapter Estabhsheol tn 1836
FRATRES IN FACULTATE
Arthur H Baxter Ellsworth E Rtcharclson
Phtlhps Bradley Clarence D Routllarol
Wtllard H Stearns
Sxxth Row Wrqgtns Estes Broughton Dostal Rathbun Lane Garde Bodrne
Frith Row Bole Cratg Whttrnan Wells Farrell Hoffman F Gese C Jones
Fourth Row Hoyt Scott Cowan K Walbndqe Chambers Stearns I Jones Harvey Pattengxll
Thtrd Row Grose Whxcher Croxton Parr Hall Mason Hughes Crltchlow
Second Row Earl R Walbrtdge Strohmeter Baldwm Penn Buckman Maynard Partridge P
Burrows Cushman R G1ese Clarke Meldrum
Front Row Harroun I Burrows Truman Sloan Broornell
Absent from the plcture Wmston S Ttsdcrle W Ttsdale E T1SdOlG Abercrombze Nellson
Bartlett Barton Merrrtt H Iones Meeker
'Ill
I
One Hundred and Three
:iw "-1 f , Tw. ' - 'sv
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111
111
Frederick S. Allis, Ir.
lohn C. Boyden
William R. Chappell
Richard D. Ewald
Theodore C. Boyden
Horace C. Coleman, Ir.
Richard L. Cooper
Fronefield Crawford
Paul N. Critchlow, Ir.
Robert T. Breed
Melbourne C. Bro wninq,
Robert G. Calder, lr.
lohn S. Coey, ll
Charles H. Foote
Harvey H. l-lathe-way
Carl F. Holthausen
Duncan C. Holthausen
'William K. Blair
Iohn L. Davis, lr.
Leonard Farmer
George W. Goodell
Ellis I. Green
Psi Upsilon
FRATRES lN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
lerolcl B. Poland
Richard S. Hawkey
Hiram D. Hilton
Iohn W. Ireys
CLASS OF l93E5
Allen H. Ehrqood, Ir.
Iarnes P. B. Goodell
Fritz O. Haas
Vincent K. Keesey, Ir.
Matthew A. Kelly
CLASS OF 1937
Douglas R. Kennedy
George S. Lambert
Robert C. I. McKinstry
Clement F. Merrill
G. Henry Mundt, lr.
Robert E. Newcomb, Ir.
William M. Palmer. lll
CLASS OF l938
Richard M. Howland
Iohn leppson
Horace S. Keesey
lohn C. Merritt
Charles W. Michell
Sumner C. Lawrence
William W. Long
Ioseph D. Messler
Robert C. Smith
Richard E. McCormick
Ralph H. Sleicher
Herman V. D. Stewart
Niel A. Weathers, Ir.
Russell E. Whitmyer
Ben K. Polk
Edward E. Poor, IV
Horace C. Reider
Charles I. Schauffler
Carl D. Sheppard, Ir.
Robert P. Snyder
Thomas K. Taylor
William B. M, Tracy, Ir.
lohn B. Palmer
Richard W. Poor
Robert O. Reider
Frederick S. Schauffler
Peter C. Van Dyck
One Hundred
and Four
1
z'0Ll",f::-'f"Q.,i,,",,5!lv
Nazi.-.QT-'2t"'f"" Gamma Chapter Established in l84l
.F--,, ,
4x,A'm. 5..'?l-
'Il K' ' Q., PBATRES lN FACULTATE
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wg?-nf' Mwew Thomas C. Esty 'William I. Newlin
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R fix dwg? A Charles S. Toll
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Sixth Row: S. Schauffler, R. Reider, I. leppson, Davis, Green, Merritt, G. Goodell, R. Poor,
I. Palmer, Miche1l,'Van Dyck.
Fifth Row: Farmer, Merrill, Hatheway, C. I-lollhausen, Lambert, Blair, H. Keesey, Howland.
Fourth Row: D. Holthausen, Kennedy, H. Reider, Close, Sheppard, Breed, Polk, Newcomb, Foote
Third Flow: Cooper, Weathers, Coleman, Critchlow, E. Poor, Calder, Mcliinstry, Browning,
Mundi, I. Schaufiler.
Second Row: T. Boyden, McCormick, Whttmyer, Kelly, Hilton, Crawford, Haas, Ehrqood, Sleicher,
W. Palmer.
First Row: Chappell, lreys, Poland, Messler, Allis, I. Boyden, Ewald, Lawrence, Smith, Long.
Absent from picture: Coey, Taylor, Tracy, I. Goodell, V. Ke-esey, Stewart, Hawkey.
One Hundred and Five
.
r
1
lohn P. Batterson, Ir.
Glyndon H. Crocker, Ir.
Kendall B. DeBevoise
Charles K. Arte-r, Ir.
Ioseph W. Barr, Ir.
Ioseph Boyle
William A. Buechner
Robert H. Carlson
Laurence N. Barrett
Charles E. Bradley, lr.
Robert W. Crawford
William N. Dawson
Robert L. DeWitt
Howard F. Balme
Paul Barton
Robert C. Good
Charles E. Hills, Ir.
Iames W. Hyde
Thomas A. Kelley
Delta Kappa Epsilon
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF l935
George I. Dittmar, Ir.
Leonard K. Guiler, Ir.
Arthur S. Huey
Richard King
CLASS OF 1936
Daniel B. Caudle
Lloyd P. Dodge
Reginald Fitzgerald
Walter B. Mahony, Ir.
Gilbert H. Mudge
CLASS OF 1937
Hugh P. Fleming
Thomas A. Kennedy
Iohn G. Lamb
John H. Lancaster
CLASS OF l938
Harry I. Koster
Iames H. Moses
Robert C. Myers
William W. Price
Frederick O. Schweizer
Iolin T. Ricks
Iames M. Taylor
Irving G. Thursby
Gaylord L. Paine
Frederic B. Smead
Earl A. Turner
Fredric P. Weller
Benjamin Williams
Stuart A. Maher
'Westby P. Richards
lesse I. Ricks
William A. Warner,
Durbin H. Wells
Nauman S. Scott
Hudson A. Smith
Robert K. Warner
William E. Wilkening
Melvin S. Wilson
One Hundred and
IX
Ir.
William A. Sturgis, Ir.
S.
eau. N,
sf?-
xgk -xx.
s-:W
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.Q-fr "fri ?'31'4qE5-fLiQ- '73
' .FHQs19:rl."'fj.qTl25l"'-3-:flf:- I I K
gisfggtev2ft+,:.gf:2::-.lf , Sigma Chapter Established in l846
v.--.5f'-'12 :fly-aug!-l,,f-.::,s-17.71
5.?f':f: 'Iii -'fra it
1 erxzsaizfffi
1 .... u. -.-1 G, fix-if
":f2.,,T'?"-:.S.' Q -:aff FRATRES IN FACULTATE
..-gf. 4 ter.
l f'-,f .-:QQ-2155-Q Charles H. Cacliqan David Morton
'jgaeiiflg "vi" w-'..fi.'-iff" , .
W5-i12:,,,fr.f' 51:-:tg-gf-3 Herbert H. Gallmqer Harry deF. Srnlth
. 1 114,51 :af
jk-Q-Q.5:3i3313i1.ggi55.,1.hifi Charles H. Morqan Frederic L. Thompson
Fil-115:'Tilf'1Ii1?+'1.S1:
, f'9'f.,.e - .ZZQEQTDTQT
Fifth Row: Madigan iSteWardl, Candle, Buechner, Mahony, Lamb, Lancaster, Dawson, DeWitt,
Barrett, Wells, Richards, I. Ricks, Crawford.
Fourth Row: Boyle, Fleming, Dodge, Kennedy, Weller, VV. Warner, Maher, Smead, Williams,
Paine, Fitzgerald, Carlson, Mudge, Turner.
Third Row: Guiler, lohn Ricks, Batterson, Crocker, DeBevoise, Dittrnar, King, Taylor, Huey,
Thursby.
Second Row: Wilkening, Koster, Schweizer, Scott, Kelley, R. Warner, Balme, Sturgis, Wilson,
Myers, Moses.
First Row: Hills, Hyde, Smith.
Absent from the picture: Barr, Arter, Bradley, Barton, Good, Price.
One Hundred and Seven
3.1 , x
n..Y.x... .-. -1
Reed E. Bartlett
Stanley R. Bryant
Frank B. Evans, Ill
Stuart C. Hurlbert
Marcus G. Beebe
George T. Bristol, lr.
Edward N. Goodwin, Ir.
lames B. M. Arthur, Ir.
David W. Brewer
K. lan Deane
lames C. Edqell
George A. lackson
lohn W. Atherton
M. Vincent Edds, lr.
David S. Evans
Royal Firman, Ir.
Delta Upsilon
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF
Seymour M. Klotz
Ralsten C. Lewis
Alan B. Lyman
Francis I. McTernan,
CLASS OF
S. Merrill Gower, lr.
William Haller, lr.
William S. lol-mson
Franklin L. Reed, lr.
CLASS OF
Robert D. Landon
Andrew R. Linscott
Robert K. Massey
Earl T, Maxon, lr.
Gunther E. Otto
Lewis H. Palmer
CLASS OF
Ross Gilpatric
Benjamin E. Haller
Bruce H. Keppel
Norman F. Lacey
Albert A. Miller, lr.
1935
lr.
1936
l937
1938
T. Arnold Mainwaring
Iarnes S. Miner
Roy S. Stuckless
Harry H. Walsh, lr.
A. Turney Savage
Harold L. Smith, lr.
Eric E. Sundquist
C. Churchill Stafford
William I. Thompson, Ir.
Charles L. Tooker
George S. Trees
S. Douglas Vlfalker, Ir.
Walter O. Roberts
William H. Snow
Edward D. Steinbrugge
Richmond M. Sutherland
One Hundred and Eight
Amherst Chapter Established in l84'7
FRATRES IN FACULTATE
Francis H. Foloes C. Scott Porter
Laurence B. Packard E. Dwight Salmon
Harold C. Plouqh Atherton H. Sprague
Robert B. Whitney
Fourth Row: Massey, Landon, Walker, Trees, Edgell, Tooker, Arthur, Brewer, Maxon, Linscott,
Stafford, Otto, Thompson, Deane.
Third Row: Bristol, W. Haller, Sundquist, Beebe, Savaqe, Goodwin, Gower, Smith, Iohnson, Reed.
Second Row: Miner, Lyman, F. Evans, Stuckless, Bryant, Bartlett, Klotz, Walsh, McTernan, Lewis,
Mainwaring.
First Row: Moses, Sutherland, Gilpatric, Snow, Steinbruqqe, D. Evans, Firman, Edds, Atherton,
Roberts, B. Haller, Miller.
Absent from picture: Iackson, Palmer, Hurlbert, Lacey, Keppel.
One Hundred and Nine
Robert E. Anderson
William W. Crosby
Arthur R. English
Edward A. Evans
Iohn B. Chamberlin
William P. Ellis
Richard C. Forman
Iohn A. Dietze
Gordon H. Ewen
Osmun Fort
Hans H. Frey
Henry C. Higginbottom
Leo C. Bullinger
Gordon Campbell
George L. Cullen, Ir.
Iohn R. Doty
Richard H. Eisenhart
Chi Psi
FBATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
Lee B. Henry
Fred H. Klaer, Ir.
Henry R. Mayo, Ir.
Frederick F. Moon
CLASS OF 1936
Charles P, Goss
Charles E. Hulick, Ir.
Stephen E. Magill
CLASS OF 1937
Warren T. Iohnson
Daniel C. Lawton
Seth R. Martin
C. Merrill Matzinger
I CLASS OF 1938
David F. Goodnow, Ir.
Francis A. Hardy
Iohn M. Lutz
Frederic B. Mayo
Richard M. McClellan
Frederic F. Moore, Ir.
Allan B. Temple
Henry W. Thomas, Ir.
Thomas Toby
William C. Wickenden
Charles E. Phreaner, Ir.
Paul H. Raidy
Dana F. Woodman, Ir.
W. Hugh Maxwell
George I-I. Phreaner
Benjamin P. Terry
M. Tilghman West
Edward A. Wilson
George M. Shay
Renslow D. Sherer
Heath Wakelee
Leon S. Wiles
Robert B. Young
One Hundred and Ten
Zi' I -ffffff Alpha chi chapter Established in 1864
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N'-fiw .-'..1fT:4 '- . FCM Fourth Row: Cullen, Terry, Iohnson, Dietze, Fort, Ewen, G. Phrecmer, Maxwell, Frey, Martin,
Higginbottom, Wilson, Eisenhari.
Third Row: Lawton, Malzinqer, Ellis, Woodman, Forman, Chamberlin, Stone, Goss, Hulick, Ma-
qill, E. Phreaner, Haidy, West.
Second Row: Anderson, H. Mayo, English, Evans, Moon, Crosby, Thomas, Toby, Wickenden,
Temple, Henry.
First Row: Campbell, Young, Wiles, Sherer, Lutz, Hardy, Shay, Goodnow, McClellan, Wakelee.
P. Mayo, Doty, Moore, Bullinqer.
Absent from picture: Klaer.
One Hundred and Eleven
FW T' .
V'?"'1
L. ,r .M MJ
-' f "'-1
Emory Bancroft
Edward O. Brown, Ir.
Terence A. Cordner
Ernest A. Becker, Ir.
Howard B. Bosworth
Allen Brown
Edward L. Butler
William H, Creamer
Dudley C. Bostwick
Iohn E. Field, Ir.
Robert E. Garion
Philip F. Hall, lr.
Franklin G. Allen, lr.
Austin L. Beach
larnes C. Bishop
Clyde F. Cristman
Iohn R. S. S. Greenwood
Chi Phi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
John C. Kehoe, Ir.
Robert E. Keith
Donald L. LaBarre
CLASS OF 1936
Guild Devere
Charles H. Poster
Horace W. Hewlett
Russell W. Higgins
Norman E. Limberg
CLASS OF 1937
lean R. Keith
Roger Keith, lr.
William N. Larkin
Charles G. McCormick
Daniel L. Mcliallagat
CLASS OF 1938
Christian Keedy
Iames P. MacCain
Cornelius F. Miller
Richard C. Reed
W'illard W. Roberts
Robert K. Moses
Donald C. Waite, Ir.
Guilbert Q. Wales
Rae I. Malcolm
William M. Snyder, lr
Roman L. Trembicki
G. Rezeau Tucker, Ir.
Richard S. Wisner
I. Warren Mersereau
Clement M. Simmons
R. Wendell Snyder
Lewis O. Wardell, lr.
William H. Sherwood,
Andrew B. Simpson
Henry H. Skillings
George G. Whitehead
Randall H. Young
lr
One Hundred and Twelve
S's??iI53"f 'P atm thi -425
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Quik? I
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r- L-Sa PRATRES IN PACULTATE
""--. George W Bcnn E Gordon Kelth
-1- 1 'N Wll P Brqelow Newton F McKeon Ir
'-2-.9531 1 1am
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Fourth Row Roberts R Snyder I Kelth Mersereou H Kerth Wordell Hall Srmmons Lundwoll
Fleld
Thrrd Row Wlsner Tremb1ck1 L Snyder Bosworth Devere Tucker Butler Lrmberg A Brown
Second Row Cordner R E Kerth Moses LcxBQrre Bancroft
F1rstRow Cnstmom Brshop Whrteheud Mrller Young MorcCcnn Srmpson Beach Allen Keedy
Greenwood Reed
Absem from the prcture Slcrlhngs Sherwood Hrggms Becker Malcolm Creamer C Foster
Kehoe Wcute E Brown McCorm1ck Gcrrton BostW1ck McKollaqc1t Larkln
l
One Hundred ond Thrrteen
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Robert P. Anderson
Edward R. M. Brehm
Murray H. Green
L. Middleton Black
Burr C. Brundage
Harold W. Cobb
Edgar A. Baird, Ir.
T. Gordon Baker
William D. Baker
Howell A. Bates
Iohn K. Best
Robert N. Bonnett
Thomas M. Colton
Robert S. Alexander
Martin Bennett
Dick A. Clarke
Thomas M. Davis
I. Henry Francis, Ir.
Beta Theta Pi
FBATBES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
George W. Long
Iohn Minnick
CLASS OF 1936
George B. Hamilton
Richard B. Harding, Ir.
Iarnes W. Harker
Calvert B. Lindquest
CLASS OF 1937
Archibald G. Douglass, Ir.
Paul V. Farrell
R. Philip Gregory
Daniel F. Griggs, Ir.
David W. Holmes
Henry C. Howell, Ir.
H. William Iordan
Frederick B. Loomis, Ir.
CLASS OF 1938
Thomas Y. Funston
Robert W. Hyatt
Alexander F. lmlay
Waldo M. Iohnson
Equinn W. Munkelwitz
Donald F. Smith
Frank C. Wilson
Paul I. Newlon
Edward I. Wersebe
Morris K. Winborn
Thomas I. McGurl, Ir.
Leonard S. May
Daniel C. Minriick
Albert T. Nice
Iohn P. Saul, HI
Girvan N. Snider, Ir.
I. B. Millard Tyson
Earle W. Newton
Lyman Phillips
David B. Proctor
Iohn C. Quady
Warren F. Sawyer
One Hundred and Fourteen
' .'41iw151 - -14 , ff 1'
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Frith Row W Iohnson Douglass Newton Proctor Clarke Qucrdy Funston
Fourth Row Bennett Plullxps Gregory Sawyer Davrs D Mmmck Francxs D Baker Alexander
Hyatt
Thlrd Row McGurl Tyson Iordan Smder Best Farrell Grrgqs Bates Bcnrd Bonnett Loorrns
Sau
Second Row Nrce Howell Wrnborn Black Harmlton Holmes Wersebe Hardmg Lmdquest
Newlon May G Baker Colton
P11'St Row Green Anderson Smrth Long Munkelwltz I Mmnxck
Absent from the p1cture Wllson Brehm Harker Cobb Tmlcy
One Hundred and Fxfteen
- - 1 1 1 1 1 1 -
- 1 V1 1 1 1 - 1 1 - 1 1
- 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
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Douglas M. H. Frost
Allen A. Gilmore
Henry C. Carson
Kimball Davis
Daniel B. Halstead
William L. Hitchcock
Benson M. Austin
George R. Bacon
Henry VI. Barber
William H. Brownell
Frank R. Breul
Homer Crawford
Richard H. Custer
Thomas O. Grisell, Ir.
Theta Delta Chi
FRATBES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
Paul F. Kirby
Victor L. Lewis
Iohn R. Lindberg
CLASS OF 1936
lohn P. King
Frederick S. Lane, ll
Iarnes R. Leech
Robert C. Nowe
CLASS CF 1937
Iohn C. Bush
Stephen T. Ellen
CLASS CF 1938
Edward H. Hastings, Ill
Peter N. Horvath
Ralph B. Hurlbutt, Ir.
Willard E. Iones
Iason S. Kohler
Allen Lindberg
Walter C. Meyer
Frederick W. Zink
Walter H. Olclen, Ir.
Samuel F. Potsubay,
Albert K. Roehrig
Clinton W. Tylee, Ir.
William E. Fairley
Jerome F. Peck, Ir.
Alfred A. Snowball
Iohn F. Mcigrath
Iohn K. McDowell
Eugene M. Plumstead
Robert F. Walker
James L. Woodress, 1
One Hundred and Sixteen
fi
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PRATRES IN FACULTATE
Charles W. Cobb Paul C. Phillips
F. Stewart Crawford, Ir. Henry B. Thatcher
Arthur I. Hopkins Georqe F. Whicher
88
Fifth Row: Boltwood, Hurlbutt, Hastings, Breul.
Fourth Row: Bacon, Grisell, Fairley, Barber, Mayo, Bush, Walker, Ellen, Austin, A. Lindberg
Third Row: Lane, Olden, King, Hitchcock, Potsubay, Nowe, Corson, Roehriq, Tylee, Davis.
Second Row: Gilmore, Zink, Meyer, Frost, I. Lindberg, Lewis, Kirby.
First Row: Iones, Woodress, Horvath, Plumsiead, Custer, Crawford, Kobler.
Absent from picture: Halstead, Leech, Peck, Snowball, Brownell, McGrath, McDowell.
One Hundred and Seventeen
Iudson B. Benjamin
Robert B. Clark
Warren F. Draper, Ir.
Edwin B. Bartow
'William F. Homiller, II
Jose W. Fenderson
Harry L. Goff
Verne-r Alexanderson
Robert A. Baclenhop
Max A. Berns, Ir.
Phi Delta Theta
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
Arthur R. Douglass
Philip I. Forbes, Ir.
CLASS OF 1936
Raymond S. Pearsall
Albert H. Pike
Harold I. Baby
CLASS OF 1937
Benjamin F. Goodrich
Iames T. Rarney
Philip N. Hebert
CLASS OF 1938
Bryant M. French
Benjamin I. Glasgow
it
Iohn B. Hickey, Ir.
Iohn D. Leinbach
William Presson
George C. Seward
Athenasios D. Skouras
Procior C. Twichell
Walter H. Whitehill
Iames D. Gowing
Victor S. Johnson, Ir.
David Winslow
One Hundred and Eiqhieen
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Fourth Row: Hebert, Tw1che11 Fenderson Wh1teh111 Goff
Third Row: Skouras,Hom11Ier Pearsall Seward Plke Bartow Raby
Second Row: Clark, Draper Forbes Lembach Bernamrn Presson Douglas Hrckey
F'i1'stHow: Lewis, Eadenhop Glasgow Berns Vtfmslow Gomnq Alexanderson French Iohnson
Absent from picture: Goodrxch Ramey
rum: ss
One Hundred and Nineteen
D. Bradford Blossom
Robert S. Y. Clifton
Donald WV. Craig
'William R. Donaldson
Iohn F. Armstrong, Ir.
Herman K. Beach, Ir.
George B. Burnett, Ir.
Edward Chandler
Angus W. Clarke, Ir.
William H. Claus
Robert S. Fichtel
G. Ward Humphrey, Ir
Kenneth D. Kraeqer
Homer E. Allen
George N. Beecher, Ir.
lohn A. Bookhout
Kenneth M. Davis, lr.
Robert O. Diephouse
Paul P. Felt
Phi Gamma Delta
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
Iohn P. Howe
Donald M. Iones
Charles R. McNeill
Edgar D. Mayhew
CLASS OF 1936
Edgar Coon
William E.. Hall
lohn P. Lutz
Paul Lund
George E. McPherson, Ir.
CLASS OF 1937
Albert F. Miller, Ir.
Frank A. Peltier, lr.
Iohn I. Plante, Ir.
William W1 Reilly
CLASS OP 1938
Iohn D. Gerhard
Edward G. Kothe
Orrin H. Lincoln, Ir.
loseph W. Marshall
Arthur F. Mercer, Ir.
Thomas V. McKean
lames L. Shields
Iohn C. Warren
Ernest A. Wedge
Leonard D. Wickenden
George A. Nagle, Ir.
Ernest Palmer, Ir.
lohn H. Peterson
loseph T. West, Ir.
Ioseph W. Richmond
Richard C. Rotherham
lames M. Selby
Iohri A. Swainbank
Roy E. Tilles, Ir.
Thomas F. Power, Ir.
Robert W. Riemer
Theodore S. Rowland, lr
Edgar F. Taber, Ir.
Don Wilson
Leverett L. Wright
One Hundred and Twenty
' ' V i ,am , ' .""f ,-fW?'j,:gg,i'
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FRATRES IN PACULTATE
'73-' ' 'I5.IlA.
:-..:::'r2'-- awww ,
'js Charles E. Bennett Allison W. Marsh
3-Q.. , . ii,-Q "Q, -:QQ --
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414-
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Fourth Row: Diephouse, Wright, Wilson, Beecher, Allen, Lincoln, Bookhoui, Bower, Marshal
Roland, Rierner, Davis.
Third Row: Rotherham, Fichtel, Clarke, Selby, Humphrey, Miller, Peltier, Kraeger, Claus, Taber
Felt, Mercer.
Second Row: Tilles, Chandler, Palmer, Peterson, Burnett, Beach, Nagle, Lutz, Hall, McPherson
Lund, Plante.
First Row: Blossom, Howe, Donaldson, Warner, lones, McNeill, Clifton, Shields, Wiclcenden
Wedge, Craig.
Absent from piciure: Mayhew, Coon, West, Arrnslrong.
,... . .. , ..-...W .'-P --
One Hundred and Twenty-one
R. Stanley Field
Hugo F. Fredrickson
Alexander I. Hemphill,
George K. Allison
Raymond K. Bryant
Edward W. Harrison
Stephen l. Allen
Harold S. Atwood, Ir.
Gordon L. Becker
G, Franklin Bower
C. Norton Coe
Benjamin P. Atkinson
Robert F. Buehler
Ralph W. Greenlaw, lr.
Robert S. McCollum
Phi Kappa Psi
F RATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
Robert L. Johnson
C. Francis Ladd
Henry H. Leibrich, Ir.
W'illiam G. Phelps
CLASS OF 1936
Crescens G. Hubbard
Anthony F. O'Donnell
Carl I. Raymond
CLASS OF 1937
Philip M. Deisroth
Horace B. Fay, lr.
Sheldon G. Grubb
Franklin H. Hemphill
Arthur V. C. Marshall
CLASS OF 1938
Donald A. MacHarg
Edwin L. Olander, lr.
Richard W. Reuter
Breen Ringlcxnd
Philip H. Ward
Robert I. Willoughby
Donald C. Young
Nelson B. Repsold
Bernard F. Stall, lr
Donald N. Sullivan
Leland P. Russell, lr
Arthur l. Stranq, lr
lames P. Wilkerson, Ill
Edward D. Williams
Robert H. Williams
Georcre YV. R. Sykes
Frank C. Whitmore, Ir
Iohn R. Willoughby
Iohn W. Wilson, Ir
One Hundred and Twenty two
s - . -- .
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Mwst-Wi' 3" -ff, Established in li-395
A, ,- 0 ' FRATRES IN FACULTATE
U Q55 an
Xxgff bun Ralph A. Beebe 'Walter A. Dyer
393522 N F. Curtis Canfield E. Kimball Morsmari
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Fourth Row: Coe, Wilkerson, Russell, F. Hemphill, Becker, Atwood, Bower, Grubb, Deisroth, E.
Williams, Strang.
Third Row: Fay, R. Williams, Marshall, Harrison, Hubbard, Sullivan, Repsold, Allison, Raymond,
Bryant, Stall.
Second Row: Macl-larq, Phelps, Leibrich, Fredrickson, R. Willoughby, Field, A. Hemphill, Iohn-
son, Greenlaw, I. Willoughby.
First Row: Olander, Sykes, Aikinson, Wilson, Whitmore, Rinqland, McCollorn, Sherman, Buehler.
Absent from the Picture: Ward, Ladd, Young, O'Donr1ell, Allen, Avery, Sindlinqer, Okie.
One Hundred and Twenty-three
Wilbur F. Arnold
Kingman N. Grover
George P. Barbarow, Ir.
Ronald S. Beckett
Robert C. Bielaski
Iohn Bowditch, lll
lohn R. Berryman
William B. Braman
Norman S. Buckingham
Iohn O. Epple
Iohn U. Fehr
Richard S. Furhush
Kellogg G. Birdseye
Chester B. Bland
Robert K. Bodensten
David R. Boyd
Delta Tau Delta
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
George T. Hecht
Robert I. Landry
Richard M. Rudden
CLASS OF 1936
Iames R. Collard
Charles W. Combs
Oliver M. Flanders
Robert H. Gardner
CLASS OF 1937
Edward P. Green
William A. Grouse
Robert B. Hevenor
Iohn S. McDaniel
Alan A. Mahanke
CLASS OF 1938
Iarnes T. George
Richard S. Landry
Robert H. Parker
Dorian F. Reid
Robert E. Simpson
William P. Van Fleet
Gardner F. Watts
Vlfilliam E. Goodman
Walier G. Pfeil, Ir.
William M. Rider, Ir.
Iames VV. Stoudt
Melville E. Reiner
Rowland V. Rider
Francis L. Rose
William L. Schoff
C. Blake Skinner
Stanwood Wollaston
George Q. Slocum
Merrill H. Tilghman
Chester A. Weed
Daniel C. Vwfheclon
One Hundred and Twenty four
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Fourth Row: Furbush, Reid, Skinner, Shields, Bowditch, Whedon, Braman,
Third Row: Weed, George, Boyd, Simpson, Epple, Bland, Bodensien, Parker, Wollaston, Creese,
Birdseye, Slocum, Tilghman.
Second Row: Grouse, Landry R., Hecht, Arnold, Watts, Grover, Hevenor.
First Row: Rose, Schoff, Flanders, Barbarow, Goodman, Stouclt, Pfiel, Gardner, Beckett, Collard,
McDaniel, Buckingham.
Absent from the picture: Fehr, Reiner, Berryman, Mahanke, Greene, R. Rider, Coombs, Bielaski,
M. Rider, Rudden, Vo'nFleet, D. Landry.
One Hundred and Twenty-five
Charles Averill
Ioseph P. Chapman
George F. Fusco
Edwin P. Lepper
Richard E. Bodkin
Ernest E. Ellert
Harry F. Gray, Ir.
W'a1do B. Cummings
Theta Xi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1935
lames H. Hayford
Iames R. Hopkins
George L. Ingalls
Chester W. McClelland
CLASS OF 1936
CLASS OF 1937
Winfield Keck
lohn R. McDermott
CLASS OF 1938
William F. Kazlauskas
Paul W. Leak
Iames W. Miller
Henry W. Perlenfein
Iohn W. Whitney
Henry S. Meyer
William N. Mustard
Edward M. Shepard
Richard S. Zeisler
Nathaniel Mills, Ir.
One Hundred and Twenty six
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Third Row: Gray, Zeisler, Leak.
Second Row: Keck, Meyer, Perlenfein, Chapman, Lepper, Shepard, Mustard.
First Row: Whitney, McClelland, Averill, Hopkins, Ingalls.
Absent from picture: Fusco, l-layford, Miller, Bodkin, Ellert, McDermott, Cummings, Mills,
Kazlauskas,
One Hundred and Twenty-seven
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Standing: Schwartz, I-Iciwkey, Averill.
Seated: Ward, Singer, Allis, DeBevoise, Lewis.
Phi Beta Kappa I
Massachusetts Beta Established in 1853
President .................... PROFESSOR FREDERIC B. LOOMIS, '96
Vice-President .... ............ I-I ONORABLE ARTHUR P. RUGG, '83
Secretary-Treasurer ...... MR. F. STUART CRAWFORD, IR., '24
35
35
1
Undergraduate President .......... FREDERICK S. ALLIS, IR.,
Undergraduate Secretary .......... KENDALL B. DeBEVOISE,
FIRST DRAVVING OF TI-IE CLASS OF 1935
Frederick Scouller Allis, Ir. Victor Lamar Lewis
Charles Averill Sidney Schwartz
Kendall Bush DeBevoise Armand Edwards Singer
Richard Stevenson I-Iawkey Philip Hebard Ward
SECOND DRAWING OF 'I'HE CLASS OF 1935
Warren Fales Draper, Ir. Donald Farnsworth Smith
lames I-Iight I-Iaytord Charles S. Torem
Sydney Baer I-Iechler Iohn Cushman Warren
George Lewis Ingalls Iohn Warren Whitney
Henry Walter Perlentein Leonard Daniel Wickenden
FIRST DRAWING OF THE CLASS OF 1936
Daniel Burt Caudle George Curry Seward
Robert Dwight Fenn Harold Ladd Smith, Ir.
William Summer Iohnson Niel Alexander Vxfeathers, Ir.
Mandal Robert Segal Stephen Emerson Whicher
One Hundred and Twenty-eigh
The Foreign Student Group
Four years ago foreign students were afforded an opportunity for resi-
dent study at Amherst through the generosity of Sherman Pratt of the class
of l927. His grant of five thousand dollars a year for five years is this year
providing scholarships for three men.
The scholarships are intended for the purpose of encouraging an under-
standing of foreign cultural institutions as brought about by personal con-
tacts between foreign students and students at Amherst.
The students holding the scholarships are pursuing their courses of study
under the guidance of the Amherst faculty, having the opportunity to compare
the American manner of study and college life with that of their own countries.
Each student has been selected as a representative of his country with regard
to interest in that course of study which Amherst is particularly fitted to offer.
The three students who compose the group represent France, Germany,
and England. They are Bernard Cherau of the Sorbonne, Rudolf Kuhne of
Technische Hochschule, and Brian Heald of St. Catherine's College of Cam-
bridge. In addition to their courses of study Kuhne and Heald are getting a
touch of American fraternity life, living at the Alpha Delta Phi and Psi
Upsilon houses, respectively.
Rudolf Kuhne, Bernard Chereau, Harry Brian Mair Heald,
One Hundred and Twenty-nine
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Walker l-iall
"Now the Trustees, prompted by Stearns, appointed a new committee
which took into consideration all the present and future requirements of the
college and finally purchased two and a half acres of land belonging to
Lucius Boltwood on the north side of the campus. For the first time in the
college history, furthermore, an architectural competition was held, and the
views of landscape gardeners were asked for. Twenty years before Amherst
had been virtually bankrupt. Now it was laying plans for an extensive and
intensive development to extend over a quarter of a century.
The architect's design which, to use Professor Tyler's words, best 'united
beauty with convenience' was that of George Hathorne, of New York City.
The cornerstone of Walker Hall was placed in position on the morning of
Class Day, Iune lU, 1868, With appropriate ceremonies. The usual docu-
ments and memorabilia were placed inside the block of granite, and then
Professor Snell with his air pump drew out the air from the cavity, thus leav-
ing them presumably in a vacuum. lt was a beautiful day and everything
joined to make the occasion a notable one. Was not the new 'temple of
science', as President Stearns styled it, to be Amherst's finest edifice, some-
thing new in local architecture, the 'revised mediaeval'? lt was, as Professor
Tyler wrote, 'a happy Conception happily executed'. lt remained for sacre-
ligious undergraduates and irreverent alumni of a later generation to cast
aspersions upon its charm."
From "AMI-lEPtS'T, The Story of a New England College" by
CLAUDE MOORE FUESS.
One Hundred and Thirty
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Wallacr' Hall
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
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Standing: Kehoe, Allis, Ward, Hawkey, Crosby, Klotz.
Seated: Bartlett, English, DeBevoise, Boyden, Truman.
Absent from the picture: King.
Scarab
KENDALL BUSH DeBEVOlSE .............. ....................... P resident
IOHN CARY BOYDEN ........... ................. S ecretary-Treasurer
Arthur Robertshaw English Frederick Scouller Allis, Ir.
David Bicknell Truman William Wyman Crosby
Philip Hebard Ward Richard King
Seymour Milton Klotz Reed Ebersole Bartlett
lohn Christopher Kehoe Richard Stevenson Hawkey
Scarab is the senior honorary society, founded almost thirty years ago to
recognize those members oi the student body who had demonstrated by their
achievements that they were the outstanding men in undergraduate activi-
ties. Since thestime of its origin, Scarab has continued to hold a position
ot leadership on the Amherst campus.
At Senior Chapel, when their senior year is drawing to an end, the out-
going Scarabs, in an impressive ceremony, tap the men Whom they have se-
lected to carry on the traditions and responsibilities ot the society. This year
at a chapel service in December a new precedent Was set when four members
oi the senior class were tapped for additional membership in the society, it
being the iirst time in the history of Scarab that any members were chosen at
other than Senior Chapel.
ln recent years, Scarab has made one oi its aims to preserve the spirit
and traditions of the college. As a part of this policy, the freshman rules
have been revised, and the supervision and enforcement of traditional cus-
toms has been undertaken, a venture which has proved a marked success.
One Hundred and Thirty-two
Ss...e.,.-ans .. .., , . Q-, W. -.,..... , f. f mf, - Y- - V
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Student Council
ARTHUR R. ENGLISH ...................................................... President
KENDALL B. DeBEVOISE ....... ...... ................ V i ce-President
ALBERT E. WINSTON .......... ................................, S ecretary
WALTER B. MAHONY, IR. ................ Corresponding Secretary
19,35
Edward M. R. Brehm Arthur R. English Seymour M. Klotz
Kendall B. DeBevoise David B. Truman
1936
Richard C. Forman Walter B. Mahony, Ir. Albert E. Winston
1937
Matthew T. West
In addition to its routine duties of supervising elections and competitions
and preserving the customs and traditions of Amherst, the present Student
Council has assumed a position oi true leadership in matters concerning the
college.
Last Spring it was the Student Council that initiated the demand for a
new gymnasium and conducted the poll which resulted in a voluntary gym-
nasium tax of ten dollars a year per man. The present Council also revised
the organization of the Dance Committee into a more efficient unit.
During the Winter term the Student Council submitted to the college
a brief supporting the present rushing system and another suggesting the
creation of a pre-college camp for sub-freshmen. It is also making a study of
the problems created by race and nationality of students.
The most momentous problem which the Council is investigating, how-
ever, is that of the feasibility of national fraternities. The report of the Coun-
cil on this subject will be presented in the Spring.
Standing: West, Forman, Winston, Mahony.
Seated: Brehm, DeBevoise, English, Klotz, Truman.
One Hundred and Thirty-three
Standing: Bartlett, Frost, Averill, Moses, Allis, Willoughby, Stoudt.
Seated: Truman, Long, Dittmar, Crosby, McNeill, Leinbach.
Council of Fraternity Presidents
GEORGE I. DITTMAR, IR. ............................,................. President
WILLIAM W. CROSBY ...... ................................ S ecretary
DAVID B. TRUMAN ......... ................................... T reasurer
Frederick S. Allis, Ir. George W, Long
Charles M. Averill Charles R. McNeill
Reed E. Bartlett A. Milton Miller
Douglas M. Frost Robert K. Moses
lohn D. Leinbach Iames W. Stoudt
Robert I. Willoughby
When the lnterfraternity Council voted itself out of existence on October
24, 1934, the Council of Fraternity Presidents assumed a new importance in
college affairs, taking over all the duties of the more unwieldy body. The
purpose of the Council as expressed in the preamble of its new constitution is
"to co-operate in the handling of problems common to various fraternities and
to provide a medium of co-operation between the college administration and
the student body." The Council of Fraternity Presidents was first called in
1933 and while the lnterfraternity Council was in existence, it devoted itself
principally to regulations concerning the presence of women in fraternity
houses.
This year the Council has proved itself an active one. Eight new rules,
to be effective in the rushing season of l935, have been added to the present
rushing regulations. Time spent by fraternities on the hazing of freshmen
during the pre-initiation period has been limited to two and a half hours a
week: freshmen also are not allowed to work more than two and a half hours
a week on the fraternity grounds. Rules concerning the presence of women
in fraternity houses have been made stricter, the enforcement of these rules
being left to the individual houses.
One Hundred and Thirty-four
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The Christian Association
FREDERICK S. ALLIS, IR. ..................,........................... President
HORACE C. COLEMAN, IR. .......................................... Treasurer
REV. CHARLES H. CADIGAN ...... Faculty Adviser, Secretary
Although every student automatically is enrolled upon entering college
into the membership of the Christian Association, there is selected from those
students who have shown rnost interest in the work a cabinet for the purpose
of directing activities.
There are five general fields of work covered by the Christian Associa-
tion. ln the fall the college supports a Community Chest Drive, sponsored by
the cabinet. The funds are utilized to maintain the Amherst representative in
Doshisha, as well as providing contributions for relief work in Holyoke, and
financial aid to the Red Cross and Dr. Grenfell in Labrador.
Every summer a few students spend six weeks in Holyoke doing social
service work in co-operation with Dr. E. B. Robinson, '96, the pastor of Grace
Church. During the winter further contacts are made through the Old
Clothes Drives.
Delegates are sent to the New England lntercollegiate Christian Student
Conferences at Northfield, Hatfield, and Camp Becket to discuss various topics
with representatives from other institutions.
Through the medium of the Christian Association forums and study
groups are set up to consider the personal, social, and moral issues relevant
to the lives of the students of today. Outside speakers are brought in to
lend assistance to these discussion groups.
On February 28 and March l the Christian Association sponsored the
Christian Association Embassy, whose theme this year was: "The Christian
Religion: Its Significance, Personal, Social, and lntellectual." ,
Standing: Twichell, Barr, Barrett, Merrit, Lancaster, Keesey, Gower, D. Minnick, Mahony, Saul,
Schnepel.
Seated: Winston, Forman, Ward, Allis, Mr. Cadigcxn, Coleman, Brewer.
One Hundred and Thirty-tive
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Johnson Chapel
"Old Adam Iohnson, a one-legged farmer in Pelham, had no immediate
family and a small estate. He was a peculiar man, something of a miser,
with idiosyncrasies and apprehensions, Whofas death drew near was uncer-
tain what to do With the savings of a lifetime. lt was later alleged that
Squire Samuel F. Dickinson brought pressure on the old gentleman and in-
duced him- to make a bequest to Amherst College. However this may be,
When Adam Iohnson died, in August 1823, in his seventy-first year, it was
found that he had bequeathed in his will the sum of 254,000 for the use of 'the
Collegiate Charity Institution in Amherst'.
it it 1' Q'
Work on the chapel started as soon as the frost Was out of the ground in
the spring of 1826, and finished Within a year.
The archiect of lohnson Chapel has never been known, and its graceful
proportion have been assigned, somewhat vaguely, to 'the instinctive good
taste of local builders'. Its exterior, with its pillared portico so reminiscent
of South Colonial architecture, was singularly impressive. The tower, the
floor of which is ninety-six feet from the ground, is actually 450 feet above sea
level, and commands a wonderful view over the surrounding countryside.
i' i' i' 1-
The most recent transformation is the rebuilding of the east facade of
Iohnson Chapel by extending it fourteen feet, and the consequent remodeling
of the interior so that many of the administrative offices, including that of the
President, are located there."
From HAMHERST, The Story of a New England College" by,
CLAUDE MOORE FUESS.
One Hundred and Thirty-six
ORGANIZATIGNS
t
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Fourth Row: Gower, Douglass, Burnett, Allen, Phreaner.
Third Row: Sullivan, DeWitt, Calder, Williams, Breed, Collard, Holthausen, Huey.
Second Row: Ellis, Ringland, Sherer, Howland, Ward, Hewlett, Landon, Keck, Stall.
First Row: Stewart, Taylor, Phelps, Poland, Hawkey, Fredrickson, Goodwin, Batterson, Liebrich.
The Amherst Musical Clubs
Probably the most outstanding feature of the Amherst Musical Club is its
ever-increasing popularity and importance. At the beginning ot this season
almost two hundred men turned out for the first try-outs, the largest group
ever to aspire to membership, and what is more, over ninety were maintained
as a practise group. Thirty men are picked as a concert group, the policy ol
the Club being to vary the groups so as to give as many men as possible a
chance at a trip.
The big concert oi the year was the Intercollegiate Contest on March 1,
in which the Amherst Club took second place, Wesleyan being the winner.
Held in Portland, Maine, this year marks a new beginning in the resumption
of the contest. Two years ago the Amherst Glee Club won the prize at
Springfield and, as the sing was not held last year, the Club still had posses-
sion of the cup at the time of the contest.
An innovation was made last fall when before the Christmas Holidays
the Club gave a joint concert with the Smith Glee Club in Northampton. F ol-
lowing close on the heels of vacation two concerts were held before mid-years
set in. One was another new trip, this time to Colby Iunior College in
New Hampshire. After the singing the Lord Ieff Serenaders supplied music
for a dance in the gymnasium. On the Saturday following the first home
concert was held in College Hall.
One Hundred and Thirty-eight
On February 16 the club appeared in
Worcester. On March l, the lntercollegiate
Glee Club contest was held at Portland,
Maine. Amherst was defending Champion,
but was only able to place second to Wes-
leyan this year. Williams was third, to
make it a clean Little Three sweep. On the
following weekend, the club made an ex-
tended trip to New York and vicinity. On
Thursday, March 7, the club appeared be-
fore the New York Alumni Association din-
ner and gave two broadcasts during the
next day, one over the Columbia and one
over the National network. They also made
a recording of "Lord Ieff" and "High Upon
Her Living Throne." That evening was
spent at the Westchester Biltmore Country
Club, and the week-end was closed with a
concert on Saturday evening at the Powel-
ton Country Club in Newburgh, New York.
The final concert of the season was given
Haverhill, Mass.
RALPH H. OATLEY
Director
at Bradford Iunior College in
Mr. Ralph Oatley, '22, is the enthusiastic and capable Director of the
Club and has had an unusually brilliant success to mark his first three years
of Amherst Directorship. Hawkey, '35, is the President and sings in the
famed quartet-known more popularly as the heartrenders. Liebrich, '35,
Kennedy, '37, and Gregory, '37, are the other members of this specialty num-
ber organization. Especial mention ought to be made of Fredrickson, '35,
whose competent piano solos have been a main feature of the concerts for
several years.
The coaching staff consists of Professor Cobb and Mr. Oatley, who has
had conspicuous success with singing units at Deerfield as well as at Amherst.
AMHERST MUSICAL CLUBS
President
RICHARD S. HAWKEY, Boothbay Harbour, Me.
Vice-President
HUGO F. FREDRICKSON, Norwood, Mass.
Manager
IEROLD B. POLAND, Geneseo, N. Y.
Assistant Manager
EDWARD N. GOODWIN, Montclair, N. I.
Publicity Manager
GEORGE I. DITTMAR, IR., Freehold, N. I.
I Director of the Glee Club
MR. RALPH H. OATLEY, Springfield, Mass.
1ERoLD B. POLAND Advisor
Manage, PROP. CHARLES W. COBB, Amherst, Mass.
One Hundred and Thirty-nine
is-fr
RICHARD S. HAWKEY
President
First Tenors
Bland, C.
Dittmar, G. I., Ir.
Dodge, L. P.
Forbes, P. I., Ir.
Frey, H. H.
French, B.
Gregory, R. P.
Holthausen, D. M.
Huey, A. S.
Landon, R. D.
Minnick, D. C.
Mullen, B. L.
Phreaner, G. H.
Proctor, B.
Shepard, E. M.
Skinner, C. B.
Stewart, H. V.
Sullivan, D. N.
Tracy, W. B.
Membership
Second Tenors
Allis, F. S., Ir.
Allen, S. l.
Batterson, I. P., Ir.
Berns, M. A., Ir.
Clark, R. B.
Cobb, H. W.
Douglass, A. R.
Gilpatric, R.
Gower, S. M., Ir.
Homiller, W. F., ll
lreys, I. W.
Kelly, M. A.
Kennedy, D. R.
Otto, G. E.
Ringland, B.
Snyder, R. W.
Sutherland, R. M.
Trembicki, R. L.
Vanljleet, W. P.
Warner, R.
Weathers, N. A., I
Wersebe, E. I.
First Basses
Barr, I. W., Ir.
Becker, G. L.
Bodine, C.
Breed, R. T.
Bryant, R. K.
Calder, R. G., Ir.
Ellis, W. P.
Evans, E. A.
Farrell, M.
Felt, P.
Fredrickson, H. F.
Guiler, L. K., Ir.
Hawkey, R. S.
Hewlett, H. W.
Ieppson, I.
Iones, I. P., Ir.
McCollum, R. S.
Martin, S. R.
Merritt, R. A.
Poor, E. E., IV
Rathbun, W. T., Ir
Stall, B. F., Ir.
Williams, E. D.
Second Basses
Bole, D. C., Ir.
Buckman, A. R., Ir
Burnett, G. B., Ir.
Burrows, P. W.
Collard, I. R.
De-Witt, R. l...
Howland, R. M.
Keck, W. A.
Liebrich, H. H., Ir.
Miller, C. F.
Mundt, G. H., Ir.
Neilson, A. C.
Palmer, I. B.
Phillips, L.
Selby, I. M.
Sherer, R. D.
Simpson, A. B.
Snow, W. H.
Taylor, I. M.
Ward, P. H.
Warner, W. A.
Whicher, S. E.
Williams, R. H.
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One Hundred and Forty
Standing: W. Wait, Chandler, Olden, Ellis.
Seated: Fredrickson, Canfield, Director, Klotz, Wilson, Raymond, Mayhew.
Absent from Picture: I. West, Schiller, Vlhicher, Wickenden, Presson, Young, Pearsall, Munkel-
witz.
The Amherst Masquers
Off to a successful start with the presentation of Sidney Howard's and
Paul De Kruit's Yellow lack on December 6 and 7 in College Hall, the Arn-
herst Masquers hope to experience as brilliant a dramatic year as that ot
1932-33 which culminated in a European appearance. Departing from the
usual custom of presenting three plays during the college year, the Masquers
this year will give four, one oi which, The Bright Blade, was written by the
organizations vice-president, L. Daniel Wickenden.
The Masquers staged two plays in the winter and spring terms oi l934.
The first, Denis Iohnston's Moon in Yellow River. Was presented in College
Hall on Thursday and Friday, March 8 and 9. Although Klotz turned in a bit
of sincere acting as Tausch, the student players
were overshadowed by the presence ot Professor
and Mrs. Canfield in the cast as the eccentric Do-
belle and his daughter, Blanaid.
Frank Wilson, president ot the Masauers,
scored a personal triumph in Hamlet when that play
was given before an Amherst audience on May 17,
18, and l9. Handling the delicate role of Hamlet
in a superb manner, Wilson far outstripped the rest
of the cast. As a result of his performance Wilson
was invited by the Theater Guild for a tryout and 1
was asked by Paramount and Warner Brothers to PROP. F. C. CANFIELD
take screen tests. Director
One Hundred and Forty-one
Y
A SCENE FROM "YELLOW LACK"
ln Yellow lack in which he took the part of Dr. Lazear, a role demanding
a Wide emotional range, Wilson was also outstanding, but in this play he re-
ceived better support. lames Harker in his first appearance as a Masquer
handled the part of Maior Walter Reed excellently, While Wickenden, Mer-
ritt, and Klotz turned in competent performances.
On February l4 and l5 the Masauers directed their activities to a lighter
vein when they presented Ivory Door, a fantasy by A. A. Milne. Wickenden's
play The Bright Blade, a satire on fraternity life, was
enthusiastically received. The season will be closed
in May with the performance of an expressionistic
Work by Denis lohnston, The Old Lady Says No.
Still handicapped by the lack of an adequate
stage the Masquers are looking forward to the
day when their hopes for a Little Theater Building
will be materialized. Credit for the success which
the Masquers have attained must go in no small
measure to Director Canfield and to Mr. McGoun,
the stage director.
HUGO F. FREDRICKSON
Manager
One Hundred and Forty-two
The Amherst Masquers
PROGRAM POR 1934 35
Yellow lack by Sldney Howard and Paul De Krult
December 6 and 7
College Hall
Ivory Door by A A Mrlne
February 14 and 15
College I-Tall
The Bnght Blade by L Danrel Wrckenden
March 21 and 22
College Hall
The
May 16 17 and 18
College Hall
FRANK C
L DANIEL WICKENDEN
IUDSON E BENIAMIN
HUGO P PREDRICKSON
WILSON
DONALD C YOUNG
F CURTIS CANFIELD
RALPH C MCGOUN
Edward Chandler
Wrlltam P Ellts
Robert E Ketth
Seymour M Klotz
Edgar deN Mayhew
Equrnn W Munkelwttz
Walter H Olden Ir
FRANK C WILSON
Presrdent
One Hu ded cz d F rtyth ee
Old Lady Says No by Dems Iohnston
Presrdent
Vrce Presrdent
Secretary
Busrness Manager
Stage Manager
D1rector
Technlcal Dlrector
Raymond S Pearsall
Carl P Raymond
Ionathan W Schrller
Ward H Walt
Ioseph T West Ir
Stephen E W1'11cl'1er
Donald C Young
WILLIAM PRESSON ......... . .- ....... - ................. P roperty Manager
Standing: Segal, G. Craig, Cowan, Hecxld.
Seated: Whitman, Hughes, Truman, Skouras, Watts.
International Relations Club
ROBERT E. KEITH ......... .................... P resident
DAVID B. TRUMAN .... .............. V ice-President
H. STUART HUGHES .......... ....... S ecretary-Treasurer
FAIRMAN C. COWAN ....... ........ P ublicity Manager
In the second year under its new constitution the International Relations
Club is Well launched on a full and significant year. The Club is organized
for the purpose of spreading information on international relations, holding
open forum discussions on current foreign affairs and having from time to
time speakers on topics of international importance.
One of the most important functions of the Club is that of participation
in the Model League of Nations, of which organization Robert Keith is secre-
tary-general. The twenty delegates which the Club is planning to send to
the Model League meeting in March will represent the nations of Great Brit-
ain, Haiti, and Persia. The delegates will go prepared to discuss the inter-
national problems facing these three nations.
In the Fall Prof. Arnold Tolles of Mt. Holyoke College spoke to the Club
on "Munitions." Dr, Hans Cohn of Smith College addressed the group dur-
ing the Winter term on "Dictatorships Today."
One Hundred and Forty-four
ram.
,H
. ,
I-.
' : it
1". .
Liberal Club
A. MILTON MILLER ........................................................ President
RICHARD BLANC ....... ............. V ice-President
ROBERT LAWREN ........................................ Secretary-Treasurer
In its fifth year of active participation in the affairs of the College the
Liberal Club has faithfully carried through with the ideals and purposes for
which it was founded. To quote: "The a-im of the club is to study in an un-
biased manner all political and social ideals, without, however, affiliating
itself as an organization with any special group." Under the able leadership
of A. Milton Miller it can be reported that from the middle of last year to the
middle of this the Club has had a full program. -
The College will remember the Anti-War Week program held last Spring
in conjunction with the International Relations Club, the Christian Association,
The Amherst Student and the Liberal Clubs of the surrounding colleges. The
week ended with the mass demonstration held at ll:OO o'clock on April 13.
In the remaining' weeks of the Spring two speakers were presented by the
Club. Dr. I. V. Sollins of th Anglo-American Institute spoke on "Education in
the Soviet Union," and Mr. Dornbrowski of The Highlander Folk School on
"Education in The Southern Hills."
So far this year a rather extensive program has been followed out, and
much has been accomplished. The Foreign Exchange Students and Robert
Lawren inaugurated the year with talks and an open forum on the question
of "Students and War." Somewhat later Professors Warne and Gallinger
staged a debate on the subject of "War." Leslie Richards, a strike leader,
was prevailed upon to come and speak on the specific subject of the Ludlow
Strike. In rnid-Winter representatives from the Liberal Club participated in the
Connecticut Valley Student Conference Against War at Vtforcester. A. Milton
Miller presided at this meeting during which Robert Lawren was elected
Chairman of the Continuations Committee.
Standing: Klotz, Forman, Ward, DeBevoise, Alexanderson, Bartlett.
Seated: Segal, Arnold, Whitman, Miller, Skouras, Hughes, Kehoe.
Absent from the Picture: Blanc, Lawren.
One Hundred and Forty-five
ti -I A .
-
Standing: Black, Iordan.
Seated: LaBarre, Torem, McNeill, Newlon, Segal, Hughes.
Absent from picture: Sid Schwartz, Coombs, Whitman.
The Debating Council
CHARLES B. MCNEILL ......... ................... P resident
DONALD L. LA BARRE ....... ...................... M anager
L. MIDDLETON BLACK ............ ....... A ssistant Manager
Sidney Schwartz Paul I. Newlon Horace W. Iordan
Charles S. Torem H. Stuart Hughes Philip H. Coombs
Mandal B. Segal Charles S. Whitman
The Debating Council of Amherst College is composed of those students
Who have represented Amherst in intercollegiate debates. lts purpose is to
foster an interest in debating at Amherst.
Thus tar this year the Council has engaged in four debates. The only
victory was Won from Smith, While Bates, Lafayette, and Brown triumphed
over the Sabrina orators. In preparation for these debates the students pre-
pare the material and are assisted in practice of delivery by Professor Gar-
rison. The schedule for the last half year includes debates with Williams,
Wesleyan, and Union and a possible one with Pennsylvania.
One Hundred and Forty-six
The Flying Club
RANDALL BARTON ........................................................ President
WILLIAM D. STROHMEIER ,...... ....... S ecretary-Treasurer
DONALD HOOD ................................................................ Director
In its second year the Amherst Flying Club advanced rapidly through
the vigorous exertions of William Strohmeier. This club, still the lone organi-
zation ot its kind owning its private plane, is under the direction ot Donald
Hood '27, at the La Fleur airport in Northampton. Due to his efforts instruc-
tion is saie, inexpensive, and requires no more than eight hours before solo
flying is possible.
Not only does the Club own a Taylor Cub of forty horse power, but has
access to a one-hundred horse-power Byrd and an Aeronca. The large plane
is used for primary instruction, but after several hours flying the pupil
changes to the Cub, which is an excellent training ship due to its stability and
low landing speed. The Club composed oi Barton, Strohmeier, H. Thomas,
G. Snider, Saul, and R. King, the last two holding private pilot licenses, has
put in an aggregate of well over l25 hours oi solo flying.
At a meeting in Washington, W'illiam Strohmeier was elected chairman
ot the National Intercollegiate Flying Club, and plans are under way for an
intercollegiate air meet to be held some time in lune. Strohmeier, as secre-
tary-treasurer of the New England lntercollegiate Flying Club, is also making
arrangements for the first intercollegiate air meet which will take place on
the La Fleur airport. ln this meet contests oi skill will supersede those of
speed, in order to insure safety. There will be such events as bomb drop-
ping, spot landing for accuracy, and paper strating, in which the contestant
throws out a roll oi adding-machine paper and then endeavors to cut it with
his plane in the least amount of time.
Standing: Snider, Thomas.
Seated: Crosby, Hood, Director, Barton, Strohmeier.
Absent from picture: Saul, King, Grose.
One Hundred and Forty-seven
. T M
The Cuting Club
RICHARD B. HARDING, IR. ............. ......................... P resident
DAVID W. BREWER ...................................... Secretary-Treasurer
Continuing its policy ot fostering outdoor activities at Amherst, the Out-
ing Club this year has broadened its scope by co-operating with the Physical
Education Department in the instruction of the undergraduates in skiing.
Charles Parker, noted skiing expert, Was procured to aid in the instruction.
The Quting Club ski team, composed of Iarvis and Sanderson Schautiler and
Kenneth and Robert Walbridge, gained twelfth place for Amherst in the Dart-
mouth Winter Carnival.
The Outing Club, in its eighth year of existence, has an active member-
ship ot forty, members of the faculty being included on the roster as well as
undergraduates. The Club has made Tyler Cabin on Mt. Toby available tor
the use ot students at any time.
Last tall the Club sponsored five trips, one ot them to Mt. Washington in
the White Mountains. A like number of trips has been planned for the spring
term.
Delta Sigma Rho
HONORARY DEBATING SOCIETY
Amherst Chapter Established in l9ll
CHARLES R. MCNEILL .................................................... President
The Amherst Chapter of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debating society, is
open to juniors and seniors who show a marked proficiency in speaking and
who have participated in several college debates. The aim ot the fraternity
is to improve the caliber ot speaking and debating in the college. At present
there is but one member, Charles R. McNeill, but plans are being made to
accept as members those juniors and seniors who are on the Debating Coun-
cil.
One Hundred and Forty-eight
SCCIAL
Dance Committee
In accordance with the decision ot the Student Council, the Amherst Col-
lege Dance Committee Will in the future consist of six members, one from the
Senior Class, three from the lunior Class, and one apiece from the Sophomore
and Freshman Classes. Formerly the Committee was limited to tive men,
there being only two lunior representatives.
The Committee has complete supervision ot the two college dances which
occur during the school year, the Lord left Prom in the Fall and the lunior
Prom in the Spring.
Accordinq to the present plans the three luniors on the Committee will
compete for two positions, the chairmanships ot the Lord left and the lunior
Proms.
Under the direction ot George Dittrnar the Lord left Prom was held in
Pratt Gymnasium on December 14 with Mclinnelly and Doc Peyton supplying
the music. lunior Prom will be held on May 17 with Eric Sundquist as
chairman, and with music by Ray Noble.
T. Kelley, Sundquist, Dittmcrr, E. Phreaner, H. Reider.
One Hundred and Forty-nine
dfgiiggv, Q iPy'3?':fg, 1, Tar...
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Sphinx Club
IOHN C. BOYDEN ...... .................... P resident
RICHARD KING ...... .............. V ice-President
WRIGHT TISDALE ......................... Secretary-Treasurer
HONORARY MEMBERS
l President Stanley King Prof. Lloyd P. Iordan
IOHN ch BOYDEN Dean C. Scott Porter lack Darby Wade
President
Originally formed as a social organization, the Sphinx Club during the
past three years has embarked on a program of fostering athletics at Amherst
College. Every Fall the Club holds a banquet in honor of lettermen and
numeral Winners in autumn sports. "Red" Blaik, head football coach at
Dartmouth, Was the Chief speaker at this year's banquet. The Club also
awards a mahogany punch ladle in Senior Chapel to that member of the
undergraduate body who has done the most for athletics during the year.
Last year Richard MacMeekin was the ricipient ot the award.
In its social capacity the Sphinx Club combines with Cotillion to give a
dance the evening after the Lord Ieif and Iunior proms in addition to its
annual Winter dance.
MEMBERSHIP
FROM THE CLASS OF 1935
Frederick S. Allis, Ir.
Robert P. Anderson
Reed E. Bartlett
Iohn P. Batterson, Ir.
Iohn C. Boyden
Edward M. R. Brehrn
Stanley R. Bryant
Ioseph P. Chapman
William R. Chappell
Terence A. Cordner
G. Harry Crocker, Ir.
Kendall B. DeBevoise
Arthur R. English
Richard D. Ewald
George F. Fusco
Murray H. Green
Arthur S. Huey
Iohn W. Ireys
Richard King
Iohn C. Kehoe, Ir.
Seymour M. Klotz
George W. Long
Robert K. Moses
William G. Phelps
Roy S. Stuckless
Harry W. Thomas, Ir
Irving G. Thursby
Philip H. Ward
Donald C. Waite, Ir.
Frank C. Wilson
One Hundred and Fifty
Allen Abercrombie
Charles K. Arter, Ir.
loseph W. Barr, Ir.
Marcus G. Beebe
Lewis M. Black
Howard B. Bosworth
Theodore C. Boyden
Allen Brown
Georqe B. Burnett, Ir.
Edward L. Butler
Robert H. Carlson
Philip H. Clarke
Harold W. Cobb
Fronefield Crawford
William H. Creamer
Paul N. Critchlow, Ir.
One Hundred and Fifty-one
FROM THE CLASS OF 1936
Lloyd P. Dodge
Guild Deyere
Wilber N. Earl
Allen H. Ehrqood, Ir.
Robert D. Fenn
Richard C. Forman
larnes P. Goodell
Edwin N. Goodwin, Ir.
Horace W. Hewlett
Charles E. Hulick, Ir.
Vincent K. Keesey, Ir.
Matthew A. Kelly
Walter B. Mahony, Ir.
Andrew B. Meldrum, Ir.
Gilbert H. Mudge
Paul I. Newlon
Anthony F. O'Donnel1
Charles E. Phreaner, Ir
Carl I. Raymond
Iohn M. Shields
Frederic B. Smead
W. Lloyd Snyder, Ir.
B. Frank Stall, Ir.
Herman V. D. Stewart
Donald N. Sullivan
Eric E. Sundquist
Wriqht Tisdale
Roman L. Trembicki
Garrett R. Tucker, Ir.
Earl A. Turner
Russell E. Whitmyer
Benjamin Williams
Albert F. Winston
lOHN M. BURROWS
President
Frederick S. Allis, lr.
Robert E. Anderson
Reed E. Bartlett
lohn C. Boyden
Iohn G. Broomell
Iohn M. Burrows
William R. Chappell
Robert S. Y. Clifton
William W. Crosby
Edward A. Evans
Allen Abercrombie
Fritz W. Baldwin
loseph W. Barr, Ir.
Donald L. Bartlett, Ir.
William S. Bowmer
George T. Bristol, Ir.
Allan R. Buckman, Ir.
George B. Burnett, Ir.
Parke W. Burrows
lohn B. Chamberlin
Philip H. Clarke
Horace C. Coleman, Ir.
Paul N. Critchlow, Ir.
William M. Croxton
lohn C. Cushman, Ir.
Wilber N. Earl
Cotillion Club
lOHN M. BURROWS ..................................... President
THOMAS TOBY ............. ......... T reasurer
IEROLD B. FOLAND ........................................ Secretary
PERMANENT HONORARY MEMBERS
President and Mrs. Stanley King
Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Allis
Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight Salmon
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Whicher
FROM THE CLASS OF
Jerold B. Poland
Douglas M. Frost
Bryant M. Harroun
Iames H. Hayford
Lee B. Henry
Iohn W. Ireys
Donald M. Iones
Richard King
Fred H. Klaer, lr.
1935
John R. Lindberg
Henry R. Mayo, Ir.
F. Franklin Moon, Ir.
Roland H. Sloan, Ir.
Robert C. Smith
Allan B. Temple
Samuel T. Tisdale
Thomas Toby
David B. Truman
William C. Wickenden
FROM THE CLASS OF 1936
Allen H. Ehrgood, Ir.
William P. Ellis
Robert D. Fenn
Robert E. Giese
Iames P. B. Goodell
Edward N. Goodwin, Ir.
Minot Grose
Fritz O. Haas
Daniel B. Halstead
Matthew A. Kelly
lames R. Leech
Richard E. McCormick
Stephen E. Magill
Edward W. Maynard, Ir.
Andrew B. Meldrum, Ir.
Alan C. Neilson
lay A. Parr
Sanborn Partridge
Charles E. Phraener, Ir.
Samuel F. Potsubay, Ir.
Paul H. Raidy
Ralph H. Sleicher
Robert R. Stone
William D. Strohmeier
Donald N. Sullivan
Wright Tisdale
Robert P. Walbridge
Niel A. Weathers, lr.
Russell E. Whitmyer
Benjamin Williams
Albert F. Winston
Dana F. Woodman, Ir.
One Hundred and Fifty-two
PUBLICATIQNS
t Ptmljrrst Stuhvnt
, M-, ....s...l......... .,..,
The Amherst Student
EOUNDED 1868
Desiring to publish a paper more representative of the finer traditions of
the college, and with a more mature point of view, the "Student" has made a
vigorous attempt to create a more thoughtful attitude on affairs both in and
out of the college, stressing topics of interest to the international as well as to
the collegiate world.
The "Student" has supported the activities and administrative policies
which it considers sound and healthy, but it has not hesitated to criticize any
moves which seemed detrimental. The new gymnasium has had the Whole-
hearted support of the "Student". Also, there has been an effort made to main-
tain a balance between the athletic and the other activities, both intellectual
and extra-curricular. This has been manifested by book reviews, articles con-
cerning art exhibits, concerts, lectures, and feature stories.
The "Student" has approached the problems which are facing the frater-
nity system at Amherst and throughout the country by supporting policies
involving the new rushing system, modification of the hazing methods, and
the regulation of women in fraternity houses. It has also sponsored efforts
toward economy in the form of a cooperative-buying enterprise and has
treated, as well, the more abstruse difficulties confronting the societies.
In cooperation with the Association of College Editors the "Student" has
published open letters in which leading figures in
the newspaper world, have expressed their views
upon points regarding internationalism and disarma-
ment. In addition to this, Amherst, through the
"Student" has taken part in a nation-wide peace poll
to determine the attitude of the undergraduate body.
To stimulate further interest in intercollegiate affairs
a weekly rotogravure section has been circulated
under the auspices of the Associated Collegiate
Press.
Thus, While maintaining its youthful vitality, the
"Student" has attempted to bring about a more
mature restraint expressing a broadened point of
view of student opinion and creating an increased
outside interest.
GEORGE I. DITTMAR, Ir.
Business Manager
One Hundred and Fifty-four
Fourth Row: Massey, Batterson, Lane, Gardner, Twtchell, Bristol.
Third Row: Hewlett, Howard, Barr, Mahony, Meyer, R. Anderson, D. Craig, Partridge, C. E.
Phreaner, Fort, K. Davis.
Second Row: Long, Broomell, Truman, Dittmar, Miner, Averill.
First Row: Cowan, D. Lee, Iackson, Rotherham, Peck, Austin, Hughes.
Absent from picture: Walker, Richards.
The Amherst Student
THE PERSONNEL
D. B. TRUMAN '35 ...... Editor-in-Chief G. T. HOWARD '36, Photographic Ed.
I. G. BROOMELI.. '35, Managing Ed. G. I. DITTMAR, IR. '35, Business Mgr.
G. W. LONG '35 .......... Feature Editor I. S. MINER '35, Merchandising Mgr.
C. AVERILL '35, Permanent News Ed. H. W. HEWLETT '36, Advertis'g Mgr.
K. DAVIS '36 .... Circulation Manager
THE ASSISTANT EDITORS
R. E. Anderson '35 C. E. Phreaner '36
I. P. Batterson '35 F. S. Lane '36 I
D. W. Craig '35 W. B. Mahony, Ir. '36
W. C. Meyer '35 S. Partridge '36
I. W. Barr, Ir. '36 B. M. Austin '37
G. T. Bristol, Ir. '36 F. C. Cowan '37
R. Gardner '36 I-I. S. Hughes '37
I. F. Peck, Ir. '37
TI-IE ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS
O. Fort '37 P. C. Twichell '37
R. C. Rotherham '37 S. D. Walker '37
H. Maxwell '37 C. S. Whitman, Ir. '37 ,
I. B. M. Tyson '37 G. A. Iackson '37 I
R. K. Massey '37 W. P. Richards '37 DAVID B. TRUMAN
D- Lee '37 Editorein-Chief
One Hundred and Fifty-five
'T - . - .
.-.iagl-: --1.-....Lg.,LQ.LL ' In .ghiwlf ,Xw..4.4 Y,. S+' ,,L',, L- ,
THE 1936 OLIO
Volume LXXIX
This, the seventy-ninth volume of the OLIO, Arnherst's oldest undergrad-
uate publication, is presented in an effort to record the history of the college in
a dignified but simple book.
The OLIO as it now appears is the culmination of many years growth.
Starting as a small pamphlet with no cuts or pictures, it grew gradually
through a cloth bound volume. Pictures were introduced gradually and
leather binding was used. During recent years the book has been freed
from attempts at humor in an effort to make it more dignified.
This year the size ofthe book has been changed back to the one used
for several volumes before last year's, and an entirely new type of cloth
cover has been used. There has been no attempt to develop any particular
theme throughout the book, each section being arranged as a unit and all
blended into a simple and dignified whole. The color scheme has been
worked out to use the college colors. A larger enrollment this year has al-
lowed a slight expansion in the book, but the Iunior section has again been
printed with four portraits to a page, but using an entirely new arrangement.
Following the plan of last year the campus views section has been omitted,
the views being used on the division pages.
A few departures from the past have been made, the most important
being the adoption of a more modern type face.
Some of the sections have been rearranged slightly, l
but the content of the book remains substantially
the same. A feature on the new gymnasium has
been introduced as a forecast of the Amherst of the
future.
The editor wishes to express his appreciation
for the generous suggestions and cooperation of the
printing and engraving companies in planning and
arranging this volume. The board presents the
1936 OLIO as the record of the past year and hopes
that the tradition of Amherst may live on far into
the future and be recorded by many succeeding l
ANTHONY F. O'DONNELL
Business Manager
OLIOS.
One Hundred and Fiftyesix
Standing' Forma Mahony Seward Tucker Hoyt L ncaster Ewe Peck Minn' k Tyle
Seated W Wart ODonne11 H L Smxth Br stol Howard
Absent from p1cture Wmston B yden Stoudt Burnett Segal
The 1936 Ollo Board
HAROLD L SMITH IR Ed1tor1nCh1et
GEORGE T BRISTOL IR Managmg Edltor
GEORGE T HOWARD Photographlc Edltor
ANTHONY F ODONNELL Buslness Manager
WARD H WAIT Advert1s1ng Manager
THE ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Gordon H Ewen 37 Dan1eI C M1HD1Ck 37 Iohn H Lancaster 31
THE ASSISTANT MANAGERS
Edwn B Colburn 37 'Warren T Johnson 37 Iohn T Saul III 37
Frank A Peltler Ir 37
THE ASSISTANT EDITORS
Theodore C Boyden
George B Burnett Ir
Rlchard C Forman
Walter B Mahony Ir
Mandal R Segal
One Hundred and F tty se en
George C Seward
Iames W Stoudt
G Rezeau Tucker Ir
Chnton W Tylee Ir
Albert P Wmston
HAROLD L SMITH IR
Edntor n Ch ef
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Standing: Becker, Thompson, Carlson, Linscott, Segal.
Seated: Potsubay, Miller, Mainwaring, Zink, Guiler. Absent from picture: Otto, Vcrnderbreggen.
Lord Jeff
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED COLLEGE COMICS OF TI-IE EAST
Volume XVI
Exclusive reprint rights granted to College Humor
EDITORIAL BOARD
THOMAS A. MAINWARING '35, Editor-in-Chief SAMUEL F. POTSUBAY, IR. '36, Art Editor
BUSINESS BOARD
FREDERICK W. ZINK '35, Business Manager
IAMES R. LEECH '36, Ass't Business Manager A. MILTON MILLER '35, Ass't Business Manager
ASSOCIATES
ROBERT H. CARLSON '36 ANDREW R. LINSCOTT '37 WILLIAM I. THOMPSON '37
MANDAL R. SEGAI. '36 GORDON A. BECKER '37 C. VANDERBREGGEN '37
The Lord Ieff, Amherst's contribution to the
World of collegiate humor, is the fourth and
most lasting attempt at such a publication.
The Ieffs predecessors Were all short-lived.
The first, The Bat. appeared in 1897. lt, how-
ever, Was so unsuccessful that it discour-
aged literary efforts on the part of campus
Wits for fifteen years until in 1909 there
descended upon Amherst the Ivory Soap
Number of Four Leaf Clover. Administrative
officials failed to agree that it was 99 and
44!lOO pure: that publication made a hasty
and involuntary exit.
The Ieff's immediate forerunner, The
Shrapnel, was published in 1918, but it, too,
was doomed to banishment. Finally, in
l92U, the present Lord left came into being.
Although from time to time college authori-
ties have ordered its discontinuance, the
Ieff has Weathered fourteen stormy years as
a blatant companion of the Student and Olio.
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One Hundred and Fifty-eight
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Amherst College Press
ERNEST A. BECKER, IR. ............................................ General News Correspondent
KIMBALL DAVIS ........................................................ General News Correspondent
FREDERICK S. LANE, 2nd ..,..................................................... Sports Correspondent
MR. WALTER A. DYER ..................................................,................................. Director
PROP. LLCDYD P. IORDAN ...................................................... Co-Director in Sports
The Amherst Press was formed in 1925 for the purpose of supplying the
public with news of Amherst College. In the autumn of l933 Walter A.
Dyer, '00, was appointed by the administration officials to serve as a director
to the student correspondents. Shortly following Mr. Dyer's appointment
came that of Prof. Lloyd P. Iordan of the Physical Education Department to
the position of Co-Director in Sports.
General news and sports releases are regularly sent to Boston, New
York, and Springfield papers, and to the United Press and the Associated
Press. Each paper or news syndicate receives a different account of the
events which take place on the Amherst Campus. During the past year
alumni in the large cities of the East and Mid-West have been acting as in-
termediaries between the Press and the newspapers of their cities. The direct
contact of these alumni with editors has been responsible for the large amount
of Amherst news printed in papers outside of New England Another inno-
vation of the past year has been that of sending news of prominent under
graduates to their prep school or local papers The records ot the outstanding
campus figures are kept on file at the Press office
The Press competition which is under the direction of Mr Dyer is open to
sophomores only Competitors receive definite assignments and turn in writ
ten statements once a week to Mr Dyer on the amount of work accomplished
and time spent The competition begins in February and in Iune three men
are selected by Mr Dyer and th correspondents in consultation with the
Dean
Howard Becker Mr Dyer Lane Davis
One Hundred and Fifty nine
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South College Dormitory
"ln the erection of the first Amherst College building,--the one still stand-
ing under the name of South College,-many people had a share. Colonel
Graves Cone of the first trustees? at once ordered bricks from a brick-yard at
Mill hollow, the agreement specifying that they were to be ready in four
weeks. After the site had been crudely surveyed and marked out the boys
of Amherst Academy came one Saturday afternoon and helped to dig the
foundation trench. A corner stone was selected at Pelham, and soon the
work was under way. Many people from the surrounding country, including
Pelham, Sunderland, Levereti, Belchertown and Hadley, worked together,
contributing their teams and ox carts, carrying sand, lumber, and lime, and
supplying food to the laborers. Squire Dickinson sent his own horses to
draw brick, and, when men to drive the teams failed, drove them himself. He
even boarded some of the laborers and paid them out of his own pocket, and
neglected his business affairs in his zeal for the college. It was in truth a
community proiect.
tl'
Nineteen days after the cornerstone was laid the roof timbers were being
raised. In spite of unavoidable delays, the exterior was completed by snow-
fall, with less than 1300 dollars in bills unpaid. During the winter, following
a customary practice in the frigid New England climate, work was suspended:
but when the leaves began to come out in the spring of 1821, South College
stood on its eminence, 'a solid and lofty edifice'-to quote the proud words
of President Humphrey. Before lune was over, it was apparent that the
trustees could plan to open Amherst College in the following September."
From "AMI-IERST, The Story of a New England College" by,
CLAUDE MOORE FUESS.
Cne Hundred and Sixty
ATHLETICS
Football
1934 SCHEDULE
Amherst ......... ...... 2 2 Connecticut State.. 0
Amherst ......... .. U Princeton ............... . 75
Amherst ......... ...... 1 3 Union .................... U
Amherst ......... ...... 3 5 Rochester ..... .. 7
Amherst ...... 37 Wesleyan ........ .. 7
Amherst ...,,.... .. 9 Mcrss. Stcxte .... ........ 1 6
Amherst .. 6 Swarthmore .... .. 7
Amherst .. 19 Williams ................ 7
Coach
Jordan s
IOHN C. BOYDEN
Manager
One Hundred cmd Sixty-two
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1934 PERSONNEL
IOHN C. KEHOE, IR. '35 .................................... c .... Captain
IOHN C. BOYDEN '35 ........................,................. Manager
WRIGHT TISDALE '36 ........................ Assistant Manager
ANDREW B. MELDRUM '36 .............. Assistant Manager
LLOYD JORDAN .....,.................................................. Coach
LEE FRANK ,................................. .............. A ssistant Coach
ELLSWORTH E. RICHARDSON ............ Assistant Coach
FREDERICK I. HOLTER ............................ Assistant Coach
,-ff.:-,-
IOHN C. KEHOE
Captain
One Hundred and Sixty-three
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LETTER MEN
Iohn C. Kehoe,
Edward R. Brehm
Melbourne C. Browning, Ir.
Parke W. Burrows
lohn S. Coey
Lucian I. Colucci
George F. Cramer
Kendall B. DeBevoise
Arthur R. English
Robert D. Penn
Hugh P. Fleming
Richard C. Forman
Arthur S. Huey
Ir., Captain
Thomas A. Kennedy
John G. Lamb
Sumner C. Lawrence
Rae I. Malcolm
Robert K. Moses
Robert E. Newcomb
Leo I. Pagnotta
Keith P. Pattengill
lohn M. Shields
Alfred A. Snowball
Roman L. Trernbicki
Russell E. Whitmyer
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THE SEASON
l
posed of five regulars
from the 1933 team and
splendid material from the
undefeated freshman team
of last year, Coach Icr-
dan welded a team that
brought back the Little
Three Championship to
Amherst. The team, wel'-
conditioned by early prac-
tice, advanced rapidly a'-
ter the Princeton setback
and reached its peak in
the Wesleyan game. Am-
herst lost its stride in the
next two games only to at-
tain its greatest heights
by a smashing triumph in
the fiftieth game with their rivals from Williamstown. At times the loss by
graduation of such veterans as Captain Warner, Potter, Thompson, Morse,
Murphy, Krieger, Flint, and Skiles was felt, but the young team built around
the nucleus of Captain Kehoe, DeBevoise, English, Moses, and Brehm soon
asserted itself as an aggressive and enthusiastic unit.
ln the opener Amherst splashed in a quagmire of mud to a 22-0 win
over Connecticut State. After a scoreless first period the attack began to
function with Brehm and Browning, the latter scoring twice, carrying the pig-
skin over. The entire squad saw action and the sophomores in particular
showed real promise, although the dampness of the field hampered the play.
The terrible tiger at Princeton smothered a bewildered Amherst team
under a barrage of passes, trick plays, and reverses, and emerged victor by a
75-U score. Throwing four splendid teams into action, the Orange and Black
linesmen drove their lighter opponents all over the field opening gaping holes
for Kaufman, Sandbach, and Bulon-Miller, the hard-running Nassau backs.
For t.he thoroughly demoralized leffmen Al Snowball's defensive play and
Brehm's punting stood out.
The Sabrinas staged a determined comeback against a good Union team
that defeated Wesleyan and Williams by earning a 13-O victory. The team,
inspired by the return of Captain Kehoe to action, outcharged, outran, and
outplayed the Schenectady gridders and held Semerad, their star, in check.
DeBevoise and English blocked kicks that led to both touchdowns. The plung-
ing of Snowball and Browning behind a fast-charging line, led by Kennedy,
was particularly impressive.
Gathering momentum, the Amherst team rolled back Rochester and piled
up score after score to turn in a 35-7 conquest. Browning, with three touch-
downs, Whitmyer, Pagnotta, and Pattengill ripped the Yellowjackets' line for
long gains. The interference led by Fleming, Cramer, and English func-
tioned perfectly. Kennedy stood out in his smashing defensive play on a
line that outplayed their opponents all afternoon.
After a stirring first-half battle at Middletown the Purple and White offen-
sive displayed remarkable form in routing the 1933 Little Three Champions
37-7. Amherst scored first on a field goal by Pagnotta, but within three
plays Wesleyan retaliated with a touchdown. Shortly afterwards DeBevoise
One Hundred and Sixty-four
From a squad com-
carried the pigskin around end for a beautiful 42 yard run into the end zone.
In the second half the backs led by Pattengill, an elusive open-field runner,
and Captain Kehoe ran wild against the tiring Wesmen. Fenn, DeBevoise,
and English played the most outstanding defensive games of their careers,
while Colucci was frequently knifing through to drag down Wesleyan backs
behind the line.
An inspired Mass. State team outfought their much favored rivals and
won 16-9 in a thrilling encounter. Stewart kicked and passed to perfection
behind a tireless and driving forward wall. With the score at three-all by
virtue of two field goals, the Sabrinas took the lead when lack Kehoe topped
off a sustained drive by sweeping around end to a score. The State grid-
men then rose up as a man and began a driving attack that kept the leffs in
their territory for the remainder of the game. Kennedy, Snowball, and De-
Bevoise led the visitors' defenses, but they were unable to withstand the sav-
age thrusts of Stewart, Capt. Schaffner, and Koenig.
Swarthmore caught Amherst still in the throes of a slump and gained a
7-6 victory in a heart breaking loss for the leffmen. The play was sluggish
throughout most of the conflict, and only in the last five minutes with defeat
staring the team in the face did Amherst rise up to drive the length of the field
to score. Kehoe, leading the drive, Lawrence and Malcolm played well for
the losers.
After much display of spirit by the student body and an impressive rallY,
a determined and aggressive Sabrina team celebrated the return of the
Alumni by conquering a favored Williams team 19 to 7. Amherst scored
twice before the game was well under way and then tallied a third touch-
down before the Ephmen could cross the goal line. Al Snowball completed
the two first period advances by putting the oval across the line. Browning
scored on a buck in the fourth quarter completing the Ieffs' scoring and
bringing his season's total up to fifty points. Williams retaliated when
Stanley carried the ball over on a l9 yard run. Amherst's seniors were
brilliant in their last game. DeBevoise and Moses protected their flanks well,
English spent most of the game in the Williams' backfield, and Captain Kehoe
proved himself to be the spark of the fighting leff gridmen.
Six members of the team were selected on the mythical all Little Three
team: DeBevoise and Moses, two of Amherst's greatest ends, Colucci, a fast
guard: Kennedy, the hard slashing and sturdy pivot many Pagnotta, a splen-
did blocking and tackling
back and heady' field gen-
eral: and Al Snowball, a
hard driving fullback. Eng-
lish, Penn, and Burrows
played steadily at the
tackle positionsp Fleming
and Cramer deserve men-
tion for their Guard play:
while Kehoe, Pattengill,
Brehm, Browning, and
Whitmyer were fast run-
ners and good defensive
backs. Although Kehoe,
DeBevoise, ,Moses, Eng-
lish, Brehm, Lawrence,
and Huey will be lost in
Iune, there will be eight-
een lettermen available
for next year in addition to
a strong freshman team.
One Hundred and Sixty-five
Soccer, 19.34
With fourteen lettermen returning to
bolster the line-up, a veteran Amherst soc-
cer team completed an undefeated schedule
to win undisputed possession of both the
New England Intercollegiate League and the
Little Three championships. The only blot
on the otherwise perfect season experienced
by Coach Marsh's men was a 3-3 overtime
deadlock with Harvard.
A 2-U victory over Connecticut State in a
game marked by a lack of team play
opened the season. Captain Ward's 30-
foot drive in the first period and Neilson's
heading of Mahony's corner kick in the
third accounted for the two Amherst scores.
COACH MARSH Amherst's second victory was gained
at the expense of a weak Clark University team by a 5-l score. Allis, veteran
wing, led the Lord Ieff attack with two goals.
Manheimer's goal in the last fifteen seconds of the overtime period en-
abled Harvard to gain a 3-3 tie with Amherst. Harvard gained a 2-l lead in
the second half only to have Allis counter on a hook shot and knot the score
with but five minutes of regulation playing time remaining. King scored
early in the overtime, putting Amherst temporarily ahead 3-2.
With Allis and Klaer confined to the sidelines by injuries, Amherst was
hard pressed to win its first Little Three encounter from Wesleyan 2-l. Both
teams tallied in the first quarter-Amherst on a 20-yard shot by Ward, cap-
tain and center halfback, and Wesleyan on a well-placed corner kick by
Talbot. Neilson scored on a quick kick in front of the goal in the last half to give
Amherst the victory. Shields was outstanding in the goal position for the leffs.
The town championship came Amherst's way by dint of a 2-l victory over
Massachusetts State on a mud-covered field. The score was tied until the
last minute of play when Walbridge, substitute inside right, preserved the
Ieff's undefeated record with a spectacular shot that
escaped the State goalie. A fighting Tufts team was the
next to fall before the powerful Purple and White. Ward
supplied the winning goal in Amherst's 2-l victory.
The Little Three championship was clinched and
the season closed on November 17 by a 2-l triumph
over Williams on Hitchcock Field. The game was less
than a quarter old when Neilson scored for Amherst
on a hard shot from the middle of the penalty area.
ln the second period Williams threatened several
times, but good work on the part of Shields in the goal
and Winston and Maynard at fullback prevented an
Eph tally. Klaer climaxed three years' service in the
Amherst forward line with third-quarter goal that
proved the margin of victory. Davidson scored for
Williams in the last period.
At the conclusion of the season twenty players
and Manager Stuckless were awarded letters. The
graduation of nine seniprs, Captain Ward, Allis, Blos-
som, Clifton, King, Klaer, Miller, Perlenfein, and
Shields will prove a severe loss when the 1935 team
takes the field. Manager
ROY S. STUCKLESS
One Hundred and Sixty-six
1
it ,
PHILIP H. WARD
Captain
SUMMARY OF THE SEASON
2
Amherst ..............................
Amherst ..............................
Amherst ..........
Amherst ..........
Amherst ..........
Amherst ..........
Amherst ..........
LETTERMEN
Philip H. Ward, Captain, Halfback
Allen Abercrombie, Halfback
Frederick S. Allis, Ir., Forward
Dwiqht B. Blossom, Forward
Robert S. Y. Clifton, Forward
Minot Grose, Haltback
Henry C. Hiqqinbottom, Forward
Richard King, Forward
Fred H. Klaer, Ir., Forward
Edward W. Maynard, lr., Fullback
Walter B. Mahony, Ir., Forward
Iames W. Miller, Haliback
Alan C. Neilson, Forward
Henry W. Perlentein, Haliback
Walter G. Pteil, Ir., Forward
Gunther E. Otto, Forward
Iames L. Shields, Goal
Kenneth M. Walbridge, Forward
Frederic P. Weller, Goal
Albert F. Winston, Fullback
Connecticut State ............ 0
5 Clark ........................... .... 1
3 Harvard ...................... .... 3
2 Wesleyan .......................... l
2 Massachusetts State ........ 1
2 Tufts .................................... l
2 Williams 1
PERSONNEL - '
PHILIP H. WARD .............. ................................. ............ Ca p tain
ROY S. STUCKLESS ........................................................................................ Manager
ALLISON W. MARSH .......................................................................................... Coach
One Hundred and Sixty-seven
COACH JORDAN
Basketball
SUMMARY OF THE SEASON
Amherst .............................. 45
Amherst ....... ................... 2 7
Amherst ....... .....
Amherst ....... .....
Amherst ....... .....
38
39
3 1
Amherst ....... ..... 2 9
Amherst ....... ..... 2 3
Amherst ....... ..... 4 O
Amherst ....... ..... 3 l
Amherst ........... ..... l 3
Amherst .......... ..... 2 2
23
Amherst .......... .....
LETTERMEN
R. K. Moses, Captain
I. S. Coe-Y
G. F. Fusco
M. H. Green
D. W. Holmes
Ft. I. Malcolm
I. T. Ramey
H. C. Retcler
E. A. Turner
Clark ...........
Trinity .........
Swarthmore
Mass. State
Springfield
Harvard .......
Mass. State
Williams .....
Wesleyan
Union . ..........
Wesleyan
Vlfilliams
- 1935
l7
23
30
27
25
26
19
25
32
54
20
38
SAMUEL T. TISDALE
Manager
One Hundred and Sixty-eight
.81
Standmg S Tlsdale Manager Beebe Bole Hlggms Marshall Iordan Coach Becker Scott
Seated Ramey Turner Relder Holmes Moses Captain Coey Malcolm Fusco Patlengrll
'223'
'Th'
1935 PERSONNEL
ROBERT K MOSES 35 Captam
SAMUEL T TISDALE 35 Manager
CHARLES E Pl-IREANER IR 36 Assrstant Manager
ERIC E SUNDOUIST 36 Ass1stant Manager
LLOYD IORDAN Coach
EARL A TURNER 36 Captaln Elect
THE SEASON
W1th elght consecutlve Wln a trlple t1e for the Llttle
IZ.
E3
il'
WW
-fu.
4-1-
Fmt
,iv-
ROBERT K MOSES
Captaln
Three Champlonshrp and nme v1ctor1es to three defeats 1n
the whole season Coach Iordan brought the Amherst bas
ketball team through one of 1ts most successful seasons dur
1ng thls past wlnter Bu1ld1ng hrs team around SIX returmng
lettermen Wlth Capt Moses at guard and Earl Turner and
George Fusco two d1I'l'11lflL1l1V9 but extremely fast forwards
as a nucleus of veterans Coach Iorclan was able to tashlon
a Wlnrung team Extremely strong sophomore materral
was really responslble for the strong cornblnatlon that
Wh1rled through the openlng games of the schedule Lanky
Iack Coey at center managed to get the tlp off most of the
tlme Whlle Dave Holmes at the other guard posltlon dlcl
vahant work gettlng the ball off the backboard and on
occaslon made a fast break for the basket to set 1n an easy
step shot The set plays of the Amherst team worked tune
and agam durlng the openmg games allowlng the players
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One Hundred and Srxty nme
W -:wr-wr.F Tegan-F
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easy and short shots. lack Coey's eagle eye made him high scorer for the
season, and Earl Turner managed to sink some of his spectacular long shots
at crucial moments, especially in the return game with Wesleyan.
This powerful five swept through the opening games, gathering momen-
tum as it went. Nothing seemed able to stop them as they mowed down
Clark, Trinity, Swarthmore, Mass. State twice, Springfield, Harvard and
climaxed their winning streak of eight games with a crushing defeat of Wil-
liams in the cage 40-25. After this the team sank into a lethargic slump, first
being just barely nosed out by Wesleyan and then crushed by Union. They
recovered just enough to eke out a two-point win over Wesleyan in the re-
turn game at the cage but then were crushed by 'VV'illiams in the final game,
leaving a triple tie for the Little Three Title. .
A brilliant passing attack coupled with an early lead helped the left
netrnen deliver a 45-17 defeat to the Clark team on their floor in the opening
contest Ianuary 12. At no time during the game did the Worcester contin-
gent threaten, and the visiting quintet displayed a form that was to stand them
well in future games. In a close and hotly contested game Amherst gained
its next victory over a strong Trinity aggregation on the Amherst floor. With
the score 9-8 at the half, the contest was nip and tuck all the way to the
thrilling finish when Fusco shot the last and winning goal to end the game
27-23.
CHEERLEADERS-1934-1935
Devere, Waite, Bartlett, Reed.
One Hundred and Seventy
Durlng the followmg week two more wrns were annexed to the Purple
streak when Swarthmore fell on the Amherst court to the tune of a 38 30 de
feat and Mass State was conclusrvely beaten on the State court 39 27 Coey
flashy sophomore southpaw center led tn the former ot these games wrth ten
pornts whrle Captarn Elect Earl Turner starred 1n the latter wrth fourteen to
hrs credlt W1th the odds agalnst mt the Iett qurntet flashed through tts htth
vlctory w1th a well deserved w1n over the famed Sprlngfreld College frve
ln a poorly played game the Harvard Crlmson battled through a neck
and neck contest on the Cambrrdge floor only to come out on the short end
of a close 29 26 vrctory for therr Purple rrvals from Amherst The Amherst
team hung up 1lS seventh strarght Wm at Mass States expense Saturday
nlght February l6 by a 23 l9 count but not before the Statesmen had come
W1ll'111'1 three po1nts of tymg the score 1n the frnal mmutes of play A crowd
of 2 OOO fllled the cage to see the Ietfs burld up a slender lead ln the flrst halt
and defend 1t ln the second Davrs of State led the scor1ng wrth nme pornts
one more than Coey netted for Amherst
The last consecutlve w1n was accounted for 1n the tlrst W1ll1ams game
when Coey and Holmes drsplayed br1ll1ant play to boost the Ietfs through to
a declslve 40 25 V1ClO1'Y The next two games were dropped rn contests away
from home as Wesleyan eked out a 32 31 w1n and the flashy Unron qumtet
completely bottled up the Purple to trounce them 5413 A slrght comeback
was staged when Wesleyan fell 1n the cage by two polnts 1n a close 22 20
battle The season closed up at Wrlllamstown where the left passers got
gomg too late to lose 38 23 Wrlltams scored n1neteen pomts before Amherst
knew qulte what was happentng After that the contest was well matched
and tarrly even
Earl Turner Captaln Elect for next year and George Fusco spark plugs of
the team were consrstent and well balanced forwards lack Coey at center
was h1gh scorer and Captaln Moses and Dave Holmes accounted for ag
gressrve guardlng w1th the lanky captam occasronally srnklng one of hrs pot
shots or h1s partner makmg one of hrs sudden breaks for the basket to neatly
set the ball 1n
One Hundred and Seventy one
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1
COACH WHEELER
Baseball, 1934
1934 PERSONNEL
WALTER l. MURPHY ......
ROBERT L. DAVIDSON ........
ALFRED G. WHEELER ........
LETTERMEN
Ioseph P. Boyle, Catcher
loseph A. Chapman, Right Field
Terence A. Cordner, Left Field
George F. Fusco, Second Base
Bryant M. Harroun, Third Base
William F, Homiller, Il, Third Base
Lester A. Karelis, Pitcher
Walter I. Murphy, Shortstop
Charles W. Nielsen, Pitcher
Milton Taradash, Second Base
Iohn H. Thompson, Pitcher
Earl A. Turner, Center Field
Harold L. Warner, Ir., First Base
Russell E. Whitmyer, Riqht Field.
.........Captain
...........Manaqer
........Coach
WALTER I. MURPHY
Captain
One Hundred and Seventy-two
Amherst .............................. 4
SUMMARY OE THE SEASON
Clark ...........
Amherst ........ .... O l-lamilton .....
Amherst ........ .... 2 Bowdoin ......
Amherst ....... ..... 5 Wesleyan
Amherst ....... ..... 3 Springfield .
Amherst ....... ..... 4 Army ...........
Amherst ....... ..... 8 Arnold ........
Amherst ....... ..... 6 Lehigh ....
Amherst ....... ..... 2 M. S. C. ..... .
Amherst ....... ..... 8 Wesleyan
Amherstl ...... ..... 9 Williams .....
Amherst ........... ..... 3 M. S. C. ..... .
Amherst ....... ..... 6 Williams .....
W .
ROBERT L. DAVIDSON
Manager
THE SEASON
A halt share in the Little Three Championship with its perennial rival,
Williams, and seven victories in thirteen starts was the record of the 1934
Amherst baseball team. Mediocre pitching and weak hitting were more
than offset by the airtight fielding displayed by the nine throughout the
season.
Captained by Walter Murphy, brilliant shortstop oi two seasons' exper-
ience, the team accounted tor victories over Williams, Wesleyan, Springfield,
Clark, Bowdoin, and Arnold. Boyle, sophomore catcher, led the team in bat-
ting with a .333 average and performed with distinction behind the plate to
mark himself as one ot New England's leading college backstops. Fusco at
second base and Thompson on the pitching mound also contributed mater-
ially to the team's success.
One Hundred and Seventy-three I
ff -TQ T-f c51 :Tyan-Qin 1315?-2 5Tf:f:f-?:v1 e'?- ' T F ' Y T. Z --1. ft, :mb
. .- :Y 1,7 nf . ...E ....-..s..,...,.. . . A.-- . .- .,. '
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l
5 Y ng fr ,...- , -..Q i. ,W ,J 'Q ,
. if ,- 1-
4 ln the opening game of the season with Clark
University, Thompson pitched his teammates to a
441 victory, allowing four hits. Amherst was able
to touch Gallagher, Clark hurler, for but three safe-
tiesy but nine walks and a timely single in thc
eighth inning by Harroun gave the Purple and
White the winning margin.
Weakness at bat spelled a 2-O defeat at the
hands of Hamilton for the Lord Ieffs in their second
game. The game was a pitching duel with Bets of
Hamilton and Karelis of Amherst yielding only three
hits apiece. I-lamilton's scores came in the fifth
frame when six straight bunts temporarily upset the
Amherst infield and accounted for two runs.
Fusco's eighth-inning theft of home was the
high spot of a 2-l triumph over Bowdoin. Running
for Boyle who had doubled, Fusco advanced to third
Assismm Manager base on a wild pitch and brought the crowd to its
feet by stealing home with two outs and two strikes
called on Warner. Nielsen and Karelis shared pitching honors for Amherst.
REED E. BARTLETT
Amherst's first Little Three victory was gained on Pratt Field by a 5-3
margin over Wesleyan. Coultas held the home batsmen hitless for the first
five innings, while his teammates were tallying once in the second. Fusco
doubled in the home half of the sixth inning to start a scoring spree which re-
sulted in three runs. Both teams added two more runs to their totals before
the end of the game. Thompson went the full route
for Amherst and turned in his second four-hit per-
formance in as many starts.
In the Springfield game Amherst was forced
to an extra inning before winning 3-2. Two hits and
a well-executed squeeze play in the tenth inning
provided victory. Karelis, who limited the veteran
Springfield aggregation to eight scattered hits, and
Boyle, who hit safely three times in five trips to the
plate, were outstanding for the Lord leffs.
The most crushing defeat of the season was ad-
ministered in the next game by Army at West Point.
The Cadets pounded the combined offerings of
Nielsen, Thompson, and Karelis for l9 base hits and
14 runs. This total included two home runs and
three triples. Coach Wheeler's charges converted
eight hits into four runs, making the final score 14-4
in favor of Army. Cflpffrirl-Elect
GEORGE F. FUSCO
One Hundred and Seventy-four
Arnold College of New Haven succumbed to Amherst 8-4. All of Am-
herst's runs were scored in the third inning, Captain Murphy's homer with
two men on base supplying the climax. On the following day the Purple
and White was taken into camp by Lehigh by the scose score of 7-6. Turner's
double and two singles made him the leading Amherst batsman of the day.
Pratt Field was the scene of the first of a two game eries with Massa
chusetts State Pitcher Iohnny Stewart held the home team to one hit giving
Massachusetts State a 42 victory States four runs all came in the fifth
innmg while Amherst scored twice ln the frrst chapter
In the second game of the year with Wesleyan Karelis blanked the Car
dmal and Black forces 8 U Amherst played errorless ball and made 12 hits
six of which were accounted for by Whitmyer and Boyle
The Decoration Day game with W1ll1GmS resulted rn Amherst s third and
last Little Three triumph With Thompson prtchlng a brilliant game the
Sabrina team had little trouble in wmnrng 9 2 Amherst scored three runs m
the third inning and six more rn the fifth The Williams tallies came ln the
second frame
The second game with Massachusetts State brought another heartbreak
ing defeat at the hands of l"e town rivals this time by 5 3 Stewart again
baffled Amherst and set down the team wh1ch faced him with four hrts Am
herst staged a belated rally 1n the ninth 1nn1ng to score three runs
Williams revenged her defeat earlier m the season by defeating Amherst
10 6 on Pratt Field in the final game of the season for both teams A Com
mencement Day crowd watched the Amherst team crrppled by the loss of
Boyle go down to defeat Karelrs started the game for the Ieffs and was re
placed ln the second inning by Thompson The Ephmen gained a 6 l lead
only to have Amherst knot the count at 6 6 at the close of the fourth inning
Amherst errors helped Williams to counter four more trmes in the closing
innings
At the close of the season George F Fusco veteran second baseman
was elected to captain the team in the l935 season
1935 PERSONNEL
REED E BARTLETT Manager
ALFRED G WHEELER Coach
One Hundred and Seventy five
GEORGE F. FUSCO .........,.......................................... Captain
LETTER MEN
COACH LUMLEY
Track - 1984
1934 PERSONNEL
WALDO E. SWEET ............................................ Captain
CECIL M. MUNOZ ............................................ Manager
SEYMOUR M. KLOTZ .................... Assistant Manaqer
ALBERT E. LUMLEY .............................................. Coach
1935 PERSONNEL
RICHARD S. HAWKEY ................................ Co-Captain
IOHN MINNICK ............................................ Co-Captain
ROBERT P. ANDERSON .....
......................Manaqer
GEORGE B. BURNETT ...... ....... A ssistant Manaqer
G. REZEAU TUCKER
.Assistant Manager
ALBERT E. LUMLEY .Iliff "ff ........................ Coach
Brainard T. Bennett
Iohn G. Broornell ..........
.................Harnmer
.........l00, 440, 220
lohn M. Burrows ..... ............................... H ammer
Parke W. Burrows ...................................... Shot, Discus
Herbert W. Edwards
Mile, Mile, 880, Relay
Arthur R. English ........., ................... H iqh lump, Shot
Richard S. Hawkey Iavelin, Discus, Shot
Richard King .............. .................,.......... l 00, 220
lohn Minnick ...........
Frederick E. Moon .
.......440, 880, Relay
.....................I-lurdles
Stanley Paymer ........ . ....... 440, Broad lump
Frederic B. Smead .
Herman V. Stewart
.............,.....Hurdles
................440, Relay
Waldo E. Sweet ......... ......... 8 80, Mile, Relay
Philip H. Ward ..........
Iohn H. Washburn ..
Mile
.............220, Relay
CECIL M. MUNOZ
Manager
One Hundred and Seventy-six
Amherst
Amherst
Amherst
WALDO E SWEET
68
Amherst ....
Track - 1934
SUMMARY
Swarthmore
94 2,73 Haverford ........
97 2X3 Wesleyan ..........
75 l1'2 Williams ..........
58
31 1,13
37 113
59 112
Cgptcnn
Duplicating the prev1ous years rn many respects Amhersts 1934 track
team concluded another undefeated schedule This season marked Coach
Al lumley s fourth Little Three championship and h1s third undefeated team
in six vears The conquest of Wesleyan was the worst defeat ever admin
1stered by one team upon another in Little Three competition and W1ll1ams
was overcome for the second straight season Another feature of note was
that the Sabnnas failed to lose a single running event to either of their ancient
r1val
Fourth Row Moon Munoz Manager Richardson Brown Assistant Coaches Eddie Newport
Third Row Dunn Mmer Stewart Allison Tylee Beckett Beach Smead Payrner
Second Row Hanes Thursby Hawkey Broomell Warren Ward Kmq M1nn1ck I Burrows
English
Ftrst Row Fenn P Burrows Washburn Edwards Lurnley Coach Sweet Vargus B Bennett
R Bennett
One I-'undred and Seventy seven
I n 1 1 I
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Doc Newport, Trainers.
3 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 ' 1 1 - 1
Graduation will deprive Amherst of such stars
as Captain Sweet, Washburn, and Edwards. Dur-
ing his four seasons at Amherst Sweet was unde-
feated in dual competition, scored more points than
any other Amherst trackman, and broke five varsity
and two freshman records. He holds the records in
the outdoor and indoor mile, 2 mile, the 800 meter,
and the half-mile. ln reference to his ability, Coach
Lumley said: "Without doubt Sweet is the ablest
runner that Amherst ever had." Washburn not only
was an excellent 220 man, but accomplished more
for the team through his enthusiasm than any other
man. Herb Edwards was undefeated in his two-
mile event. Smead, a speedy sophomore, and
Moon did not lose a hurdle event. King, a sea-
soned veteran in his junior year, Broomell, and Min-
nick excelled in the 100, 440, and 880, while I. t
Burrows, P. Burrows, and Hawkey handled the SEYMOUR M- KI-GTZ
weights efficiently for the team.
Assistant Manager
During the Winter Track season the Relay team of Broomell, Minnick,
Stewart, and Washburn defeated Williams and Colby for the sixth consecu-
tive victory at the Millrose games in the Madison Square Garden. At the
same time Sweet ran an admirable second in the 1000 yard run to Horn-
bostel, the world champion. Sweet then lowered the New England Intercol-
legiate record in the indoor mile by 12 seconds to 4:2522 at the University
Club games. Here the Relay team ran fifth, while King and Smead gained
thirds in the 40 yd. dash and the hurdles respectively.
The track team won one and lost one in the indoor dual meet compe-
tition. A strong Holy Cross team defeated Amherst 52-34, in a meet which
saw seven Cage records broken. Sweet gained victories in the mile and
880. The Purple and White men turned back Springfield in a nip and tuck
meet 57Vz-SOW. ln this meet Edwards and Sweet lowered the existing Cage
records in the 2 Mile and the 880.
The outdoor season was ushered in by a close victory over Swarthmore
68-58. Though crippled by injuries, the team rose to heights by earning ten
first places. Sweet and Moon were dual winners, the former in the mile and
880, and the latter in the hurdles. Hawkey shattered the former javelin rec-
ord of Amherst with a toss of 185 feet 3J7f2 inches. P.. Burrows also won in the
shot and discus.
One Hundred cmd Seventy-eight
Gathermg momentum the Purple snowed Hav
erford under by a score of 94 2X3 to 31 l 3 The
Sabrrnas took trrst 1n efery event but the 440 wrth
Sweet and P Burrows agarn takmg two f1rsts ap1ece
Smead won ln the hlgh and placed second behlnd
Moon rn the low hurdles who 1n turn gamed sec
ond rn the hrgh hurdles Klng Arnhersts veteran
dash man won handlly rn the l00
The hrgh scorlng track team overpowered the1r
rlvals from Mrddletown 97 2 '3 to 37 l f 3 to better the
92Vz 42 V2 score ot the prevlous season Sweet agam
swept the m1le and 880 wlth h1s rnachlnellke con
s1stency Iohn Burrows estabhshed a new college
hammer record w1th a l55 f ot heave Kmg
Washburn and Mmnrck won the 100 220 and the
440 yard runs respectrvely Hawkey led rn the
Javehn and dlscus whlle P Burrows took frrst 1n the
shot and second ln the dlscus Smead and Moon
kept thelr slate clear 1n the hurdle events whrle
JOHN MINNICK Wesleyan won the hlgh and broad Jumps and the
Co Captam Elect pole vgult
ln a spectacular meet wrth Wrlhams the mvaders p1led up enough pomts
to br1ng back a 75 V2 to 59Vz tnumph from Wlllramstown Thrs v1ctory brouaht
Amherst rts second success1ve Lrttle Three trtle Handrcapped by a muscle
pulled on the hrst lap ot the m1le run Sweet managed to break the tape ahead
of Ward but was unable to compete rn the 880 however Mmnrck ran a
beaut1tul race to extend Amherst s record ot wlnnrng that event to SIX stra1ght
years Kmg Washburn and Stewart another fast star brought back hrsts rn
the dashes and the 440 Although Amherst was spectacular m the spr1nts
and runmng events Wrlltarns was equally good 1n
the held events gcnnrng 40W out of a possrble 63
pomts though Hawkey and I Burrows won w1th the
Javelm and hammer
Durlng the regular season the team was repre
sented at the Penn R lays and the New England
lntercollegrate meet ln the former a relay team
composed of Sweet Edwards Mlnnrck and Wash
burn ended flfth ahead of teams from Cornell N Y
U and Mrchrgan State Amherst placed tenth ln
the N E l meet
Bronze medals are donated annually by George
D Pratt to the hfteen who have scored the most
pornts Those recervmg the award are W E
Sweet 65 F B Smead 47W R S Hawkey 39 F
F Moon 39 P W Burrows 33 H W Edwards 26
I M Burrows 26 B Kmg '75 I Mmnrck 23Vz I H
Washburn 23W I G Broomell 19W H V Stewart
1431 A R Englrsh 1412 P H Ward l2 S Paymer
RICHARD S HAWKEY
Co Captam Elect
One Hundred and Seventy nine
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12. l .
Standing: Smith, Manager, Lumley, Coach, Vxfarren, Tylee, Furbush, Twichell.
Seated: Snider, Marshall, Swainbank, Minnick, Captain, Beckett, Breed, Doc Newport, Trainer.
Cross Country, 1934
After going down to defeat in the first four meets, with no victories to
brighten the outlook, the Amherst Cross Country Team was facing the title
of the most unsuccessful harriers in purple and white for some time, but a
flashing upset in the all-important Little Three Meet gave the team instead
the title of Little Three Champions. The great comeback shown by the Lum-
ley-coached team in this 30-40-54 conquest over favored Williams and Wes-
leyan shows that not unsuccessful, but courageous, is the adjective which
describes the l934 aggregation.
The Coast Guard Academy team, always a superlative group of runners
that are hard for any opponent, walked off with a well-earned 24-3l victory.
The Tufts harriers were next in line, and the speedy men in brown and blue
emerged on top by a 22-38 score, The Ieffs then travelled to Burlington,
Where a strong Vermont outfit won 24-31. A fast and experienced team from
Massachusetts State added to Amherst sorrow by administering a l5-48
drubbing.
With this not-too-successful slate behind them, the Lord leffs came into
the Little Three a decided underdog, but with Captain Minnick, Captain-elect
Beckett, Twichell, Halstead, and Marshall of the Amherst team finishing in
the first ten, Williams and Wesleyan were conquered.
One Hundred and Eighty
-xv 1
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QE
Standing Braman Lund Ehrgood Martm
Seated McDamel DeW1tt Warren Fay Howe Tucker Captam Goodell Hemphxll
Wrestltng 1935
PERSONNEL
G REZEAU TUCKER Captam
WILLIAM C WICKENDEN Manager
FREDERICK I HOLTER Coach
SUMMARY OF SEASON
The 1935 Wrestlrng team 1S a remarkable example of what a competent
coach can do wrth very green materral The graduatlon of De Leon Davld
son Porter and Krleger and the tatlure of Barlow Marks and Hurd to return
to college left Captam Rez Tucker as the lone letter man around whom to
bu1ld the team After los1ng to W1ll1ams 226 the Amherst grapplers came
back strong to defeat Wesleyan twlce and ftnally lose to Wllltams I4 12 1n a
thrllhng exhtbltlon
Inexperrence was greatly' responstble for the poor showmg of the Am
herst Wrestlers 1n the opemng meet w1th W1ll1ams A strong aggregatlon of
Ephmen captured all but two events Ilmmy Fay sophomore star galned a
tlme advantage ln the 135 lb class as d1d Tucker 1n the l75 lb class
At Mlddletown the Purple and Whlte showed great 1mprovement by de
featlng the Wesmen 21 ll McDan1el threw hls man to open the meet
Howe and Captam Tucker also pmned the1r opponents Whlle Bradley and
Fay won on trme advantages The return meet Wllh Wesleyan resulted tn a
Sl to 5 trtumph wlth Burt tn the unhmlted class belng the lone Wesleyan
vlctor McDan1el Bradley Fay Martln and Tucker threw thelr opponents
Howe and Goodell garnermg decrsrons The latter defeated Capt Rymer ln
a br1ll1ant battle whlch went to an overt1me
The trme advantage v1ctor1es of Bradley Fay Tucker and Goodell put
Amherst ahead of a favored W1ll1ams team l2 ll but 1n the fmal bout Mc
Coun managed to defeat I-Iemphlll to keep the Ephmens slate clear tor the
season
One Hundred and Exghty one
- 1 1 1 -
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SUMMARY OF SEASON
. The Swimming team completed one of the
most brilliant seasons of its twenty-tour years
as a varsity sport, and according to Coach
Kennedy was the outstanding team that he
has coached in his long experience at Amherst.
Not only did the leff natators gain victories
over seven of their eight opponents, but they
administered to Williams its worst defeat in the
history of their swimming rivalry by a score of
66-ll. ln addition to this triumph Amherst
turned back Wesleyan to win the Little Three
title. With Captain Emory Bancroft, Kelly,
Buechner, Wisner, Whicher, Repsold, Lapidus,
and Partridge forming a strong nucleus, the
Purple and White swimmers earned victories
, , over M. I. T., the Coast Guards, Rensselaer
Poly, Trinity, Wesleyan, Worcester Poly, and
Williams, bowing only to Army.
The Sabrina swimmers opened their season with a 46-31 win over M. I.
T., Matt Kelly being outstanding in his victories in the 50 and 100.
ln the second meet with the Coast Guards Amherst swept all but one
first place to turn in a 59-18 score. Captain Bancroft set a new pool record
in the 220-yard free style event by lowering the time to 2 minutes, 27 seconds.
Swimming on successive afternoons Amherst won from Rensselaer Poly
59-18 and then was set down by West Point, Sl-20. Bill Buechner starred by
winning the 440 in both meets and garnering a first against Poly and a second
against Army in the 220. Warner, sophomore speedster, also won the fifty
yard dash on both afternoons.
After this single defeat the leffmen returned to the Pratt natatorium to
conquer Trinity 51-24, with the Hartford team being able
only to earn a single first place. Kelly tied his own pool
record in the 100-yard free style.
The invasion of the Wesleyan pool proved successful
with Amherst winning the first leg of the Little Three
Championship by a 48-29 score. Buechner was the star of
the meet, gaining two firsts and aiding the relay team to
emerge victorious, while Kelly, Bancroft, Warner, and Wisner
also swam brilliantly.
Worcester Poly proved easy as Amherst again won all
but one event to triumph 63-14. In the 40-yard pool Buech-
ner set a new record 2324.2 in the 220 yard free style, while
the relay team composed of Green, Bancroft, Warner, and
Kelly lowered the record in the 400-yard relay to 3:49.
ln the worst defeat ever received by a Williams swim-
ming team at the hands of an opposing Amherst team, the
Lord Ieffs swept all first places and all but two seconds to
swamp their ancient rivals 66-ll. This victory assured
Coach Kennedy's charges of the Little Three title. Bill
Buechner starred, reducing the 440 record to 5:29.8, also
winning the 220. Green in the backstroke, Whicher in the
breaststroke, Kelly in the 100, and Lapidus in the dives also
showed to good advantage for Amherst.
COACH KENNEDY
One Hundred and Eighty-two
VICTOR L. LEWIS
Manager
SWIMMING TEAM
Name Points Scored
W. A. BUECHNER .......
M. A, KELLY, ..............
W. A. WARNER ............ .
E. BANCROPT CCapt.l ..... .
S. E. WHICHER ............... .
E. P. GREEN ................ .
S
R. . WISNER ........ .
N. B. REPSOLD ...... .
G. L. LUNDWALL ...... .
A. S. LAPIDUS ....... .
P. H. COOMBS ........... .
G. S. TREES .................... .
C. M. MATZINGER ................... .
64
53
45
38
38
38
26
22
20
19
I2
11
10
R. 10
KEITH .......................... ............... .
Swimming - 1935
SUMMARY OF SWIMMING SEASON
Amherst .............................. 46 M. I. T. ................... ..... 3 1
Amherst ........... .... 5 9 Coast Guards ....... ..... 1 8
Amherst ........... .... 5 9 Rensselaer Poly ............ 18
Amherst ........... .... 2 O Army ...................... ..... 5 1
Amherst ........... .... 5 I Trinity ................ ..... 2 4
Amherst ........... .... 4 8 Wesleyan ............. ..... 2 9
Amherst ........... .... 6 3 Worcester Poly ............ 14
Amherst .............................. 66 Williams ........................ 1 1
PERSONNEL
EMORY BANCROFT ...................................... ......... C aptain
VICTOR L. LEWIS .................................. ....... ....... M a naqer
MICHAEL I. KENNEDY ....... .......................................... C oach
IU 'illl
1
1
u
Standing: Coombs, Newport, Trainer, Repsold, R. Keith, Buechner, Kennedy, Coach, Trees
Crawford, Green, Tylee. "
Seated: Whicher, Lapidus, Kelly, Bancroft, Captain, Wisner, Warner, Matzinger.
One Hundred and Eighty-three
A . - . -- ,, , ... " -nga Lw -.- -s.....A?,
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F.. ,i --. ..q.?....-.- -f 4. i-.- ..-....-.Y-. ,,- Y , 1 -ir f. M
L 1. ,LQ "gr -Tg.g4,.,i,.1e..,.,.,- sgisgiixmeg -.. . .....,. .L..Q,'s ,,,, - L-My ,, Q
Mahony, Sprague, Coach, Winston, Bielaski, Owen, Sundquist, Hulick, Watson, Manager, Meldrum.
Varslty Tennis
PERSONNELL
W. F. OWEN, IR. ..... ............................ ........................ C a ptain
H. R. WATSON ....... ......................... M anager
P. H. WARD .......... ....... A ssistant Manager
A. H. SPRAGUE ...................................................................... Coach
Flanlced by an aggregation of sophomores, Captain Owen led the 1934
varsity tennis team to a record of six victories and four defeats. Starting
practice late, the team fell before a strong Yale unit 8-1. The next week-end,
however, victories were scored over Union- 7-l and Army 5-4, the l"f1lG'
match being the high-light of the year, with Winston starring in the singles,
and Captain Owen and Meldrum in the doubles.
ln the Harvard match the doubles team of Winston and Mahony was
the only one to gain a victory, the final score being 8-1. Showing unusual
team power the varsity took their next two matches from Trinity and Bowdoin
by scores of 8-1 in both contests. The University of North Carolina: proved
too strong for the Amherst team and Won the match 7-2. 'Regainirig their
stride the team defeated TI-Iamilton 7-2 with Owen, Winston, Meldrum and
Mahony playing outstanding tennis.
The Little Three contests were divided, Amherst winning the Wesleyan
match and dropping a close decision to Williams. The Wesmen furnished
little opposition to the Ietfs with Winston, Owen, Mahony and Hulick, defeat-
ing their rivals in singles and doubles. The final score was 8-l. At Williams-
town the Purple and White pressed the Ephrnen to the limit only to lose by a
score of 6-3.
SUMMARY OF THE 1934 TENNIS
Amherst 1, Yale 85 Amherst 7, Union 17 Amherst 5, Army 47 Amherst l, Harvard 8, Am-
herst 8, Bowdoin 17 Amherst 8, Trinity lg Amherst Z, University of North Carolina 7, Amherst 7,
Hamilton Z1 Amherst 8, Wesleyan lg Amherst 3, Williams 6.
One Hundred and Eighty-four
Macoy, Pomeroy, Hughes, Light.
Golf
The 1934 Amherst golf team continued where the 1933 linksmen had left
off and established another enviable record on the golf course. The team
gained eight victories and two ties in twelve starts, maintaining an undefeated
record throughout the first seven contests. The mainstays for the Purple
team throughout the year were Macoy '34, captain and manager, and Pom-
eroy '34, playing first and second in all the matches. Hughes '34, Light '34
and Baldwin '36 were the other regular players.
In the opening match of the year, played at Amherst, the Ieffs turned in
a 6-0 victory over Bowdoin. This was followed by a 5-1 win over W. P. I.
on the Orchard course. Playing in the wind and on a strange course, Arn-
herst did the unexpected and held the undefeated Dartmouth team to a 3-3
tie. The next three matches were all fairly easy for the Amherst team.
Boston College was shut out 6-0, M. 1. T. fell 5-l, and the strong Holy Cross
team was defeated 4-2, Macoy turning in the lowest score of the year on the
Orchard course: he shot a 39 on the first nine holes and then carded a 32, four
under par. Providence next fell 5-1, but the Sabrina team suffered its first
defeat 4-2 at the hands of Brown on a difficult strange course. The team came
back strong defeating Colgate 4-2 on the Orchard course, Hughes winning his
twelfth straight victory in Intercollegiate competition in two years. The Ieffs
lost the first Little Three match to Wesleyan 4-2, but rebounded to trounce
Fordham 6-O. The final match of the season with Williams resulted in a 3-3
tie, crushing all hopes of the Little Three title.
Baldwin '36, Hall '36 and Long '35, the captain and manager-elect, form
the nucleus of the 1935 aggregation.
One Hundred and Eighty-five
The lnteriraternity Trophy oi Trophies
-- The lnterfraternity Trophy of Trophies
i was won last year, 1933-34, by Phi Gam-
ma Delta, which gained its first victory in
this competition in the ten years of the
cup's existence. The winners attained a
successful winter sports season with
spring victories in track and tennis, and
thus gained an ample margin over Alpha
Delt, runner-up last year and winner the
previous season. Third place was
clinched by Beta, which had been in a
triple tie for last place at the end oi the
fall season: nevertheless, by snaring first
place in the basketball and in the base-
ball leagues that fraternity nearly caught
Alpha Delt in the final standings.
Throughout the season the athletic
department continued its practice of pub-
lishing a weekly bulletin with announce-
ments, standings, and individual scor-
ing records. As a result there was a constant interest manifested by the
student body and a record number of men participated in the sports program.
Ot 763 undergraduates 443 took part in interiraternity athletics at some time
during the season. Two hundred men participated in one sport: 143 in two:
62 in three: 29 in tour: 6 in five: and 3 in six.
The final standings tor the year are:
Fall Winter Spring Total
68 91
Phi Gamma Delta ...... 48W 207 V2
Alpha Delta Phi ........ 7392 39 36 148 V2
Beta Theta Pi ........... 8 64 61 133
Delta Tau Delta ...... 61 36 26 123
Psi Upsilon .................. 28 V2 55 18V2 102
Chi Psi ................................. 28 41 18 V2 87 V2
Delta Kappa Epsilon ....... 8 36 31 75
Phi Kappa Psi ............... 21 3812 ll 70 V2
Chi Phi ...,.................... ..... 1 516 11 41 67M:
Phi Delta Theta ....... ..... 1 1 24 8 43
Theta Delta Chi ....... ..... 1 1 17 11 39
Commons Club ............,........................................... 11 11 11 33
Delta Upsilon .......................................................... 8 14 11 33
First place winners in each sport and runners-up are:
Touch football: l. Delta Tau Delta: 2. Alpha Delta Phi.
Cross Country: 1. Phi Gamma Delta: 2. Alpha Delta Phi.
Golf: 1. Psi Upsilon and Alpha Delta Phi itiel.
Basketball: 1. Beta Theta Pi: 2. Psi Upsilon.
Squash: 1. Psi Upsilon: 2. Alpha Delta Phi.
Handball: 1. Phi Delta Theta: 2. Phi Gamma Delta.
Swimming: 1. Phi Gamma Delta: 2. Phi Kappa Psi and Theta Xi itiel.
Relay: 1. Delta Kappa Epsilon: 2. Phi Gamma Delta.
Track: 1. Phi Gamma Delta: 2. Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Baseball: 1. Beta Theta Pi: 2. Phi Gamma Delta.
Tennis: 1. Phi Gamma Delta: 2. Chi Phi.
One Hundred and Eighty-six
SPCDRTS
- .. ,- L
Freshman Baseball
A well-rounded and powerful Amherst 1937 baseball team took the field
four times last spring to come through with four well-earned victories. The
stellar pitching of lack Epple backed up by an experienced infield along with
a competent outfield made this one of Amherst's best freshman baseball sea-
sons.
Good weather facilitated many practices so that the team was in excellent
shape when it came up against its first opponent, Deerfield. Epple turned
them back to the tune of a 13-l score, allowing only four hits. Next came
Wilbrahamg Bole allowed no hits and only one run. The final score
was 7-l. Wesleyan was the next victim: they were blanked ll-U. On May
30th Williams Was vanquished in the closest game of the season. Coach
lordan's Varsity aspirants barely led until the sixth when three runs estab-
lished a safe margin, 9-5.
Next year, due to heavy losses through graduation, the Sophomore sup-
port will be strongly felt. Epple and Bole on the mound, Kennedy, West,
Colucci, Tisdale, and Waltman will all strive for positions in the infield, while
Pagnotta, Mersereau and Ptamey should press last year's Varsity outfielders.
Freshman Soccer
The Freshman Soccer team ended its season in a tie with the Williams
first-year men for the Little Three Championship. The team won from the
Wesleyan cubs, lost to Deerfield, and concluded by tying Williams.
The opener was a bitterly fought defensive battle in which Deerfield
emerged the victor by l to O. In another hard fought contest the Sabrina
yearlings broke through after two overtime periods to gain a 3-2 victory over
Wesleyan. The final game with Williams was a brilliant battle with Mc-
Cain, Capt. leppson, McGrath, and Haller starring. The final score was 4 to 4.
The following men received their numerals: Captain leppson, Breul, Hal-
ler, Harvey, Hyatt, lanes, McCain, McGrath, Poor, Reider, Salley, Van Doren,
and Young.
One Hundred and Eighty-eight
Freshman Track
Sweeping through three official and one informal track meets the l937
track team turned in an impressive and undefeated record. The season's
peak was reached when, in the spirit of all of Amherst's Freshman teams of
last year, the trackmen annexed the Little Three title decisively at Williams-
town.
Starting off early the leff tracksters trounced aggregations from Mass.
State and Stockbridge while still working out in the cage. The opening meet
with Roxbury clearly indicated the calibre of the team as it eked out a close
victory from this previously unbeaten opponent. Rolling up a total of 67
points the Amherst team prevailed in the track events with Roxbury showing
superiority on the field. Scott was Purple high-point scorer with eleven points
to his credit. ln its second encounter the team easily came out ahead of
Deerfield and Governor Dummer. The final score was Amherst 78M1, Deer-
field 43M, and Governor Dummer 21.
Leading its nearest opponent by 25 points the Amherst team capped the
season with the Little Three title. As strong as ever in the running events
with Scott, Frey and Snyder taking honors in the hurdles and dashes and
Swainbank and Merritt in the middle distance runs, the team also showed
strength in the field events. Holmes hurled the discus for a first with Griggs
doing the high jump and pole vault for a first and third, respectively. Am-
herst garnered 72 576 points while Williams came in second with 47 173
points and Wesleyan trailed with 33 576.
Freshman Cross Country
The Freshman Cross Country team, coached by Al Lumley, placed sec-
ond to Williams in the Little Three meet at Amherst, their only formal en-
counter of the season. Hopes for a successful varsity season next year were
augmented by the fact that Gowing and Schauffler placed first and second,
respectively, in this meet. The freshmen runners also competed with Massa-
chusetts State freshmen and Stockbridge in several practice meets. The fol-
lowing were awarded numerals: Gowing, Schauffler, Gaodnow, Lewis, and
Alexanderson.
l
One Hundred and Eighty-nine
Freshman Football
VV ith only average material to choose from, Coach Al Wheeler developed
a freshman football team which compiled a creditable record by winning three
out of the four games played. The only defeat of the season, that by the
slender margin of 6-O, was suffered at the hands of the Williams Yearlings.
Ernie Estes, right guard, and Bob Michell, left half back, were elected co-
captains at the beginning of the season.
ln the season's opener the Ieff frosh journeyed to Groton, Mass., to
wrest a 29-14 decision from a stubborn Lawrence Academy eleven. Michell
and Wanzo crossed the goal line twice for the freshmen, one of Michell's
tallies coming on an 80-yard return of a kickoff.
The team's second victory was gained at the expense of the Wesleyan
freshman aggregation by a 14-O score. The heavy Cardinal line held the
visiting leffmen scoreless until late in the second period when Wanzo out-
ran the defense on a wide end run to make a touchdown. In the third quarter
Amherst scored again with McClellan taking the ball over on a line plunge.
Meriden Iunior College was the leff's third victim, showing a surprising
lack of opposition in their 66-6 defeat. Michell led the scorers with three
touchdowns, while Wanzo and Cristman made two apiece.
A fourth-quarter flat pass from Slingerland to Duane in the Williams
game spoiled a perfect season for Coach Wheeler's charges and gave the Eph
cubs a 6-U victory. Earlier in the game Amherst threatened to score when a
40-yard run by Bullinger and a successful forward pass placed the ball on the
Purple's 14 yard line, but an attempted field goal went wide of the crossbars.
Another Amherst offensive carried the ball as far as the lU yard line where
the Williams line braced and proved impenetrable.
The following men were awarded their numerals: Co-captains Estes and
Michell, Schweizer, Price, Palmer, Garde, Bookhout, Bodine, Goodell, George,
Miller, Koster, Wiggins, Bullinger, Wanzo, Brown, Cristman, and McClellan.
One Hundred and Ninety
Freshman Basketball
A smooth-passing, fast-breaking freshman basketball team, one of the
best yearling fives ever developed at Amherst, completed a schedule of nine
games with seven victories and two defeats.
The Wheeler-coached men began the season impressively by winning
from a visiting Williston team 57-30. Keesey, right forward, and Captain
Schweizer, center, paved the Way to a leff victory by accounting for 37 points.
Handicapped by the loss of Schweizer early in the third period, Amherst suf-
fered its first setback by a 38-22 score from Roxbury School on the latter's floor.
An overwhelming victory was scored at the expense of the Springfield
College lunior Varsity 40-18, Keesey leading the home team. The freshmen's
third win was gained from St. Michael's High School, defending Catholic state
champions, 23-21. Meyers dropped the winning basket in the last minute of
play. The Massachusetts State freshmen were the next victims, losing 44-34.
ln the first game after the mid-year lay-off the frosh trounced Loomis
School 39-16. Continuing their winning ways the leff yearlings journeyed to
Deerfield, Mass., to administer a 47-23 defeat to the Deerfield Academy five.
The Wesleyan freshmen, after trailing l3-8 at half-time, unleashed a fin-
ishing drive which left the Amherst team on the short end of a 25-24 score.
The Purple and White handled the ball poorly and missed many scoring op-
portunities on the Wesleyan court.
A half-share in the Little Three championship was gained for Amherst in
the final game of the season with Williams. Victors over Wesleyan by a
three-point margin, the Williams team succumbed to the second-half drive of
the Ieffs and dropped a 32-25 decision. Keesey made ll points for Amherst,
While D. Stearns starred for the losers.
Seven men, Captain Schweizer, Kee-sey, Meyers, Michell, Warner, Young,
and lones, were awarded their numerals.
l
One Hundred and Ninety-one
Freshman Swimming
Although the Freshman Swimming team won two and lost one meet, it
displayed splendid form during its short season and has a fine group of nata-
tors for future Varsity teams. Under the leadership of Captain Kothe the
Frosh defeated the Pittsfield Boys' Club decisively in the opening contest 44-22.
The second meet with Deerfield was a very close defeat with the first year
men losing out 38-27. The final score hinged on the relay, which the
Sabrinas lost by a touch in a thrilling finish.
In the final meet the yearlings submerged the Williams Frosh 51-25 to
complete Amherst's mastery in Little Three swimming. Kothe, the holder of
the college breaststroke record, 2:49, swam well, as did Firman, who gar-
nered a first in the 100-yard swim and a second in the 50. Whitemore and
Scott put on a brilliant exhibition in a fast backstroke race, the former winning
by inches. Farmer and Parker placed one-two in the 440 yard swim. A
strong relay team composed of Simpson, Griffith, Farmer, and Firman came
close to the varsity time in their event.
The following men composed the numeral winners: Capt. Kothe, Firman,
Simpson, Whitemore, Griffith, Caplan, Hoffman, Farmer, Parker, Scott, Phil-
lips, Quady, Weinstein.
One Hundred and Ninety-two
B
FEATURE
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F
The New Gymnasium
A problem has been stirring the minds of Amherst men for the past few
years about the construction of a new gymnasium. When architects were
consulted about the plans for building, it was found that it would be neces-
sary to raise 53400000 in order to make the venture possible. With money
scarce and alumni impoverished this seemed an insurmountable barrier, but
through great student agitation and alumni cooperation plans were formu-
lated for the raising of the necessary funds. On the opposite page the pro-
posed plant can be seen including the gymnasium connecting with the
Davenport Memorial Squash Building and the Cage.
Over a period of fifty years the size of the Amherst College student body
has been nearly trebledg the single physical education program has in-
creased to three departments-health, general physical education and intra-
murals, and intercollegiate athletics: the winter sports have grown from six 'Lo
twelve with eight instructors instead of a former three. While the program,
the college, and the student body have been growing rapidly, Pratt Gym has
remained essentially the same with scarcely a major alteration. Glorious
once as the leader of college gymnasiums, she now stands the worst in New
England--"a darksome, mouldering, and obnoxious cavern."
Amherst has long held a splendid tradition in collegiate physical educa-
tion thanks to "Old Doc" Hitchcock, and in l932 received the first certificate
of High Merit from the American Student Health Association. The famous old
gymnasium now is dark, draughty, and incomplete in equipment. lt is far
too small for the 800 students and faculty members who use it daily for five
of the eight months of the collegiate year. The gym floor of 80 by 50 com-
pares unfavorably with that of Williams, l40 by 69. Small windows admit
little light or air, with some rooms only getting a change of air on alternate
Thursdays. The bathing and toilet facilities are grievously lacking, for there
are but ten showers and three toilets as against sixteen of the former and nine
of the latter at Williams. Every other gymnasium in New England surpasses
Pratt in exercise rooms, basketball courts, and boxing, wrestling, and fencing
facilities. The visiting teams have to dress Vin a musty lounge with no
showers nearby and are constantly exposed to draughts. To complete the
picture the swimming pool of a youthful thirty years has become greatly out-
moded-the Amherst swimmers are so lashed about by the waves that break-
ing swim records in other pools is comparatively simple for them.
The antiquated gymnasium, except for the swimming pool and squash
addition built thirty years ago, has remained practically unchanged except
for a few internal alterations. The Cage was constructed 'with Centennial
Gift funds: the Davenport Memorial was a gift. These two new additions are
far removed from Pratt, leaving the physical education plant hanging in mid-
air so to speak.
One Hundred and Ninety-five
The proposed new gymnasium will unity these three major units and will
connect them with Hitchcock Field. lt will afford central lockers, toilets, etc.,
for all the buildings. There will be adequate accommodations tor visiting
teams. Not only will it provide sufficient space for all indoor games, but it
will house all the athletic trophies of the past and future. Space will also be
provided for the medical, physical, and athletic offices under a single root,
in addition to a large basketball floor and a modern swimming pool.
Undergraduate students, not content with mere criticism oi the present sit-
uation, proved their wholehearted support oi the project by voting to place a
tax ot S10 on each student tor a four year period, which will result in a con-
tribution of S25,UUO to this cause. This is probably the largest sum ever con-
tributed by a student body toward a major building project.
At the Alumni Council meeting on Nov. 16 and 17 plans were drawn up
for the organization of the campaign among the alumni. A general com-
mittee with Walter S. Orr, '12, as chairman, was selected to take charge of
the collection of contributions. So far, as much as forty per cent has been
secured. In june further plans as to the actual time of building will be
adopted. Pratt Gymnasium will not be demolished: it will be utilized as a
home for college collections, according to President King, but with over
fifty years oi service, it has outlived its purpose as a college gymnasium.
One Hundred and Ninety-six
Index to Advertisers
Casper Ranger Const. Co.
Henry Adams Co. .......... .
Iames A. Lowell ......
Pratt df Lambert ............
Oliver Walker G Son .......
Carpenter 61 Morehouse
Amherst Laundry Co., Inc. ....... .
Bill McIntosh ......................
Hotel Northampton ........
Wiggins Old Tavern .........
Warner Bros. CS Goodwin,
Irving House .......................
Amherst Garage Co., Inc.
Grigg's, Inc. ............. ....... .
BalIantine's Ale .....
The Reclaiming Co.
The Princeton Inn ........
Eddie M. Switzer ...........
H. E. Northrup Coal Co. ..... .
College Candy Kitchen ....
Inc...
Angotti-Designer ......... .... I V
Ioseph Fessia 61 Co., Inc. ............ IV
Metcalf Printing 6. Publishing Co. IV
A. G. Pelissier .............................. V
Musante's Flower Shop .............. V
Roberts Cash G Carry Market .... V
Amherst Cleaners ........................ V
Grandonico's ...... .... V I
Conant-Ball Co. ....,. .... V I
Douglas-Marsh .............................. VII
Springfield Plumbing Supply Co. VII
Thomas F. Walsh ........................ VIII
I. R. Horner Coal Co. ....... ....... V Ill
The Roland T. Oakes Co. .......... VIII
The Holyoke Valve 6: I-lydrant
Co. ............................................ VIII
The Rumtord Press .... ....... V III
Zamsky Studio, Inc. ..... .... I X
Colyer Printing Co. ...................... X
Iahn 6: Ollier Engraving Co. .... Xl
CASPER RANGER
CONSTRUCTION CO.
Builders
O
Established 1880
HOLYOKE BOSTON
WI-IEREVER maximum beauty and pro'
tection must be combined with low
maintenance costs, there economy calls ior
the use of
PRATT 6. LAMBERT
Paint and Varnish
In Amherst College, as in many other in-
stitutions, schools, public buildings and
fine homes throughout the United States
and Canada, Pratt 6: Lambert Varnish
Products are preserving and beautifyinq
the surface.
Pratt :S Lambert. Inc.
Paint 6: Varnish Makers
NEW YORK BUFFALO CHICAGO
FORT ERIE, ONTARIO
The Best in Drug Store Merchandise
The Best in Drug Store Service
HENRY ADAMS CO.
"The Rexall Store"
3 SOUTH PLEASANT STREET
AMI-IERST, MASS.
Insurance of Every Description
With Personal Service
CHARLES W. WALKER
Oliver Walker :S Son
259 MAIN STREET
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
IAMES A. LOWELL
Bookseller
New and Standard Books
College Texts and All
Student Supplies
AMHERST
O o o PRINTERS no o o
Carpenter 6. Morehouse
COOK PLACE
AMHERST, MA SS.
AMHERST LAUNDRY
COMPANY. Inc.
3 EAST PLEASANT ST. Telephone 3-W
Free Mending - Darning - Buttons
ON
Dry Cleaning - Pressing - Laundry
IRVING HOUSE
DALTON, MASS.
ln the Berkshire Hills. Open all Year
A delightful modern Inn known for its
homelike atmosphere and good food.
Golf and all sports
Headquarters for Amherst Teams
Hand Pressing
is still the vogue
Dry Cleaning
Repairing G Altering
BILL MCINTOSH
Tel. 55
HOTEL NORTHAMPTON
AND
WIGGINS OLD TAVERN
"An Inn of Colonial Charm"
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
Delightful Rooms 332.00 up. Fireproof
Excellent Food - Popular Prices
The Wiggins Tavern and Country Store
is furnished with a very extensive collec-
tion oi Early American pieces and is most
interesting.
LEWIS VVIGGINS, Landlord
AMHERST GARAGE CO..
Inc.
Automobile Supplies
Repairing in All Its Branches
Washing - Storage
Where the Thoughtful Man keeps his car
17 SO. PROSPECT ST. AMHERST, MASS.
Used and New
Student Furniture
at
GRIGG'S, Inc.
AMITY ST. Tet. 16
WARNER BROS. 6.
GOODWIN, Inc.
SUNDERLAND, MASS.
Excavation, Trucking. Grading
Sewers. Water Mains. etc.
Roads and Athletic Fields are our favorites
Prompt attention to all calls
Tel. So. Deerfield 173-3
On Draught at
Deacly's Lunch
T U . ' -- T ' - ' --the T'l'-T'Tt' 'r-' 2:1 f- e Y --1 --QT -1-v -as-.rn-. .1 -ff
v 't f- . , . -.":f '-'- 1- f L'-L ' ' f'-: if 1:11 ff-w'1:1'9"E.'f'Et' - "- N.,-1 4 ' -A:-x
I -- .ie -, l3-ir- ' '12 '-1-e.m.:+U.:s. -. ..- .tai-. ,.g5,ge,.',e,',: ..a7+:MlLvlY?A,L3,U.'lQ'QL Y-,Lili I-1 Lk L, ,
..- ui e - - -,- - -1:-4:-.qv-vizf' ' ' " - -w e -ff.,
l ' - . AQT' ' 'SLE-QQL., 4 1 .
MAY WE
SERVE YOU
in any future Work which you
may do in Athletics Whether it
be in school or college?
The
Reclaiming Company
Specialists in
Cleansing, Sterilizing, Repairing
and Rebuilding
Athletic Equipment
I-IOLYOKE, MASS.
EDDIE M. SWITZER
CLOTHING
and
HABERDASHERY
THE PRINCETON INN
ALEXANDER STREET
I. HOWARD SLOCUM, Manager
AMERICAN PLAN
Overlooking Springdale
Golf Course
The Dining Room facilities of TI-IE
INN are especially recommended
to those visiting Princeton at the
time of the different athletic events.
Accommodations for Permanent and
Transient Guests
H. E. NORTHRUP
COAL CO.
Coal and Coke
Navy Standard Coals
Steam-Stoker-By-Product
BURDETT BUILDING
TROY, N. Y.
COLLEGE CANDY KITCHEN
The place in Amherst which for I9 years has been out-
standing for its Quality ot Food Service and atmosphere
" ---- the meeting place of all
Amherst Alumni and the
pride of every Student ---- "
THE HOSPITALITY AND WARM WELCOME SHOWN
TO ITS PATRONS HAS WON IT MANY FRIENDS
Compliments of
I
,of
DESIGNER
80 GREEN STREET
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
IOSEPH FESSIA 6 CO., Inc
Wholesale
Fruit and Produce
185-187 MAIN STREET
HOLYOKE, MASS.
COLLEGE PRINTERS
Metcalf
Printing 6. Publishing
Comany
28 CRAFTS AVENUE
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
Retail Package Store
A. G. PELISSIER
Beer. Wine. Whiskey and Cordials
North Middle Street. Hadley
The nearest package store to Amherst
Telephone-1493
Daily Deliveries
When in need of flowers
REMEMBER
Musante's Flower Shop
Daily deliveries to Smith
and Mt. Holyoke
Phones:
lU28-W Nite-1028-R
ROBERTS
Cash and Carry Market
56 MARKET ST.
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
Tel. 3504
Amherst Mer1's Motto is Always
"Let Dave do it
AMHERST CLEANERS
Dyers 6. Launderers
"Best Known as the Best"
. . . GRANDONICUS . . .
7 Main Street Telephone 426
Amherst's Newest and Most Modern Restaurant
DINE DANCE
CONANT-BALL
Furniture
For Schools. Libraries. Dormitories.
and every room in the Home
Q52
2 0
CONANT - BALL COMPANY
80 Sudbury St. Boston, Mass.
VI
DQUGLAS-MARSH
AMHERST, - MASSACHUSETTS
At the End of the Village Green
Furniture - Rugs - Lamps
We carry what the Student needs at Prices that he
Wants to pay
I 'ro THE PARENTS
A I I We deliver anywhere and
I N INN I IfIl tf:::1? II pay all Transportation costs
N 3
I 5 fe li I 45- Quality Merchandise
il? v and sold for less.
IQ ls?-
Q I
In
II I, Iwi tt,ttt ttttt I I
QIEIIIIIIIIIIIIIRIIIIAIJ'IIt 'ipiiilll Ui In if if"""'1:
If I'ElfF'iI2'fi1Ifg:MEIW. QMMIIIIII ,l'l I
,
SPRINGFIELD
PLUMBING SUPPLY CCD.
Supplies for Sanitary and Heating Engineers. Sheet Metal
Workers. Mechanical Engineers. Factories and Mills
South West Corner Chestnut and Franklin Sts.
Office and Warehouse
Springfield, Mass.
VII
HICKEY-FREEMAN
Dre-A0
for flu?
Dccaozon
2
P Z
W ,,
I oUsToM1zED oLoTHEs
THOMAS F WALSH
More Than A Toqqery
A College Insiituilon
COAL
Anthraclie
Bltummous
FIREPLACE WOOD
I R Homer Coal Co
h P
THE HOLYOKE VALVE
AND HYDRANT CO
P1pe Valves and Fittings
Engmeers and Contractors
1 W 1
k
d P p
HOLYOKE MASS
THE ROLAND T OAKES
Electrical Specialties
I-IOLYOKE MASS
THE RUMFORD PRESS
10 FERRY STREET
CONCORD NEW HAMPSPHIRE
Prmters of D1st1nct1on
H
dAd
V
IH
x
n JA '
, of 2
ll
.
Steam and Ho aer Heaiinq
Automatic Sprin ler Systems
' ' ' Power and In ustrial i ing
Phone Nort Gm ion 3030
.
CO.
Specializing in igh Grade Publicaiion
I n an ca ernic Printing
ZAIVISICY STUDIO, Inc.
Sittings Telephone:
By Pennypaclcer
Appointment - 6190 - 8070
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE E OR
EXPERIENCE
The Zamsky Studio, Inc., has successfully handled
Yearbook Photography for twenty years. The
skilled personnel and up-to-date equipment
necessary for such a record is reflected in
this book and in your assurance that
you may -
"COUNT ON ZAMSKYU
902 Chestnut Street Philadelphia
Yale Record Building New Haven
OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS EOR SCHOOLS AND
COLLEGES PROM NEW ENGLAND TO
THE SOUTH
IX
TeI6
OLIO
P t
rl
THE ART OF PRINTING
The invention of printing from movable
types, made in l-lolland near the middle of
the fifteenth century, was the most signifi-
cant invention of civilized man. The
priceless jewel of knowledge, which for
centuries could be the possession of only
a privileged few, was made available to
all by the development of printing. During
the la st five centuries printing has
progressed not only as the spreader and
preserver of knowledge and culture but
also as the finest of the graphic arts
We take pride in turning out artistic
printing Our plant represents the last
word in modern equipment skillful
craftsmanship and dependable service
You regard your yearbook as the
reflection of your school we regard it as a
sample of the art of prrntina
Our specialty is distinctive printing that
both you and we can be proud of
COLYER PRINTING COMPANY
SUSSEX AVENUE AND DEY STREET NEWARK N I
LARGEST PRINTERS OF YEAR BOOKS IN THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY
I
I
, .
I .
h sa J'
Is u xoduc
of Ou Pant .
O
'sd I I I
X
l ' I ' W 1 ' 1 ' ' 'ZW Y' Z , ' Ylxz' I Z' fi' t
IIDIHDIUBIIDIIDHI-
X
SOUND managerial policies and long,
successful experience have provided
us with sufficient equipment, adequate
personnel, and ample resources to render
dependable service as artists and makers
oi fine printing plates. That you will be
secure from chance, is our first promise.
JAHN 8: OLLIER ENGRAVING CO.
811 Wes! Washington Blvd., - Chicago, Illinois
XI
..i.L.,',,, ,NA ,X, e , ,
?.- .
L,-.---,-, , , ,
1
ln- the foreground f Ft. Dearborn referected
in Grant Park on Chicago's lake front.
Illustration by Jahn Ev- Ollier Art Studios,
r
I
”
Suggestions in the Amherst College - Olio Yearbook (Amherst, MA) collection:
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.