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BOOK ONE
JS. ..:.-
V
INTRGDUCTION
Chapel
FOREWO RD
This, the eightierh volume of
the 01.10 and the last to be pub-
lished by the Junior Class, is pre-
sented by rhe Class of 1937 in the
hope that it has captured thc
atmosphere of the College-on-the
Hill and that in the future it will
serve as a reminder of our college
years, our friendships, and our
associations.
CONTENTS
Book One
INTRODUCTION
Book Two
CLASSES
Book Three
FRATERNITIES
Book Four
ORGANIZATIONS
Book Five
PUBLICATIONS
Book Six
ATHLETICS
Book Seven
ADVERTISING
DEDICATION
To FREDERIC L. THOMPSON:
He brought to the college a rare devotion and during the twenty-eight years he
served on its faculty the College and all its activities received his lively and helpful interest.
Steadfast in his loyalty to Amherst, his zeal for the College was militant and never passive.
With unwavering purpose he strove to have his Alma Mater realize the ideal of a dis-
tinguished educational tradition, and his affection never silenced his courageous criticism
of the deviations from that ideal. Forthtight and decisive, he stood squarely for his con-
victions before the eyes of men. He contributed immeasurably to the vitality of his faculty
and to the development of this institution by his saving gift of humor, by his kindliness,
by his shrewd, sane judgment, and by his sturdy championship of the principles he held.
Coffege Hn!!
Comferse Library
Mowouf' Dofmifofy
ly: rff 'ff' f
P1'eJideu1f'5 H owe
FACULTY
C laurcb
THE? 1937? OLIO
The Corporation
GEORGE ARTHUR PLIMPTON, LL.D., L.H.D .....,...,.......
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 ....,.......,...,......,..
FREDERICK J. E. WOODBRIDGE, Litt.D.,
ARTHUR LEE KINSOLVING, D.D ...,.....
LL.D .....i....
HARLAN FISKE STONE, LL.D., D.C.L .....,...
GEORGE EDWIN PIERCE, B.A .......,....,......
ROBERT WASHBURN MAYNARD, LL.B
CHARLES KINGSLEY ARTER, LL.B ...,...
Lucius Roor EASTMAN, LL.B .............................,,...
ALFRED ERNEST STEARNS, Litt.D., L.H.D, LL.D .........
LOUIS GOLDSBOROUGH CALDWELL, M.A ......,.
HENRY sELDEN KINGMAN, B.A ...,.,.............
LEWIS WILLIAMS DOUGLASS, LL.D ....,,,
FREDERIC SCOULLER ALLIS, M.A .....r.............................
Secretary of the Corporation
CHARLES AMOS ANDREWS, B.A .......,...............,..,.....,....
Treasurer of the Corporation
...New York,
........Amherst,
..New York,
.......Hartford,
....Worcester,
New York,
.........Boston,
......1..Wasliington,
...........Boston
.....,..Boston
7
N. Y.
Mass.
N. Y.
Conn.
Mass.
N. Y.
Mass.
D. C.
Mass.
Mass.
Cleveland, Ohio
........New York, N. Y.
.........Danvers, Mass.
........Wasliingto11, D. C.
Minneapolis, Minn.
........New York, N. Y.
...,....Amherst, Mass.
Amherst, Mass.
The Terms of the Alumni Trustees expire as follows: Charles Kingsley Arrcr, 19569 Lucius
Root Eastman, 1957, Alfred Ernest Stearns. 1.9383 Louis Goldsborough Caldwell, 19393 Henry
Selden Kingman, 19403 Lewis Williams Douglass, 1941.
Fourteen
AMHERST COLLEGE
The Administration
STANLEY KING, LL.D ..,,..,
President
THOMAS CUSHING ESTY, M.A ...................................,.
Acting President fin case of absence of Presidentj
CHARLES SCOTT PORTER, M.A .,,......
Dean
WILLIAM JESSE NEWLIN, M.A ........
Secretary of the Faculty
GLADYS ALICE KIMBALL, B.S ..........
Recorder
EDWARD JAMES MANWELL, M.D .........
College Physician
LLOYD PAUL JORDAN, B.S ...................
Director of Intercollegiate Athletics
CLARENCE WILLIS EASTMAN, Ph.D .........
Senior Marshal
WARREN KIMBALL GREEN, Ph.D ........
Marshal
CHARLES HOWARD CADIGAN, B.A., B.D .......
Director of Religious Activities
CHARLES AMOS ANDREWS, B.A .....,.
Treasurer
HERBERT GALE JOHNSON, B.A ........
Comptroller
HENRY BANGS THACHER, B.S ........................
Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds
FREDERICK SCOULLER ALLIS, M.A ..........,
Secretary of the Alumni Council
WALTER ALDEN DYER, B.A .........
Director of the Amherst Press
Fifteen
........Chapel
Walker Hall
........Chapel
.,......Chapel
.,......ChaPel
.......Gymnasium
Walker Hall
..........Barrett Hall
...,...Observatory
6 Boltwood Avenue
Walker Hall
Walker Hall
......,...Service Building
.,.,.11 Walker Hall
.,...13 Walker Hall
THE 1937 OLIO
CHARLES SCOTT PORTER, Delta Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi
Dean of College.
B.A., Amherst, '19: M.A., Clark, '22.
Instructor in Mathematics, XX!orcester Polytechnic Institute, 1919-24. Gradu-
ate work at Clark University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the
University of Chicago. Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst, 1924-27, Assistant
Professor, 1927-29, Associate Professor, 1929-35. Dean of College, 1931-.
Member of the American Mathematical Society and the Mathematical Association
of America.
STANLEY KING, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
President of the College.
A.B., Amherst, '05g A.M., Harvard, '06g l.L.D., Dartmouth, Wesleyaln,
Colgate, '32, LL.D., Columbia, '53g LL.D., Willizinis, '36.
Admitted to the Massachusetts Bar, 1906. Business, 1906-1917, 1920-27.
Member Committee Supplies, Council of National Defense, 19173 Special Assist-
ant to Secretary of War, 1917-1918, Private Secretary to Secretary of Writ,
1918-19, Member and Secretary of President XXlilson's Industrial Conference,
1919-20. Amherst Alumni Council, 1913-183 Vice-chairman Amherst Centennial
Gift, 1920-21, Alumni Trustee Amherst College, 1921-31, Life Trustee Amherst
College, 1931-32. Chairman Massachusetts Special Committee Stabilization Em-
ployment, 1951-35. Elected President of Amherst College, April 9, 1952.
ARTHUR JOHN HOPKINS, Tlteta Delta Chi
Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '85, Ph.D., johns Hopkins, '93.
Taught at Cotuit, Mass., and at Peekskill Military Academy, N. Y., 1885-90.
johns Hopkins Fellow, 1892. Instructor at Westminister College, 1895-94-
Instructor in Chemistry at Amherst, 1894-1907, Professor of Chemistry, 1907-.
Fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Member
of the American Chemical Society, the johns Hopkins Chemical Society, and the
History of Science Society.
RICHARD FRANCIS NELLIGAN
Associate Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, Emeritus.
Graduate of Boston School of Gymnastics, 18863 Instructor at Y. M. C. A.
Gymnasium at Detroit, 1886-875 at Chelsea, Mass., 1887. Gymnasium Instructor
at Cornell, 1887-923 at Amherst, 1892-1906, at Vanderbilt Summer School, 18935
at Harvard Summer School, 1896-97. Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Edu-
cation, 1906-10: Associate Professor, 1910-29g Associate Professor Emeritus,
1929-. Civilian Director of Athletics, Camp Devens, 1917, Commissioned Cap-
tain, 191S. Retired.
JOSEPH OSGOOD THOMPSON, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Physics, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '84, Ph.D., University of Strasshurg, 91.
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, 1891-9-1.
Associate Professor of Physics, Amherst, 18911-1918g Professor, 1918-283 Pro-
fessor Emeritus, 1928-. Fellow of the American Association for the Advance-
ment of Science. Author, Ueber das Gesetz der Elastichen Dehnung in Wlied-
mann's Annalemf' Fatigue in the Elasticity of Stretching, and Investigations
in Torsion Elasticity, in the Physical Review. Member of the American Physical
Society.
Sixteen
MHERST i COLLEGE
DAVID TODD, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Astronomy, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '75g M.A., '78g Ph.D., Wasltington and jefferson, '88.
Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Amherst Observatory, 1881-
19175 Professor Emeritus, 1917-. Director of National Academy Eclipse Expedi-
tion to Japan, 1887. Chief of the Government Eclipse Expedition to Japan,
18961 to Tripoli, 19053 and 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.
GEOFFREY ATKINSON, Beta Theta Pi
Professor of Romance Languages.
B.S., Amherst, '13g M.A., Columbia, '14, Ph.D., '20
Graduate work at Columbia, 1913-14, 1916-173 1919-20, Secretary and
Interpreter, Rockefeller Tuberculosis Commission to France, 1917. Instructor in
Modern Languages, Union College, 1914-16. British and American Expeditionary
Forces, 1917-19. Instructor in French, Columbia, 1919-20. Associate Professor
of Romance Languages, Amherst, 19205 Professor, 1926-3 Dean of Amherst
College, 1929-31. Fellow of the C. R. B. Foundation, Brussels, Belgium, 1925-27.
Author: The Extraordinary Voyage in French Literature, 2 Volumes, 1920,
1922g Les Relations de Voyage du 17e Siecle, et L'evolution des Iclees, Paris,
1924, La Litterature Geographique francaise de la Renaissance, Paris, 1927,
in-4to Francois Villon, London, 1930, Les Nouveaux Horizons de Ia Rennais-
sance Francaise, Paris, 1935. Guggenheim Fellowship, 1934-35.
EDNWIN AUGUSTUS GROSVENOR, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Modern Government and International Law, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '67g M.A., '91g I.L.D., Wabaslt, '03g LL.D., Alfred, '04g LL.D., Marietta, '10,
LL.D., Williarn and Mary, '13g 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, 1901-14g 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 London
Author's Club.
PAUL CHRYSOSTOM PHILLIPS, Theta Delta Chi
Parmly Billings Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, Emeritus.
B.A., Amherst, '88, M.D., Columbia, '95g M.P.E., Springfield, '21.
Medical and Athletic Director of the General Board of the Y. M. C. A., Chicago, 1895. Assistant
Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, Amherst, 1899g Professor of Hygiene and Physical
Education, 1908-29, 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.
GEORGE NWILLIAM BAIN, Chi Phi, Sigma Xi
Assistant Professor of Minerology and Geology on the Edward Hitchcock
Foundation.
B.Sc., McGill University, '21g M.Sc., '23g M.A., Columbia, '23, Ph.D., '27.
Member of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineersg
Member of the Committee on Mining Geology. Member of the Canadian Insti-
tute 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. Assist-
ant to Vermont State Geologist, 1925. Assistant Professor, University of Ver-
mont, 1925-26. Instructor in Geology at Amherst, 1926-31g Assistant Professor,
1931-.
Seventeen
ARTHUR HENRY BAXTER, Alpha Delta Phi
man, Country School for Boys, Baltimore, 1898-1900. Instructor inARomance
Languages, Amherst, 1900-06g Assistant Professor, 1906-08: Associate Professor,
1908-221 Professor, 1922-.
CHARLES ERNEST BENNETT, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Kappa
High School, 1905-06. Sub-master at Washingttun School for Boys, Wasliiiigton,
D. C., 1906-07. Instructor at Volkmann School, Boston, and Graduate Student at
Harvard, 1907-08. Graduate Student and Teaching Fellow, Cornell, 1908-11.
Instructor in Latin, Amherst, 1911-133 Assistant Professor, 1913-143 Associate
Professor, 1914-193 Professor, 1919-. Author: Across the Years. Member of
the Archaeological Institute of America, and the American Philological Associa-
tion.
THE i 1937 3 OLIO
THEODORE BAIRD, Kappa Alpha Society
Associate Professor of English on the Samuel Willisttmli Foundation.
B.A., Hobart College, '213 M.A., Harvard, '223 Ph.D., '29.
Instructor in English, Western Reserve University, 1922-23. Instructor in
English, Union College, 1925-25. Graduate Study at Harvard, 1925-27. Instruc-
tor in English at Amherst, 1927-293 Assistant Professor, 1929-32, Associate
Professor, 1932-.
Professor of Romance Languages.
B,A., Johns Hopkins, '9-ig Ph.D., '98,
Instructor in Italian, johns Hopkins, 1897-98. Master of French and Ger-
RALPH ALONZO BEEBE, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Beta Kappa
Associate Professor of Chemistry.
B.A., Amherst, '20: Ph.D., Princeton, '23.
Graduate study, Princeton, 1920-23, Instructor in Chemistry, Amherst,
1925-25g Associate Professor, 1925-.
Moore Professor of Latin. 1
B.A., Amherst, '05g Ph.D., Cornell, '11.
Assistant Principal and Instructor in German and Latin, Nanticoke, Pa.,
WILLIAM PINGRY BIGELOXW, Chi Phi
Professor of Music.
B.A., Amherst, '89g M.A., '12.
Studied Music in Wtmrcester, 1889-90, in Berlin and Dusseldorf, 1890-911.
Instructor in German and Music, Amherst, 1894-19013 Associate Professor,
1901-063 Professor, 1906-08, Professor of Music, 1908-.
Eighteen
AMHERST COLLEGE
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 and Social Studies, 1934-g Member Sub-Committee on
Personnel American Political Science Association, 1934.
SAMUEL HUGH BROCKUNIER
Visiting Instructor in History.
A.B., Harvard, '26, A.M., Harvard, '28,
Assistant in History at Harvard University, 1928-50. Instructor in History
at Wesleyan University, 1930-1936, Assistant Professor, 1936-. Visiting Instruc-
tor in History at Amherst, 1935-36.
BAILY LE FEVRE BROWN
Instructor in Mathematics.
B.A., Amherst, '24g M.A., Princeton, '25.
Graduate Student at Princeton, 1924-27. Instructor in Mathematics at
Bryn MLIWY, 1927. Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst, 1927-. Member
American Mathematical Society.
FAYETTE CURTIS CANFIELD, Phi Kappa Psi
Associate Professor of Dramatics.
B.A., Amherst, '25.
Assistant in Dramatics at Amherst, 19263 Instructor, 1927-305 Assistant
Professor, 1930-343 Associate Professor, 1934-. Member National Theatre Con-
ference. Editor, Plays of the Irish Renaissance, 1929g Plays of Changing
Ireland, 1936.
JAMES TOUGH CLELAND
Assistant Professor of Religion.
M.A., Glasgow, '24, B.D., '27g S.T.M., Union Theological Seminary, '28.
Jarvie Fellowship in New York, 1927-28. Holder of Black and Faulds
Teaching Fellowships at Glasgow. Member of the Divinity Faculty of Glasgow
University, 1928-31. Instructor in Religion at Amherst, 1931, Assistant Pro-
fessor, 1932-.
Nineteen Y V
TI-IE 1937 OLIO
CHARLES WOOLSEY COLE, Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Kappa Epsilon
Associate Professor of Economics,
B.A., Amherst, '27g M.A,, Columbia, '28g Ph.D., Columbia, '31.
Instructor in Economics, Columbia University, 1928-35. Associate Professor
of Economics at Amherst, 1935. Author: French Mercantilist Doctrines Before
Colbert, 1931.
CHARLES WIGGINS COBB, Theta Delta Chi, Sigma Xi
Professor of Mathematics.
B.A., Amherst, '97, M.A., '01g Ph.D., University of Michigan, '12,
Instructor at Albany Academy, Fitchburg High School, New York I-Iigh
School of Commerce, and Worcester Academy, 1897-1904. Graduate study at
Columbia and New York University, 1904-053 at Clark University, 1907-09,
at the University of Michigan, 1910-11. Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst,
1908-105 Assistant Professor, 1911-14, Associate Professor, 1914-223 Professor,
1922-. Captain in the Air Service, 1917-18. Arbitrator for the Rochester Cloth-
ing Market, 1922-24.
FREDERICK STUART CRAWFORD, jlt., Theta Delta Chi, Phi Beta Kappa.
Instructor in Greek.
B.A., Amherst, '24g B.A., Oxford, '26g M.A., Oxford, '30,
Simpson Fellow at Oxford, 1924-26. Instructor in Latin at Amherst, 19269
Instructor in Greek, 1927-. Member of the American Philological Association.
'98, M.A., Amherst, '12.
HOWARD WATERS DOUGHTY, Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Xi, Phi Lambda
Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Chemistry.
Ph.D., johns Hopkins, '04, M.A., Amherst, '16, B.E., extra ordinem, johns
Hopkins, '27.
Prohcient in Electrical Engineering, Johns Hopkins, 1895. Commercial
work, 1893-1900. Graduate work, johns Hopkins, 1900-04. Carnegie Research
Assistant, Washingttmn, D. C., 1904-05. Instructor in Chemistry, University of
Missouri, 1905-06g at the University of Wisconsin, 1906-073 at Amherst, 1907-08.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry, 1908-09, Associate Professor, 1909-133 Pro-
fessor, 1915-. 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.
B.S., Worcester Polytechnic Institute, '94g M.A., Leipstc 98 Ph D Icipsic
Harvard Summer School, 1894, Instructor in Modern Langu tgcs W P I
1894-95. Studied at the Universities of Goettingen and Leipsic, 1895-98.
Instructor in German, University of Iowa, 1898-1901: Assistant Professor
of German, 1901-07. Associate Professor at Amherst, 1907-09: Professor of
German Language and Literature at Amherst, 1909-. Author: Die Syntyx des
Datives bei Notkerf' Editor of German texts. Member of th: Modern Language
Association of America, the New England Modern Language Society and the
Goethe Society of America.
Twenty
AMI-IERST COLLEGE
GEORGE ROY ELLIOTT, Phi Eta
Professor of English on the Henry C. Folger Foundation.
B.A., University of Toronto, '04, Ph.D., University of Jena, 'USQ Litt.D.,
Bowdoin, '25.
Engaged in newspaper work, 1904-06. Study in Germany, 1906-08. Instruc-
tor in English, University of Wisconsin, 1909-13. Professor of English Literature.
Bowdoin, 1913-25. Professor of English, Amherst, 1925-. Author: The Cycle
of Modern Poetry, 1928.
THOMAS CUSHING ESTY, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Walker Professor of Mathematics and Acting President in case of absence
of President.
B.A., Amherst, '953 M.A., '97.
Graduate work at Amherst, 1893-94. Instructor in Mathematics and Draw-
ing. 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 Advance-
ment of Science, the Mathematical Association of America, and the American
Mathematical Society.
FRANCIS HOWARD FOBES, Delta Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
john C. Newton Professor of Greek.
B.A., Harvard, '04, M.A., '05, Ph.D., '12, M.A., Amherst, '23,
Instructor in Greek and Latin, Harvard, 1907-15. Assistant Professor of
Greek. Union College, 1915-20. Associate Professor of Greek, Amherst, 1920-21,
Professor, 1921-. Editor: Aristotle's Meterologyf' 1919.
l
ROBERT FROST, Theta Delta Chi
Professor of English on the John Woodruff Simpson Foundation.
B.A., Dartmouth, '92g M.AM, Amherst, '18, M.AM, Michigan, '22: L.H.D..
University of Vermont, '233 Litt,D., Yale, '23g Middlebury, '24, Bowdoin, '26g
New Hampshire, '30g Wesleyan, '31g 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, 1925-26. Professor
of English at Amherst, 1926-. Author: A Boy's Will, North of Boston,
1 Mountain Interval, New Hampshire, and West-running Brook.
GEORGE BANKS FUNNELL, Phi Beta Kappa
Assistant Professor of French.
B,A., Amherst, '24g M.A., Harvard, '28.
Graduate work at the University of Chicago, 192-1-25: at Harvard, 1927-50.
Instructor in French at Amherst, 1925-27. Instructor in French at Harvard,
1928-50. Instructor in French at Amherst, 1950-34. Assistant Professor, 1934-.
Member of the Modern Language Association.
Twenty-one
? THE - 1937 OLIO -?
STEWART LEE GARRISON, Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Associate Professor of English and Public Speaking.
B.A., Harvard, '12g A.M., '30.
Harvard Law School, 1912-15. Assistant in English, Harvard, 1912-15.
Instructor in English and Public Speaking, Worcester Academy, 1915-18: Head
of Department of English, 1919-20. Associate Professor of English and Public
Speaking, Amherst. 1920-. joint Author: The Essentials of Argument. Editor
of Macaulay's Life of Johnson.
ALFRED SHEPARD GOODALE, Phi Beta Kappa
Associate Professor of Botany.
B.A., Amherst, '98.
Acting Registrar, Amherst, 1901: Registrar, 1902-18. Instructor in Botany,
1904-11g Assistant Professor, 1911-135 Associate Professor, 1915-. Fellow of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science and member of the New
England Botanical Club.
1
1
l
1
ll
', 1
1
HERBERT PERCIVAL GALLINGER, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of History.
B.A., Amherst, '935 Ph.D., Leipsic, '98.
Principal of Oxford Academy, Oxford, New York, 1893-95. Student at
University of Jena, 1895-96: at the University of Leipsic, 1896-98: at Columbia,
1917-18g Instructor in History, Amherst, 1898-1904g Associate Professor, 1904-181
Professor, 1918-. Member of the American Historical Association. Author: Die
Haltung der deutschen Publizistik zu dem amerikanischen Unabhangigkeits-
kriege, 1900. Collaborated in translating and editing of Conversation with
Luther, 1915.
OTTO CHARLES GLASER, Phi Chi, Phi Beta Kappa
Stone Professor of Biology.
B.A., johns Hopkins, 1900: Ph.D., '0-1.
Graduate work at johns Hopkins, '04, Study at Marine Laboratories, Beau-
fort, N. C., Woods Hole, Mass., and Cameron, La., and at the University of
Budapest. Demonstrator of Biology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Balti-
more, and Professor of Biology at the University of Michigan, 1905-11-1. Stone
Professor of Biology at Amherst, 1918-. Trustee of Marine Biological Labora-
tories, Woods Hole, 1922.
WARREN KIMBALL GREEN, Theta Xi, Sigma Xi
Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Observatory.
B.A., Harvard, '13g M.A., Harvard, '1-1: Ph.D., University of California, '16.
Student at the Lick Observatory, 1914-17. Martin Kellogg Fellow. 1916-17.
With the U. S. Army Signal Corps, A. F., 1917-19. Instructor in Physics at
Yale, 1919-21. Instructor in Astronomy at Amherst, 1921-22g Associate Professor,
1922-263 Professor, 1926-. Member of the American Astronomical Society and
the American Physical Society. Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society, Eng-
land. Member of the International Astronomical Union.
Twenty-two
' AMHERST COLLEGE
ALBERT GUERARD, Phi Beta Kappa'
Instructor in English.
B.A., Stanford, '34g M.A., Harvard, '36,
Engaged in newspaper work, 1933-34. Winner of the Hound and Horn
short story contest, 1933. Instructor in English, Amherst, 1955-.
ALFRED FREEMAN 1-IAVIGHURST, Phi Delta Theta
Instructor in History.
vard, '31.
Graduate study at the University of Chicago, 1927-28, and at Harvard
GILBERT THOMAS HOAG
Instructor in English.
B.A., Haverford, '20, M.A., Harvard, '26.
Harvard Business School, 192G-21. Brown Brothers and Company, Bankers,
Philadelphia, 1921-23. Parrish and Company, Brokers, 1924. Graduate work at
Harvard, 1.924-27. Instructor in English and Tutor in the Division of Modern
Languages, Harvard, 1927-28. Instructor in English at Amherst, 1928-.
FREDERICK JOHN HOLTER, Sigma Delta Psi
Instructor in Physical Education.
B.A., C.P.E., Oberlin, '29g M.A., N. Y. U., '34.
Acting Physical Director and Assistant Coach, Muskingum College, 1930.
Edward Hitchcock Fellow, Amherst, 1931g Assistant in Physical Education, 1931g
Instructor, 1932-. Member of the American Physical Education Association, and
the Society of College Directors of Physical Education.
LLOYD PAUL JORDAN, Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Associate Professor of Physical Education.
B.S., University of Pittsburgh, '23.
Director of Athletics, Jeannette, 1925-27. Assistant Football, Head Basket-
ball Coach, Colgate, 1928-31. Football and Basketball Coach, Amherst, 1932-.
Director of Athletics, 1934-. Associate Professor of Physical Education, Amherst,
1932-.
l
Twenty-three
B.A., Ohio Vfesleyan, '25g M.A., University of Chicago, '28, M.A., Har-
l929-31. Pacific University, 1928-29. Instructor in History at Amherst, 1931-i
TIIE i 1937 OLIO
MICHA EL JOSEPH KENNEDY
Instructor in Physical Education and Assistant Director of the Gymnasium.
Assistant in Pratt Gymnasium, Amherst, 1910. Assistant in Physical Educa-
tion, 19175 Instructor, 1927-.
MANFORD VAUGI-IN KERN, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in German.
B.A., William .lewell College, '18g M.A., Indiana University, '21: M.A., Prince-
ton, '30.
Tutor in Latin and Greek, Indiana University, 1919-21. Assistant Professor
of Latin, William Jewell College, 1921-22. Instructor in Classics, Princeton,
1923. Instructor in Latin, Amherst, 1925-35. Instructor in German, 1935-.
Member of the American Philological Association.
OTTO FREDERICK KRAUSHAAR
Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy.
B.A., Iowa, '24g M.A., '27g Ph.D., Harvard, '35.
i Instructor in Philosophy at the University of Iowa, 1926-27. Instructor in
Philosophy at Harvard and Radcliffe, 1927-29 and 1930-53. Assistant Professor
of Philosophy at Kansas University, 1929-51. Assistant Professor of Philosophy
at Smith, 1933-. Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Amherst, 1955-.
STERLING POWER LAMPRECHT, Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Sigma Rho
Professor of Philosophy.
B.A., Williatns, '1 I: M.A., Harvard, '12: B.D., Union Theological Seminary,
'15: Ph.D., Columbia, '18g University of Poitiers, '19,
Instructor in Philosophy at Columbia, 1916-18 and 1919-21. American Ex-
peditionary Forces, 1918-19. Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of
Illinois, 1921-25g Associate Professor, 1925-28. Professor of 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. I-larkness Foundation.
B.A., Amherst, '96g Ph.D., University of Munich, '99.
Instructor in Biology, Amherst, 1899-1904: Associate Professor of Compara-
tive Anatomy, 1904-083 Professor of Comparative Anatomy, 1908-16: Stone
Professor of Biology, 1916-17g Hitchcock Professor of Mineralogy and Geology.
1917-513 Professor of Geology on the Edward S. Harkness Foundation, 1931-.
Director of Amherst Paleontological Expeditions. Author: Hunting Extinct
Animals in the Patagonian Pampasf' Common Rocks and Minerals, and Evolu-
tion of the Horse.
Twenty-four
MHERST iCOLLEGE
GEORGE WILLIAM LOW, ju., Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in Chemistry.
B.A., Princeton, '31g Ph,D., Princeton, '34,
Assistant in Chemistry, Amherst, 1934-35g Instructor in Chemistry, 1935-.
Member of the American Chemical Society.
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. Instructor in Physical Education and Coach
of Track at Amherst, 1928-30: Assistant Professor, 1930-. Member of the Track
Coaches Association of N. C. A. A. and American Physical Education Association.
RALPH CLELAND MCGOUN, Jn., Delta Tau Delta
Instructor in Biology.
B.A., Amherst, '27, M.A., '29,
Assistant in Biology, Amherst, 1927-29. Instructor in Biology, 1929-
Technical Director, Amherst Masquers, 1929-.
NEWTON FELCH MCKEON, IR., Chi Phi, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in English.
B.A., Amherst, '26.
Master at Lawrenceville School, 1926-27. Engaged in business in New
York, 1927-31. Instructor in English at Amherst, 1931-. Simpson Fellow in
English and Research Student at Emmanuel College, Cambridge University,
1933-54.
OTTO MANTHEY-ZORN
Professor of German on the Emily C. jordan Folger Foundation.
B,A., Adelbert College, Western Reserve University, '01g Ph.D., University
of Leipsic, 'O-4.
Graduate study at the University of Erlangen, 1901-02, and the University
of Leipsic, 1902-04. Instructor in German, Western Reserve University, 1904-05
and the University of Illinois, 1905-06. Instructor in German at Amherst.
1906-083 Assistant Professor, 1908, Associate Professor, 1908-18, Professor,
1918-. Author: Johann Georg Jacobi's Iris, 1905: Friedr Heinr jacobi's
Home at Pampelfortj' 19075 Germany in Travai1, 1922. Editor, Fulda's Des
Talisman, 1912. Member of the Modern Language Association and the Society
for the Advancement of the Study of Scandinavian Literature.
Twenty-tive
THE 3 1937 3 01,10
EDWARD ,IONES MANWELL
Associate Professor of Physical Education.
B.A., Amherst, '25g M.D., Rochester University, '30,
Awarded Fellowship in Pathology, 1927-28. Residency and surgery at Yale
University, 1930-35. Associate Professor of Physical Education, Amherst, 1935-.
ALLISON WILSON MARSH, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education.
B.A., Amherst, '13g M.Etl., Harvard, '25.
.Hitchcock fellow in Physical Education, Amherst, 1913-111. Instructor in
Physical Education, Ohio Wesleyan, 1914-15, Instructor in Physical Education,
01119 SYNC Cllllfff-XC. 1915-17. Graduate work at Harvard Summer School, 1915-16
and 1920-22. Associate Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education, Amherst,
1917-245 Professor, 1924-.
CHARLES HILL MORGAN, II, Delta Kappa Epsilon
Assistant Professor of Fine Arts.
B.A., Harvard, '24g M.A., 26: Ph.D., '22-1.
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, 1929-30. Assistant Professor of Fine Arts, Amherst, 1950-. Member
of the American Numismatic Society and of the Archaeological Institute of
America. Visiting Professor at the American Classical School in Athens, Greece.
VINCENT MORGAN
Assistant Professor of Music, Ad Interim.
B.M., New England Conservatory of Music, '32g M.M., '54,
Studied abroad with Boulanger in Paris, 1929. Instructor in Danforth-
Dunbar School for Girls, 1935. Director of Carnegie Music Program at Wtbrcester
Arr Museum, 1935-. Lecturer on the Musical Arts, Worcester Art Museum,
1935-. Assistant Professor of Music at Amherst, 1935-.
Professor of English.
B.S., Vanderbilt, '09.
DAVID MORTON, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappt
Ten years in newspaper and magazine work after graduation. Associate
Professor of English, Amherst, 19211-26, Professor, 1926-. Author: Nocturnes
and Autumnalsf' The Renaissance of Irish Poetry, A Man of Earth, Shorter
Modern Poems: an Anthology, Six For Them: an Anthologb'- and Earth's
Processionalf' Member of the Poetry Society of America and of the Poets,
New York.
Twenty-six
MHERST COLLEGE
XWILLIAM JESSE NEWLIN, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Philosophy and Secretary of the Faculty.
B.A., Amherst, '99g M.E., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, '01, M. A..
Amherst, '03g A.M., Harvard, '06.
Wttlker Instructor of Mathematics at Amherst, 1902-05. Shattuck Scholar
in Mathematics, Harvard, 1905-06. Assistant Professor of Mathematics and
Philosophy, Amherst, 1906-07g Associate Professor, 1907-09, 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 Education,
Serbian Relief Commission, 1920. Received Cross at St. Sava from King Alex-
ander, 1920.
LAURENCE BRADFORD PACKARD, Delta Upsilon,
Anson D. Morse Professor of History.
A.B., Harvard, '09g Ph.D., '21.
Graduate Student and Austin Teaching Fellow at Harvard, 1909-15: Rogers
Travelling Fellow, 1911-12, Instructor in History, University of Rochester,
1913-15, Assistant Professor, 1915-19g Professor, 1915-25. U. S. Army, 1917-19:
served with 78th Division, Military Intelligence and Siberian Expedition. Pro-
fessor of History, Amherst, 1925-283 Anson D. Morse Professor of History,
1928-. Visiting Professor at Yale, 1929-30, Wesleyan, 1952. Author: Russia
and the Dual Alliance, 1920: The Commercial Revolution, 1927, The Age
of Louis XIV, 1929. Associate Editor, The Berkshire Studies in European
Phi Beta Kappa
History.
HAROLD HENRY PLOUGH, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Xi
Rufus Tyler Lincoln Professor of Biology.
B.A., Amherst, 'IESQ M.A., Columbia, '15, Ph.D., '17.
Graduate work at Columbia, 1914-17. University Fellow in Zoology.
1916-17. Instructor in Biology, Amherst, 1917-19g Associate Professor, 1919-24:
Professor, 1924-. Commissioned Second Lieutenant, Sanitary Corps, and Instruc-
tor 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.
Professor of Latin.
I-IOMER FRANKLIN REBERT, Kappa Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa
B.A., Franklin and Marshall College, '12g M.A., '19g Ph.D., Cornell, '25,
A. A. G. O., 1916, and F. A. G. O., 1917. Scholar in Latin and Greek,
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. Instructor in
Physical Education at Amherst, 1929-.
Twen ty-seven
Cornell University, 1920-21. Combined Fellowships in Greek and Latin, 1921-22.
American Academy in Rome, 1922-24. F. A. A. R., 1924. Associate Professor of
Latin at Amherst, 1927-50g Professor of Latin, 1950-, College organist and
choir master, 1929-55. Author: Qui and Cum Clauses in Seneca's Moral
Epistles, The Temple of Concord in the Roman Forum, and Virgil and
Those Others. Organist, 1934.
i THE i 1937 i OLIO .
CLARENCE DANA ROUILLARD, Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in French.
B.A., Bowdoin, '2-ig A.M., Hat'vard, '25.
Instructor in French at Harvard, 1925-27. Instructor in French at Amherst.
1927-. Fellow of the C. R. B. Foundation, Brussels, Belgium, 1950-51.
VUILLIAM TINGLE ROVULAND, Kappa Alpha fSouthernJ
Professor of Latin.
B.A., Kentucky Wesleyan, '02g M.A., Vanderbilt, '07g 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, 1910-125 Graduate study
at the University of Chicago, 1910-13: at Columbia, 1913-15. Instructor in Latin, I
Hunter College, New York City, 1915-17. Assistant Professor of Greek, Queen's
University, 1918-19. Associate Professor of Latin, Amherst, 1920-26, Professor,
1925-.
XVALTER ARTHUR RUDLIN
Visiting Lecturer in Political Science and Economics on the john XX!oodruiI
Simpson Foundation.
Graduated from the London School of Economics of the London University.
1931. Research Assistant to Prof. Laski at London School of Economics, 1951-32.
Research work at Royal School of International Affairs, 1952-3-1. Appointed
Visiting Lecturer in Political Science and Economics on the john Woodruff
Simpson Foundation, 1934-35. Published: The Growth of Fascism in Great
Britain.
EDNVARD DWIGHT SALMON, Delta Upsilon
Associate Professor of History.
B.S., University of Rochester, '17g A.M., Harvard, '23: Ph.D., Harvard, 193-1. - -Q
Graduate studeint at Harvard, 1922-26. Served in U. S. Army in A. E. F.,
First Lieutenant, A. G. D., Division Headquarters, 78th Division, 1917-19.
Assistant in History, Harvard, 1923-25: Instructor of History, Harvard, 1925-263
Instructor of History, Amherst, 1926-29, Assistant Professor, 1929-34: Associate
Professor, 1954-. Author: Imperial Spain, 1931. Member of the American
Historical Association.
ANTHONY SCENNA, Phi Beta Kappa
Instructor in German.
B.A., Amherst, '27g 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, 1950-31. Instructor in German at Amherst, 1951-.
Twenty-eiglit
AMI-IERST COLLEGE
HENRY EDWARDS SCOTT
Associate Professor of Fine Arts.
B.A., Harvard, '22.
Graduate work at Harvard, 1922-23. Instructor in Harvard and Radcliffe
College, 1923-26: Head tutor of Fine Arts, 1924-25. Practiced painting in New
York and abroad, 1926-28. Instructor in the History of Art, Rochester Univer-
sity, 1928-29. Assistant Professor of Fine Arts, Pittsburgh, 1929-34. Painting
and writing, 1934-55. Associate Professor of Fine Arts, Amherst, 1935-.
T OSCAR EMILE SCI-IOTTE
Assistant Professor of Biology.
D.Sc., Geneva, '2 5.
CHARLES LAWTON SHERMAN, Phi Beta Kappa
Associate Professor of Latin.
B.A., Harvard,
Lieutenant in
1917-19. Associate
1920-22. Instructor
1923-29. Associate
'17, Licencie-Lettres, Grenoble, '20: Ph.D., Harvard, '2S.
the Engineering Corps. American Expeditionary Forces
Professor of Greek and Latin, Ohio Wesleyztn University
in French, Harvard, 1922-23. Instructor in Greek and Latin
Professor of Latin, Amherst, 1929-.
Graduate from Imperial Russian State Gymnasium, 1913 Licencie es
sciences, Geneva, 1920: D.Sc., 1925. Instructor at the Institut de Zoologie et
d'Anatomie Comparee of Geneva University, 1920-28. Rockefeller Foundation
at the University of Freiburg, 1928-31. Research Fellow at Freiburg, 1931-32.
Research Fellow at Yale University, 1932-54. Assistant Professor of Biology at
Amherst College, 1954-. Member of the Societe Suisse de Zoologie and of the
American Zoological Society. Member of the Corporation of the Marine Biologi-
cal Laboratory, Wcmods Hole. Research papers published in fields of Regeneration
and of Experimental Embryology.
FRANK HERBERT SINIITH, Phi Delta Theta
Parmly Billings Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education.
B.A., Amherst, '93g M.D., University of Pennsylvania, '98.
Practiced medicine in Hadley, Mass., 1900-29. Parmly Billings Professor
of I-Iygiene and Physical Education at Amherst, 1929. Member of the Massa-
chusetts Medical Society and the American Medical Society.
HARRY DE FOREST SIVIITH, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Class of 1880 Professor of Greek.
B.A., Bowdoin, '91g M.A., Harvard, '96, M.A., Harvard, '12,
Taught at Rockland, Maine, 1891-95. 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, Bowdoin, 1898-99:
Assistant Professor of Greek, 1899-1901. Associate Professor of Greek, Amherst.
1901-03g Professor of Greek, 1903-.
Twenty-nine
TI-IE 1937 OLIO
THEODORE SOLLER, Gamma Alpha, Sigma Xi, Phi Beta Kappa
Assistant Professor of Physics.
B.A., Oberlin, '22q M.A., University of Wiscoiisin, '2-I, Ph.D., '3'l.
Graduate Assistant in Physics, University of Vlisconsin, 1923-25g Instructor
in Physics. 1925-28. Instructor in Physics at Amherst, 1928-51: Assistant Pro-
fessor, 1931-.
ATI-IERTON HALL SPRAGUE, Delta Upsilon
Associate Professor of Mathematics.
B.A., Amherst, '20, 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, 192-'I-25. Instructor in Mathematics, Amherst, 1925-26. Associate
Professor, 1926-. Dean of Freshmen, 1928-35.
Professor of Physics.
WILLIAM WARREN STIFLER, Gamma Alpha, Sigmi ki
B.A., Shurtleff College, '02, M.A., University of Illinois, 08, 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, Colum-
bia University, 1911-17. Head of Department of Physics and Dean of Pre-
Medical School, Peking Union Medical College, China, 1917-22. Visiting Pro-
fessor of Physics, Canton Christian College, China. 1922-23. Research study,
Harvard, 1923-24. Acting Professor of Physics, Wfilliams, 1924-25. Associate
Professor of Physics, Amherst, 1925-31: 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 Review and other
scientific journals.
GEORGE ROGERS TAYLOR
Associate Professor of Economics.
Ph.B., University of Chicago, '21, Ph.D., '29.
Instructor, Department of Economics of the University of Iowa, 1921. Act-
ing Professor of Economics, Earlham College, 1925. Instructor in Economics
at Amherst, 1924-27g Assistant Professor, 1927-293 Associate Professor, 1929-.
JOHN RICHINIOND THEOBALD
Instructor in English.
B.A., Oxford, '25g M.A., '28g S.T.M., Union Theological Seminary, '29.
Graduate study at Oxford, 1925-28. English Fellowships ro the Union Theo-
logical Seminary, 1928-29. Lecturer in English at Queen's University, 1929-50.
Instructor in English, Amherst, 1931-. Published poems in the Oxford Poetry
Magazine and Oxford Outlook. Winner of the Oxford Outlook Prizes, 1928.
Thirty
CHARLES HANSEN TOLL, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Philosophy and Psychology.
B.A., Hamilton, '04, M.A., Harvard, '05g Ph.D., Freiburg, i.B., '09.
Graduate work at Harvard, 1904-06. John Harvard Fellow, 1906-08. Grad-
uate study at the University of Berlin and Freiburg, i.B., 1907-09. Assistant
Professor of Philosophy at Amherst, 1909-123 Associate Professor, 1912-233
Professor, 1923-. Commissioned First Lieutenant and later Captain, Sanitary
Corps. Chief Psychological Examiner, Camp Custer, 1918. Major Corps Res.,
1922.
COLSTON ESTEY WARNE, Kappa Delta Rho, Artus
Associate Professor of Economics.
B.A., Cornellg M.A., '21g Ph.D., University of Chicago, '25.
Instructor in Economics at Cornell, 1920-21g University of Pittsburgh,
1921-22. Assistant in Economics at the University of Chicago, 1922-25. Asso-
ciate Professor of Economics, University of Denver, 1925-26. Assistant Professor
of Economics, University of Pittsburgh, 1926-29. Associate Professor of Eco-
nomics at Amherst, 1930-. Author: The Consumers' Cooperative Movement in
illinois, 1926.
GEORGE FRISBIE WHICHER, Theta Delta Chi, Phi Beta Kappa
Samuel Williston Professor of English.
B.A., Amherst, '1Og M.A., Columbia, '11g Ph.D., '15,
University Scholar in English, Columbia, 1911-12: University Fellow, 1915.
Instructor in English, University of Illinois, 1913. Associate Professor of Eng-
lish, Amherst, 1915-22, Professor, 1922-. Editor of the Amherst Graduates'
Quarterly, 1919-32.
Thirty-one
MHERST COLLEGE -
' FREDERICK KING TURGEON, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Beta Kappa
Assistant Professor of French.
B.A., Bowdoin, '23g M.A., Harvard, '24g Ph.D., '29,
Instructor in French at Harvard, 1924-26. Instructor in French at Amherst.
1926-50: Assistant Professor, 1930-.
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, Amherst, 1927-29: Associate Professor, 1929-.
THE 193 OLIO
ROBERT BYRON WHITNEY, Delta Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Phi
Lambda Upsilon
Assistant Professor of Chemistry.
B.A., University of Minnesota, '24g Ph.D., '27,
Research Assistant and Instructor in Chemistry at the University of Minne-
sota, 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, 1950-. Member of the American
Chemical Society and of the American Association for the Advancement of
l Science.
RALPH COPLESTONE XVILLIAMS, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of French.
B.A., johns Hopkins, '08g Ph.D., '17.
Instructor in French, Ohio State University, 1918-191 Assistant Professor.
1919-21. Assistant Professor of French, johns Hopkins, 1921-25. Associate
Professor of French at Amherst, 1925-27g Professor, 1927-. Author: The Theory
of the Heroic Epic in Italian Criticism of the Sixteenth Century, Chicago, 19205
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 Language Notes.
SAMUEL ROBINSON NXXILLIAMS, Theta Xi, Sigma
Xi, Phi Beta Kappa
Professor of Physics on the Eliza J. Clark Folger Foundation.
Ph.B., Grinnell, 'Olg M,A., University of Nebraska, 1901-03: Ph.D., Colum-
bia, '16, D.Sc., Grinnell, '28g M.A., Amherst, '34.
Graduate work at the University of Nebraska, 1901-05: University of Berlin,
FREDERICK SCOULLER ALLIS, Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Kappa
Secretary of the Alumni Council and Secretary of the Corporation.
B.A., Amherst, '93g M.A., '25.
Graduate study at Law School of Harvard University. Admitted to the
Pennsylvania Bar, 1897.
in business in the Wfest
Amherst, 1914.
1903-054 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 Associa-
tion for the Advancement of Science and of the American Physical Society.
Practiced Law at Erie, Pa., and in New Yorkg engaged
until 1913. First Secretary of the Alumni Council at
CHARLES AIXIOS 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. Witli
Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, Boston, 1898-1907. Member of Massa-
chusetts House of Representatives, 1904-06, where he was a member of the
Committee on Codihcation of Railroad Laws and a Special Commission on Taxa-
tion, Deputy Commissioner of Corporations and Taxations, Commonwealth of
Massachusetts, 1907-15. In commercial business, 1915-22. Connected with
investment banking, 1921-31. Treasurer of Amherst College, 1931-.
Thirty-two
CHARLES HOWARD CADIGAN, Delta Kappa Epsilon
Director of Religious Activities.
B.A., Amherst, '27g B.D., Virginia Theological Seminary, 30.
Assistant Coach of Football, Episcopal High School, Alexander, Va.,
1927-28g Conch of Basketball, 1927-28. Student Secretary, National Student
Council of the Episcopal Church, 1928-29. Rector of Grace Church, Amherst,
1930-. Director of Religious Activities at Amherst, 1930-.
l
Thirty-three
AMHERST COLLEGE
ROBERT STILLIVIAN FLETCHER, Chi Psi
Otis Librarian.
B.A., Amherst, '97.
Connected with the BufTalo Library, the Carnegie Library, Bradford, Pa.
the Brooklyn Library: and the Carnegie Library, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1898-1908
Assistant Librarian, Amherst, 1908-113 Otis Librarian, 19112
THE i 1937 OLIO
Assistants on the Faculty
GEORGE PERCY CHILD, Ph.D .........,.... .,....,. R eseiirch Assistant in Biology
DONALD EUGENE COPELAND, A.B ....... ......,. A ssismnr in Biology
HENRY SEELYE EMERSON, A.B. ....... .,,,i,,, A ssisfanf in Biology
HARMON JARVIS KELSEY, Reg.P ...,... .,.,...... A ssistant in Chemistry
WALTER CHARLES MARKERT, B.S ....... ,,,,.,. A ssismm in Botany
CARL EMIL MEYER, M.D. ............ ........ A ssistanr in Biology
FOREST WILLIAM MILLER Ph.D ........ ,.,...., A ssisranr in Biology
HENRY HUNTER SMITH, M.S ........, .......,,. A ssismnr in Physics
Teaching Fellows
FREDERICK CHARLES BARGHOORN, B.A ............... Teaching Fellow in Economics
HAROLD MURISON CLELAND, B.S ......... .....,.. T eaching Fellow in Economics
RICHARD DALE HUMPHREY, M.A ................................. Teaching Fellow in History
HAROLD HOOKER LANE, M.A ................. Teaching Fellow in Physics and Astronomy
ARTHUR PAUL LEVACK, M.A ........... ........................... 'I 'eaching Fellow in History
ARMAND EDWARDS SINGER, B.A ......... ........ T eacliing Fellow in Geology
HENRY FRANKLIN WILLIAMS, M.A ..,...... ......... T eaching Fellow in History
Thirty-four
AMI-IERST COLLEGE
Fellows
FREDERICK SCOULLER ALLIS, JR., B. A ...........
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
CHARLES AVERILL, B.A ...,...............................
Fortis Jewett Moore Fellow in Chemistry
JOHN GRAHAM BROOMELL, B.A ..,...........
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
GEORGE LESLIE CADIGAN, B.A ...........,........,...
John Woodruff Simpson Fellow in Theology
KENDALL BUSH DEBEVOISE, B. A .........,......
John Woodruff Simpson Fellow in Law
GEORGE FRANCIS FUSCO, B.A ............................,
Edward Hitchcock Fellow in Physical Education
ALLEN AUSTIN GILMORE, B.A ..,......,.....
Fortis Jewett Moore Fellow in History
SYDNEY BAER HECHLER, B.A ........,..................
Fotris Jewett Moore Fellow in Philosophy
WINSTON BARNES LEWIS, B.A ........,..........
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
GEORGE WASHINGTON LONG, B.A .,,................
History
Roswell Dwight Hitchcock Memorial Fellow in
CLIFFORD LEE LORD, M.A ......................,..............
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
EDWARD MARCUS, B. A ...........................i..,...,......
John Woodruiif Simpson Fellow in Medicine
ROBERT OSI-IER SCHLAIFER, B.A ..,........,
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
JOSEPH ANTHONY VARGUS, JR., B.A ..........
John Woodrunf Simpson Fellow in Physics
PHILIP HEBARD WARD, B.A ............,................
John Woodruff Simpson Fellow in Theology
JOHN CUSHMAN WARREN, B.A ...,........,..
Amherst Memorial Fellow in History
Thirty-five
....Harvatd University
,......,,Harvard University
.....,....Chicago University
Cambridge University
,......,.Yale University
..,.....Amherst College
..,.Harvard University
.......Brown University
I .....r... Harvard University
........Amherst College
.Columbia University
..Columbia University
,...Harvard University
Cambridge University
....,..Union Theological Seminary
...,.....Harvard University
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BOOK TWO
I
CLASSES
-l-..-1-l THE 1937 OLIO -1
Oflicers of the Class of 1937
HENRY S. HUGHES ,...... ....,.............. P resident
BENJAMIN P. TERRY ..............., Secretary-Treasurer
DOUGLAS R. KENNEDY ....,..................... Choregus
HENRY S. HUGHES
President
History of the Class of l937
Big and little, fat and thin, worldly-wise and unsophistocate, athlete and scholar,
coming from Maine to California, some eager and confident, some timid and apprehensive,
nearly two-hundred and Hfty pea-green freshmen arrived at Amherst College in the
middle of the fall rainy season of 1933. During the Summer the many and variously
talented members of our class had been tracked down and duly inspected by the collegiate
species of the go-getter, the rushing chairmen. Now we were entering an unknown phase
of existence, the new world of College. The first week was a hectic, but glorious jumble
of new friends, pledge pins, and cannons. The next six weeks were a hectic and inglorious
jumble of interrupted sleep, black-robed figures, and paddles, the reform movement not
having reached Amherst in our day.
Our large and latinless class lost no time in becoming acquainted with itself and
with the College. Our first claim to fame, and it was a considerable one, was our football
team. Captained by lack Coey, it swept through the four scheduled games, scoring 165
points to the opposition's 0 and raking Williams and Wesleyan into camp by 33-0 and
53-O scores, respectively. The soccer team won its only game of the season by defeating
the Williams yearlings 2-1.
The winter was marked by the usual restlessness, snowball hghts, broken windows,
and two more championship teams, swimming and basketball. Freshman Spring brought
warm days and Little Three championships in baseball and track. At this time jim Fay
was elected Class President, while Til West was chosen to represent the class on the
Student Council.
Thirty-eight
AMHERST t COLLEGE
Sophomore year, that most erratic of periods, found the class! of 1937 moved out
of its old dormitory haunts and into fraternity houses or off-campus rooms. The responsi-
bilities of being second-year men were not taken lightly. Eleven lettermen were con-
tributed to the football team. Other of our athletes filled key positions on the remaining
varsity teams. The only class function was the never-to-be-forgotten beer party in which
much new talent was brought to light.
But now we are juniors and have, in the eyes of ourselves and possibly a few
Freshmen, attained maturity. The road to becoming upper classmen has been a long one,
but one filled with experience, enjoyment, and, even at times, intellectual stimulation.
Time passes swiftly. Even as Juniors we feel our days at the College-on-the-Hill to be
numbered. Soon we shall be singing the Senior Song. We hope that the friendship that
has cemented our class in college will continue to do so after graduation.
BEN JAMIN P. T ERRY, Secretary-Treasurer.
Thirty nine
STEPHEN Ives ALLEN
Phi Kappa Psi
16 Fairfield Avenue
RAYNOLD A. Ancuni
9 Willow Place
JAMES B. McKEE ARTHUR, jk.
Delta Upsilon
35-46 79th Street
Jackson Heights New York
HAROLD SHUI'rLEwoRTH Arwoon, JR.
Phi Kappa Psi
12 Mendl Terrace
Montclair New jersey
Holyoke Massachusetts
Mount Vernon New York
Forty
BENSON MARTIN AUSTIN
Brooklyn New York
AMHERST i COLLEGE .
Theta Delta Chi
74 87th Street
GEORGE RICHARDS BACON
Providence Rhode Island
Forty-one
Theta Delta Chi
660 Elmgrove Avenue
LAURENCE NEXSEN BARRETT
Delta Kappa Epsilon
Valley Road
Katonah New York
RANDALL BARTON
Alpha Delta Phi
Granite Street
F0Xb01'0 Massachusetts
THE 1937 OLIO
Beta Theta Pi
104 Forest Street
GORDON LYON BROKER
Phi Kappa Psi
121 Market Street
JOHN ROBERT BERRYMAN
Delta Tau Delta
524 Trinity Place
Westheld New Jersey
RICHARD EDWARD BODKIN
Theta Xi
660 Fort Washington Avenue
New York New York
HOWELL ANDREW BATES
Wellesley Hills Massachusetts
Amsterdam New York
Forty-two
DAVID CLARK BOLE, JR.
Cleveland Heights Ohio
JACOB WALDO BOND
Chi Psi
14 Mason Street
Winchester Massachusetts
AMHERST 2 COLLEGE
Alpha Delta Phi
2884 Scarborough Road
ROBERT NELSON BONNETT
Beta Theta Pi
32 Crescent Terrace
Forty-three
Brooklyn New York
DUDLEY CHASE BOSTWICK
Chi Phi
3690 Broadway
New York New York
THE i 1937 3 OLIO
Phi Kappa Psi
71 Ridgedale Avenue
Delta Kappa Epsilon
Country Club Road
South Bend
WILLIAM BULKELEY BRAMAN
Delta Tau Delta
106 Preston Street
Windsor Connecticut
GEORGE FRANKLIN BOWER
Madison New jersey
CHARLES EDWARD BRADLEY, JR.
Indiana
ROBERT THOMSON BREED
Psi Upsilon
9 Washington Square
Lynn Massachusetts
Forty-four
Syracuse New York
MELBOURNE CORBIT BROWNING, JR.
Germantown Pennsylvania
Forty-Hve
AMHERST COLLEGE
DAVID WYMAN BREWER
Delta Upsilon
865 Livingston Avenue
Psi Upsilon
252 West Johnson Street
NORMAN SHEPHERD BUCKINGHAM
Delta Tau Delta
98 West Rivet Street
Milford Connecticut
JOHN CONWAY BUSH
Theta Delta Chi
390 West End Avenue
New York New York
THE 3 1937 2 OLIO
ROBERT GEORGE CALDER, J
Psi Upsilon
100 Cayuga Road
Phi Gamma Delta
1541 Oneida Street
WILLIAM HENRY CLAUS
Phi Gamma Delta
320 West 7th Street
Erie Pennsylvania
ROBERT JOHN CLOSE
Psi Upsilon
336 East Adams Street
Sandusky Ohio
V 4
R.
Tuckahoe New York
ANGUS WARNER CLARKE, JR.
Utica New York
Forty-six
MHERST ECOLLEGE .
CHARLES NORTON COE
New Britain Connecticut
JOHN SMILEY COBY, II
Glffll Ridge New Jersey
Phi Kappa Psi
23 Laurel Road
Psi Upsilon
39 Wildwood Terrace
EDWIN BELCHER COLBURN
Lord Jeffery Amherst Club
Stafford Connecticut
Forty-seven
THOMAS MARVIN COLTON
Beta Theta Pi
4 First Avenue
Montpelier Vermont
THE 1937 OLIO
18 Summer Street
LUCIAN JOSEPH COLUCCI
Medford Massachusetts
PHILIP HALL Coombs
14 Gilman Street
FAIRMAN CHAFFEE COWAN
Alpha Delta Phi
Colburn Road
Wellesley Hills Massachuetts
Grsoizcis ARMOUR CRAIG
Alpha Delta Phi
3878 Mayfield Road
Cleveland Heights Ohio
Holyoke Massachusetts
Forty-eight
GEORGE FRANCIS CRAMER, JR.
Amherst
ROBERT WALTON CRAWFORD
-Lakewood Ohio
Forty-nine
AMHERST ' COLLEGE
31 Northampton Road
Massachusetts
Delta Kappa Epsilon
1435 Wagar Avenue
V .
BUELL CRITCHLOW
Alpha Delta Phi
647 Lafayette Avenue
Buffalo New York
WILLIAM WRIGLEY CUTTER
Grand View Drive
Peoria Illinois
THE 1937 OLIO
WILLIAM NELSON DAWSON
Delta Kappa Epsilon
301 South Birchwood Avenue
Louisville Kentucky
l
l KENNETH IAN DIEANE
l Delta. Upsilon
Orr's Mills
Cornwall New York
PHILIP MAUE DEISROTH
Phi Kappa Psi
67 North Church Street
Hazelton Pennsylvania
ROBERT LIONNE DEWITT
Delta Kappa Epsilon
14 Nelson Street
Auburn New York
Fifty
Maplewood New Jersey
ARCHIBALD GREY DOUGLASS, JR.
Saint Louis Missouri
Fifty-one
AMI-IERST COLLEGE
JOHN ARTHUR DIETZE
Chi Psi
31 North Crescent Street
Beta Theta Pi
5206 Washington Avenue
JAMES CAMPBELL EDGELL
Delta Upsilon
1418 East 17th Szreec
Brooklyn New York
STEPHEN TAPPER ELLEN
Theta Delta Chi
253-34 Bay Avenue
Douglaston New York
TI-IE ' 1937 OLIO
ERNEST EDWIN ELLERT
Theta Xi
75 Calumet Road
JOHN VINCENT ELM1511
54 Wortluy Avenue
ROBERT WATSON ELMER
55 Meredith Street
Springfield Massachusetts
JOHN OLIN EPPLE
Delta Tau Delta
126 Hope Street
Ridgewood New jersey
Holyoke Massachusetts
West Springfield Massachusetts
Fifty-two
AMHERST COLLEGE
GORDON HOLLAND EWEN
Chi Psi
1430 Sheridan Road
Evanston Illinois
WILLIAM EDWIN FAIRLEY
Theta Delta Chi
Cape Rosier Maine
Fifty-three
PAUL VICTOR FARRELL
Beta Theta Pi
25 June Walk
Long Beach New York
101-IN U. FEHR
Delta Tau Delta
1038 Franklin Street
Reading Pennsylvania
THE 3 1937 i OLIO
21 Elba Street
Phi Delta Theta
Parsonfield
HENRY GRANT FERNALD
14 Hawthorne Street
Cambridge Massachusetts
ROBERT SOFFEL FICHTEL
Phi Gamma Delta
119 Sycamore Street
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
SAMUEL BERNARD FEINBERG
Brookline Massachusetts
JOSE WEBSTEII FENDERSON
Maine
Fifty-four
New Haven Connecticut
HUGH PATTERSON FLEMING
Winnetka Illinois
Fifty-five
AMHERST iCOLLEGE
JOHN EL1.1oT FIELD, JR.
Chi Phi
119 Wfestwood Road
Delta Kappa Epsilon
760 Foxdale Avenue
F. ALEXANDER FRANK
4132 76th Street
jackson Heights New York
l
HANS HENRY FREY
Chi Psi
351 Rutter Avenue
Kingston Pennsylvania
TI-IE 1937 OLIO
Delta Tau Delta
4 Main Street
HARRY LIONEL GOFF
Phi Delta Theta
57 Converse Avenue
Newton Massachusetts
BEN JAMIN FRANKLIN GOODRICH
Phi Delta Theta
Saint George Street
Duxbury Massachusetts
RICHARD SYLVESTER FURBUSH
Saint johnsbury Vermont
ROBERT EDMUND GARTON
Chi Phi
618 Erie Avenue
Sheboygan Wiscoiisin
Fifty-six
AMHERST COLLEGE
HARRY FITZHUGH GRAY, JR.
Theta Xi
8 Kraft Avenue
Bronxville New York
HERBERT EMANUEL GREENSTONE
I 386 Wyoming Avenue
South Orange New jersey
Fifty-seven
ROGER PHILIP GREGORY
Beta Theta Pi
1011 Ocean Avenue
Brooklyn New York
DANIEL FULLER GRIGGS, JR.
Beta Theta Pi
Adams New York
HE -5 1937 3 OLIO
Delta Tau Delta
21 Boughton Street
WILLIAM ALBERT GROUSE
Danbury Connecticut
Phi Kappa Psi
2775 Derbyshire Road
Cleveland Heights
HARVEY HAGER HATHEWAY
Psi Upsilon
Weeks Avenue
Cornwall-on-Hudson New York
DONALD EARLE HEDDEN
Lord Jeffery Amherst Club
1861 West Main Street
Norristown Pennsylvania
SHELDON GILKEY GRUBB
Ohio
Fifty-eight
AMHERST COLLEGE
FRANKLIN HOVEY HEMPHILL
Phi Kappa Psi
245 North Mountain Avenue
Upper Montclair New jersey
ROBERT BYRON HEVENOR
Delta Tau Delta
Salt Point New York
Fifty-nine
HENRY CODY HIGGINBOTTOM
Chi Psi
Allahabab Agricultural Institute
Allahabab India
DAVID WILLIS HOLMES
Beta Theta Pi
1537 Buckland Street
Fremont Ohio
THE 1937 OLIO
Psi Upsilon
86 Bluff Road
Psi Upsilon
S6 Bluff Road
WALTER ASAHEL How, JR.
Alpha Delta Phi
175 Merriman Road
Akron Ohio
HENRY STUART HUGHES
Alpha Delta Phi
5040 Independence Avenue
Riverdale-on-Hudson New York
CARL FREDERICK HOLTHAUSEN, JR.
Palisade New jersey
DUNCAN MCCLAVE HOLTHAUSEN
Palisade New jersey
Sixty
Sandy Hook Connecticut
HAYDEN BRIGGS JOHNSON
Jackson Heights New York
Sixty-one
AMHERST COLLEGE
GEORGE ANSON JACKSON
Delta Upsilon
Hardscrabble
3406 81st Street
WARREN TREADWELL JOHNSON
Chi Psi
56 Warren Avenue
Woburn Massachusetts
JEAN PAUL JONES, JR.
Alpha Delta Phi
Box 568
Texas City Texas
I , E
THE 3 1937 3 OLIO
Beta Theta Pi
625 Cornelia Avenue
JEAN REED KEITH
chi Phi
1383 Main Street
Campello Massachusetts
ROGER KEITH, JR.
Chi Phi
65 South Street
Brockton Massachusetts
HORACE WILLIAM JORDAN
Chicago Illinois
WINFIELD KIECK
Theta Xi
1104 Sycamore Street
Haddon Heights New Jersey
Sixty-two
AMHERST COLLEGE
DOUGLAS RICHARDS KENNEDY
Larchmont New York
THOMAS ANDREW KENNEDY, JR.
Lincoln Park New jersey
Sixty-three
Psi Upsilon
58 Stuyvesant Avenue
Delta. Kappa Epsilon
Main Street
AARON LAWRENCE KINGSBERG
Lord Jeffery Amherst Club
365 Division Street
Amsterdam New York
l
JOHN GRAVETTE LAMB
Delta Kappa Epsilon
2555 Coventry Road
Shaker Heights Ghio
2 THE 1937 OLIC
Psi Upsilon
717 Meecinghouse Road
GEORGE STECK LAMBIERT
Elkins Park Pennsylvania
Delta Kappa Epsilon
604 Eclgevale Road
ROBERT DONALD WIKE LANDON
Delta Upsilon
Vestal New York
WILLIAM NICHOLAS LARKIN
Chi Phi
108 Howe Avenue
Shelton Connecticut
JOHN HUNTINGTON LANCASTER
Baltimore Maryland
Sixty-four
DANIEL CAPWELL LAWTON
Larchmont New York
Northampton Massachusetts
Sixty-Eve
AMHERST CCLLEGE
Chi Psi
1 Forest Court
DWIGHT WINGATE LEE
219 Earle Street
ANDREW RYDER LINSCOTT
Delta Upsilon
78 Greenwood Avenue
Swampscott Massachusetts
FREDERIC BREWSTER LOOMIS, JR.
Beta Theta Pi
8 Orchard Street
Amherst Massachusetts
THE E 1937 3 OLIO
GORDON LEE LUNDWALL
Chi Phi
81 Main Street
Chi Phi
3 Washington Square
JOHN SHEPHERD MCDANIEL
Delta Tau Delta
Newfield Road
Stamford Connecticut
JOHN RICHARD MCDERMOTT
58 Pelham Street
Methuen Massachusetts
I ,C
Gardner Massachusetts
CHARLES GRAHAM MCCORMICK
New York New York
Sixty-six
THOMAS JOSEPH MCGURL, JR.
Minersville Pennsylvania
ROBERT GIBSON MCILROX'
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
AMHERST COLLEGE
Beta Theta Pi
517 Sunbury Street
Alpha Delta Phi
Schenley Apartments
ROBERT COLEMAN JAMES MCKINSTRY
Psi Upsilon
Golf View Road
Doylestown Pennsylvania
Sixty-seven
ALAN ARTHUR MAHANKE
Delta Tau Delta
312 Temple Place
Westneld New Jersey
i THE 1937 OLIO i
GEORGE GROS MASON
Alpha Delta Phi
26 Summit Avenue
Larchmori: New York
ROBERT KEISER MASSEX'
Delta Upsilon
6 Westwood Drive
Worcester Massachusetts
STUART ANTHONY MAHER
Delta Kappa Epsilon
1000 Park Avenue
New York New York
SETI-I RICHARDS MARTIN
Chi Psi
19 Haviland Street
Worcester Massachusetts
l
Sixty-eighr
CHARLES MERRILL MATZINGER
Denver
LEONARD SEUFFERLE MAY .
Wasliington District of Columbia
I
AMHERST COLLEGE
Chi Psi
853 Race Street
Colorado
Beta Theta Pi
2208 Wyoming Avenue
LEONARD CARPENTER MEEKER
Alpha Delta Phi
581 Valley Road
Upper Montclair New jersey
Sixty-nine
CLEMENT FESSENDEN MERRILL
Psi Upsilon
69 Colonial Avenue
Warwick New York
THE 3 1937 3 OLIO
RICHARD ALLEN MIERRITT
Alpha Delta Phi
1 Dudley Street
ALBERT FLEMING MILLER, JR.
Phi Gamma Delta
1 East Oak Avenue
Moorestown New Jersey
DANIEL CoRNEL1Us MINNICK
Beta Theta Pi
21 East 10th Street
New York New York
Reading Massachusetts
JONES WARREN MERSEREAU
Chi Phi
2272 University Avenue
New York New York
Seventy
G. HENRY MUNDT, JR.
7000 South Shore Drive
Chicago
WILLIAM NILES MUSTARD
Willimantic Connecticut
AMI-IERST IOLLEGE
Psi Upsilon
Illinois
Theta Xi
77 Windham Road
ROBERT EARL NEWCOMB, JR.
Psi Upsilon
427 Levering Mill Road
Bala-Cynwyd Pennsylvania
,
Seventy-one
ALBERT TAMBOISE NICE
Beta Theta Pi
3533 89th Street
jackson Heights New York
. THE i 1937 3 OLIO
16 Reed Street
LEWIS HALL PALMER
Delta Upsilon
807 Crawford Avenue
WILLIAM MITCHELL PALMER, III
Psi Upsilon
Parma Michigan
LEO JOSEPH PAGNOTTA
Brockton Massachusetts
Syracuse New York
KEITH PRUDDEN PATTENGILL
Alpha Delta Phi
618 West Ottawa Street
Lansing Michigan
Seventy-two
JEROME FREDERICK PECK, JR.
Binghamton New York
FRANK ADELBERT PE1.T1ER, JR.
Dalton
AMHERST COLLEGE
Theta Delta Chi
26 Mitchell Avenue
Phi Gamma Delta
651 Main Street
Massachusetts
CLEMENT RICHARDSON PHIPPBN
366 Washington Street
Seventy-th ree
Belmont Massachusetts
GEORGE HOPKINS PHREANER
Chi Psi
Eichelberger Street
Hanover Pennsylvania
HE 2 1937 3 OLIO
Phi Gamma Delta
15 Congress Street
Psi Upsilon
JAMES THOMAS RAMEY
Phi Delta Theta
7301 Sheridan Road
Chicago Illinois
HORACE CHAIN REIDER J
Psi Upsilon
2201 East Market Street
York Pennsylvania
JOHN JOSEPH PLANT13, JR.
Worcester Massachusetts
EDWARD ERI Poon, IV
140 Pennington Avenue
Passaic New Jersey
Seventy-four
WILLIAM WILKINSON REILLEY
Mount Vernon New York
MELVILLE EDWARD REINER
Mount Vernon New York
l
Seventy-five
AMI-IERST COLLEGE
Phi Gamma Delta
204 Primrose Avenue
Delta Tau Delta
473 East 5th Street
' JOSEPH WALKER RICHMOND
Phi Gamma Delta
185 Glen Road
Providence Rhode Island
V
ROWLAND VANCE RIDER
Delta Tau Delta
616 james Street
Syracuse New York
i THE fi 1937 3 OLIO ?
LELAND PENNIWELL RUSSELL
Phi Kappa Psi
457 Richmond Avenue
Maplewood New jersey
JOHN PETER SAUL, III
Beta Theta Pi
540 Boulevard
Salem Virginia
FRANCIS LIELAND Rosa
Delta Tau Delta
652 State Street
Camden New jersey
EDWIN CHARLES ROZWENC
Lord Jeflfery Amherst Club
5 Franklin Court
Northampton Massachusetts
Seventy-six
CHARLES JARVIS SCHAUFFLER
Nantucket
CHARLES D. SCHILLING
Lord jeffrey Amherst Club
Glen Cove
Seven ty-seven
AMHERST COLLEGE
Psi Upsilon
Quidnet
Massachusetts '
20 Landing Road
New York
' I
JAMES SAMMIS SCHNEPEL
Lord Jeffery Amherst Club
155 South Broadway
White Plains New York
WILLIAM LINCOLN SCHOFF
Delta Tau Delta
353 Pembroke Road
Bala-Cynwyd Pennsylvania
THE 193 OLIO
Alpha Delta Phi
135 Atkins Street
WIN FIELD Faux SCOTT
Meriden Connecticut
Phi Gamma Delta
WALTER LEWIS SELIGSBERG
1155 Park Avenue
JAMES MACARTHUR SELBY
406 Bryn Mawr Avenue
Bala-Cynwyd Pennsylvania
New York New York
EDWARD MANNING SHEPARD
Theta Xi
121 East Webster Avenue
Roselle Park New jersey
Seventy-eight
. AMHERST E CCLLEGE
CARL DUNKLE SHEPPARD, JR.
Psi Upsilon
167 North Highland Avenue
Akron Ohio
CLEMENT MERRILL SIMMONS
Chi Phi
480 Silver Lane
East Hartford Connecticut
I
Sevenrylni ne
CHARLES BLAKE SKINNER
Delta Tau Delta
40 Greystone Park
Yonkers New York
GIRVAN NOBLE SNIDER, JR.
Beta Theta Pi
46 Rockledge Avenue
White Plains New York
THE 1937 OLIO
l
ALFRED ANTHONY SNOWBALL
Theta Delta Chi
36 Lincoln Avenue
Niles Ohio
R. WENDELL SNYDER
Chi Phi
246 West Spruce Street
Shamokin Pennsylvania
CHARLES CHURCHILL STAFFORD
Delta Upsilon
14 Congress Street
Morrisville Vermont
ROBERT PEABODY SNYDER
Psi Upsilon
2-4 Marion Avenue
Albany New York
liightv
i AMHERST COLLEGE
JOHN BURROUGHS STEARNS
Alpha Delta Phi
117 Meadowbrook Place
South Orange New Jersey
ARTHUR INNIS STRANG, JR.
Phi Kappa Psi
6 Crane Avenue
Wlmire Plains New York
l
l
Eighty-one
JOHN ALLEN SWAINBANK
Phi Gamma Delta
53 Church Srreer
Ware Massachusetts
JAMES BLAINE SWEENEY, JR.
2213 Sulgrave Avenue
Baltimore Maryland
TI-IE i 1937 3 OLIO -
.I i
nu l
WILLIAM JAMES THOMPSON, JR.
Delta Upsilon
246 South Mountain Avenue
Montclair New Jersey
ROY ERE TILLES, JR.
Phi Gamma Delta
33 Lyncroft Road
New Rochelle New York
THOMAS KAUFFMAN TAYLOR
Psi Upsilon
4416 Westminster Place
Saint Louis Missouri
BEN JAMIN PELLINGTON TERRY
Chi Psi
40 Morgan Street
Melrose Massachusetts
Eighty-two
EBEN DAWES TISDALE
Taunton
CHARLES LEONIDAS TOOKER
Saint Louis Missouri
AMI-IERST iCOLLEGE
Alpha Delta Phi
261 Winthrop Street
Massachusetts
Delta Upsilon
5858 Clemens Avenue
BARRY BALDWIN TOWNSEND
Psi Upsilon
5008 43rd Street, N. W.
Wasliington District of Columbia
l
Eighty-three
WILLIAM BOWER MITCHELL TRACY, JR.
Psi Upsilon-
6802 Lincoln Drive
Germantown Pennsylvania
--l THE 1937 OLIO 2
J. B. MILLARD TYSON
Beta Theta Pi
434 North Tenth Street
Lebanon Pennsylvania
CORNELIUS VANDERBREGGEN, JR. .
Lord jeffery Amherst Club
209 West Ridley Avenue
Norwood Station Pennsylvania
GEORGE SPENCER TREES
Delta Upsilon
5492 South Shore Drive
Chicago Illinois
PRoCToR CLARK TWICHELL
Phi Delta Theta
240 Glen Street
Glen Falls New York
Eighty-four
KENNETH MERRELL WALBRIDGE
Scarsdale New York
STUART DOUGLAS WALKER, JR.
Summit
Eighty-live
AMHERST COLLEGE
Alpha Delta Phi
35 Lockwood Road
Delta Upsilon
60 Lenox Road
New Jersey
IRVING WALTMAN
Lord Jeffery Amherst Club
32 Plainheld Street
Hartford Connecticut
LEWIS WARDELL, JR.
Chi Phi
58 East Avenue
Norwalk Connecticut
- THE E 1937 E OLIO
Delta Kappa Epsilon
2689 East Overlook Road
Cleveland
Alpha Delta Phi
41 Dellwood Road
DURBIN HARPER WELLS
Delta Kappa Epsilon
83 Pomeroy Terrace
Northampton Massachusetts
MATTHEW TILGHMAN WEST
Chi Psi
5 Davis Road
Port Washington New York
WILLIAM ALEXANDER WARNER
Ohio
WILLIAM HARVEY WEBSTER, JR.
Bronxville New York
Eighty-six
' AMHERST
WALTER HUGH WHITEHILL, JR.
Phi Delta Theta
Grand Avenue
Newburgh New York
CHARLES S. WHITMAN, JR.
Alpha Delta Phi
502 Park Avenue
New York New York
Eighty-seven
li.. COLLEG
JAMES PLATT WILKERSON, III.
Phi Kappa Psi
Colonia New Jersey
JOHN DAYTON WILLARD
Phi Gamma. Delta
51 Lincoln Avenue
Amherst Massachusetts
THE 3 1937? OLIO
Phi Kappa Psi
29 Nutgrove Street
Phi Kappa Psi
3071 Warrington Road
Cleveland
STANWOOD WOLLASTON
Delta Tau Delta
51 Aubrey Road
Upper Montclair New Jersey
RICHARD S. ZEISLER
Theta Xi
4840 Ellis Avenue
Chicago Illinois
EDWARD DAVID WILLIAMS
White Plains New York
ROBERT HACKMAN WILLIAMS
Ohio
Eighty-eight
A I-IERST COLLEGE
JOHN KELTZ BEST, BOII
RICHARD LAWLOR COOPER, 'PY
EDWARD PELTON GREEN, ATA
GEORGE TAYLOR HOWARD
HENRY CLAY HOWELL, JR., BGH
NED BURR MCKENNY
WESBY PONTEFRACT RICHARDS, AKE
Former Members Of the Class Of 1937
THOMAS GORDON BAKER
WILLIAM DALLAS BAKER
STEVEN HARRY BAMEERGER
HARRY WHEELER BARBER
BRADFORD BARNES BROWN
JOHN ROBERT BURKE
TIMOTHY FRANCIS BURKE
CHARLES RUSSELL CORWIN, II
THOMAS NIBLO CREED
HORACE BYRON FAY, JR.
EDWARD EVERETT FENTON
JOHN HALDANE FLAGLER
CHARLES HOWARD FOOTE
BERNARD FRIEDMAN
CARLTON EVERETT GREENWOOD
JOHN OSBORN HALL
THEODORE PARKER HARDING
CHARLES HENRY HECHLER, JR.
DEXTER WRIGHT HEWITT
GEORGE FREDERICK HINCHCLIFFE
WARD HUMPHREY, JR.
KENNETH DONALD KRAEGER
JOHN TODD LAURENT
ARTHUR VANCOTT MARSHALL
EARL TERRY MAXON, JR.
WELLWOOD HUGH MAXWELL, JR.
DONALD BABSON MAYO
JAMES PATRICK MCGRADY, JR.
WALTER HARRISON MCINTOSH, JR
DANIEL LEO MCKALLAGAT
GUNTHER ERNST OTTO
WILLIAM FRANKLIN PFEIFFER, JR.
BEN KAUEEMAN POLK
PHILIP NEVIN REBERT
JESSE JAY RICKS
WILLARD WROATH ROBERTS
RICHARD CLARENCE ROTHERHAM
WALTER GORDON SCHMITT
VINCENT SCOFIELD
ATHANASIOS DEMETRIOS SKOURAS
DAVID PAUL SULLIVAN
MORIHIKO TAKAMI
FREDERIC PORTER WELLER
JOHN DAYTON WILLARD
EDWARD AUGUSTUS WILSON
WILLIAM VINCENT WILSON
DONALD ALFRED LE ET
Eighty-nine
THE 193 OLIO
ROBERT D. FENN .........,.......,
NIEL A. WEATHERS, JR .......,...
ALBERT F. WINSTON .........
HORACE W. HEWLETT .........
ROBERT D. FENN
President
History of the Class of IQ36
WALTER B. MAHONY, JR .....,.........
ANDREW B. MELDRUM, 'IR ............
I Oflicers of the Class of 1936
l
........President
Vice-President
.........Secretary
.........Treasurer
........Class Marshal
........Choregus
The Class of 1956 entered Amherst in the fall of 1932 like most freshmen classes,
rather green and young, and keenly enjoying its new status as college students. It took
a very short time to form the acquaintances which have strengthened into the friendships
which bind the Senior Class together.
In this time of diminished emphasis on the class as a unit, class history has been
uneventful. Enthusiasm and energy were at a peak during freshman and sophomore years.
Under the leadership of jim Goodell, 1956 was the last to uphold the good old custom
of freshman banquets. It was rather a sedate affair, as compared with the lurid tales of
former freshman banquets, but very much worth while, and gave us our first informal
contact with the President and the Dean of the College. During our first year, also, we
managed to win the Interclass Sing fmainly on attendancej. Matt Kelly was president
sophomore year, and engineered the somewhat informal sophomore beer party. Resting
on these laurels for the last two years under the capable direction of Al Winston and
Bob Fenn, we have led a life of dignified retirement. Sabrina, the famous object of
interclass competition, was formally presented to the college museum last year by the
Class of '55. In athletics the Class produced an undefeated freshman football team and
won the interclass swimming meet four years in succession.
The Class of 1936 entered Amherst with Stanley King. Its four year sojourn has
seen the college begin on a period of increasing prosperity. Entering under the old system
of fixed requirements for admission and finding the courses of freshman and sophomore
years closely prescribed, we have seen the curriculum liberalized and rejuvenated. Students
have been given a great increase of freedom in the choice and pursuit of their studies,
N i netv
AMHERST COLLEGE
culminating in the new attendance system under trial now. A stronger curriculum has
also been part of the progress. The physical equipment of the college has been steadily
improved, with the addition of one new building and the near prospect of- another. We
have been members of Amherst during a period of heighrening morale. It has shown
itself among undergraduates on the athletic held and, spreading through the alumni, has
increased their interest in the college. The jump to five hundred applications for admission
has undoubtedly been a result of this, as well as of the admission policy. We are privileged
to have belonged to an alert, progressive and advancing organization.
The Class of 1936 hopes that, in its turn, it has had something to contribute to
Amherst. Athletic teams and extra-curricular affairs have been kept up to their standards.
A nucleus of Seniors is the foundation for the unusual strength of this year's swimming
and tennis reams, and the Class has been a contributor to the success of track teams to
whom defeat is unknown. This year has seen a Student Council judiciously handled and
an alert, active Student . The Class has strongly supported the Glee Club in its recent
rise to prominence. A member of the Class was nominated as candidate for a Rhodes
Scholarship from the State of Massachusetts, an honor second only to actual attainment
of the scholarship itself. We trust that in our participation in the intellectual pursuits and
student life of a bright period of Amherst's history we have capably upheld our part.
ANDREW B. MELDRUM, jR,, Secretary.
Ninety one
Members of the Class of 1936
Allen Abercrombie, AAQIH Turner Falls, Mass.
Soccer 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 2, 3, 41: Wrestling 111: Ski Team 131: Band
12, 3, 41: Sphinx Club 13, 41: Cotillion Club 13, 41.
Tl'1COd0I.'C JOh1'1 Albertowicz N0ffl1a1nPf011, Mass,
Football 11, 2,.3, 4: Numerals 11: Track 13, 41: Pre-Medical Club 12, 3, 41.
George Kelby Allison, fI1K1I1 Brooklyn, N. Y.
Cross Country 11, 2, 3: A 21: Track 11, 2, 3: Numerals 11: Manager of Freshman
Basketball 13, 4-1: Winged A Club 13, 41: Interfraternity Council 131: Council of
Fraternity Presidents 141: Sphinx Club 13, 41.
john Fisher Armstrong, Jr., 4I1PA San Antonio, Tex.
Charles Kingsley Arter, Jr., AKE Lyndhurst, Ohio
Football 11, 2: Numerals 11: Sphinx Club 13, 41, Vice-President 141: Council of Fraternity
Presidents 141.
George Peter Barbarow, jr., ATA Morristown, N.
Cross Country 111.
Joseph Wilson Barr, Jr., AKE Oil City, Pa.
Wrestling 12, 31: Christian Association Cabinet 131: Glee Club 11, 3, 41: Student Edia
torial Board 12, 3, 41: Sphinx Club 13, 41: Cotillion Club 131.
Donald Lord Bartlett, jr., AA1I1 New Britain, Conn.
Baseball 11, 2, 3: Numerals 11g Cotillion Club 13, 41.
Edwin Borthwick Bartow, fIJAl9 Northport, N. Y.
Wrestling 11, 2, 31: Soccer 121: Liberal Club 141: International Relations Club 141:
Interfraternity Council 131: Student Business Board 12, 3, 41.
Herman Kissam Beach, jr., rIJI'A Bridgeport, Conn.
Swimming 111: Track 11, 2, 3: A 31: Relay 131.
Ernest Anton Becker, Jr., X111 Bristol, Conn.
Basketball 11, 2, 3: Numerals 11: Tennis 121: Choir 11, 2, 3, 41: Amherst Press Corres-
pondent 13, 41.
Ronald Stewart Beckett, ATA Purchase, N. Y.
Track 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 31: Cross Country 12, 3, 4: A 3, 41, Captain 141:
Relay 131: Blodgett Biology Prize 131: Pre-Medical Club 13, 41.
Marcus Gilbert Beebe, AY Wakefield, Mass.
Football 111: Basketball 121: Sphinx Club 13, 41.
Robert Cary Bielaski, ATA Great Neck, N. Y.
Tennis 11, 2, 3: Numerals 1: A 2, 31.
Lewis Middleton Black, BCDTI Great Neck, N. Y.
Cross Country 111: Freshman Banquet Committee 111: Assistant Manager of Debating 131,
Manager 141: Pre-Law Club 141: International Relations Club 141: Debating Council
13, 41: Sphinx Club 13, 41.
Howard Brooks Bosworth, X111 Auburn, R. I.
Sphinx Club 13. 41.
John Bowditch, III, ATA Poland, Ohio
Football 11, 2. 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 41: Phi Beta Kappa 141.
William Sterett Bowmet Louisville, Ky.
Theodore Childs Boyden, 1I1Y Deerfield, Mass.
Glee Club 141: Sphinx Club 13. 41.
Jggeph Patrick Boyle, AKE East Mauch Chunk, Pa.
Baseball 11. 2, 3. 4: Numerals 1: A 2, 3, 41, Captain 11, 41.
George Treat Bristol, Jr., AY Mountainville, N. Y.
Council of Fraternity Presidents 141: Student Editorial Board 12, 3, 41, Editor-in-Chief
141: Olio Editorial Board 12, 31, Associate Editor 121, Managing Editor 131: Howard
Prize for Editorials 131: Sphinx Club 13, 41: Cotillion Club 13, 41: Scarab 141.
Allen Brown, XID Nashua, N- H-
Sphinx Club 131.
Burr Cartwright Brundage, BGDII BUff21l0, N- Y-
Raymond Keith Bryant, CIJKHII Lofkporr, N- Y-
Football 11: Numerals 11: Masquers 13, 41, President 141: Glee Club 11, 31: Sphinx
Cl b 13. 4-1. . 1
Edwarld Anson Buck Richmond Hill, N. Y.
Allen Raymond Buckman, jr., AAfIJ Summit, N- J-
Soccer 111: Basketball 111: Glee Club 11, 2, 31: Flying Club 141: Cotillion Club 13. 41.
Ninety-two
f THE E 1937 2 OLIO -l
AMHERST COLLEGE -
William Austin Buechner, AKE Lockhart, Fla.
Swimming 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 2, 3, 45: Cross Country 11: Numerals 15.
George Brinton Burnett, jr., CDFA Amherst, Mass.
Glee Club 11, 2, 3, 45: Masquers 13, 45: Track 115: Assistant Manager of Track 135,
Manager 145: Vice-President of the New England Intercollegiate Amateur Athletic Asso-
ciation 145: Olio Editorial Board 125: lntertraternity Council 125: Sphinx Club 13, 45:
Cotillion Club 13, 45.
Parke Wolcott Burrows, AACD Davenport, Iowa
Football 12, 3, 4: A 3, 45: Track 12, 3, 4: A 2, 35: Glee Club 13, 45: Cotillion
Club 13, 45.
Edward Ladd Butler, X111 Dedham, Mass.
Assistant Manager of Wrestling 135, Manager 145: Council of Fraternity Presidents 145.
Robert Henry Carlson, AKE Higganum, Conn.
Football 11: Numerals 15: Wrestling 12, 353 Glee Club 125: Sphinx Club 13, 45.
Roger Charles Carmien, Jr. Jackson Heights, N. Y.
Daniel Burt Caudle, AKE Rochester, N. Y.
Phi Beta Kappa 13, 45.
William Nesbit Chambers, AAfIv New York, N. Y.
Pre-Medical Club 13, 45, President 145.
Edward Chandler, f1mI'A Brookline, Mass.
Masquers 13, 45, Property Manager 145.
Philip Hyde Clarke, AAfI1 Southbridge, Mass.
Football 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 45: Baseball 11, 2, 3: Numerals 15: Basketball
11, 25: Sphinx Club 13, 45: Cotillion Club 13, 45.
Harold Warren Cobb, BGJII Great Neck, N. Y.
Horace Coates Coleman, jr., WY Norristown, Pa.
Track 11, 2: Numerals 15: Tennis 13, 4: A 3, 45: Christian Association Cabinet 13, 45,
Treasurer 135, Chairman of Chest Drive 145: College Squash Champion 12, 35: Sphinx
Club 13, 45: Cotillion Club 13, 45: Phi Beta Kappa
James Robert Collard, ATA Belchertown, Mass.
Glee Club 12, 3, 45.
Sheldon McGirr Collins, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Springfield, Mass.
Track 125: International Relations Club 11, 2, 3, 45: Model League 11, 3, 45: Pre-Law
Club 12, 3, 45.
Charles Warren Combs, ATA Springfield, Mass.
Edgar Loewer Coon, QDFA Woodhaven, N. Y.
Henry Carter Corson, GJAX Oakmont, Pa.
Football 11, 2: Numerals 15: Outing Club 115.
Fronefield Crawford, SPY Wayne, Pa.
Baseball 11: Numerals 15: Sphinx Club 13, 45.
William Henry Creamer, Xrlv Brooklyn, N. Y.
Sphinx Club 13, 45.
Paul Nisbet Critchlow, jr., WY Sewickley, Pa.
Football 11, 2, 3: Numerals 1: A 25: Basketball 11. 2: Numerals 15: Tennis 11, 25:
Sphinx Club 13, 45: Cotillion Club 13, 45.
William Merriam Croxton, AAfI1 Evanston, Ill.
Football 11: Numerals 15: Outing Club 115: Student Business Board 125: Sphinx Club
13, 45: coaiiion Club 13. 47.
Iohn Clydesdale Cushman, jr., AA111 Upper Montclair, N.
Soccer 115: Swimming 115: Golf 12, 3, 4: A 3, 45, Captain 145: Student Editorial Board
12. 3, 45: Olio Editorial Board 125: Lord Jeff Business Board 125: Sphinx Club 13, 45:
Cotillion Club 13, 45.
joseph Walter Davis, Jr., JJFA Wellesley Hills, Mass.
Ski Team 145.
Kimball Davis, GDAX Brookline, Mass.
Student Business Board 12, 3. 45, Circulation Manager 135, Merchandising Manager 145:
Amherst Press Correspondent 13, 45: Band 12. 35: Freshman Latin Prize 115.
Guild Devere, X411 Cranston, R. I.
Soccer 12, 35: Wrestliiig 11, 25: Tennis 11, 2, 3, 45: Cheerleader 13, 45: Glee Club 145:
Assistant Publicity Manager of the Glee Club 135, Manager 145: International Relations
Club 13. 45: Model Leafzuc 13. 45: Sphinx Club 13, 45.
Lloyd Pillsbury Dodge, AKE New York, N. Y.
Track 135: Glee Club 135: Pre-Medical Club 135: Sphinx Club 113, 45.
Ninety-three A
-1- THE 1937 OLIO '1'---1-
Wilbur Noyes Earl, AAQIJ Oneida, N. Y.
Wrestling 1113 Assistant Manager of Baseball 131, Manager 1413 Band 1113 Sphinx
Club 13, 413 Cotillion Club 13, 41.
Allen Henry Ehrgood, jr., KIIY Lebanon, Pa.
Wrestling 12, 313 Sphinx Club 13, 413 Cotillion Club 13, 41.
William Pneuman Ellis, X111 Kingston, Pa.
Masquers 13, 41, Assistant Stage Manager 131, Manager 1413 Glee Club 1413 Sphinx
Club 15, 41, Cotillion Club 15, 41.
Robert Dwight Fenn, AAfI1 Meriden, Conn.
Football 11, 2, 3, 43 Numerals lg A 2, 3, 41, Honorary Captain 1411 Track 11, 2, 33
Numerals 113 Class President 1413 Sphinx Club 13, 413 Cotillion Club 13, 41, President
1413 Phi Beta Kappa 13, 41.
Reginald Fitzgerald, AKE Worcester, Mass.
Football 11, 23 Numerals 113 Wrestling 11, 213 Student Business Board 121.
Oliver Meredith Flanders, ATA Worcester, Mass.
Wrestling 1213 Christian Association Cabinet 11, 2, 3, 41.
Edmund Littleton Foote, Lord jeffrey Amherst Club Montclair, N.
Tennis 131.
Richard Collins Forman, X111 Alpena, Mich.
Football 11, 2, 3, 43 Numerals 13 A 2, 3, 413 Basketball 113 Numerals 113 Track 11, 33
Numerals 113 Christian Association Cabinet 1413 Pre-Medical Club 1413 Class Secretary-
Treasurer 1213 Student Council 13, 413 Sphinx Club 13, 41.
Charles Howell Foster, XKD Northampton, Mass.
Poetry Society 1113 Collin Armstrong Prize for Poetry 131.
Robert Harry Gardner, ATA Oak Park, Ill.
Student Editorial Board 13, 41.
Daniel Gersen Elisabethtown, N. Y.
Norman Harold Gerson, Lord jeffrey Amherst Club Haverhill, Mass.
Baseball 1113 Football 1113 International Relations Club 13, 413 Model League 13, 41.
Robert Ewald Giese, AAfD Wellesley Hills, Mass.
Cross Country 1113 Tennis 1113 Squash 1413 Band 1413 Cotillion Club 13, 413 Phi Beta
Kappa 141.
james Pierpont Bartlett Goodell, SPY Jamestown, N. Y.
Football 11, 2, 4g Numerals 13 A 413 Baseball 113 Numerals 113 Wrestling 13, 43 A
3, 413 Glee Club 1413 Pre-Medical Club 13, 41, President 1313 Class President 1113
Sphinx Club 13, 413 Cotillion Club 13, 41.
William Edward Goodman, ATA Warreri, Ohio
Football 113 Numerals 113 Physical Education Handball Cup 121.
Edward Nute Goodwin, Jr., AY Montclair, N.
Assistant Manager of the Glee Club 131, Manager 141.
Charles Platt Goss, X111 New Britain, Conn.
Band 11, 213 Cotillion Club 13, 41.
Stanley Merrill Gower, jr., AY Skowhegan, Me.
Soccer 13, 413 Glee Club 11, 2, 3, 413 Christian Association Cabinet 12, 3, 413 Sphinx
Club 13, 413 Cotillion Club 13, 41.
Alvin Greif, jr., Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Baltimore, Md.
Debating 1113 International Relations Club 12, 3, 413 Model League 12, 3, 413 Poetry
Club 1113 Student Business Board 1213 Commons Club 11, 2, 31.
Minot Grose, AAcIm Great Neck, N. Y.
Soccer 11, 2, 3, 43 Numerals lg A 2, 3, 413 Squash 1413 Band 11, 2, 3, 413 Band
Committee 1413 Council of Fraternity Presidents 141, Secretary 1413 Flying Club 1213
Cotillion Club 13. 41.
Fritz Otto Haas, WY HHVCff0fd, PH-
Outing Club 11, 213 Student Business Board 1213 Cotillion Club 13, 41.
William Ewell Hall, KDFA Newton. Mass-
Williain Haller, Jr., AY I-COHU1, N- ,lr
George Burton Hamilton, B911 PCOri11, Ill-
Pre'Law Club 141.
Edward Woodberry Harrison, 4111011 l0dik1DHPOliS, Ind.
Horace Wilson Hewlett, X41 New Haven, Conn.
Football 11: Numerals 113 Assistant Manager of Cross Country 131: Manager 141: Student
Council 1413 Glee Club 11, 2, 3, 41, President 1413 Student Business Board 12, 3, 41,
Ninety-four
AMI-IERST iCOLLEGE
Advertising Manager 131, Business Manager 1415 Class Choregus 12, 415 College Choregus
1415 Commencement Committee 1415 Sphinx Club 13, 41, President 1415 Scarab 141.
Russell William Higgins, Xflw Northampton, Mass.
Basketball 11, 2, 31.
William Lundy Hitchcock, SAX Dedham, Mass.
Swimming 115 Numerals 115 Outing Club 111.
Herbert Leonard Horn Newburgh, N. Y.
Crescens Garman Hubbard, q1KwIf White Plains, N. Y.
Band 11, 21.
Charles Edwin Hulick, Jr., X111 Easton, Pa.
Soccer 115 Numerals 115 Tennis 11, 2, 35 Numerals 15 A 2, 315 Debating Union 13, 41,
President 1415 Sphinx Club 13, 41.
William Summer Johnson, AY Belleville, N. J.
Phi Beta Kappa, 13, 41.
Vincent King Keesey, Jr., xIfY York, Pa.
Basketball 11, 2, 45 Numerals 1: A 2, 41: Tennis 11, 2, 3, 45 Numerals 15 A 31: Chris-
tian Association Cabinet 12, 3, 415 Sphinx Club 13, 41.
Matthew Arnold Kelly, 'PY New York, N. Y.
Baseball 115 Numerals 115 Swimming 11, 2, 3, 45 Numerals 15 A 2, 3, 41, Captain
11, 415 Glee Club 11, 2, 315 Choir 11, 2, 3, 415 Christian Association Cabinet 11, 2, 3, 415
Samueal Wally Brown Scholarship 1315 Class President 1215 Sphinx Club 13, 415 Cotillion
Club 13, 415 Phi Beta Kappa 141.
John Pease King, G-JAX Detroit, Mich
Baseball 1115 Cross Country 1315 Golf 135 A 315 Outing Club 1115 Pre-Law Club
13, 415 Phi Beta Kappa 141.
Arthur Klein, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Woodbridge, N. J
Track 1115 Model League 13, 415 Poetry Society 1115 Commons Club 11, 2, 31.
Ray Browdy Landis Amherst, Mass
Cross Country 1115 Glee Club 1415 Commons Club 11, 2, 31.
Frederick Stanley Lane, II, GJAX Foxboro, Mass
Indoor Track 1115 Baseball 1115 Pre-Law Club 13, 415 Student Editorial Board 12, 3, 41,
Sports Editor 1415 Amherst Press Sports Correspondent 13, 415 Assistant Manager of
Intramural Sports 131, Manager 1415 Phi Beta Kappa 141.
Alfred Seymour Lapidus New York, N. Y
Swimming 11, 2, 3, 45 Numerals 15 A 3, 41.
Edmond Peter Larkin Northampton, Mass
Track 12, 315 Cross Country 1315 Pre-Medical Club 11, 2, 3, 41.
Robert Lawrence New York, N. Y
Debating 1115 Liberal Club 11, 2, 3, 41.
Robert Edward Leary Holyoke, Mass
James Rogers Leech, GDAX
Edwin Paul Lepper, GE
Baseball 115 Numerals 11.
Stanley Lewis Levin, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club
International Relations Club 12, 3, 415 Pre-Law Club 141.
Joseph Sidney Lilienthal
Wrestling 1115 Liberal Club 1315 Pre-Law Club 1415 Kellogg Contest
Norman Edwin Limberg, X411
Baseball 111.
Calvert Bernard Lindquist, B811
Paul George Lund, rI:1'A
Cross Country 11, 3, 41: Wrestli
John Piper Lutz, QIJFA
George Thomas McClelland
Richard Elmore McCormick, SPY
Golf 1511 Cotillion Club fs, 41
George Edwin McPherson, KIJFA
Giee Club fi, 21.
Stephen Edward Magill, XXII
ng 11, 3, 11.
Providence, R. I
Providence, R. I
Waterbury, Conn
Pottsville, Pa
121- ,
Leonia, N. J
Omaha, Nebr
Lawrence, Mass
Drexel Hill, Pa
Larchmont, N. Y.
Manchester, Conn.
Belchertown, Mass.
Holmes, Pa.
Track 1115 Soccer 12. 313 Wrestling 1215 Christian Association Cabinet 1415 Latin Club
1215 Cotillion Club 131.
Ninety-live
-f THE 1937 OLIO -'ge
Walter Butler Mahony, jr., AKE Scarborough, N . Y.
Basketball 11: Numerals 11: Soccer 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 2, 3, 41: Tennis 11, 2, 3:
Numerals 1: A 2, 31, Christian Association Cabinet 11, 2, 315 Student Council 13, 41,
Vice-President 141g Student Editorial Board 12, 3, 41, Permanent News Editor 141: Class
Choregus 111: Class Secretary-Treasurer 1313 Class Vice-President 141, Co-holder of the
Samueal Walley Brown Scholarship 131: Sphinx Club 13, 413 Phi Beta Kappa 141:
Scarab 141, President 141.
Rae james Malcolm, X111 Holyoke, Mass.
Football 11, 3, 45 Numerals 1: A 3, 41: Basketball 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 2, 3, 415
Track 11, 3: Numerals 11.
Edward Washburn Maynard, jr., AACIJ Wilinington, Del.
Soccer 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 2, 3, 41, Interfraternity Council 12, 31g Cotillion
Club 15, 41.
Andrew Barclay Meldtum, jr., AAKIJ Cleveland, Ohio
Tennis 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1, A 2, 3, 41: Assistant Manager of Football 131: Manager
of Soccer 141: Chairman of Committee of Committees 1415 Christian Association Cabinet
11, 2, 3, 41, Model League 131: Class Treasurer 141g Sphinx Club 13, 41: Cotillion
Club 13, 41.
Henry Spaulding Meyer, GJE New York, N. Y.
George Stanley Moss, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Brooklyn, N. Y.
Soccer 121: Pre-Law Club 141.
Gilbert Horton Mudge, AKE Brooklyn, N. Y.
Squash 13, 41: Sphinx Club 13, 41: Phi Beta Kappa
George Albert Nagle, jr., KIPFA Hollis, N. Y.
Alan Crawford Neilson, AAfI1 Worcester, Mass.
Soccer 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals lg A 2, 3, 41, Captain 111: Swimming 11, 2: Numerals 11:
Glee Club 1315 Cotillion 13, 41.
Paul johnson Newlon, BQII Charlestown, W. Va.
Debating Council 11, 2, 3, 41, President 141: Debating Union 13, 41: International
Relations Club 13, 41: Model League 13, 41g Steering Committee 1415 Sphinx Club 13, 413
Cotillion Club 13, 41: Phi Beta Kappa 141.
Robert Childs Nowe, GAX Amboy, Ill.
Outing Club 11, 2, 3, 41: Second Folger Prize 1315 Phi Beta Kappa 141.
Anthony Francis O'Donnell, fI1K1I' Norwood, Mass.
Football 11, 3, 4g Numerals 1: A 41: Track 11, 4: Numerals 11: Glee Club 131g Olio
Business Manager 131: Sphinx Club 13, 41.
Walter Hart Olden, jr., QDAX Princeton, N.
Masquers 13. 41, Stage Manager 141.
Gaylord Lord Paine, AKE East Hartford, Conn.
Football 11, 2, 3: Numerals 11: Wrestling 11, 2, 3, 4g Numerals 11g Debating 111.
Ernest Palmer, jr., CDPA Springfield, Ill.
Cross Country 111: Student Business Board 11, 21.
Iay Andrew Parr, AAG? Springfield, lll.
Cotillion Club 13, 41.
Sanborn Partridge, AAG, Proctor, Vt.
Swimming 11, 2, 3g Numerals 11: Assistant Manager of Freshman Baseball 131, Manager
141: International Relations Club 141: Pre-Law Club 141: Student Editorial Board
12. 3, 41: Cotillion Club 13, 41: Phi Beta Kappa 141,
Stanley Paymer, Lord jeiiery Amherst Club jamaica, N. Y.
Soccer 12, 3, 41: Track 11, 2, 3, 4: Numerals 1: A 31.
Raymond Smith Pearsall, KFAQJ FFCCPOFF, N- Y-
Track 111: Choir 111, Glee Club 121: Masquers 13, 41.
George Thomas Perkins Wellesley, Mass.
john Holberton Peterson, KIQFA New Rochelle, N. Y.
Football 11: Numerals 11: Swimming 111: Manager of Freshman Track 131: Council of
Fraternity Presidents 141. .
Walter George Pfeil, Jr., ATA PHSSHIC, N- l-
Soccer 11, 2, 3. 4: Numerals 1: A 2, 3, 41: Committee of Committees 141.
Charles Edgar Phreaner, Jr., XXI' Hanover, Pa.
Football 111: Track 111: Band 11, 2, 41, Student Director 141: Student Editorial Board
12, 3, 41, Managing Editor 141: Class Choregus 131: Assistant Manager of Basketball 131,
Manager 141: Student Council 141: Dance Committee 131: Commencement Committee
141: Council of Fraternity Presidents 141: lnterfraternity Council 151. Treasurer 131:
Sphinx Club 13, 41: Scarab 141, -
Ninety-six
' AMHERST i COLLEGE
Albert Heisey Pike, Jr., CIJAQ Karonah, N, Y,
Liberal Club 15, 415 Pre-Law Club
Samuel Franz Potsubay, jr., QAX Easthampton, Mass.
Soccer 1115 Swimming 11, 25 Numerals 115 Pre-Medical Club 12, 5, 415 Outing Club
11, 215 Lord jeff Board 12, 51, Art Editor 1515 Harvey Blodgett and Phi Delta Theta
Scholarships 1515 Council of Fraternity Presidents 1415 Cotillion Club 15, 41.
Harold joseph Raby, QIDACD Mamaroneck, N. Y.
Glee Club 11, 2, 415 Choir 15, 415 Band 11, 2, 5, 415 Manager of the Band 1515 Liberal
Club
Carl joseph Raymond, CIJKXII Lockport, N. Y.
Swimming 11, 2, 55 Numerals 115 Fencing 11, 2, 5, 415 Masquers 15, 41, Secretary-
Treasurer 1415 Sphinx Club 15, 41.
Franklin Luther Reed, jr., AY Westfield, N.
Cheerleader 12, 5, 415 Pre-Medical Club 141.
Nelson Bradford Repsold, CDIQYII Evanston, Ill.
Swimming 11, 2, 5, 45 Numerals 15 A 2, 5, 415 Glee Club 1215 Pre-Law Club 141.
W. Morrison Rider, Jr., ATA Syracuse, N. Y.
Masquers 15, 415 Christian Association Cabinet 141.
Albert Karl Roehrig, QAX Auburndale, Mass.
Swimming 1115 Soccer 11, 21.
Lewis Locks Rosen, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Mount Vernon, N. Y.
Fencing 12, 5, 415 Assistant Fencing Coach 15, 415 College Fencing Champion 1415
Commons Club 12, 51.
Gershon Salhanick Fall River, Mass.
Pre-Medical Club 12, 5, 415 Commons Club 11, 2, 51.
Arthur Turney Savage, AY Westfield, N. J.
Cross Country 1115 Student Business Board 121.
Walter Amson Schloss Flushing, N. Y.
Swimming 115 Numerals 115 Commons Club 11, 2, 515 Phi Beta Kappa 141. V
Mandal Robert Segal, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Worcester, Mass.
Debating Council 12, 51, Secretary 151, Vice-President 1415 Secretary-Treasurer of the
Eastern Intercollegiate Debate League 1415 lnternarional Relations Club 12, 5, 41, Vice-
President 1415 Model League 12, 5, 41, Chairman 1415 Lord jeff Editorial Board 12, 31,
Olio Editorial Board 1215 Rogers Debating Prize 151: A. Lyman Willison Prize 1115
Steering Committee 1415 Debating Union 1415 Pre-Law Club 1415 Liberal Club 11, 215
Delta Sigma Rho 1415 Phi Beta Kappa 15, 41.
George Curry Seward, IPAQ . Altoona, Pa.
Cross Country 11, 25 Numerals 115 Wrestling 11, 2, 515 Council of Fraternity Presidents
1415 Phi Beta Kappa 15, 41.
john Musselman Shields, ATA St. Johnsbury, Vt.
Football 11, 2, 5, 45 Numerals 15 A 2, 5, 415 Track 1115 Interfraternity Council 12, 515
Sphinx Club 15, 4-1.
Harold Chester Sigda, QE Holyoke, Mass.
Tennis 111: Pre-Law Club
Solomon Harold Skolnick, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Woonsocket, R. I.
Baseball 1115 Pre-Law Club 11, 2, 5, 41.
Athanasios Demetrios Skouras, CIJAGD Rye, N. Y.
Manager of Fencing 1515 William C. Collar Prize 1115 International Relations Club
11, 2, 51, Chairman of the Executive Committee 151: Model League 11, 2, 515 Model
Senate 1315 Liberal Club 11, 2, 51, President 1515 Provisional Committee of American
Student Union 1515 Christian Association Cabinet 1115 Outing Club 1515 Phi Beta
Kappa 151. I
Ralph Herbert Sleicher, 'PY New York, N. Y.
Tennis 1115 Squash 141: Choir 1115 Cotillion Club 15, 41.
Frederic Baker Smead, AKE Toledo, Ohio
Soccer 115 Numerals 115 Track 11, 2, 5, 45 Numerals 15 A 2, 5, 41, Captain 111: Sphinx
Club 15, 41.
Harold Ladd Smith, Ir., AY Proctor, Vt.
Olio Editorial Board 12, 51, Associate Editor 121, Editor-in-Chief 1515 Choir 12, 5, 415
Phi Beta Kappa 15, 41.
William Lloyd Snyder, Jr., X111 Shamokin, Pa.
Wrestling 11, 215 Pre-Law Club 1415 Sphinx Club 15, 41.
Ninety-seven
TI-IE 1937 OLIO F
Bernard Frank Stall, jr., 1121011 New Rochelle, N. Y.
Assistant Manager of Baseball 1315 Manager of Tennis 1415 Glee Club 11, 2, 5, 415
Sphinx Club 15, 41.
Herman Van Dien Stewart, WY Ridgewood, N.
Relay 12, 5, 45 A 2, 5, 41, Captain 1515 Track 11, 2, 5, 45 Numerals 15 A 2, 5, 41,
Captain 1415 Cross Country 1415 Glee Club 12, 5, 415 Interfraternity Council 1515
Sphinx Club 15, 415 Scarab 141.
James William Stoudt, ATA Reading, Pa.
Council of Fraternity Presidents 15, 41.
William Dengler Strohmeier, AACD Monson, Mass.
Football 11, 2, 55 Numerals 115 Swimming 115 Numerals 115 Baseball 1115 NVres1ling
1215 Secretary-Treasurer of the Intercollegiate Flying Club 15, 415 Secretary-Treasurer of
the Amherst Flying Club 12, 5, 415 President of the National Intercollegiate Flying Club
15, 415 Cotillion Club 15, 41.
David Paul Sullivan Boston, Mass.
Donald Normile Sullivan, KIJKNII Cortland, N. Y.
Basketball 1115 Assistant Manager of Freshman Football 151, Ivlanager 1415 Glec Club
12, 5, 41, Vice-President 1415 Commencement Committee 1415 Cotillion Club 15, 41,
Vice-President 1415 Sphinx Club 15, 41.
Eric Edward Sundquist, AY Brooklyn, N. Y.
Tennis 11, 2, 5, 415 Assistant Manager of Basketball 1515 Manager of Swimming 1415
Council of Fraternity Presidents 1415 Dance Committee 15, 41, Chairman 15, -115 Sphinx
Club 15, 415 Scarab 141.
Albert Stanley Thompson, CDE Columbia, N. 1.
Cross Country 1115 Swimming 151.
Wright Tisdale, AAKIJ . Taunton, Mass.
Assistant Manager of Football 151, Manager 1415 Golf 15, 415 Pre-Law Club 15, 41,
Vice-President 1415 International Relations Club 15, 41, President 1415 Sphinx Club 15, 41,
Secretary 1515 Cotillion Club 15, 415 Scarab 141.
Roman Leon Trembicki, X111 New Haven, Conn.
Football 11, 2, 55 Numerals 15 A 2, 515 Baseball 115 Numerals 11: Basketball 1115
Glee Club 1515 Christian Association Cabinet 12, 515 Sphinx Club 15, 41.
Garrett Rezeau Tucker, jr., Xfb Ridgewood, N. 1.
Football 115 Numerals 11, Captain 1115 Track 115 Numerals 111 Wrestling 11, 2, 5, 45
A 2, 5, 41, Captain 15, 415 Assistant Manager of Track 1415 Manager of Wiimter Track
1415 Olio Editorial Board 1215 Sphinx Club 15, 415 Phi Beta Kappa 1415 Scarab 141.
Earl Arthur Turner, AKE Holyoke, Mass.
Baseball 11, 2, 55 Numerals 15 A 2, 515 Basketball 11, 2, 5, 45 Numerals 15 A 2, 5, 41,
Co-Captain 111, Captain 1415 Sphinx Club 15, 41.
Clinton White Tylee, jr., GJAX Newton, Mass.
Football 115 Numerals 115 Cross Country 155 A 515 Swimming 11, 2, 5, 45 Numerals 1:
A 215 Track 11, 2, 55 Numerals 115 Christian Association Cabinet 15, 415 Liberal Club
1415 Steering Committee 1415 Manager of Cross Country 1415 Assistant Manager of
Interscholastic Track Meet 151, Manager 1415 Cotillion Club 15, 41.
Milton Allen Ushman, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Newburgh, N. Y.
Soccer 1115 Wrestling 1415 International Relations Club 141.
William Peter Van Fleet, ATA New Rochelle, N. Y.
Ward Hyde Wait, CIJFA Hood River, Ore.
Masquers 15, 41, Business Manager 1415 Outing Club 11, 2, 5, 41, President 1415 Olio
Business Board 12, 51, Advertising Manager 151.
Robert Packard Walbridge, AAID Scarsdale, N. Y.
Ski Team 15, 415 Assistant Manager of Skiing 1415 Cotillion Club 15, 41.
Niel Alexander Weathers, jr., 'PY Short Hills, N. 1.
Glee Club 11, 2, 5, 415 Council of Fraternity Presidents 141, President 1415 Class Secretary
141: Commencement Committee 1415 Sphinx Club 15, 415 Phi Beta Kappa 15, 415
Scarab 141.
Frederic Porter Weller, AKE Lynbrook, N- Y-
Basketball 115 Numerals 115 Soccer 11, 2, 55 Numerals 15 A 2, 51: Tennis 11, 215
Pre-Law Club 12, 51. -
Edward Ireland We-rsebe, Bon Washington, Conn.
Baseball 11, 55 Numerals 115 Cross Country 11, 25 Numerals 11, Captain 1115 Glee Club
15, 415 Sphinx Club
Joseph Thomas West, Jr., IDPA CYCSFWOOCI, N- Y-
Masquers 15, 415 Band 15, 415 Ski Team 141.
Ninety-eight
AMHERST COLLEGE
Stephen Emerson Whicher, AND Amherst, Mass.
Soccer 11, 2, 3, 4, Numerals 115 Swimming 11, 2, 3, 4, 3, 41g Glee Club 11, 2, 315
Choir 12, 313 Masquers 13, 41g Debating 11, 415 Co-holder of the john Sumner Runnels
Prize 131, Addison Brown Scholarship 1414 Cotillion Club 15, 41, Phi Beta Kappa 13, 41,
President 141: Scarab 141'
Russell Eliot Whitmyer, WY Providence, R. I.
Football 11, 2, 3, 4g Numerals lg A 31g Baseball 11, 2, 3, 4g Numerals 1g A 2, 3, 415
Sphinx Club 13, 41g Cotillion Club 13, 41.
Benjamin Williams, AKE Los Angeles, Calif.
Track 11, 2, 31, Sphinx Club 13, 413 Cotillion Club 13, 41.
Edward Augustus Wilson, XXI' Hot Springs, Arl-1.
Morris Knight Winborn, B011 Birmingham, Mich.
Masque-rs 13, 419 Sophomore Hop Committee 121.
Albert Flanagan Winston, AAG: Evanston, Ill.
Soccer 11, 2, 3, 4, Numerals 1g A 2, 3, 41, Captain 1413 Tennis 11, 2, 3, 4g Numerals 1g
A 2, 3, 41, Captain 13, 413 Student Council 12, 3, 41, Secretary 131, President 1413
Christian Association Cabinet 11, 2, 3, 41, Pre-Law Club 13, 41g Temporary Class Chairman
1115 Class Secretary-Treasurer 111: Class President 131g Class Marshal 141g Sphinx Club
13, 41, Cotillion Club 13, 41, Scarab 141.
Richard Sims Wisner, XID Nashville, Tenn
Swimming 11, 2, 3, 4, Numerals 1g A 2, 3, 41.
Dana Francis Woodman, Jr., Xilf Rye, N. Y
Jacob Louis Yamins, Lord Jeffery Amherst Club Fall River, Mass
Former Members of the Class of 1936
Glenn Seven Allen, jr.
Fritz Walter Baldwin
Stuart Edward Barton
Eugene Wemple Baxter
William Vandivert Bernard
Edward Fernald Bristol
Raymond joseph Brodeur
Edwin Frederic Brown
Louis Brown
John Busby Chamberlin
William Sidley Chapman
Tsunegoro Chiba
Nelson Perley Coffin
Richard Lawler Cooper
William Carter Dill
Robert Francis Donovan
Robert Harold Dunn, jr.
Thomas Kelley Evans
Charles Hastings Gamage
John Edward Geisenhoff
George Forest Gillett
Vernon Hall, Jr.
James Wiley Harker
David Willis Holmes
William Foster Homiller, II
Ninety-nine
Willard Henry Hurd
William Patton Kinsey
Fetnand Goodrich Leon
Morris Leviloff
Hewlett Withington Lewis
William Sanford Lewis
David Lindsey
Kenneth Everett Matteson
Francis Stephen McArthur, Jr.
Robert Gibson Mcllroy
Bertrand Layhee Mullen
Richard Kenneth Murdock
Richard Viberts Pelton
Frederic Starr Pendleton, jr.
Charles Andre Perron
Robert Morgan Powell
Paul Heaton Raidy
Charles Jarvis SchauHler
Edward Lawrence Scott
Robert Arnold Simon
Stanley Simon
Kenneth Campbell Stewart
Robert Reynolds Stone
Robert Haven Willey
Roger Robert Wunderlich
TI-IE 1937 OLIO
l
Officers of the Class of l938
CHARLES L. DOSTAI. ....,..... .,..... ........ P r esiclent
RICHARD M. HOWLAND ..,.,... Secretary-Treasurer
RENSLOW D. SHERER ......... ........ C horegus
CHARLES L. DOSTAL
President
History of the Class of 1938
The Class of 1958 blazed its way into Amherst no greener than any other and
certainly no less ambitious. After the smoke had cleared away, it gradually dawned on
us that perhaps we were not very much better than any other class which went forth with
the blessing of Sabrina. Or perhaps that is a typically sophomoric observation, and as
such signifies nothing.
The fall included, along with the usual freshman inanities, good football and
soccer teams and an equally creditable cross country team. Despite the pressure resultant
from the pledging period the football team, captained by Ernie Estes and Bill Michell,
managed to come within one touchdown of an undefeated season, that being the one
by which they lost a close game to Williams. Captain jeppson led the booters to a tie
for the Little Three championship, while the cross country team, paced by Jim Gowing
and Sandy Schaufiier, who finished first and second in every race, almost took the title.
The winter term meant for many of us the first shot at real social life as well as
pitched snowball battles of the fiercest sort. In the hrst skirmish Pratt won the inter-
dormitory snow battle, judging by comparative window scores, in the second, President
King took the palm. As far as sports were concerned, the Class of 1958 accounted for
itself in admirable fashion by taking the basketball title with a team which went up to
the varsity this year almost intact to act as an alternate combination. The swimmers
wound up an unofficial, undefeated season by sinking the Williams tankmen by an
overwhelming score. For the courtmen Captain Fred Schweizer and Horace Keesey
turned in dependable performances throughout the season, while Ed Kothe with a
handful of freshmen records led the swimmers.
The spring came and departed, leaving us mentally, morally, and physically stagnant.
The soft persuasion of spring winds dropped many a Math 1 average from a spot well
into the nineties to a low and rather soiled sixty-something. Some of us made our hrst
speaking acquaintance with the Hamp jail, though most of the freshman brethren stuck,
comparatively speaking, to the straight and narrow till the Beer Party rolled around.
Guided by the sturdy hand of Ernie Estes, the Party was a great success, and, what is
more, scored fewer casualties than the 1937 brawl, which left sophomores strewn all the
way from Hitchcock Field to the Greek's.
One Hundred
AMHERST . COLLEGE li'-
The freshman baseball club, led by the able Benny Meyers, scored another Little
Three victory, while the track team, built around the persons of jim Gowing, Chuck
Dostal, Bill Wilkening, Dave Evans, and Sandy Schauliler, almost beat Williams. At
least, whenever we missed a title, we missed it close. The sport season was brought to a
climactic finish with the Amherst Firemen's Half-Mile Run, occasioned by the most
successful furniture ire in years on the Amherst campus.
Sophomore year found us inhnitely more intelligent than three months before. We
bore the brunt of the rushing dirty work and emerged sadder, wiser and, if anything,
wetter. Following this period of stress and strain we settled down to bullying the fresh-
men, found to be a good means of relaxation from the long drudgery of competitions.
Chuck Dosral, our Student Council representative, as class president has led us a long
way through the woods. .. ,
Now that the year is drawing to a close, we may look back on our freshman asininities
with an indulgent smile. Yet the outlook is not unprogressive, for next year we may
have ample opportunity to chuckle over our sophomore asininities. There is always hope,
since this progression is likely to continue indefinitely.
RICHARD M. HOWLAND, Secretary-Treasurer.
One Hundred and One
THE 1937
hlenabers of the Cdass
Robert S. Alexander, IIHII
ljppcr Montclair. N. j.
Verner Alexanderson, 'I'59
Sclienectady, N. Y.
Franklin G. Allen, Jr., Xflf
Baltimore, Md.
john M. Allman
Birmingharn, Mich.
Paul J. Andrews
Northuniherlantl, Pa.
Benjamin P. Atkinson, 'I'K'I'
Warren, O.
Henry L. Avery, jr., fI'K'I'
Charlemnnt, Mass.
Robert A. Badenhop, 'DAG
Newark, N. j.
Howard F. Balme, MCE
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Paul Barton, AKE
Waterbury, Conn.
Austin L. Bench, Xfl'
Providence, R. l.
George N. Beecher, jr., 'ITA
Evanston, lll.
Martin Bennett, I39II
Elmhurst. L. l., N. Y.
Kellogg G. Birdseye, STA
Gloucester, Mass.
james C. Bishop, X41
Southampton, N. Y.
William K. Blair, XI'T
Toledo, O.
Chester B. Bland, ATA
Reading, Pa.
Robert K. Bodensten, ATA
Staatsburg, N. Y.
Cornelius Bodine, jr., AAIII
Chestnut lrlill, Phila., Pa.
Robert M. Boltwood, SAX
Buffalo, N. Y.
john A. Bookhout, 'ITA
Oneonta, N. Y.
David R. Boyd, AT-X
Frank R. Breul, 9-XX
Bridgeport, Conn.
George E. Bria
Waterbury, Conn.
john N. Broughton, jr., ANI'
Notwell, Mass.
Allyn S. Brown
Cleveland lleighls, O.
Willittiii H. Brownell, 9.5-X
Northampton, Mass.
L. G. Bruggeman, jr., l..j.C.
llingliam, Mass.
Robert F. Buehler, 'I'K'I'
South Orange, Nl.
Leo C. Bullinger, XXI'
llollywootl, lll.
Dick A. Clarke, IIUII.
Omaha, Nehr.
Richard E. Clements, 'I'I'A
Larchmont, N. Y.
Richard G. Cole
llritlgewater, Pa.
Homer Crawford, fI'AX
llronxville, N. Y.
Philip G. Creese
Danvers, Mass.
Clyde F. Cristman, XKI'
Ashland, Mass.
George L. Cullen. jr., XXI'
llarrislnurg, Pa.
Waldcm B. Cummings, 'PE
Springfield, Mass.
Richard H. Custer, 9-GX
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
john L. Davis, jr., 'I I'
St. Louis, Mo.
Kenneth M. Davis, jr., fI'1'l
St. Louis, Mo.
Thomas M. Davis, II9II
lloltlrege, Nehr.
Charles L. Dostal, ANI'
Glencoe, Ill.
john R. Doty, XXI'
0LIO ' '-
of l938
Mac V, Edtls, jr.. -YI'
Caldwell, N. ,I.
Richard H. liisenliart, X'I'
Rochester, N. Y.
Ernest L. Estes, jr., ANI'
Izvanston. lll.
David S. Evans, AT
XYynneu'ootl, Pa.
llflaurice L. Farrell, AAKII
New York, Y.
Paul Perhatn Felt, 'I'I'.l
.-Xuhurndalt', Mass.
Lester N. Fillis
New Rochelle, N, Y,
james H. Francis, jr., HHH
Charleston, W, Va,
Bryant M. French, 'I'i9
Woburn. Mass
Thomas Y. Funston, llflll
Lipper Montclair, N. ,l.
john F. Garde, jr., Aid'
Merion, Pa.
james T. George, ATA
St. llohnshury, Vt.
john D. Gerhard, 'I'I'A
liast Orange. N. ,l.
Frank S. Giese, ANI'
Wellesley llills, Nlass.
Ross Gilpatric, -YI
New llritain, Conn.
Benjamin j. Glasgow, 'PAO
jackson, Mich.
Robert C. Good, AKE
Waterbury, Conn.
George W. Goodell, 'I T'
,lamestown. N. Y.
David F. Goodnow, Xtl'
Pt-lhzun, N. Y.
james D. Gowing, 'I'-30
Walpole, Mass.
Paul W. Graff
Blairsville. l'a.
john J. Graves
Lgqmia, N, j, Tuinucu. Cuba Newton Upper Falls. Mas
One Hundred and Tvvo
AMHERST COLLEGE
Ellis j. Green, 'PT
Providence, R. I.
Ralph XV. Greenlaw, jr., 'FKA'
W. lfngltrwood, N. j.
John R. S. S. Greenwood. Xq'
Rydal. Pa.
john P. Griffith, jr., 'PFA
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Benjamin E. Haller, AT
Leonia. N. j.
Francis Alonzo Hardy, X'1'
Barrington, Ill.
Henry S. Harvey, AAC1'
Chestnut llill, Mass.
Edwin H. Hastings, III, UAX
W. Englewood, N. -I.
Charles E. Hills, AKE
Windsor, Conn.
Schuyler V. V. Hoffman, III, AAG,
l.archmont, Y.
Peter N. Horvath, 9AX
Washington, D. C.
Richard M. Howland, WT
Iiennehunkport, Me.
Ralph B. Hurlbutt, jr., 9AX
Greenwich, Conn.
Robert W. Hyatt, B911
Moorestown, N. J.
Alexander F. Imlay, B911
Montclair, N. gl.
john Jeppson, 'PT
Worcester, Mass.
Victor S. johnson, jr., 'PA9
out Part, ut.
Waldo M. johnson, B9II
Wehster Groves, Nlo.
Charles E. jones, AAQD
Peoria, Ill.
Harry F. Jones. Ir., AAAI'
Riverton, N. il.
William F. Kazlauskas, 93
Waterbury, Conn.
Christian Keedy, X4'
Amherst, Mass.
john J. Keep
jamaica, I., I., N. Y.
One Hundred and Three
Horace S. Keesey, 'PT
York, Pa.
Thomas H. Kelley, AKE
Chicago, lll.
Xxfilliarn VU. Kelly
New Castle. Pa.
Bruce H. Keppel, AT
Port Deposit, Mtl,
jason S. Kobler, GAX
1 1
New Xorlt, N. X.
Harry -I. Koster, AKE
Scarstlale, N. Y.
Edward G. Kothe, 'PFA
Hollis, N. Y.
Melvin Kranzberg, L.j.C.
St. Louis, Mo.
Edward L. Kuhn, fitlixlf
Buffalo, N. Y.
Richard S. Landry, ATA
Ogtlensburg, N. Y.
Stoddard Lane, jr., AAT
Des Moines. Iowa
Paul W. Leak, 95
Larchmont, N. Y.
john E. Lehman, L.j.C.
W. Orange, N. Nl.
Orrin H. Lincoln, jr., KPFA
Greeniield, Mass.
Allen Lindberg, GAX
Westlielrl, N. Al.
Abe K. Lipsitz, L,j.C.
Sr. Louis, Mo.
Arthur E. Long
Mt. Vernon. N. Y.
James P. MacCain, Xfl'
Germantown, Pa,
Richard M. McClellan, X4'
Bryn Mawr. Pa.
Robert S. McCollum, 'PKXI'
Denver, Colo.
Donald R. McGeorge, L.J.C.
Summit, N. j.
John F. McGrath, 95-X
New York, N. Y.
Donald A. MacHarg, 'PKXI'
Albany, N. Y.
Thomas V. McKeon, 'ITA
. V , ,
Mt. Xernun, N Y
Arthur E. Mace, jr., HGH
l.um.: Beach, Calif.
Frederic B. Mayo, XXI'
Lynn, Nlass.
Arthur F. Mercer, jr., 'ITA
Detroit, Mich.
john C. Merritt, NPT
l.:trchmont, N. Y.
Bennett R. Meyers, L.j.C.
iiiIl'll-Oftl, Conn.
Charles VU. Michell, 'PT
Syracuse, N. Y.
Albert A. Miller, Jr.. AT
St. l.ouis, Mo.
Cornelius F. Miller, Xflf
Asbury Park, N. J,
Nathaniel Mills, -Ir., 93
Ml. Vernon. Y.
Edwin H. Morse
Bronxville, N. Y.
Robert C. Myers, AKE
Laltewootl, O.
Earle W. Newton, BQIT
Cortland. N. Y.
William R. Okie, jr., 'PKXI'
Berwyn, Pa.
Edwin L. Olander, Jr., 'I'K'l'
Northampton, Mass.
George D. Olds, III, AA4'
Great Neck, N. Y.
John B. Palmer, 'PT
Parma, Mich.
John C. Parker, III
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Robert H. Parker, ATA
Dorchester, Mass.
Richard W. Parsons
Amherst, Mass.
Frederic S. Pendleton, jr., 9AX
Bt'oolilyrt, N. Y.
Lyman Phillips, B9Il
New llatvcn. Conn.
Eugene M. Plumsteacl, FYAX
Wilmington, Del.
THE
Richard W. Poor, 'PT
Passaic, N. j.
Thomas F. Power, jr., 'DFA
Worcester, Mass.
William VU. Price, -GKE
Westerly, R. l.
David B. Proctor, BQH
Springheld, Mass.
john C. Quady, BGII
Omaha, Nebr.
William T. Rnthbun, jr., ANI'
South Orange, N. j.
Richard C. Reed, XID
Brockton, Mass.
Dorian F. Reid, ATA
New York, N. Y.
Gordon S. Reid, I..j.C.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
john Reid, III, NPT
New Rochelle, N. Y,
Robert O. Reider, 'PT
York, Pa.
Henry W. Reis, jr.
Pelham Manor, N. Y.
Richard W. Reuter, KIHKKP
Queens Yillagu, I... l., N. Y.
Robert W. Riemer, 'ITA
Norwood, Mass.
Breen Ringland, 4'KtIf
Oswego, N, Y,
Walter O. Roberts, AT
Bridgewater, Mass.
Willard W. Roberts, Xfl'
Bloomfield. N. j,
Theodore S. Rowland, jr., 'DFA
Philadelphia, Pa.
Charles D. Sager, jr.
Washington, D. C.
Edward M. Salley, jr.
jersey City, N. j.
Warren F. Sawyer, HBH
Gardner, Mass.
Frederick S. Schaufller, XPT
Nantucket, Mass.
Frederic O. Schweizer, MCE
Lakewood, O.
Vincent Scofield, 95X
W. Hartford, Conn.
1937
Nauman S. Scott, SHE
Alexandria, La.
George M. Shay, XXI'
llighland Park, lll.
Renslow D. Sherer, XXI'
llighland Park, lll.
Edwin F. Sherman, jr., 'l'K'l'
Barrington, R. l.
William H. Sherwood, jr., X'l'
Ardmore, Pa.
Andrew B. Simpson, X4'
Narherth, Pa.
Robert E. Simpson, ATA
Ridgewood, N. j.
Henry H. Skillings, Xflf
Amherst, Mass.
George Q. Slocum, ATA
Ardsley, N. Y.
Hudson A. Smith, 15-KE
Syracuse, N. Y.
William H. Snow, AT
New Canaan, Conn.
Milton Spielman, L.j.C.
South Orange, N. j.
Edward D. Steinbrugge, AT
Summit, N. ,l.
William A. Sturgis, jr., AKE
Manhasset, N. Y.
Richmond M. Sutherland, JT
Bronxville. N. Y.
George W. R. Sykes, 'l'K'l'
Conifer, N. Y.
Edgar F. Taber, jr., 'FPA
New Bedford, Mass.
john W. Thompson, GAX
Watertown, Mass.
Merrill H. Tilghman, Ill, AFA
Wayne, Pa.
Walter D. Van Doren
Wesllield, N. j.
Heath Wakelee, XXI'
Maplewood, j.
Robert F. R. Walker, UlX
Wahan, Mass.
Elvin H. Wanzo, L.j.C.
Toledo, O,
OLIO
Robert K. Warner, -XKE
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Donald Wedel, L.j.C.
Tucson, Ariz.
Chester A. Weed, ATA
Torrington, Conn.
Richard I.. Weinstein, L.j.C.
New York, N. Y.
jacob A. Weisman, 'L.j.C.
Lynn, Mass.
David H. Wells, AAG
Evanston, lll.
Raymond M. Wetrich
lfleinpstead, N. Y.
Daniel C. Wliedcin, ATA
jamaica, N, Y.
Harry O. Whipple
Montpelier, Vt.
George G. Whitehead, X'l'
New llaven, Conn.
Albert N. waning, L.J.c.
jersey City, N. j.
Frank C. Wltitiiiore, jr., 'NPI'
State College. Pa.
Thomas P. Whitney
Toledo, O.
Elmer W. Wiggins, jr., A3-fl'
Eilgewuod, li. l.
William E. Wilkening, -'3-KE
Landsdowne, Pa.
john H. Williamson
New York, N. Y.
john R. Willoughby, 'l'K'l'
Warren, 0.
Don Wilson, 'l'l'i
New York, N, Y.
john W. Wilson, jr., 'l'KNl'
Albany, N. Y.
Melvin S. Wilson, Mill
Natick, Mass.
David Winslow, 'PAQ
Meriden, Conn.
james L. Woodress, jr., UAX
Webster Groves, Mo.
Leverett l.. Wright, 'Pl'-3
llrid1.gepoi't, Conn.
Randall H. Young, Xll'
I'rovidence, li. l.
One Hundred and Four
AMHERST COLLEGE
Former Members of the Class of 1938
One Hundred and Five
Homer Edgar Allen
John William Atherton
Max Arnold Berns, Jr.
Gordon Wallace Campbell
Robert Owen Diephouse
Kenneth Burd Drake
Leonard Farmer
Philip Feldman
Royal Firman, jr.
Thomas Olen Grisell, Ira
Marston Alfred Hamlin
Roy Caldwell Hopgood, jr
James Winchester Hyde
Willard Edmund Jones
Norman Fairbank Lacey
Thomas Lothrop Lewis
john Milton Lutz
George Richard Marsh
joseph Ward Marshall
John Kingsley McDowell
Frederic Foster Moore, Jr.
james Hamilton Moses
Philip Scarpino
john Raymond Sincllinger,
Peter Cornelius Van Dyck
Wilberr Davis Wear
Leon Stivers Wiles
Robert Barnes Young
- -Z-Qi TI-IE 1937 OLIO -il-3
i
l
Officers of the Class of 1939
I-IARTLEY JOYS .,.... ...,,,.....,,,... P resident
GORDON SPENS ......... ......... S ecretary-Treasurer
RICHARD D. FULLER ..,..... ....... C horegus
HARTLEY joys
President
History of the Class of l939
The Class of 1939, having been visited by various rushing chairmen throughout the
summer, officially entered Amherst on Sunday, September 15, when a class meeting was
held to explain the fraternity rushing system. It was then thrown into hve hectic days
of rushing by the fourteen campus organizations. Two hundred and twenty-six of the
class' members pledged to a fraternity or the Lord jeff Club, which was operating for the
first time. This organization, formed in the spring of 1935, pledged 33 men. The usual
subjects for conversation were fully expounded during rushing: Professor Packard's
History 1, the new furniture in North and South Dorms, and the weather, which was
exceptionally good. Those autumn days, with their hasty meals snatched at the Greek's
between appointments, the making of new friends, and grumbling about 7Z5O'S have
a flavor all of their own. Freshmen, so it seemed in our innocence, were the lords of the
campus. Only after the pledge banquets did our real status become clear. Then the sting
of the paddles brought us to the realization of the true state of affairs. Freshman, be
funny was a command which we heard too often. Lineups assumed a position of major
importance in our lives. Some of us became expert hte-builders, others ran errands,
washed cars, picked up morning papers, and above all, amused. Initiation banquets and
ceremonies stopped all of this, and we started the normal life of Men of Amherst.
Immediately our class showed its spirit by turning out in large numbers for football,
soccer and cross-country. The freshman football team won the Little Three championship
under the leadership of joys and Pattengill. Seeley, Smart, Fitts, and Doherty distinguished
themselves in this season, in which Williams was conquered 13-7 and Wesleyztn 12-0.
The freshman soccer team tied with Williams for the Little Three championship. The
freshman cross-country team which started out with 21 men, turned in a rather poor
season, beating only Massachusetts State 22-43. On October 8, the Porter Admission
prize of S50 was awarded to Dave Hildreth. On November 1, the college staged a football
rally before the Massachusetts State game. After several melees and brawls, the Class
exhibited a snake-dance which lasted for an hour and wound into the City Hall, the
Greek's, and other points of local interest. Temporary elections were held the last of
One Hundred and Six
l AMHERST i COLLEGE '
October, and Doherty, Richardson, and Stewart became oflicets. Williston was opened up
as a freshman reading room, and Pratt Dorm was given a new library.
After the mid-year exams, the first Student competition was announced and about
thirty of the class started in. McKinley, Stifler, Stilwell, Hutchinson, Collins, Merchant
and May seem to be leading the field. Since mid-years, participation in club activities
has been possible and has drawn many of the class. Basketball season has started and so
far the freshman team has won four and lost three. Captain Otis, Doherty, Kydd, Van
Nostrand, and Furman have been playing consistent games. Class elections held Monday,
February 24, resulted in joys being elected president. He appointed Spens as secretary-
treasurer and Fuller as choregus. The Student Council held a Freshman Class meeting
where prominent members of campus groups told of their clubs and activities.
So it has been pointed out that the Class of 1939 bids fair to make itself one of the
best classes which ever attended Amherst. Our advent in Amherst was heralded by the
beginning of a new gym, by the appearance of a new course, M and E, by increased reading
facilities, and, in the second semester, a new cut system. We hope that ,39 will go far
towards making Amherst an even greater college.
GORDON SPENS, Secretary-Treasurer.
One Hundred and Seven
. THE 1937 OLIO ..
Members of the Class of 1939
Robert Lamprecht Abbey, ANI'
Cleveland Heights, O.
Robert A. Aldrich, XXI'
Winnetka, Ill.
Herbert Charles Allen, III
Rochester, Vt.
Thomas Boyd Armistead WT
St. Louis Co., Mo.
Richard Graves Arms, 9-AX
Detroit, Mich.
William j. Atkinson, jr., AT
Mobile, Ala,
William Brooks Baker, jr., 9AX
West Newton, Mass,
john Robert Baldwin, jr., 9-XX
Bridgeport, Conn.
Everett Colby Banfield, jr., 'PA9
Austin, Minn.
Robert Barir, X'1,
Detroit, Mich.
Robert Hurlbut Bartleson
Spokane, Wash.
George Gordon Bartlett, jr., QAX
New Bedford, Mass.
Horace Seaman Bell, L.j.C.
Worcester, Mass.
jerome Seymour Beloit, L.j.C.
Meriden, Conn.
Richard Austin Benedict, '1'1'A
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Donald Nevius Bigelow, L.j.C.
Danbury, Conn.
james B. Birmingham, jr., '1'-X9
Nutley. N. QI.
Raymond Chamberlin Boshco, AT
West Nledford, Mass.
Spencer Gordon Bosrwick, X'1f
N, Y. C.
William j. Branstrom, jr., ATA
Freemont, Mich.
jacob Herbert Brautigam, jr., 93
Glen Ridge, N. j.
Frederic Brooks Breed, '1 T
W. Medford, Mass,
Albert jameson Brooks, QAX
W. Newton, Mass.
james M. Brown, III, ATA
Summit, N. j.
Rockwood Bullard, jr., XT
Birmingham, Mich.
jolm Shea Bulman,
Greenfield, Mass.
Richard Davis Bush
Belmont, Mass,
Burgess Butler, X'1'
Dedham, Mass.
Robert Francis Byrnes, L.j.C.
Waterville, N. Y.
Harry Cecil Calcutr, L.j.C.
Traverse City, Mich.
William Douds Calhoun '1'Kt1'
Cleveland lleiahts, Ohio
Philip Oglivie Carr, ATA
Uniontown, Pa.
DeWitt Clark, II, AM1
Seattle, Wash.
Donald Hale Clark. 11911
Evanston, lll.
Homer Harrison Clark, jr., A1513
Garden City, N. Y.
Rufus Tobey Clark
Akron, Ohio
Theodore Karl Cobb, t1 1'
Newton Center, Mass.
Cyrus Stickney Collins, 11911
River Forest, lll.
Edward Payne Connell, jr., 'PAH
Wheeling, W. Va.
john Desmond Cordner, Xfl'
Cranford, N. j.
john Angell Cranshaw, 11011
W, Newton, Mass.
Howard Lansing Cuddeback, ATA
Catiamlaigtia, N. Y.
David Lamprey Currier, A1115
Newton, Mass.
Robert Lovell Cushing, 93'
Midtlleboro, Mass.
Richard Walker Davidson, Xtl'
Manhasset, N. Y.
Arthur Cayley Davis, jr., '1'-19
Worcester, M ass.
john W. Davis
N. Y. C.
Roger Wolcott Davis, jr., ATA
Windsor, Conn.
Maurice Francis Dean, L.j.C.
Holyoke, Mass.
Robert Herbert Dietze, X'1'
lllaplewood, N. j.
Robert Henry Doherty, AKE
Clifton, N. j.
Vaughan Dow. Xflf
Memphis, Tenn.
Tracey Cromwell Dudley, 93
Rahway, N. ,I.
john Fiske Eaton, L.j.C.
Newport, R. l,
Marvin Starr Edgerton, L.j.C.
Bristol, Conn.
William Fain Egloff, XXI'
livanston. lll,
Martin Steele Elmer, L.j.C.
W, Springfield. Mass.
Donald Brown Engley, L.j.C.
Stafford Springs, Conn. .
Samuel S. Faris, '1'1'A
Glensitlc. Penna.
Paul Farmer, L.j.C.
Florence, Mass,
One Hundred and Eight
AMHERST COLLEGE
Claud Richard Faunt, ATA
Grays Lake, lll.
Burleigh Fernald, 9AX
West Newton, Mass.
Nathan Cheney Fitts, 'PIUI'
Manchester, N. l-I.
John Lockwood Fletcher, Jr., TTA
Hackensack, N, j.
Joseph Lutz Flynn, ATA
Youngstown, Ohio
Frank Roscoe Fowles, 'PA9
Detroit, Mich.
Morris Fuller Fox, jr., NPT
Milwaukee, Wis.
Frederick Earle Frazer, B911
Oak Blufls, Mass.
Morris Pratt Frost, 9AX
Washington, D. C.
Richard Dwight Fuller, AKE
Springtieltl, Mass.
Alester Garden Furman, III, Xi'
Greenville, S. C.
james Hanson Gardner, Jr., AKE
Wuhan. Mass.
David Garton, Xq'
Sheboygan. Wis.
Paul H. Gleye, BGU
Birmingham, Mich.
Eeser Goldstein, L.j.C.
Springlield, Mass.
David joseph Goldwasser, L.j.C.
North ampton, Mass.
Robert A. Goldwasser, L.J.C.
Northampton, Mass.
Henry Frank Goodnow, 'PA9
Evanston, lll.
James Henry Green, L.-I.C.
Stamford, Conn.
Francis Oviatt Grose, AND
Great Neck, L. I., N. Y.
Robert jarret Guerin, 'PTA
Wonnsocket, R. I,
One Hundred and Nine
Cyril Maynard Guest, AKE
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
Robert Henry Guest, ANI'
E. Orange, N. nl.
Luther Voorhis Haggerty
lflackensack, N. ,l.
john William Haigis, Jr., 'PKXP
Greenlielcl, Mass.
Edward Weed Hall, 'ITA
N, Y. C.
john Farris Hall, 'PKNI'
Rockford, lll.
john Whitney Hall, ATA
Rochester, N. H.
Park Rickerson Hallenbeck, KPK
Glnversville, Y.
Francis Newell Hamblin, ATA
Lexington, Mass.
Morris Gordon Hammer, L.J.C.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Allan Gordon Hanford, 'PT
Rochester, N. Y.
Victor Hall Hardendorf,
Amherst, Mass.
Robert Weld Harding, B911
Brookline, Mass.
james Stoughton Hart, Xfl'
Portland. Ore.
Edward Henry Hatton, 'PFA
Evanston, Ill.
Frank Martin Heifetz, L.J.C.
Lawrence. Mass.
Arthur Charles Hensler, AT
Summit, N. j,
David Mitchell Hildreth, BGH
Painsville, O.
Charles Asa Hill, jr., 'FA9
Andover, Mass.
john Thayer Hitchcock, AAG'
Bristol, Conn.
john Detlef Horst, 'PFA
Reading, Pa.
Edwin Schuyler Hubbard, ATA
Maplewood, N. j,
Robert Vandevere Huber, L.J.C.
Wilmington, Del.
George Pinney Hunt, XPT
llaverford, Pa.
Leonard Eugene Hurtz, BSU
Omaha, Neb.
Fredrick W. Hutchinson, 'HCP
Birntingltain, Mich.
Charles William Iben, X'I'
Peoria, Illinois
William Elmer Ingham, 'DKXI'
Lakewood, Ohio
Walter Hayn Jansen, XPT
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ernest Alfred johnson, Jr., XXP
Andover, Mass.
Clayton Berry jones, jr., AKE
Elizabeth, N. tl.
Logan Oliver jones, AT
Cincinnati, Ohio
Robert Terry jones 'PT
Wehstei' Groves, Mo.
Willard Edmund jones, QAX
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Hartley joys, XXI'
Milwaukee. Wis.
Martin Green Keenan, XXI'
Doylestown, Pa.
John Herr Kehne, KPAQ
l'7reileriek, Md.
Robert John Kelly, AT
XVhite Plains, N. Y.
Harmar Denny Ker, WT
Portland, Ore.
Francis Robert Kitchell, jr., AAKI'
Newbury, Mass.
Frederick Arthur W. Kothe, 'PFA
llollis, N. Y.
+ THE
Henry Liarvin Kramer
Larchmont, N. Y.
Frank john Kusiak, jr., L.j.C.
Glastonbury. Conn.
Charles james Kydd, XLT'
E. Orange. N. j.
Norman Fairbank Lacey, AT
Arlington, Mass.
Robert Merrill Lawrence, AT
Melrose, Mass.
Edward DeWitt Leonard, 'PKXI'
Chestnut lrlill, Mass.
Ralph F. Lewis, 93
Alton, Ill.
john Renatus Lilliendahl, ATA
Stamford, Conn.
William Lanahan Livingston, X41
Harrison, N. Y.
Henry Shippen Lord, jr., AA4'
Peoria Heights, III.
Henry Nicolaus McCluney, XPT
St. Louis, Mo.
William Brown McCready, 'PFA
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Scott A. McKeown, jr., AKE
Washington, Pa.
Douglas Webster McKinley, KDKXII
Bay City, Mich.
Angus G. S. MacLeod, 'PA9
Newport, R. l.
Kimball Alexander McMullin, AT
Wahan, Mass.
Laird McNeel
Madison, Wis.
Robert Teasdale Magrane, L,j.C.
Holyoke, Mass.
Henry Jeffery Mapes, 'PTA
N. Y. C.
john Garvie Martin, jr,, 'PA9
Douglaslon, L. l., N. Y.
Webster Prescott Maxson, 'PT
Longmeadow, Mass.
1937 i
Robert Spencer May, jr., AT
Madison, Conn.
Stanley Lawrence Mayer, I..j.C.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
jose Angel Mayoral, 'PA9
Ponce, P. R.
William Allen Medlicott, L.j.C.
Auhurntlalu, Mass.
Frederic Clinton Meier, ATA
Webster Groves, Mo.
Irwin Ira Meller, L.j.C.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
William Raymond Merchant
Ilolyoke, Mass.
Samuel Detwiler Miller, KPFA
Norristown, Pa.
Donald Minnick, B911
Great Neck, N. Y.
Howard Michael Mitchell L.j.C.
Amherst, Mass.
Philip Tyson Moyer, 93
Lansdale, Pa.
Talbot Bradley Munch, AKE
Belmont, Mass.
Victor Earle Nicklas, 'PFA
Woodbridge, N. ,I.
Samuel Orlen, L.j.C.
Ilolyoku, Mass.
Charles Foster Otis, KPKNI'
Bradford, Mass.
james Raclebaugh Packard, AA'l'
Birmingham, Mich.
Louis Henry Palmer, jr., WT
Cynwyd. Pa.
Victor R. Pattengill, jr., AA4'
Lansing, Mich.
Norman Henry Perkes, L.j.C.
Lynn, Mass.
Richard Fiheld Phillips, ATA
Worcester. Mass,
Lloyd Herman Plehn, L.j.C.
N. Y. C.
OLIO
Calvin Hastings Plimpton. ARE
N. Y. C.
Frank Weluber Poland, jr., Xfl'
Pocassut, Mass.
Henry Benjamin Poor, iI l'
Passaic. N. j.
Everett Hilton Pryde, l..j.C,
lilain. lll.
William S. Putnam, 'DAO
LSVLIIISIUII, Ill.
Edward Henry Quarles, WT
Milwaukee, Wis.
Wlilliam Lynn Ransom, jr., Alil
Pcllizuu, N. Y.
john Henry Ray, Ill, A3111
Dongan llills. I., N. Y.
David Neville Reay, B911
Morgantown, W. Va.
Channing B. Richardson, 'I'-A9
Chicago, lll.
Charles Max Rieser
Chztlham, N. j.
Charles Robert Rikel, li9ll
BI'Ulllilyl'l, N. Y.
Frank Austin Robinson, 'Will'
Garden City, N. Y.
Charles Wingert Roderus
llratltlock, Pa.
Caleb Roehrig, 9AX
Auburntlale, Mass.
Gerald Rohmer, L.j.C.
Milwaukee, Wis.
james Harold Root, jr., AT
Waterbury, Conn.
Martin Victor Rothman, L.j.C.
Slamfortl, Conn.
Nvilfrecl V. E. Rounseville, 'PA9
Allluhoro, Mass.
Harry Collins Rudtlen, ATA
Ilztrtfortl. Conn.
One Hundred and Ten
MHERST i CGLLEGE
Samuel Lyons Sagendorph, AA'I'
Philaclelphia, Pa.
David Woodford Sargent, 9AX
Wollaston, Mass.
Charles Layton Sayre, f1'I'A
Gloversville, N. Y.
Wfilliam Carl Schneider, X41
Crestwood, N. Y.
Douglas George Schultz, L.j.C.
Englewood, N. j.
George Merrill Scott, AKE
Pelham, N. Y.
Henry Willard Seeley, jr., BQU
Washington, Conn.
Edward Segal, L.J.C.
Worcester, Mass.
Earl Owen Shreve, jr., 41.439
Schenectady, N, Y.
Geurson Donald Silverberg, L.J.C.
Norwich, Conn.
Murray Leonard Sims, L.-LC.
Mt. Vernon, N. Y.
john Raymond Sindlinger
Hongkong, China
Greggar Perry Sletteland, AT
Madison, Wis.
joseph Potter Smart, X4'
Greenneld, Mass.
Samuel Smyth, III, 95'
Chatham, N. Y.
Gordon Spens, AA-'IP
Chicago, lll.
Isador jacob Spiegel, L.J.C.
Salem, Mass.
Malcolm Stearns, jr., 'PT
South Orange, N. j.
James Angus Stewart, XXI'
Newtonville, Mass.
William Warren Stiffler, jr., X'l'
Amherst, Mass.
One Hundred and Eleven
Edward C. Stillwell, jr., ATA
Glen Ridge, N. ,l.
William Barton Stilwell, AAG'
N. Y. C.
Henry Stockbridge, IV, XXI'
Baltimore, Md.
Edward Morris Swaine, L.J.C.
West Springlield, Mass.
Dean Hafner Swift, AT
Syracuse, N. Y.
Charles George Taylor, 'PAS
Winnetka. lll.
james Cochran Taylor, XI'T
St. Louis. Mo.
Donald Kerr Tead, ANI'
Winchester, Mass.
Ford W. Thompson, jr., 'PTA
St. Louis, Mo.
Robert Clinton Thompson, 9AX
Watertown, Blass.
Robert john Thompson
Glencoe, Ill.
Martin Bice Travis, 'PA9
llinsdale, lll.
james Sinclair Turner, AT
Brooklyn, N. Y.
LeRoy Van Nostrand, jr., fI1A6
Bal1yion,N. Y.
Melville John Vickerman, AT
YYhiIe Plains, N. Y.
john Stuart Vollmer, 95
Scarsdale, N. Y.
james Albert Walker, B911
Philadelphia, Pa.
James Townsend Walker, AKE
Pelham, N. Y.
Vifilliam Stearns Wfalker, B9H
River Forest, lll.
Frank King Wallace, XXI'
Greenshoro, Vt.
Francis Oviatt Grose
1 9 1 6 - 1 9 3 6
l-layclen English Walling
C reenwich, Conn.
Harold Rathbun Ward, jr., ANI'
Minneapolis, Minn.
Charles Luther Warner
Williamsburg, Mass.
Wilbert Davis Wear
llarrishurg, Pa.
John Putnam Webber, L.j.C.
Amherst, Mass.
Walter O. Wfeisbecker, jr., QPFA
N. Y. C.
Vincent West, XXI'
Port Washington, N. Y.
Donald Bennett Whalin, GE
Worcester. Mass.
William C. Wheeler, AND
Providence, R. l.
Dexter Crandell Wheelock, Xsb
E. Orange, N. j.
Charles Wilgus Whitelaw, NPT
Sr. Louis, Mo.
Welles Rusk Wiley, XIIT
Illoorcstown, N. j.
Paul james Williams, IIIKXII
White Plains, N. Y.
George Gibson Willis, Xfb
Bound Brook, N. j.
john Randolph Willis, L.J.C.
Wehster Groves, Mo.
Thomas Putnam Wilson, ATA
Chevy Chase, D. C.
Robert Shoemaker Wren, AKE
Ossining, N. Y.
Giles Macord Wright, 9AX
Rockville Centre, N. Y.
Thaine Adair Youst, AT
White Plains, N. Y.
Gordon Zeese, 'PFA
Great Neck, N. Y.
!ff5iiFf',3'-,,gf.wg - ,fl
1 3.
I- I
SQ!
,. T rf
BOOK THREE
1
FRATERNITIES
h Web
THE 1937 OLIO
Allen Abercrombie
Donald L. Bartlett, jr.
Allan R. Buckman, jr.
Parke W. Burrows
William N. Chambers
Philip H. Clarke
Williani M. Croxton
Randall Barton
David C. Bole, Jr.
Fairman C. Cowan
George A. Craig
Buell Critchlow
Walter A. Hoyt, jr.
Cornelius Bodine, Jr.
John M. Broughton, Jr.
Charles I.. Dostal
Ernest L. Estes, jr.
Maurice I.. Farrell
Robert L. Abbey
Dewitt Clark, II
Francis O. Grose
Robert H. Guest
John T. Hitchcock
Alpha Delta Phi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
john C. Cushman, jr.
Wilbur N. Earl
Robert D. Fenn
Robert E. Giese
Minot Grose
Edward W. Maynard, jr.
Andrew B. Meldruni, jr.
Alan C. Neilson
CLASS OF 1937
Henry S. Hughes
jean P. jones, jr.
Robert G. Mcllroy
George G. Mason
Leonard C. Meeker
Richard A. Merritt
CLASS OF 1938
john F. Garde, jr.
Frank S. Giese
Henry S. Harvey
Schuyler Van V. Hoffman, III
Charles E. jones
Harry F. jones, jr.
CLASS OF 1939
Francis R. Kitchell, jr.
Henry S. Lord, Jr.
james R. Packard
Victor R. Pattengill, jr.
john H. Ray, III
Samuel L. Sagendorph
jay A. Parr
Sanborn Partridge
William D. Strohmeier
Wriglit Tisdale
Robert P. Walbridge
Stephen E. Wliiclier
Albert F. Winston
Keith P. Pattengill
Winfield F. Scott
john B. Stearns
Eben D. Tisdale
Kenneth M. Walbriclge
William H. Webster, jr
Charles S. Whitman, jr.
Stoddard Lane, jr.
George D. Olds, Ill
William T. Rathbun, jr.
David H. Wells
Elmer W. Wiggins, jr.
Gordon Spens
William B. Stilwell
Donald K. Toad
Harold R. Ward, jr.
William C. Wheeler
One Hundred and Fourte n
. HERST COLLEGE i
- - : :
trrfe efe. Amherst Cha ter Established th 1836
han ' , , ' P
4 'V , ' FRATRES IN FACULTATE
XL.1?fi'3..i Arthur H. Baxter Ellsworth E. Richardson
F Fhll' B dl Cl D R ll C1
ti Yf ' 1 ips ra ey arence . oui ar
Sixth Row: F. Grose, Packard, Stilwell, Ray, Ward, Spens, Wheeler, Kitchell, D. Clark.
Fifth Row: Wells, Lane, Garde, F. Giese, Olds, Farrell, Wiggins, H. jones, Dostal, Rathbun.
Fourth Row: Merritt, Craig, B, Critchlow, Barton, Whitman, Estes, Webster, C. jones.
Third Row: I. Jones, Cowan, Hoyt, K. Walbridge, Mcllroy, Mason, Bole, Scott, Pattengill.
Second Row: Maynard, Earl, Tisdale, Parr, R. Giese, Clark, Melclrum, Strohmeier, Partridge, Neilson,
Fenn, Winston.
First Row: Cushman, Buckman, R. Walbridge, M. Grose, Croxton, Bartlett, Burrows.
,.,- hi ,. 2
One Hundred and Fifteen
THE 193 OLIO
Theodore C. Boyden
Horace C. Coleman, jr.
Fronefield Crawford
Paul N. Critchlow, jr.
Allen H. Ehrgood, Jr.
Robert T. Breed
Melbourne C. Brownin
Robert G. Calder, Jr.
Robert J. Close
john S. Coey, III
Richard L. Cooper
Harvey H. Hatheway
Carl F. Holthausen
XVilliam K. Blair
john L. Davis, Jr.
George W. Goodell
Ellis J. Green
Richard M. Howland
Thomas B. Armistead
Frederic B. Breed
Theodore K. Cobb
Morris F. Fox. jr.
Allan G. Hanford
George P. Hunt
8,
Psi Upsilon
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
james P. B. Goodell
Fritz O. Haas
Vincent K. Keesey, jr.
Matthew A. Kelly
CLASS OF 1937
Duncan MCC. Holthausen
Douglas R. Kennedy
George S. Lambert
Robert C. J. McKinstry
Clement F. Merrill
G. Henry Mundt, jr.
Robert E. Newcomb, jr.
William M. Palmer, Ill
CLASS OF 1938
john Jeppson
Horace S. Keesey
john C. Merritt
Charles W. Michell
CLASS OF 1939
Walter H. Jansen
Robert T. jones
Harmar D. Ker
Webster P. Maxson
Henry N. McCluney
Louis H. Palmer, jr.
Richard E. McCormick
Ralph H. Sleicher
Herman Van D. Stewart
Neil A. Weathers, jr.
Russell Whitmyer
Edward E. Poor, IV
Horace C. Reider
Charles j. Schatufller
Carl D. Sheppard, jr.
Robert P. Snyder
Thomas K. Taylor
Barry B. Townsend
Williai11 B. Tracy, jr.
john B. Palmer
Richard W. Poor
john Reid, III
Robert O. Reider
Frederick S. Schauliler
Henry B. Poor
Edward H. Quarles
Malcolm Stearns, jr.
james C. Taylor
Charles W. Whitelaw
Welles R. Wiley
One Hundred and Sixteen
3 MHERST 9COLLEGE 3
' g T p . i Q
-X 5, fi 7.4 , 1
ls? -'L .f, ef 3'
- - 'J' , yr. Q Gamma Chapter Established in 1841
- I r- ' f ,.' . f
f' IB . Q, FRATRES IN FACULTATE
' , Q Q-5 ax T ' Frederick S. Allis Edwin A. Grosvenor
Thomas C. Esty William J. Newlin
PU' . -
Q1 '9- f:.:1-eifae
.-sf !
Sixth Row: Lambert, Armistead, L. Palmer, R. jones, Ker, Vlhitelaw, Green.
Fifth Row: Quarles, Hanford, J. Taylor, Cobb, H. Poor, Maxon, Jansen, Wiley, Hunt.
Fourth Row: Townsend, Reid, S. Schaulfler, J. Palmer, R. Poor, Blair, McCluney, Stearns, J.
Schauffler.
Third Row: Sheppard, Newcomb, Kennedy, T. Taylor, T. Poor, McKinsrry, D. Holthausen, Close,
Snyder.
Second Row: Cooper, Sleicher, Mundt, Calder, Tracy, C. Holthausen, R. Breed, Hathaway, Browning,
Haas.
First Row: Boyden, V, Keesey, Wl1itmyer, Kelly, Weathe1's, McCormick, Crawford, J. Goodell,
Crirchlow, Coleman.
l
,,
One Hundred and Seventeen
THE 1937 OLIO
Charles K. Arter, Jr.
joseph W. Barr. jr.
joseph P. Boyle
William A. Buechner
Robert H. Carlson
Laurence N. Barrett
Charles E. Bradley, jr.
Robert W. Crawford
William N. Dawson
Howard F. Balme
Robert C. Good
Charles E. Hills, jr.
Harry J. Koster
Homer H. Clark, jr.
David L. Currier
Robert H. Doherty
Richard D. Fuller
Delta Kappa Epsilon
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
Daniel B. Caudle
Lloyd P. Dodge
Reginald Fitzgerald
Walter B. Mahony, jr.
Gilbert H. Mudge
CLASS OF 1937
Robert L. DeWitt
Hugh P. Fleming
Thomas A. Kennedy
john G. Lamb
john H. Lancaster
CLASS OF 1938
Robert C. Myers
Williani W. Price
Frederick O. Schweizer
Nauman S. Scott
Hudson A. Smith
CLASS OF 1939
james H. Gardner, Jr.
Cyril M. Guest
Clayton B. jones, Jr.
Talbot B. Munch
Calvin H. Plimpton
Gaylord L. Paine
Frecleric B. Smead
Earl A. Turner
Frederic P. Weller
Benjamin Willizinis
Stuart A. Maher
Westlny P. Richards
William A. Warner. lr
Durbin H. Wells
William A. Sturgis, jr.
Robert K. Wtirner
Willitim E. Wilkenintl
Melvin S. Wilsnrm
William L. Ransom, jr.
George M. Scott
james T. Walker
Robert S. Wren
One Hundred and Izialiteen
AMHERST 3 COLLEGE
nl
I 1-5--v 'H 4,
m- 1.,?7 S.? v-'nn-'E'.4- wx,
QF ? -i'.Q' 52::
Sigma Chapter Established in
1c,.'g,jsg,1,gZ:'- 31.-2.3522
get-my-.' .- A' ve'-Xiifvfs
.. '-'- -.
ft FRATRES IN FACULTATE
Y. :A is
-as 9A f?'-R , ' 5:5 .
'-, fy Charles H. Cacligan Charles H. Morgan, II
:::1E'1'fl?f29,5sd:ttf. jfi?Qji'fr,afa Herbert H. Gallinger David Morton
J'ifT'f M.'E-p- . ,ff : r'f'-P
...42rf'?':'f:fs5 gg- 'f-Q1fi'1.r .
f 2f.T+fff:?:ig,,gA-,lA:f: ? Charles W. Cole Harry deF. Smrth
--?:.i:f:-its :S'QT:.'f:-.:ft':
-. x-.mga-rrg'd,-giw'-31. , f.x.'-,,.:v?n
1+:!I..
1846
Fifth Row: Wa1'1ier, Wilson, Price, Balme, Hills, Good, Sturgis, Schweizer, Matigan, Steward,
Myers, Smith, Koster, Kelley, Scott.
Fourth Row: Bradley, DeWitt, Barrett, Crawford, Dawson, Lancaster, Lamb, Maher, Warner
Wilkening, Fleming, Richards, Wells.
Third Row: Turner, Boyle, Buechner, Williams, Mahony, After, Barr. Paine, Dodge, Smead.
Second Row: Ransom, Scott, Clark, Munch, Gardner, Doherty, McKeown, Fuller.
First Row: Guest, Currier, jones, Walker, Wren, Plimpton.
One Hundred and Nineteen
li TI-IE 1937 OLIO
Marcus G. Beebe
George T. Bristol, jr.
Edward N. Goodwin, jr
james B. M. Arthur, jr.
David W. Brewer
K. Ian Deane
james C. Edgell
George A. jackson
M. Vincent Edds, Jr.
David S. Evans
Ross Gilpatric
William J. Atkinson, Jr
Raymond C. Boshco
Arthur C. Hensler
Logan O. Jones
Robert J. Kelly
Delta Upsilon
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
S. Merrill Gower, jr.
William Haller, jr.
William S. Johnson
Franklin L. Reed, jr.
CLASS OF 1937
Robert D. Landon
Andrew R. Linscott
Robert K. Massey
Lewis H. Palmer
CLASS OF 1938
Benjamin E. Haller
Bruce H. Keppel
Albert A. Miller, jr.
Walter O. Roberts
CLASS OF 1939
Norman F. Lacey
Robert M. Lawrence
Kimball A. McMullin
Robert S. May, jr.
james H. Root, jr.
A. Turney Savage
Harold L. Smith, jr.
Eric E. Sundquist
C. Churchill Stafford
William 1. Thompson, jr
Charles L. Tooker
George S. Trees
S. Douglas Walker. jr.
William H. Snow
Edward D. Steinbrugge
Richmond M. Sutherland
Greggar P. Sletteland
Dean H. Swift
james S. Turner
Thaine A. Youst
Melville -I. Vickerman
One Hundred and Twenty
- AMI-IERST . COLLEGE i
'-HW. -'H' 4. .1 ,,. -, 1'
:ir ev
H-P Z H-:F Amherst Chapter
es., ,,,,M 'S -. SX H
A .A r.,5k,4n ...em
sv- 4-N. L'
-L '45-A A f..-P
-.J ' ,Lf-'-v-4'
M..,.? M uf FRATRES IN
ind Ln..!9r- .1-Q..
divx, -. .A -M
tx?
A. P'-f 54
-5679
n uf'
-... .. -,.-.,, Laurence B. Packard
'i
A 401:-
,,
1-:..f-rf ...fa ,. .ii - g
M- rev-sei' f .Z
-mf-KT-Q Harold H Plou h
'-wav f Robert B.
- 'Q 1 'Si-,Q '-:-TW.'5:g',-,,L'- I '2-
4-. V - '. 4: ,Life 1
1. -L'-V., Le' -v, -4 , ..s hw-
N X,-0 , P. , ., . Y . T vw.-554. V.
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tw- , ,,,:2ggf:,,,:..' -m, Wm... ., ull., .- - Q.
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- . .f 'five F ' H F b
er-'adj f,,:::3 I 1,--iq! -5 .f I'8I'1ClS . O CS
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it w Q., . ,J 4- Y .rr-
g' ,,. V:-i....H--f .ff -W. -- -I
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nf. -L..-'-,mr-'A ,...,-.-.-f.-.mf
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Qu Q Lapse:
-rg
Established in 1847
FACULTATE
C. Scott Porter
E. Dwight Salmon
Atherton H. Sprague
Wlritney
Fourth Row: Miller, Evans, Keppel, Sutherland, Steinhrugge, B. Haller, Roberts, Lacey.
Third Row: Brewer, Tooker, Landon, Deane, Massey, Thompson, Palmer, Linscott, jackson, Stafford,
Trees, Arthur.
Second Row: Johnson, Savage, Beebe, Goodwin, Bristol, Sundquist, Gower, Smith,
First Row: Kelly, Vickerman, McMullin, May, Lawrence, Hensler, Boshco,
Sletteland, Root, Turner, Swift.
W. Haller, Reed.
Atkinson, Youst,
One Hundred and Twenty-one
THE 1937 OLIO '
William P. Ellis
Richard C. Forman
jacob W. Bond
john A. Dietze
Gordon H. Ewen
Hans H. Frey
Leo C. Bullinger
George L. Cullen, jr.
john R. Doty
Richard H. Eisenhart
Robert A. Aldrich
Richard W. Davidson
Robert H. Dietze
William F. Egloff
Alester G. Furman, III
Chi Psi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
Charles P. Goss
Charles E. Hulick, jr.
Stephen E. Magill
CLASS OF 1937
Henry C. l-Iigginbottom
Warren T. johnson
Daniel C. Lawton
Seth R. Martin
C. Merrill Matzinger
CLASS OF 1938
David F. Goodnow, jr.
Francis A. Hardy
Richard M. McClellan
CLASS OF 1939
Charles W. Iben
Ernest A. johnson, jr.
Hartley joys
Martin G. Keenan
C. Edgar Phreaner, jr.
Dana F. NVoodrnnn, jr
George H. Phreaner
Benjamin P. Terry
M. Tilghman West
Edward A. Wilson
Frederic B. Mayo
George M. Shay
Renslow D. Sherer
Heath Wakelee
james A. Stewart
William Wi, Stifler, jr.
Henry Stockbridge. 1V
Frank K, Wallace
Vincent West
One Hundred and Twcnty two
AMI-IERST 3 COLLEGE
Q.-vw 1' 1 M
,iff ' 'S.+ 2'-1-rf M
:rig e-
,fd-Qzgfifdwi J.. - - .
,si-'ff ,Q -if' greg? Alpha Chi Chapter Established IH 1864
Akfpagx 7+-.ia
wgdtikl J , , ,., C-He
,nj r 1 J .gg ,,, FRATER IN FACULTATE
if 1-all-harsh Robert S. Fletcher
'Vt 4' AP'
, sew -'I'
'VB!- 's:?'Ylf'!l Qtr'
nr' ,f1pgg.4qg!Ifi'.P,N-f-vs-vA,,,,.
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'
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wydmaf ' I ,if
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NV?-C, if.. . 'ff-.. ,r .- A .5 '
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'f its -141, 51 !-,b,,.:n ..- M
4 7' 'CEFGWJS 'ie . '
Ei Q.: ,.
9? ' ig Aw! AJ:,?f:55.'2g-Z ,
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Z- A' 1-4' - 1
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VW, -., .
,ff-+1 ' 3.3 U., Y ,M
Q-f' 'fl'4'1'-- fini-Ffh-,ff 1
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' - A-745 V ,.
' -- 1,
,-'tj-Q '? H , . '. '1f7: .,v
4. -' .M ,L
- 'v 1 4- . .J - f
Fourth Row: M. West, Hardy, Bullinger, Shay, Mayo, Sherer, Walcelee, McClellan, Cullen,
Eisenhart, Goodnow.
Third Row: V. West, Matzinger, Lawton, W. johnson, J. Dietze, Bond, Terry, Higginbottom,
Martin, Frey, G. Phrezmer, E. johnson.
Second Row: Ewen, Magill, Goss, Ellis, C. Phreaner, Woodman, Forman, Hulick.
First Row: Iben, Stockbridge, Stifler, Egloff, R. Dietze, joys, Aldrich, Keenan, Furman, Davidson,
Wallace.
One Hundred and Twenty-three
THE - 1937 -?i OLIO
Ernest A. Becker, jr.
Howard B. Bosworth
Allen Brown
Edward L. Butler
William H. Creamer
Dudley C. Bostwick
John E. Field, Jr.
Robert E. Garton
jean R. Keith
Franklin G. Allen, jr.
Austin L. Beach
james C. Bishop
Clyde F. Cristman
John R. S. S. Greenwood
Robert Barit
Spencer G. Bostwick
Rockwood Bullard, jr.
Burgess Butler
john D. Cordner
Chi Phi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
Guild Devere
Horace W. Hewlett
Russell W. Higgins
Norman E. Limherg
CLASS OF 1957
Roger Keith, jr.
William N. Larkin
Gordon L. Lundwall
Charles G. McCormick
CLASS OF 1938
Christian Keedy
john J. Keep
James P. MacCain
Cornelius F. Miller
Richard C. Reed
Willard W. Roberts
CLASS OF 1959
Vaughn Dow
David Garton
james S. Hart
Charles I. Kydd
William L. Livingston
Rae J. Malcolm
William L. Snyder, jr
Roman L. Tremhicki
G. Rezeau Tucker, jr.
Richard S. Wisner
J. Warren Mersereau
Clement M. Simmons
R. Wendell Snyder
Lewis O. Wzirclell, jr.
Williallii H. Sherwood
Andrew B. Simpson
Henry H. Skillings
George G. Whitehead
Randall H. Young
Frank W. Poland, jr.
William C. Schneider
j. Potter Smart
Dexter C. Wheelock
G. Gibson Willis
One Hundred and Twenty four
I-IERSTiCOLLEGE
.,... , ,B ,. 5,
B - CNl,vif1?'i'f41'2- .iff-421
49.52, -Y.fiQ4 ,g:f5..x::iE,,.::,,,- 1 I '
'igzjtaggx-ifSfl.:-f',T?-.,-f,5'l4 Phi Chapter Established in 1873
ll:
Iv,,iE,q1-'raensi . -siieif-fra?
-Cr.-4-, ' 1 95?
N .-vi eg wr ,H .Q-I., W -
.ff:1'f ' - E, e- '.af-g?'1e-in 1
'A1g:i?5E 5 if jQ,. ?',k, FRATRES IN FACULTATE
xfffly, , George W. Bain William P. Bigelow
Fr: S :SEQR -
Newton F. McKeon, jr.
xr?Z'?'1'L-1Y -aiiff '-- ' ' Q-me
-'.,,.:r-1-.-.af.-ww: - '-R
ff 'JT-L'-: IT's1r f
-JS-34'B' 'li' t
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'sr -n ,,,,-a,'f!. --,'-'t ,W ,.,. .1.
T3-Q f Fi' gi-'4.f',-aj.f4.rf'i Til-V522 if
Fourth Row: Allen, Beach, Sherwood, Keep, Young, Simpson, Wliitehead, Reed, Miller, Cristman,
Skillings.
Third Row: Wisner, R. Garton, Roberts, Mersereau, Bostwick, R. Keith, Wardell, Larkin, Brown,
Becker, Hewlett, Field, Simmons, I. Keith, W. Snyder.
Second Row: Creamer, Bosworth, Tucker, E. Butler, Devere, L. Snyder, Limberg.
First Row: Smart, Kydd, B. Butler, Cordner, Wheelock, Barit, Bullard, Dow.
One Hundred and Twenty-five
TI-IE 1937 OLIO
Lewis M. Black
Burr C. Brundage
Harold W. Cobb
Howell A. Bates
john K. Best
Robert N. Bonnett
Thomas M. Colton
Archibald G. Dougla
Paul V. Farrell
Robert S. Alexander
Martin Bennett
Dick A. Clarke
Thomas M. Davis
J. Henry Francis, Jr.
Donald H. Clark
Cyrus S. Collins
John A. Cranshaw
Frederick E. Frazier
Paul H. Gleye
ss,
uf
,.. 411-
H4479
Beta Theta Pi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
Richard B. Harding, Jr.
Calvert B. Lindquest
CLASS OF 1937
R. Philip Gregory
Daniel F. Griggs, jr.
David W. Holmes
Henry C. Howell, jr.
H. William jordan
Frederic B. Loomis, jr.
Thomas I. McGurl. jr.
CLASS OF 1938
Thomas Y. Funston
Robert W. Hyatt
Alexander F. Imlay
Waldo M. johnson
Arthur E. Mace, jr.
CLASS OF 1939
Robert XV. Harding
David M. I-Iildreth
Leonard E. Hurtz
Donald Minnick
George B. Hamilton
Paul j. Newlon
Edward l. XVersehe
Leonard S. May
Daniel C. Minnick
Albert T. Nice
john P. Saul, lll
G. Noble Snider, jr.
J. V. Millard Tyson
Earle W, Newton
Lyman Phillips
David B. Proctor
john C. Quady
Will'1'Cl1 F. Sawyer
David N. Reuy
Charles R. Rickcl
Henry W. Seeley, jr
james A. Walker
Wfilliam S. Wzllker
One Hundred and Twenty SIX
. AMHERST i COLLEGE
'fi-is- 4-:Z 'am TQ
'. Beta Iota Chapter Established in 1883
' I BUFIL' FRATRES IN FACULTATE
'EY' qsaww -1' .5-J
I' 'P' . .
f f Zi Geoffrey Atkinson Frederick K. Turgeon
fs-2 ff, .
F... '1 - ' f ,
W -5 7 7 5 ff
.f 7, , -.,. ' fa
Fifth Row: J. A. Walker, Hilclreth, Gleye, Cranshaw, Seeley, Reay, Frazier.
Fourth Row: McGurl, Hyatt, Davis, Francis, Imlay, Bennett, Proctor, Quacly, Clarke.
Third Row: Bates, Best, Nice, Howell, Colton, May, Griggs, Snider, Gregory, jordan, Loomis,
Saul, Bonnett, Farrell.
Second Row: Lindquest, Black, Hamilton, Wersebe, Holmes.
First Row: Collins, Clark, W. Walker, Rikel, Hurtz, Minnick.
One Hundred and Twenty-seven
- THE 1937 OLIO
1
.2iL--.
Henry C. Corson
Kimball Davis
Daniel B. Halstead
William L. Hitchcock
Benson M. Austin
George R. Bacon
Robert M. Boltwood
William H. Brownell
Frank R. Breul
Homer Crawford
Richard H. Custer
Edward H. Hastings, 111
Richard G. Arms
William B. Baker, jr.
john R. Baldwin, jr.
Theta Delta Chi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
john P. King
Frederick S. Lane, II
james R. Leech
Robert C. Nowe
CLASS OF 1937
john C. Bush
Stephen T. Ellen
William E. Fairley
CLASS OF 1938
Peter N. Horvath
Ralph B. I-lurlbutt, jr.
jason S. Kobler
Allen Lindberg
john F. McGrath
CLASS OF 1939
Albert j. Brooks
Morris P. Frost
Burleigh Fernald
George G. Bartlett, jr. Willard E. jones
Walter H. Olden, jr.
Samuel F. Potsubay, jr
Albert K. Roehrig
Clinton W. Tylee, jr.
jerome F. Peck, jr.
Alfred A. Snowball
Frederick S. Pendleton
Eugene M. Plumstead
Vincent Scofield
john W. Thompson
Robert F. Walker
james L. Woodress, jr
Caleb Roehrig
David W. Sargent
R. Clinton Thompson
Giles M. Wrigl1t
One Hundred and Twenty Light
AMI-IERST CCLLEGE
--'2'l 9?-il'Fri.:f1-- Q1
'ff'f?-if . , s'
- en - --2,
4-Aviv ggi 2 - ,A ,A
E. L. 1 . 1, lv-'l',j4. 'ef-.
Q K '
'V 1-4
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...JF
M u , ,,... -2-. .,f2!'f , 'T fff?'F2f H
i 'l 'f2i1-ff-'F-'41
' 2: ' ' 3' are
Mu Deuteron Charge
FRATRES IN
Charles W. Cobb
F. Stewart Crawford, Jr.
Arthur j. Hopkins
Established in 1
F ACULTATE
Paul C. Phillips
Henry B. Thatcher
George F. Whicher
Fourth Row: Sargent, Baker, Baldwin, Wright, Arms, Bartlett, C. Roehrig, Frost, Fernald, C. Thomp-
son, Brooks.
Third Row: Hurlbutt, Bush, Fairley, Austin, Hastings, J. Thompson,
Scolield.
Second Row: Plumstead, Kobler, Breul, Woodress, McGrath, Linclber, Snowball, Peck, Ellen,
Bacon, Walker, Boltwood, Horvath, jones.
First Row: Olden, K. Roehrig, Corson, Hallstead, K. Davis, Potsubay,
Lane, Leach, King.
Crawford, Brownell, Custer,
Tylee, Hitchcock, Pendleton,
885
One Hundred and Twenty-nine
THE 3 1937 3 OLIO
Edwin B. Barrow
john C. Kelley, Jr.
William W. Citler, Jr.
Jose W. Fenderson
Verner Alexanderson
Robert A. Badenhop
Everett C. Banfield, Jr.
James B. Birmingham, Jr.
Edward H. Connell, Ir.
Arthur C. Davis, jr.
Frank R. Fowles, jr.
Henry F. Goodnow
'Ulf
Phi Delta Theta
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
Raymond S. Peursall
Albert H. Pike, Jr.
Harold J. Ruby
CLASS OF 1937
Harry L. Goff
Benjamin F. Goodrich, Jr.
james T. Ramey
CLASS OF 1 938
Bryant M. French
Benjamin J. Glasgow
james D. Gowing
CLASS OF 1939
Charles A. Hill, Jr.
john H. Kehne
Angus G. MacLeod
john G. Martin, Jr.
jose A. Mayoral
William S. Putnam
George C. Seward
Athunusius D. Skourus
Proctor T. Twichell
Wallter' H. Wl1itel1ill,jl'.
Victor S. johnson, jr.
David Winslow
Channing B. Richardson
Wilfred V. E. Rounseville
Earl O. Shreve, jr.
Charles G. Taylor
Martin Travis
LeRoy Van Nostrand, jr
One Hundred and Thirty
- A HHH? COLLEGE
4-fe -na,-v E
1--1-1' .ve milk i mfffsl-
.M-.Jaw 6-fr :l -ri
in Jaw 05,425 Massachusetts Beta Chapter Established in 1888
fd' 54 4 'L
in ,f-,ge iff, FMR FRATRES IN FACULTATE
3 no 'B
'R JF Lo ,N ,ff Charles A. Andrews Frederic B. Loomis
' Alfred F. I-Iavighurst Frank H. Smith
' Alfred G. Wheeler
1541 ' '87 Alwui- .4-
felf' , 4 ee .- 4 fl' Hy-
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Fifth Row: Connell, Kehne, MacLeod, Shreve, Hill, Travis.
Fourth Row: Alexanderson, French, johnson, Glasgow, Gowing, Winslow.
Third Row: Twichell, Ramey, Whitelmill, Fenderson, Goff, Badenhop.
Second Row: Bartow, Pearsall, Seward, Skouras, Raby.
First Row: Fowles, Mayoral, Goodnow, Putnam, Richardson, Davis, Birmingham, Banfield, Martin,
Taylor.
One Hundred and Thirty-one
john F. Armstrong, jr.
Herman K. Beach, jr.
George B. Burnett, jr.
Edward Chandler
Edgar L. Coon
Angus W. Clarke, jr.
William H. Claus
Robert S. Fitchel
Albert F. Miller, jr.
George N. Beecher, jr.
john A. Bookhout
Richard E. Clements, jr.
Philip G. Creese
Kenneth M. Davis, jr.
Paul P. Felt
Richard A. Benedict
Samuel S. Faris, II
john L. Fletcher, jr.
Robert j. Guerin
Edward W. Hall
.I
Phi Gamma Delta
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
joseph W. Davis, jr.
XVilliam E. Hall
john P. Lutz
Paul G. Lund
George E. McPherson, jr.
CLASS OF 1937
Frank A. Peltier, jr.
john j. Plante, jr.
Wlilliam W. Reilley
joseph W. Richmond
CLASS OF 1938
john D. Gerhard
john D. Griflith
Edward G. Kothe
Orrin XV. Lincoln, jr.
Thomas V. McKeon
Arthur F. Mercer, jr.
CLASS OF 1939
Edward H. Hatton
john D. Horst
Frederick A. W. Kothe
William B. MCCready
Henry j. Mapes
Samuel D. Miller
George A. Nagle, jr.
Ernest Palmer, jr.
jolm H. Peterson
Ward H. Wait
joseph T. West, jr.
james M. Selby
john A. Swainbank
james B. Sweeney, jr.
Roy E. Tilles, jr.
Thomas F. Power, jr.
Robert W. Riemer
Theodore S. Rowland, jr.
Edgar F. Taber, jr.
Don Wilson
Leveretr L. Wright
Victor E. Nicklas
Charles L. Sayre
Ford W. Thompson, jr.
Walter O. Weisbecker, jr.
Gordon Zeese, jr.
One Hundred and Thirty-two
AMHERST i COLLEGE
' A :
'l v L, Alpha Chi Chapter Established in 1893
-3 - - 7 '4f ' 1
FA FRATRES IN FACULTATE
545 f , .e 5:4 - f . ':, V '
,fwmi Charles E. Bennett Allison W. Marsh
at 4 .. Y P - -
,- i ree. Howard W. Doughty Ralph C. Williams
T 4-:Lt
iff-
Fourth Row: Wilson, McKe0n, Clements, Griffith, Creese, Wright, K. Davis, Power, Gerhard,
Mercer, Rowland, Lincoln, Felt, Bookhout.
Third Row: Selby, Beecher, E. Kothe, Fichtel, Clarke, Richmond, Swainbank, Plante, Sweeny,
Riemer, Miller.
Second Row: W. Hall, Lund, West, Nagle, Willard, Lutz, Palmer, Wait.
First Row: Weisbecker, Thompson, Zeese, Sayre, Hatton, Nicklas, F. Kothe, McCready, Benedict,
E. Hall. Faris.
One Hundred and Thirty-three
TI-IE 1937 OLIO
George K. Allison
Raymond K. Bryant
Edward W. Harrison
Stephen I. Allen
Harold S. Atwood, jr.
Gordon L. Becker
G. Franklin Bower
Benjamin P. Atkinson
Robert F. Buehler
Ralph W. Greenlaw, jr.
William D. Calhoun
Nathan C. Fitts
john W. Haigis, jr.
Park R. Hallenbeck
Phi Kappa Psi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
Crescens G. Hubbard
Anthony F. O'Donnell
Carl J. Raymond
CLASS OF 1937
C. Norton Coe
Philip M. Deisroth
Sheldon G. Grubb
Franklin H. Henvphill
Leland P. Russell, jr.
CLASS OF 1938
Edward L. Kuhn
Robert S. McCollum
Donald A. MacHarg
CLASS OF 1939
John F. Hall
Frederick W. Hutchinson
William E. Ingham
Edward D. Leonard, -Ir.
Nelson B. Repsnld
Bernard F. Stall, jr.
Donald N. Sullivan
Arthur j. Strang, jr.
james P. Wilkerson, III
Edward D. Williams
Robert H. Williztms
Edwin I.. Olancler
Richard W. Reuter
Breen Ringlancl
Douglas W. McKinley
Charles F. Otis
Frank A. Robinson
Paul J. Williams
One Hundred and Thirty four
A HERST COLLEGE
-fa.-4-mfg, 7?--L-,i'1?Lr1Zgg-,f , ,
,igjT3fiCfl 43lga-513' 1- Massachusetts Alpha Chapter Established in 1895
' 1 :TL NI' 1 '- 'Q '-PEEL'
r 'tusf ' 'ff' Q' A' . 4' 1.1-
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-ji-f:-47,1-' -'T-'g:.q,,:3,3 FRATRES IN FACULTATE
'A' I-' .- v '-4 -.fs
-fe i IIDKIIS -1 we
3:7733-.2 ul V 21.4 '-1' F'
E-jx ! Ralph A. Beebe Walter A. Dyer
-fiiiiiif' F. Curtis Canfield E. Kimball Morsman
,L L... -,,, - ,Am ,ig
1: -1 5 3?
-N Ralph H. Oatley
nfs!!-g43+!if'if 'l
-.fwf.g,, P.,-q H -.N-us. -sv: -
Fourth Row: Ringlancl, Kuhn, Okie, Wilson, Buehler, Greenlaw, Whitmore, Sykes, Sherman,
McCollum.
Third Row: Hemphill, Coe, Wilkerson, Atwood, Allen, E. Williams, Deisroth, R. Williams, Grubb,
Russell, Strung.
Second Row: Harrison, Hubbard, Stall, Sullivan, Allison, Repsold, Raymond, O'D0nnelI.
First Row: Otis, Calhoun, Robinson, Hutchinson, P. Williams, Haigis, Hallenbeck, McKinley,
Fitts, Leonard, Ingham.
One Hundred and Thirty-live
- - THE 1937 OLIO
' 4
George P. Barbarow, jr.
Ronald S. Beckett
Robert C. Bielaski
john Bowditch, III
John R. Berryman
William B. Braman
Norman S. Buckingham
john O. Epple
John U. Fehr
Richard S. Furbish
Kellogg G. Birdseye
Chester B. Bland
Robert K. Bodensten
David R. Boyd
William J. Branstrom, jr.
James M. Brown, III
Philip O. Carr
Howard L. Cuddeback
Roger W. Davis, Jr.
Delta Tau Delta
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
james R. Collard
Charles W. Combs
Oliver M. Flanders
Robert H. Gardner
William E. Goodman
CLASS OF 1937
Edward P. Green
William A. Grouse
Robert B. Hevenor
John S. McDaniel
Alan A. Mahanke
CLASS OF
james T. George
Richard S. Landry
Robert H. Parker
Dorian F. Reid
Robert E. Simpson
CLASS OF 1939
Claud R. Faunt, Jr.
joseph L. Flynn
john W. Hall
Francis N. Hamblin
Edwin S. Hubbard
john R. Liliendahl, jr.
Walter G. Pfeil, jr.
William M. Rider, jr.
james W. Stoudt
William P. Van Fleet
Melville E. Reiner
Rowland V. Rider
Francis L. Rose
William l.. Schofl'
C. Blake Skinner
Stanwood Wollaston
George Q. Slocum
Merrill H. Tilghman
Chester A. Weed
Daniel C. Whedon
Frederick C. Meier
Richard F. Phillips
Harry C. Rudden
Edward C. Stillwell, jr
Thomas P. Wilson
One Hundred and 'lhirty Six
MHERST 3 COLLEGE
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,,.:m.,,,svf L
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3153 FRATER IN FACULTATE
:if L 1-QT-fix'-riiifl
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4 ,,,.5-igiivg Ralph C. McGoun, jr.
L , ,.-0 x -w
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Fourth Row: Stillwell, Carr, Meier, Harnblan, Cuddebaclc.
Third Row: Hevenor, Bodensten, Reid, Birdseye, Boyd, George
Second Row: Rose, McDaniel, Grouse, Stoudt, Rider, Bielaski
First Row: Lilliendahl, Phillips, Branstrom, Davis, Hubbard, W
9
Slocum, Landry.
, Beckett, Rider, Buckingham, Green
ilson, Faunt.
One Hundred and Thirty-seven
THE - 1937 OLIO
A
x
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1
- 3
A, .
Edwin P. Lepper
Richard E. Bodkin
Ernest E. Ellerr
Waldo B. Cummings
jacob H. Brautigam
Robert L. Cushing
Tracy C. Dudley
Theta Xi
FRATRES IN COLLEGIO
CLASS OF 1936
Henry S. Meyer
Harold C. Sigda
CLASS OF 1957
Harry F. Gray, jr.
Winfield Keck
William N. Mustard
CLASS OF 1938
William F. Kazlauskas
Paul W. Leak
CLASS OF 1959
Ralph F. Lewis
William R. Merchant
Philip T. Moyer
A. Stanley Thompson
Edward M. Shepard
Richard S. Zeisler
Nathaniel Mills, jr.
Samuel Smyth, III
john S. Vullmer
Donald B. Whalin
One Hundred and Thirty eight
X
AMHERST COLLEGE
4.-. '-S. ...f' 5.3-Z2 1121
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13,3212 Alpha Mu Chapter
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iw-1,5-f' -34 FRATRES IN FACULTATE
-+-... r f, i , 1 lm... -A Q
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Fourth Row: Lewis, Vollmer, Merchant.
Third Row: Moyer, Cushing, Brautigam, Whalin, Dudley, Leak.
Second Row: Cummings, Mills, Gray, Kazlauskas, Mustard.
First Row: Shepard, Lepper, Sigda, Keck, Zeisler.
Established in 1952
Samuel R. Williams
52. - L'
,fliff 1 'fa
' 97'
lm.
One Hundred and Thirty-nine
THE i 1937 E OLIO .-
Xi
Lord Jeffrey Amherst Club
Sheldon M. Collins
Edmund L. Foote
Norman H. Gerson
Edwin B. Colburn
Donald E. I-ledden
Aaron L. Kingsberg
Lester G. Bruggemann,
Melvin Kranzberg
John E. Lehman
Abe K. Lipsitz
Donald R. McGeorge
Horace S. Bell
Jerome S. Beloff
Donald N. Bigelow
Harry C. Calcutt
Maurice F. Dean
John F. Eaton
Marvin S. Edgerton
Martin S. Elmer
Donald B. Engley
Paul Farmer
Eeser Goldstein
David J. Goldwasser
I
I.
MEMBERS IN COLLEGE
CLASS OF 1956
Alvin Greif, Jr.
Stanley L. Levin
George S. Moss
Stanley Paymer
CLASS OF 1937
Edwin C. Rozwenc
Charles D. Schilling
CLASS OF 1938
Bennett R. Meyers
Gordon S. Reid
Milton Spielman
Elvin H. Wanzo
CLASS OF 1939
Robert A. Goldwasser
James H. Green
Morris G. Hammer
Frank M. Heifetz
Frank J. Kusiak, Jr.
Robert T. Magrane
Stanley L. Mayer
William A. Medlicott
Irwin I. Meller
Howard M. Mitchell
Samuel Orlen
Lewis L. Rosen
Mandal R. Segal
Milton A. Ushman
James S. Schnepel
Cornelius Vanderbreggen
Irving Waltman
Donald Wedel
Richard L. Weinstein
Jacob A. Weisman
Harry O. Whipple
Albert N. Whiting
L, Herrnain Plehn
Everett H. Pryde
Gerald Rohmer
Martin V. Rothman
Douglas G. Schultz
Edward Segal
Geurson D. Silverberg
Murray L. Sims
Isador J. Spiegel
Edward M. Swaine
John P, Webber
John R. Willis
One Hundred and Forty
AMI-IERST COLLEGE
Established in 1 93 5
'iii fi- 4'g. 'Q - is
is ? MEMBERS IN FACULTY
A ' TM -Qi
ln I kan TCll d OttoM th Z
' f QL ames . e an an e - orn
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z l ,A x r' . .
.- M fr' it milf Sranle Km Geor e F. Whicher
V 4 W2 A' v Q HM?
W gg-+-52 4 1'iii'35i25f'Z:?fg , , h
i xy Sterling P. Lamprechr Ralph C. Williains
' .fE'Q A M, -' Q2l4l'22.igQjg,5:
f gf ' E f f..iflj 'fill George R. Taylor
' gy
Third Row: Kingsberg, Moss, McGeorge, Bigelow, Kusiak, Spielman.
Second Row: Collins, Whiting, Waltman, Vanderbreggen, Kranzberg, Beloff, Wanzo.
First Row: Willis, Swaine, Schnepel, Heifetz, Spiegle.
One Hundred and Forty-one
' az- ,.
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44 fra,
Sr
BOOK FOUR
ORGANIZATIONS
Wa!ke1' Hall
-- THE 1937 OLIO - ---
Scarab
Walter B- Mahvny, Jr- Niel A. wemhefs, Jr.
WALTER BUTLER MAHONY, JR .......... ................. P resident
NIEL ALEXANDER WEATHERS, JR ................. Secretary-Treasurer
George Treat Bristol, jr. Eric Edward Sundquist
Horace Wilson Hewlett Wright Tisdale
Charles Edgar Phreaner, Jr. Garrett Rezeau Tucker, jr.
Herman Van Dien Stewart Stephen Emerson Whither
Albert Flanagan Winston
George T. Bristol, Jr. Horace W. Hewlett C. Edgar Phreaner, jr.
One Hundred and Forty-four
AMHERST i COLLEGE -
Herman V. D. Stewart Eric E. Sundquist Wright Tisdale
In recognition of their prominence in undergraduate activities eleven members of
the student body were tapped for Scarab last year in an impressive ceremony at Senior
Chapel.
Founded some thirty years ago as a self-perpetuating senior honorary society, Scarab
in its early years adopted as its responsibility to preserve the traditions and good name of
Amherst College. True, with the dwindling of Amherst customs, its original function
has been somewhat limitedg and yet, after thirty years membership in the society remains
one of the most coveted campus honors.
But this statement in no respect should lead to the conclusion that Scarab has been a
meaningless organ of student government this year. Rather it has assumed new aims and
new responsibilities with a changing campus atmosphere. The banquet which was held in
conjunction with Gargoyle, the Williams honorary society, was an honest effort to encour-
age friendship and good feeling between these two sister Massachusetts colleges. The
Society's effort to create a Scarab alumni organization has been pursued with the hope of
establishing a closer relationship between the College alumni in general and the under-
graduate body. In short, Scarab this year has made a sincere effort to apply itself as a
worthwhile undergraduate organization.
l
Garrett R. Tucker, jr. Stephen E. Wliicher Albert F. Winston
One Hundred and Forty-five
'l-T THE 1957 OLIO -f
Student Council
ALBERT F. WINSTON ............................,,A...........,.....,......, President
WALTER B. MAHONY, ja ......., ...,............. V ice-President
M. TILGHMAN WEST .........,.......... ........................,..., S ecretary
HENRY S. HUGHES .................................... Corresponding Secretary
1956
Walter B. Mahony, jr.
Richard C. Forman Charles E. Phreaner, jr.
Horace W. Hewlett Albert F. Winston
1957
Keith P. Pattengill
Henry S. Hughes Matthew T. West
1958
Charles L. Dostal
In an effort to prove itself a necessary and active organ of student government,
truly representative of the undergraduate body, the present Student Council has played
an important role in determining College policy.
After its organization last Spring, the Council proceeded to readjust the student
activities fee so as to include a general appropriation for the Masquers. It was hoped
that this provision would give the College dramatic association reliable financial backing
and still keep the total assessment down to a point where every student would be willing
to be a subscriber.
During the Fall the Council undertook to investigate the Amherst cur system. After
analyzing the systems in use at various other colleges, a committee of the Council
submitted a report to the administration, recommending some of the provisions that were
eventually incorporated into the system now being used.
Throughout the football season the Student Council sponsored night rallies on the
Octagon Hill before the important games, and it lent its support, as wholeheartedly as
possible, to the college band.
Before Spring vacation the Council expects to have prepared a report on a possible
change in the curriculum, and it will submit its recommendations to the administration
at that time.
Standing: West, Hughes, Dostal, Pattengill.
Seated: Forman, Hewlett, Wiimsttmn, Phreaner, Mahony.
One Hundred and Forty-six
' MHERST COLLEGE
Council of Fraternity Presidents
NIEL A. WEATHERS, ja .............v.........................,........... Chairman
MINOT GROSS ...............,.....,.. ..........,.................,...... S ecretary
C. EDGAR PHREANER, JR ...... .....,............,.....,..,......... ' Treasurer
George K. Allison John H. Peterson
Charles K. Arter, jr. Samuel F. Potsubay, jr.
George T. Bristol, jr. George C. Seward
Edward L. Butler Edward M. Shepard
Paul J. Newlon James W. Stoudt
Cornelius Vanderbreggen, jr.
Entering into the second year of its career as an integral part of the machinery of
student government at Amherst College, the Council of Fraternity Presidents assumed
the responsibility of directing and arbitrating the rushing season. This was formerly a
function of the Inter-fraternity Council which voted itself out of existence after the
rushing season of 1934. The new council's improvement of the rushing rules made the
opportunities of all fraternities more equal and was also instrumental in educating the
freshmen in the tactics of the rushing season. A survey of the present rushing system
for the possible improvement of conditions is the immediate project of the council.
The enforcement of women regulations in the fraternities comes under the juris-
diction of the organization, and it has set up a judicial committee for the purpose of
investigating any infractions that cannot be handled by the fraternity president. This year
the council sent a representative to the National Interfraternity Council in New York,
and then sponsored a meeting of the fraternity treasuters to further the study and
perfection of fraternity hnances.
Projects such as the exchange of eating guests among the fraternities and Sunday
night speakers and discussions in the fraternity houses have been brought before the
council and have received its sanction before becoming official practices on campus.
The Council of Fraternity Presidents is an active body in handling individual cases
which cannot be treated by the fraternity presidents and are outside the administration of
the Student Council. The Council of Presidents affords an excellent means of cooperation
and Contact between the college administration and the fraternities and their activities.
Standing: Allison, Stoudt, Seward. Butler, Shepard. Peterson, Vanderbreggen.
Seated: Potsubay, Bristol, Phreaner, Wfeathers, Grose, Newlon.
One Hundred and Forty-seven
THE 1937 OLIO
Phi Beta Kappa
Massachusetts Beta
Established in 1853
PROFESSOR FREDERIC B. LOOMIS, '96 .....,....,,.........,.... President
HONORABLE ARTHUR P.
RUGG, '83 .................... Vice-President
PROF. GEORGE B. FUNNELL, '24 ..,............... Secretary-Treasurer
STEPHEN E. WHICHER,
'36 .................. Undergraduate President
NIEL A, WEATHERS, JR., '36 ...................... Undergraduate Secretary
FIRST DRAWING
Daniel Burt Caudle
Robert Dwight Fenn
William Summer Johnson
Mandal Robert Segal
OF THE CLASS OF 1936
George Curry Seward
Harold Ladd Smith, jr.
Niel Alexander Weathers, Jr.
Stephen Emerson Whicher
SECOND DRAWING OF THE CLASS OF 1936
John Bowditch, III
Horace Coates Coleman, jr.
Robert Ewald Giese
Matthew Arnold Kelly
john Pease King
Frederick Stanley Lane, II
Walter Butler Mahony, Jr.
FIRST DRAWING
Fairman Chalfee Cowan
Robert Watson Elmer
Henry Smart Hughes
Leonard Carpenter Meeker
joseph Walker Richmond
Charles Sey
Gilbert Horton Mudge
Paul johnson Newlon
Robert Childs Nowe
Sanborn Partridge
Walter Amson Schloss
Athanasios Demetrios Skouras
Garrett Rezeau Tucker, jr.
CLASS OF 1957
Edwin Charles Rozwenc
William Lincoln Schoff
Charles Blake Skinner
Cornelius Vanderbreggen, jr.
Irving Waltman
mour Whitman, jr.
OF THE
V95
.992
Standing: Seward, Fenn, Caudle, Segal.
Seated: Whicher, Weathers.
One Hundred and Forty-eight
-i AMHERST COLLEGE -
Christian Association
RICHARD A. MERRITT ....................,...............................,. President
DONALD A. MACHARG ..,......... ...i....... T reasurer
JOHN P. SAUL, III .......................... ..............., S ecretary
REV. CHARLES H. CADIGAN .............................. Faculty Advisor
In carrying out its responsibility as a directing force of the religious activities of
the College, the Christian Association this year has undertaken to apply itself toward
promoting fellowship among the students.
Particularly in the freshman class has this objective received considerable emphasis.
At the beginning of the year a freshman smoker was held in College Hall in an effort
to avail the new students an opportunity to become acquainted. Later, a freshman cabinet
was formed, patterned after the upperclass body, to enable students especially interested
in the Christian Association to begin their work. And with the hope of heightening
interest in the religious activities of the College, six regular discussion groups, open only
to freshmen, were organized.
In addition to its traditional functions of sponsoring the Community Chest and
Old Clothes Drives, the upperclass cabinet has held bi-weekly meetings this year to
consider the work being done in the individual committees. Occasional forums and
study groups have been held, at which outside speakers have been brought in, but in
general, the cabinet this year has tried to encourage discussion among the student
members themselves.
Perhaps the most lasting contribution of this year's Christian Association was the
annual Christian Association Embassy, conducted on February 17 and 18 with the theme
Helps and Hindrances to Religion in College . Fourteen ministers, many of them
Amherst alumni, were invited to visit the College during the two-day period and to lead
the discussion in each of the fraternity houses.
Standing: Mr. Cadigan. Vanderbreggen, Lancaster, Gower, Shepard, Sherman.
Seated: Keesey, Merritt, Tylee, Twichell, Saul, Coleman.
One Hundred and Forty-nine
THE 1937 OLIO
Pre-Medical Club
WILLIAM N. CHAMBERS .................,....... .,.....,. P resident
PROFESSOR HAROLD H. PLOUGI-I .......... ........ A dviser
A series of biweekly lectures by prominent practicing physicians and scientists from
the College faculty has been the policy of the Pre-Medical Club this year in its effort to
familiarize undegraduates for medicine with some of the elementary problems of the
profession.
A balanced prospective of the student's future work has been achieved by securing
as speakers men engaged in the various fields of the medical profession. Several members
of the faculty have spoken before the club on recent scientific research which is being
carried on in medicine. Outstanding practicing physicians have explained the actual
problems with which they are confronted in their private practice, among them Dr.
Robert B. Osgood '97, a former professor at the Harvard Medical School and now a
practicing surgeon in Boston. Further, men in public health have discussed the increasing
tendency for the state to assume the responsibility of protecting the health of its citizens.
Such a speaker was Clifford W. Beers, whose autobiography, A Mind That Found
Itselfu, has been so influential in promoting a sane treatment of the insane throughout
the country. Supplementing these lectures, motion pictures have been shown before the
club on various scientific problems involved in medicine, including embryological devel-
opment and micro-dissection.
One of the aims of the Pre'Medical Club this year was to create widespread interest
in the organization among the undergraduates preparing for medicine, and the fact that
some fifty members are now enrolled in the club testifies to the achievement of this goal.
One Hundred and Fifty
AMHERST COLLEGE
Pre-Law Club
ATHANASIOS D. SKOURAS ..,......................, ,......... P resident
WRIGHT TISDALE ................. ..,,...,. V ice-President
JAMES T. RAMEY .......... ........ S ecretary-Treasurer
THOMAS M. DAVIS ,........................................... Publicity Manager
PROFESSOR CHARLES L. SHERMAN .....,.......................... Adviser
The Pre-Law Club has undertaken a complete reorganization this year in an effort
ro interest more of the undergraduates preparing for law. As a result of a membership
campaign conducted during the first semester, a hundred and five students indicated their
willingness to participate in the new club, once formed.
With this encouragement the club arranged to have Professor Roswell Magill of
the Columbia Law School speak at the first meeting on The Lawyer and Federal Taxa-
tion . Similar talks by practicing lawyers, as well as by professors of law, were planned
in order to acquaint the members with some of the problems facing the legal profession
at the present time. In addition to these lectures, the club has held a number of informal
discussions on outstanding cases, with students who already have had experience with
legal procedure leading the debate.
One of the more permanent contributions of the club has been its undertaking to
establish a law library in the Political Science Seminar of Converse Library. This library
was to contain the more important case books, essays on law, and bulletins of information
from the leading law schools in the country.
Third Row: Swainbank, Fox, DeWitt, Sigda, Skolnik, Richmond.
Second Row: Collins. Whitman, Segal, Skouras, Tisclale, Ramey, Davis.
First Row: Wanzo, Faunt, Birdseye.
One Hundred and Fifty-one
- THE E 1937 2 OLIO
International Relations Club
WRIGHT TISDALE ............. ............. P resident
MANDAL R. SEGAL ................. ........ V ice-President
CHARLES G. MCCORMICK ....... .......,......... S ecretary
CHARLES S. WHITMAN, JR ......... ................... T reasurer
JEAN R. KEITH .............,...................................... Publicity Manager
With its largest membership since the founding of the organization at Amherst, the
International Relations Club has been very active in campus activities this year. The
Club is organized for the purpose of spreading information on international relations,
holding open forums on current affairs and having from time to time speakers on topics
of international importance.
The outstanding activity of the Club this year was the Model League of Nations to
which Amherst sent its largest delegation in the history of its participation. The Model
League was based around the Italo-Ethiopian dispute, and the Amherst delegates to the
League had a key position in its affairs, representing five countries including Ethiopia.
The Ethiopians startled the conference on the opening night by appearing in full native
garb with brown faces, wigs, safety pins and no shoes.
The calibre of the International Relations Club is further emphasized by the fact
that jean Keith, an ofiicer in the club, was vice-president of the Model League.
During the course of the year, the club has also sponsored several lectures, out-
standing among them being ones by Count Sforza, who came to Amherst on the Carnegie
Peace Foundation, Professor E. Dwight Salmon, who spoke on The Philippines, and Mr.
Walter Rudlin.
Standing: Collins, Gerson, Hughes, Cowan, Whitman. I
Seated: Newlon, Devere, Segal, Tisdale, Skouras, McCormick.
One Hundred and Fifty-two
Liberal Club
ATHANASIOS D. SKOURAS ..,,..... ............. P resident
CLINTON W. TYLEE .,............. ........ V ice-President
JAMES T. RAMEY ,...............,. .....,... T reasurer
BENJAMIN H. HALLER .,.....,.. ....... S ecretary
Under the able leadership of Athanasios D. Skouras, who was elected president of
the organization for the present year, the Liberal Club succeeded in maintaining a
prominent position among the College organizations this year by organizing the series
of Sunday night Faculty-Student smokers at the various fraternity houses.
For the purpose of acquainting the undergraduates with the different topics of
current importance which can not be discussed in the class room, the Liberal Club was
established in Amherst in 1927. Its liberal type is modelled after the liberalism of
Theodore Roosevelt and pursues a moderate policy of conciliation. During the present
year it has obtained a membership of 25 undergraduates.
In the future the Club plans to affiliate itself with the American Student Union, an
organization which was founded last winter at a national convention in Cleveland and
was attended by B. H. Haller, Amherst representative to the Union.
Standing: Twichell, Rounseville, Pike, Merritt, Shepard, Wliitman.
Seated: Boyd, Tylee, Skouras, Haller, Raby.
One Hundred and Fifty-three
AMHERST COLLEGE
l THE 1937 OLIO
Debating Council
PAUL NEWLON .................................... ............ P resident
MANDAL R. SEGAL ........,......... ....... V ice-President
CHARLES S. WHITMAN, JR ....... .......... S ecretary
L. MIDDLETON BLACK ........,.. ....,........,...... M anager
JAMES P. WILKERSON, III ..,............................... Assistant Manager
Horace W. jordan
Philip H. Coombs Richard H. Custer
H. Stuart Hughes J. Henry Francis, jr.
In its capacity as organizer of Amherst's participation in intercollegiate debates, the
Debating Council is fostering a great increase of interest in that activity. A schedule of
eleven debates, two of which were broadcast over the radio, an increased range of subjects,
and an unusually large attendance at the debates afford proof of this.
Three members of the Council were made ofiicers of the Eastern Intercollegiate
Debate League for this year. They are Newlon, presidentg Segal, secretary, and Hughes,
publicity manager. In addition to this, Newlon, Segal, Hughes, and jordan were given
membership in the Amherst Chapter of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary debating society.
Professor Garrison is the adviser and coach of the debaters. Witli his assistance the
Council has debated this year against Bowdoin, Colgate, M. I. T.,-Columbia, Swarthmore,
Brown, and Boston University. Following a new procedure fostered by the Council, all
except the debate with M. I. T., which Amherst won, were non-decision debates. Debates
with Mount Holyoke and Princeton as well as the annual Little Three encounter are
scheduled for the second semester.
men mf'
Standing: jordan, Francis, Wilkerscin, Keith.
Seated: Black, Segal, Newlon, Hughes, Wliitnian.
One Hundred and Fifty-four
AMHERST COLLEGE
Amherst Union
CHARLES E. HULICK, ja ....... ...,.... P resident
The Amherst Union was formed to give students the opportunity to air their views
on present day political problems, campus questions, and any other subjects of interest.
It was modeled on the Cxford union for specific reasons. First, to familiarize the
students with parliamentary procedure, including the responsibility of the chairmanship.
Secondly, because it is an interesting and lively way in which to hold discussions, for,
while it gives a chance for the faculty and experts to give vent to their views, it does not
deter the inexperienced and less enlightened students who wish to enter the discussion.
Thirdly, because it offers an opportunity for the serious to be interspersed with the humor-
ous. In this way the Union tends to avoid scholarly debate.
The Union intends to sponsor only four meetings a year. This arrangement allows
the meetings to be spaced at appropriate intervals, so that interest remains eager rather
than forced.
In line with its policy of encouraging student discussion of pressing political problems,
the Amherst Union held its first meeting on the subject of the Supreme Court. After intro-
ductory talks by J. R. Keith, '37, and H. S. Hughes, '37, as a background for the open
discussion, the meeting was thrown open to discussion from the floor.
Terry, Cowan, Hulick, Hughes, Higginbottom
One Hundred and Fifty-live
li-- THE - 1937 OLIO -
Flying Club
RANDALL BARTON ................................,. ,....., P resident
WILLIAM D. STROI-IMEIER ........ ........... S ecretary
GIRVAN N. SNIDER, JR ...........,. .......... T reasurer
DONALD HOOD .................................................................. Director
The Flying Club at Amherst, now in its third year, has already obtained nation-wide
prominence, especially among colleges. The Club is considered a model for colleges which
desire to form flying clubs, as it alone possesses its own plane. When the National Inter-
collegiate Flying Club was formed last May, Strohmeier, '36, was elected president. Also,
Snider, '37, has been elected treasurer of the Association of New England Flying Clubs.
During the summer King, '35, and Thomas, '35, represented Amherst at the National
Intercollegiate Air Meet, and, as a two man team, performed brilliantly to secure third
place for Amherst, following close upon Purdue and the University of Minnesota.
In the first New England Intercollegiate Air Meer ever to be held, Amherst took
first place among nine colleges. .As a result the trophy now resides in President King's
ofiice. Barton, '37, King, '35, and Thomas, '35, competed for Amherst, King standing
out as the individual star with two firsts and a second. The meet was held on the Club's
own Held at La Fleur airport in Northampton, before a gathering of more than six
thousand persons. The Flying Club also won the intercollegiate event of the Springfield
Air Meer last May.
The Flying Club now owns a new Taylor Cub, paid for partly by the generosity of
alumni. The new plane, though of the same model as the old, gives a far better per-
formance and greater power. Of the thirteen active members, the eight new ones have
soloed since last year. Three have their private licenses, and one an amateur license. The
Taylor Cub, received in October, has already been flown three hundred hours which is just
an indication of the enthusiasm of the Flying Club at Amherst.
Barton, Buckman, Flynn, Lumley, Davis, Snider, Breed, Strohmeier.
One Hundred and Fifty-six
AMHERST E COLLEGE
Amherst Outing Club
WARD H. WAIT ,,,,....,,.,,,. ...........,.,... P resident
JOSEPH W. RICHMOND ........ ...,..................... S ecretary-Treasurer
RICHARD B. HARDING, JR ....... Manager of Hiking and Camping
C. JARVIS SCHAUFFLER ......... ............ M anager of Winter Sports
The Amherst Outing Club, according to its purpose of organizing and sponsoring
collegiate interest in outdoor recreation, showed unusual activity in undertaking trips dur-
ing the fall. Six trips were made, among them week-end trips to Mt. Cardigan and to the
Dartmouth Outing Club's cabin on Mt. Moosilauke.
The skiing section of the Outing Club has become quite prominent this year in the
athletics of Amherst. With Charles Parker as their very able coach, the first full ski team
ever to participate for Amherst, won sixth place in the Dartmouth Carnival where twelve
colleges entered.
The Club possesses its own cabin, Tyler Cabin, on Mount Toby, a pleasant location
in any season as evidenced by the glowing write-ups in the cabin log book. In the spring
will come more trips climaxed, as always, by the spring banquet.
Delta Sigma Rho
PAUL NEWTON MANDAL R. SEGAL
An honorary debating society, Delta Sigma Rho, is open to members of the junior
and Senior classes only. Membership is limited to those men who have shown out-
standing ability in debating, and new members are chosen by those already in the society
in cooperation with the debating instructor in the College. The aim of the fraternity is
to improve the calibre of debating and speaking in the colleges as well as to encourage
greater interest in college forensics.
Amherst had only two members in their chapter this year, but both are outstanding
in the debating field. Newlon is President of the Debating Council of the College and
is also President of the Eastern Intercollegiate Debating League which is composed of
nine Eastern colleges. Segal is Secretary of both of these organizations.
One Hundred and Fifty-seven
- THE 1937 OLIO
The Amherst Musical Clubs
For the fourth successive season the Amherst Glee Club has enjoyed unqualified
success under the tutelage of Mr. Ralph Oatley, '22. The popularity of this Club is
attested in the fact that a wealth of material is always available. This year a group of
eighty was selected from over two hundred applicants. A practice group of this size
permits the continuation of the Club's policy to vary the concert group, which has a hxed
number of thirty, so that the opportunity to make the trips will be open to more men,
In their initial appearance, December 14, the Amherst Club held a joint concert with
the Princeton University Glee Club in College Hall. The singing, acclaimed by the large
audience, indicated the undoubted ability of the Club. In New York, the newly-organized
double quartet of Sullivan, Selby, Snowball, Stewart, Hewlett, Merritt, Kennedy, and Stall
entertained at the annual New York Amherst Alumni Association Banquet, held at the
Hotel Roosevelt on january 15. The Little Three joint concert, an affair of much interest,
especially to the colleges participating, was presented at West Hartford, Connecticut, on
February 29. Amherst featured the double quartet, changed by the substitution of Phillips,
Gregory, and Howland. On March 20 the Club traveled to Newburgh, New York, and
gave a concert at the Powelton Club. The concert season was brought to a close in a
fitting manner at the Wellesley Hills Country Club in Wellesley, Massachusetts.
Fifth Row: Wiggins, Stewart.
Fourth Row: Allen, D. Holrhausen, Cowan, C. Holrhausen, Williams. Harvey, Francis.
Third Row: Phillips, Breed, Bland, Tracy, Kennedy, Simpson, Minnick. Snowball, Farrell.
Second Row: Cullen, Ringland, DeWitt, Becker, Calder, Landon, Sutherland, jones. Howland.
Gregory.
First Row: Burrows, Boyden, Collard, Sullivan, Hewlett, Wfebster, Stall. Devere, Wersebe.
One Hundred and Fifty-eight
i AMHERST COLLEGE -
During the Spring Recess the Musical Club made a short
circuit of the Middle West. After giving a concert at Utica, a
joint concert with the Case School of Applied Science was held
. at Cleveland. Then there followed, successively, concerts at
De Pauw University, St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, and Buffalo.
The president of the Club was Hewlett '36, also a member
of the double quartet. Piano accompaniment and solos were
ably provided by Cowan '37. The coaching staff consisted of
Professor Cobb and Mr. Oatley.
One of the most colorful and effective organizations in the
college is the band. It was organized this year by an under-
graduate committee with Phreanor as director, Wilkerson and
Richmond as managers, Close as drum-major, and Mr, Oatley
as adviser. Mr. Jeffs, well-known for his Greenfield High
School Band and his professional band which has appeared here
for Commencements and convocations, was secured as director. Much credit must be
attributed to the forty members of the band, its director, and its organizers for the success
of the football team, and, especially, for the spirit displayed at the rallies, all home football
games, and for the season's grand finale at Williams.
Ralph H. Oatley
Director
AMHERST MUSICAL CLUBS
HORACE W. HEWLETT, New Haven, Conn.
President
DONALD N. SULLIVAN, Cortland, N. Y.
Vice-President
EDWARD N. GOODWIN, JR., Montclair, N. J.
Manager
WILLIAM H. WEBSTER, JR., Bronxville, N. Y.
Assistant Manager
EDWARD D. WILLIAMS, Cleveland, Ohio ' y
Publicity Manager 'c
MR. RALPH H. OATLEY, Springfield, Mass. Edward Win, Jr'
Director of the Glee Club
PROF. CHARLES W. COBB, Amherst, Mass.
Adviser
One Hundred and Fifty-nine
THE 1937 OLIO
FIRST TENORS
Arms, R. G.
Bland, C. B.
Devere, G.
Frey, H. H.
Fuller, R. D.
Gregory, R. F.
French, B. M.
Landon, R. D.
Minnick, D. C.
Phreaner, G. H.
Reis, H. W., jr.
Root, j. H., jr.
Shepard, E. M.
Snowball, A. A.
Stilwell, W. B.
Stewart, H. V. D.
Sullivan, D. N.
Wallace, F. K.
Wersebe, E. j.
Wheeler, W. C.
Williams, P. j.
SECOND TENORS
Allen, S. I.
Boyden, T. C.
Brooks, A. j.
Deisrorh, P. M.
Gower, S. M., jr.
Haigis, j. W., jr.
Horace W. Hewlett
President
GLEE CLUB MEMBERSHIP
Hewlett, H. W.
Hildreth, D. M.
Holthausen, C.
Kennedy, D. R.
McKinley, D. W.
Raby, H. j.
Rarhbun, W. T., jr.
Ringland, B.
Snyder, R. W.
Sutherland, R. M.
Tracy, W. B. M., jr.
Tyson, j. B. M.
Weathers, N. A., jr.
Wells, D. H.
Wiggins, E. W., jr.
FIRST BASSES
Barr, j. W., jr.
Becker, G. L.
Bodine, C., jr.
Breed, R. T.
Calder, R, G., jr.
DeWitt, R. L.
Ellis, W. P.
Farrell, M. L., jr.
Felt, P. P.
Francis, j. H., jr.
Guest, R. H.
Hall, j. W.
jeppson, j.
Kelly, R. j.
Landis, R. B.
McCollum, R. S.
McKeon, T. V.
Newlon, P. j.
Poor, E. E.
Stall, B. F., jr.
Williams, E. D.
SECOND BASSES
Barit, R.
Bole, D. C., jr.
Burnett, G. B., jr.
Burrows, P. W.
Collard, j. R.
Cullen, G. L., jr.
Fitts, N. C.
Harvey, H. S.
Howland, R. M.
jones, j. P., jr.
Keck, W.
Merritt, R. A.
Miller, C. F.
Mundi, G. H., jr.
Phillips, L.
Sargent, D. W.
Sherer, R. D.
Simpson, A. B.
Selby, j. M.
Snow, W. H.
One Hundred and Sixty
Amherst Masquers
Although handicapped during the first semester by the
absence of their director, Professor Canfield, the Amherst
Masquers have been able to uphold the standard of excellent
performances established in previous years. Prospects for
the rest of the year are exceedingly encouraging due to
Professor Canlie1d's return and the fact that the two plays
in view seem to be admirably chosen and well suited to the
excellent talent available.
W'hirili1zg in the Dark, a farcical melodrama by Law-
rence Gross and Edward Childs, opened the Masquers'
F- CUYUS Canfield season on November 21, 22, and 23. The unquestionable
success of the production was due in part to the skill with
which Raymond Bryant, Masquers' president, handled the leading role. The acting ot
Miss Mable Btinn of Northampton and of Mrs. Henry Scott also deserves praise. Most of
the remaining laurels go to john F. Shaw, '29, who hlled in admirably as coach of the
play, and to Mr. McGoun, technical director of the organization.
The next production of the Masquers was a representation of Giotto's Frescoes of
the Nativity given December 17 and 18. A beautiful embodiment of the Christmas spirit,
the presentation was one of the most technically superb masterpieces ever given by the
organization. Professor Scott was the originator and director of the production, while the
music was in the charge of Professor Cobb. Students of Amherst and neighboring colleges,
faculty wives and children, and residents of the town all contributed to make the repre-
sentation so successful that, in response to many requests, it is to be repeated in future years.
During the second semester the Masquers will aim to continue their policy of present-
ing types of plays which a college community might be expected to enjoy. New plays will
again be emphasized, as was the case last year when the organization with great success
presented The Bright Blade, written for the Masquers by Daniel Wickenden, '35, and the
American premiere of The Old Lady Sayr, No by Denis Johnston.
Director
Standing: Grouse, Merritt, Atwood, Merrill.
Seated: Twichell, Waite, Bryant, Raymond, Rider.
One Hundred and Sixty-one
AMHERST 3 COLLEGE
Palhr of Glory, with Douglas Kennedy, Carl Ray-
mond, and Raymond Bryant in leading roles, is to be
the Masquers' offering March 19, 20, and 21. Amherst
will be among the first colleges to present this play,
which is Sydney Howard's adaptation of Humphrey
C0bb's novel. Built around a war theme, it has a cast
of over forty-Hve speaking parts.
An American preview of Arnold S. PuEer's The
Slmper Arire is the tentative choice for the final produc-
tion of the year. If the Masquers decide to present this
play, it will be particularly interesting to the Amherst
audience since its theme is based somewhat on that of
The Old Lady Sayr, No '.
Raymond K. Bryant
TI-IE 1937 OLIO
President
F, CURTIS CANFIELD ........ .........,............. D irector
RALPH C. MCGOUN .............. ......... T echnical Director
RAYMOND K. BRYANT ..........
RICHARD A. MERRITT ......,..
CARL J. RAYMOND ..........
..................President
. ....,,...... Vice-President
.........................Secretary
WARD H. WAIT .............. .......... B usiness Manager
EDWARD CHANDLER ...... .......... P roperty Manager
WALTER H, OLDEN, JR ......... ,..............,.......... S rage Manager
JOSEPH T. WEST, JR ........... ........................ L ighting Manager
Harold S. Atwood, jr.
Raymond K. Bryant
David W. Brewer
George Burnett, jr.
Edward Chandler
Stephen T. Ellen
William P. Ellis
William A. Grouse
Clement F. Merrill
Richard A. Merritt
Walter H. Olclen, jr.
Raymond S. Pearsall
Carl J. Raymond
W. Morrison Rider, jr.
Proctor Twichell
Ward H. Wait
joseph T. West, jr,
Stephen E. Whicher
One Hundred and Sixty-two
l
-i AMI-IERST COLLEGE
SOCIAL
Dance Committee
ERIC E. SUNDQUIST, '36 ................ Chairman of the Lord Jelf Prom
STUART A. MAHER, '37 ....,. .,....... C hairman of the Junior Prom
Gordon H. Ewen, '37 Andrew B. Simpson, '38
Horace C. Reider, '37 William C. Wlieeler, '39
The Dance Committee was first established in Amherst in 1933 in order to meet the
need for a stable system of holding college dances. Improvements in the system were
made last year by the Student Council in order to assure more complete success. This
system as it now stands provides for a committee consisting of one freshman, one sopho-
more, three juniors and one senior. This committee is chosen by the Student Council with
the recommendation of the class presidents. The three juniors on the committee compete
for the chairmanship of the junior and Lord jeff proms.
The annual Fall dance, the Lord Jeff Prom, was held December 7 in Pratt Gymnasium
with the pulse-quickening rhythm of Duke Ellington furnishing entertainment for the
185 couples present. Sundquist, chairman of the dance, was also responsible for obtaining
Ray Noble, brilliant arranger of popular melodies, for the junior Prom in May, 1935.
265 couples attended the event.
Although Smart Maher, chairman of the junior Prom this year, has not definitely
decided upon the orchestra for the dance, several of the best bands in the country have
been contacted.
tm .st
. ev
Standing: Wheeler, Maher, Simpson.
Seated: Reidet, Sundquist, Ewen.
One Hundred and Sixty-three
THE i 1937 E OLIO
Robert D. Fenn
President
Allen Abercrombie
Donald L. Bartlett, jr.
William S. Bowmer
Allan R. Buclcman, jr.
George B. Burnett, jr.
Parke W. Burrows
Philip H. Clarke
Horace C. Coleman, jr.
Paul N. Critchlow, jr.
William M. Croxton
Robert E. Giese
james P. B. Goodell
Charles P. Goss
Stanley M. Gower, jr.
Minot Grose
Randall Barton
David C. Bole, jr.
Charles E. Bradley, jr.
Robert G. Calder, jr.
Fairman C. Cowan .
George A. Craig
Buell Critchlow
William N. Dawson
Gordon H. Ewen
Hugh P. Fleming
Hans H. Frey
Henry C. Higginbottom
David W. Holmes
Duncan M. I-Iolthausen
Walter A. Hoyt, jr.
Henry S. Hughes
George A. jackson
Cotillion Club
ROBERT D. FENN ................. .............. P resident
DONALD N. SULLIVAN ......... ......... V ice-President
CHARLES P. GOSS .............................................. Treasurer
PERMANENT HONORARY MEMBERS
President and Mrs. Stanley King
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Allis
Mr. and Mrs. E. Dwight Salmon
Mr. and Mrs. George F. Whicher
COTILLON CLUB MEMBERSHIP
FROM THE CLASS OF 1936
Fritz O. Haas
Matthew A. Kelly
james R. Leech
Richard E. McCormick
Stephen E. Magill
Sanborn Partridge
Charles E. Phreaner, jr.
Samuel F. Potsubay, jr.
Ralph H. Sleicher
William D. Strohmeier
Donald N. Sullivan
Wright Tisdale
Clinton W. Tylee, jr.
Robert P. Walbridge
Niel A. Weathers
john C. Cushman, jr.
Wilbur N. Earl
Allen H. Ehrgoocl, jr.
William P. Ellis
Robert D. Fenn
Edward W. Maynard, jr.
Andrew B. Meldrum, jr.
Gilbert H. Mudge
Alan C. Neilson
Paul j. Newlon
jay A. Parr
Stephen E. Whicher
Russell E. Whitmyer
Benjamin Williams
Albert F. Wiiiston
Dana F. Woodman, jr.
FROM THE CLASS OF 1937
jean P. jones, jr.
Roger Keith, jr.
Douglas R. Kennedy
Thomas A. Kennedy, jr.
john G. Lamb
George S. Lambert
Gordon L. Lundwall
Robert C. j. McKinstry
Leonard C. Meeker
Richard A. Merritt
William M. Palmer, III
Keith P. Pattengill
jerome F. Peck, jr.
George I-I. Phreaner
Horace C. Reider
Wesby P. Richards
john P. Saul, III
Winheld F. Scott
Robert P. Snyder
Charles C. Stafford
john B. Stearns
Thomas K. Taylor
William j. Thompson, jr.
Eben D. Tisdale
William B. M. Tracy, jr.
Cornelius Vanderbreggen, jr.
Kenneth M. Walbridge
William A. Warner
William H. Webster, jr.
Matthew T. West
Charles S. Whitman, jr.
james P. Wilkerson, III
Edward D. Williams
One Hundred and Sixty-four
Horace W. Hewlett
President
Allen Abercrombie
Charles K. Arter, Jr.
Joseph W. Barr, jr.
Marcus G. Beebe
Lewis M. Black
Howard B. Bosworth
Theodore C. Boyden
Allen Brown
Raymond K. Bryant
George B. Burnett, Jr.
Edward L. Butler
Robert H. Carlson
Philip H. Clarke
Harold W. Cobb
Horace C. Coleman, jr.
Fronefield Crawford
William H. Creamer
Paul N. Critchlow, jr.
Guild Devere
David C. Bole, jr.
Charles E. Bradley, jr.
Robert T. Breed
Melbourne C. Browning,
Robert G. Calder, jr.
john S. Coey, II
Fairman C. Cowan
Buell Critchlow
Kenneth I. Deane
john A. Dietze
james C. Edgell
John O. Epple
Gordon H. Ewen
Samuel B. Feinberg
john E. Field, jr.
Hugh P. Fleming
Robert E. Garron
Robert P. Gregory
Henry C. Higginbottom
David W. Holmes
Duncan M. I-Iolthausen
One Hundred and Sixty-live
AMHERST IOLLEGE
Sphinx Club
HORACE W. HEWLETT ....... ................. P resident
CHARLES K. ARTER, In .......... ................ V ice-President
GORDON H. EWEN ............................ Secretary-Treasurer
HONORARY MEMBERS
President Stanley King
Dean C. Scott Porter
Prof. Lloyd P. jordan
FROM THE CLASS OF 1936
Lloyd P. Dodge
Wilbur N. Earl
Allen H. Ehrgood, jr.
William P. Ellis
Robert D. Fenn
Richard C. Forman
james P. B. Goodell
Edward N. Goodwin, Jr
Stanley M. Gower, jr.
Horace W. Hewlett
Charles E. Hulick, jr.
Vincent K. Keesey, jr.
Matthew A. Kelly
Walter B. Mahony, Ir.
Andrew B. Meldrum, Jr.
Gilbert H. Mudge
Paul Newlon
Anthony F. O'Donnell
Charles E. Phreaner, Jr.
Carl J. Raymond
Franklin L. Reed, Jr.
John M. Shields
Frederic B. Smead
William L. Snyder, jr.
Bernard F. Stall, jr.
Herman V. D. Stewart
Donald N. Sullivan
Eric E. Sundquist
Wright Tisdale
Roman L. Trembicki
Garrett R. Tucker, Jr.
Earl A. Turner
Niel A. Weathers, jr.
Edward I. Wersebe
Russell E. Whitmyer
Benjamin Williams
Albert F. Winston
FROM THE CLASS OF 1957
Henry S. Hughes
jean P. jones, jr.
Horace W. jordan
Roger Keith, jr.
Douglas R. Kennedy
Thomas A. Kennedy, jr.
John G. Lamb
George S. Lambert
Gordon L. Lundwall
john R. McDermott
Stuart A. Maher
Leonard C. Meeker
Richard A. Merritt
Jones W. Mersereau
Daniel C. Minnick
William M. Palmer, III
Keith P. Pattengill
Jerome F. Peck, Jr.
George H. Phreaner
James T. Ramey
Horace C. Reider
John P. Saul, III
Charles Schaulfler
James M. Selby
Alfred A. Snowball
Reuben W. Snyder
Robert P. Snyder
Charles C. Stafford
Thomas K. Taylor
Benjamin P. Terry
William Thompson, Jr
Eben D. Tisdale
George S. Trees
Lewis Wardell, jr.
William A. Warner
William H. Webster, Jr
Durbin H. Wells
Matthew T. West
James P. Wilkerson, III
Edward D. Williams
Robert H. Williams
Richard S. Zeisler
Phil . ,
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BOOK FIVE
PUBLICATIONS
Pm!! D0i'71Zjf0J'y
The importance of fraternities at Amherst
THE 3 1937 3 OLIO
The Amherst Student
FOUNDED IN 1868
,Amlgrrar Stuhvnt
PXEULTY i75fr2smXfJoPT1o1ifm
V OF' UNLIMITED CUT SYSTEM
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-.....:1......., ....:..-... r... .:... '-','-'3',g'-'-'-H'1H-'lh-
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Complete, unbiased news presentation and
considered editorial comment continue as the
policy of the Student . These are sound criteria
for every newspaper, and it is only by adapting
them to a campus environment, with a recogni-
tion of the peculiar opportunities which it offers,
that a college publication can distinguish itself.
an-alss -aaazs -F-iesfaa ai-'1'e??i:?ai'ff1i
5-1-F551-E'E, .f-.em-1' -1-f-asf-1-'13-'Eff-1 . . . . .
This rn mind, the editors have classified
both news and staff members' capabilities, so
.FEEL-Ea-,:,::Tg,.L.:f.3,5-A., ,F 'l E-5 that more competent reviews and news accounts
:-E-552L-g::,-::,:- '11-,E.-g.-i'i1-1:?,..,..... . . . . .
might reward the implied coordination, further,
in the expression of editorial opinion the Stu-
:: .L-:.-::-:':-':-'r:::z:ELi-Z-fi'-:T-'1:::-.:-.'E-' ., - - -
dent has addressed anlaudience which it knows
as intelligent, trained in criticism and alert to
retain its individualism and independence. Fi-
nally members of the faculty, recognized authori-
ties in their spheres of study, have been asked to
contribute articles on events especially relevant
::' n'::.-e.-:-...:-:.:'::.-.---:e.-:S-12-gil?-11-'I-1-'fg
iEi'+L'-- 'L1'-1f S:E5?-'1'i5x3 i ':':' 21:5-E:
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to their experience.
has made them still another year the subject of much of the discussion on the editorial
page. Attempting to encourage a mature approach to the problems which confront the
several societies, the Student has opposed hazing, proposed a logical, simple plan for
undergraduate government and scoured the fear that alumni advice on fraternity financial
problems would entail a necessary loss of freedom.
Also in constructive vein, the Student called attention to the periodically acute
congestion in Converse Library, and upon making known its plan for a freshman reading
room, the Administration credited the publication with initial responsibility for its
construction.
To supplement routine feature material short, illus-
trated biographies of faculty members have been innovated.
In alternate issues two columns have appeared, one devoted
to sports of the College and the nation, the other to book
reviews, poetry and satiric parodies.
On a broader horizon, the Student,' has treated sub-
jects beyond the cloister. Such a topic was that of the par-
ticipation of the United States team in the Olympics at
Berlin, one of the several which sought to lead under-
graduate interest to events of greater than local significance.
Horace W. Hewlett
Business Manager
One Hundred and Sixty-eight
AMHERST COLLEGE
The Amherst Student
THE PERSONNEL
G. T. BRISTOL, JR ......... .................,...... E diror-in-Chief
C. E. PHREANER, JR ..,..... ........ M anaging Editor
F. S. LANE, II ..,..........,... ........... S ports Eclrtor
W. B. MAHONY, JR ....... ..........I. N ews Editor
H. W. HEWLETT ....... .......... B usiness Manager
KIMBALL DAVIS ..... ....... M erchandising Editor
S. D. WALKER, JR ......... .... Advertising Manager
R. K. MASSEY ............. ......... C irculation Manager
G. T. HOWARD ......... .......... P horographic Editor
George T. Bristol, jr.
Editor-in-Chief
THE ASSISTANT EDITORS
J. W. Barr, jr. I-I. S. Hughes R. M. Howland
J. C. Cushman, Jr. ' L. C. Meeker T. F. Power, Jr.
R. H. Gardner I. F. Peck, jr. R. D. Sherer
S. Partridge M. Selby E. F. Taber, Jr.
A. W. Clarke, jr. C. Vanderbreggen, jr. J. L. Woodress, Jr
F. C. Cowan R. S. Zeisler
THE ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS
A. L. Beach W. M. johnson R. W. Riemer
D. A. Clarke W. W. Kelly G. M. Shay
I. L. Davis, Jr. C. F. Miller E. F. Sherman, Jr.
B. J. Glasgow E. H. Morse H. Wakelee
Third Row: Sherer, Howland, Wclodress, Howard.
Second Row: Taber, Power, Meeker, Vanclerbreggen, Zeisler. Cowan.
First Row: Peck, Lane, Barr, Bristol, Phreaner, Gardner, Mahony.
One Hundred and Sixty-nine
THE 1937 :-1 OLIO
THE i937 ULIG
Volume LXXX
Since its first appearance in 1855 as a four-
page pamphlet the Olio has been published
by the Junior Class. This, the eightieth volume,
is to be the last of the Junior Olios . Hereafter
the Olio will be a Senior publication, the
change coming as the result of a 291-61 vote of
the student body last Fall in favor of a Senior
Olio . At the time the vote was taken, work on
the present book had progressed too far to permit
its publication as a Senior volume.
In presenting the last of the junior Olios
the present board has broken with tradition on
two points. The first break was the opening of
the editorial competition to all members of the
Sophomore Class. Formerly eight men had been
elected to the competition by the class. The sec-
ond break saw the removal of junior write-ups
from the book. For several years the bromidic
character of these write-ups had detracted from
the general quality of the publication. A vote
of the junior Class sanctioned this change.
While retaining the general composition and arrangement of its immediate prede-
cessor, the H1937 Olio differs from it in many respects. The most noticeable change is that
of cover. The present book has a brown and gold imitation leather cover, whereas the cover
of the H1936 Olio was a purple cloth. A tint of brown has been introduced as a secondary
color, blending with the brown of the cover. Its main use is in the border where hair-line
rules have replaced the thicker border of last year. A four- ' 'T
page view section has been introduced near the beginning of
the book, while the page arrangement and type face have also
been changed. An innovation this year is the use of photo-
montage on the fiyleaf. It is hoped that this new method of
presenting informal camera studies will be conducive to the
presence of more such photography in future Olios .
The purpose of any college yearbook is to present in
a dignified, yet pleasing, style the history of the college
year, adding to this the flavor of college tradition and back-
ground. The board hopes that the H1937 Olio has fulfilled
this purpose.
Frank A. Peltier, Jr.
Business Manager
One Hundred and Seventy
ANHHERSTEEE
Gordon H. Ewen
Editor-in-Chief
COLLEGE
I The 1937 Olio Board
GORDON H. EWEN .,........ ..... E ditor in Chief
DANIEL C. MINNICK .....,... .....,.. M anagmg Editor
JOHN H. LANCASTER ........ ....... P hotographic Editor
FRANK A. PELTIER, JR ......, ....... B usiness Manager
EDWIN B. COLBURN .......... ......... A dvertising Manager
THE ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Robert F. Buehler
Thomas M. Davisi
Morris F. Fox, jr.
Frank S. Giese
Charles E. Hills
Richard S. Landry
Arthur E. Mace, jr.
William T. Rarhbun
David H. Wells
THE ASSISTANT MANAGERS
Alexander F. Imlay Charles D. Sager, Jr.
Richard W. Reuter john H. Williamson
Srancling: Buehler, Scott, Wells.
Seated: Lancaster, Peltier, Ewen, Colburn, Giese.
One Hundred and Seventy-one
THE 1937 CLIO - -I
Touchstone
E. W. NEWTON ........,. ,........ C hairman of the Board
D, C. MINNICK ,......... ................ F eature Editor
B. M. AUSTIN ......... ......,... B usiness Manager
A. F. IMLAY ,........ .,........ C irculation Manager
J. s. KOBLER ........ .......... ,................... A f t Editor
With the New Yorker as its nearest Godfather, Touchstone , the new College
magazine, combined humor, art and literary material in its first issue this Spring in an
endeavor by the board to have it replace the Lord jeff , former College humor magazine,
which was dropped last year. Although only two issues were put out this year, plans for
the future indicate that there will be at least five issues a year, depending upon whether
or not the College will aid the publication financially by alloting to it a portion of the
general Student Activities Tax. To date, the advertising has covered the cost of publishing
the first two issues so that the student body was able to receive them gratis.
The management of Touchstone is a new system which has been inaugurated for
the purpose of obtaining the highest degree of efficiency and coordination. The magazine
is controlled by an executive board of five men. This board edits the magazine as a unit,
each member having, however, a particular duty to perform.
Material for the 36-page edition is furnished by members of the executive board,
competitors and the snrdent bodies of Amherst, Smith and Mount Holyoke. A prize con-
test for the best material in each issue is sponsored by the board, separate prizes being
presented to the winners of each of the three colleges, with an additional second and third
prize for Amherst. The material may be either cartoon, story or special article, and is
judged entirely on the excellence of the material.
One Hundred and Seventy-two
AMHERST COLLEGE g
Amherst College Press
DUDLEY C, BOSTWICK .................... General News Correspondent
JAMES M, SELBY ..,.,...,,,.,. ........ G eneral News Correspondent
WILLIAM E. FAIRLEY ........ .................. S ports Correspondent
GEORGE T, HOWARD ......l ........ H ead of Photographic Staff
MR. WALTER A. DYER .........................................,.............. Director
The Amherst Press is the organization which supplies the newspapers of the country
with reports of Amherst College activities. In 1925 the need for an organized body to
handle this important function was seen, and the formation of the Press under the direction
of Professor David Morton was the result. Professor Morton later resigned the post, and
the Press was conducted under the general supervision of Mr. Frederic Allis, '93, Secretary
of the Alumni Council. In 1953 Mr. Allis and President King appointed the present
director, Mr. Walter A. Dyer, '00.
Under Mr. Dyer's direction undergraduate journalists with notebook and camera
constantly infest the campus, endeavoring ro supply the public with news of any phase of
college activities which might afford interest. The New York, Boston, and Springfield
papers as well as the United Press and the Associated Press receive regular releases of
general news and sports. In addition to this, an innovation of the past year is the use
of undergraduate volunteers from the large cities of the East and Mid-West to report to
their local newspapers the accomplishments of Amherst students from that vicinity.
The undergraduate correspondents receive considerable financial remuneration as
well as what amounts to a practical course in journalism. The competition for positions
on the board is open to sophomores only and begins at the opening of the second semester.
In june Mr. Dyer and the board members select three of the competitors to act as assistants
for one semester and to become automatically correspondents at the end of that period.
In addition, a photographic staff of four or five men is chosen for whom a fully equipped
dark-room has been provided in the basement of Walker Hall.
Standing: Davis, Howard.
Scared: Becker, Fairley, Mr. Dyer, Selby, Lane.
One Hundred and Seventy-three
x -1'
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BOOK SIX
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ATHLETICS
Dmfevzporzf Memorial
is
THE
.gl
Lloyd P jordan
Coach
1937 3 OLIO
Football, 1935
SUMMARY OF SEA
Amherst ........,.,, 6
Amherst .,... .... O
Amherst .,... .... 0
Amherst ............ 2 5
Amherst .,... ....,. 1 2
Amherst ............ 26
Amherst ....,,...... 1 5
Amherst ....,,...... 40
Amherst ............ O
Amherst ............ 1 20
LETTER MEN
Robert D. Fenn, Honorary Captain
john Bowditch, III.
Allyn S. Brown
Leo C. Bullinger
Parke W. Burrows
Philip H. Clarke
john S. Coey, 2nd
Lucian Colucci
Clyde F. Cristman
Hugh P. Fleming
Richard C. Forman
james P. Goodell
Thomas A. Kennedy,
John G. Lamb
Rae Malcolm
Charles W. Michell
SON
Colby ..,......
Colgate ...,...
St. Lawrence
Union ....... ..
Rochester
Wesleyan
Mass. State .
Swarthmore
Williams
Opponents .
Robert E. Newcomb, jr.
Anthony F. O'Donnell
Leo Pagnotta
Keith P. Partcngill
Willard W. Roberts
Frederick O. Schweizer
Winfield F. Scott
john M. Shields
Alfred A. Snowball
Elvin H. Wanzo
Durbin H. Wells
jr.
One Hundred and Seventy six
AMI-IERST 3 COLLEGE .
1 9 3 5 PERSONNEL
ROBERT D. FENN ......... ...,.................................. H onorary Captain
WRIGHT TISDALE ......... ..,........,............,......................... M anager
BENJAMIN P. TERRY .......... ....... A sst. Manager
LLOYD JORDAN .......................... ................. C oach
LEE FRANK .........................,....,.....,... ..,.,.,. L ine Coach
ELLSWORTH E. RICHARDSON .,....... ......... E nd Coach
FREDERICK J. HOLTER .....................,...,..I..........,.................. Trainer
v H THE SEASON
The 1935 football season got under way when a squad of forty men, including
sixteen lettetmen, reported on the opening day of practice. The loss by graduation of
Debevoise, English, Moses, Captain Kehoe, Huey, Lawrence, and Thomas left several
positions open. However, the veterans, together with several promising sophomores, soon
filled the gaps. After considerable experimenting, Coach Jordan found some effective
backfield combinations, while Lee Frank, Sabrina line coach, stressing speed and aggressive-
ness, welded a strong forward wall. Coach jordan's worry about the power of his reserve
material was dissipated when the men in question turned in good performances in the
early games. Adverse weather conditions kept the jeffs from showing their real strength
in the first game, but from the Colgate game on they showed considerable power on
both offense and defense.
In the opening game a determined Amherst eleven and a stubborn Colby mule slid
around in the mud for sixty minutes and fmished up with six points each. Kicking played
an important part in the contest, and the teams were evenly matched in this respect. In
the second quarter a Colby fumble and penalty, a fifteen yard run by Wanzo, and short
gains by Snowball and Scott gave the Purple and White their first tally of the year. Colby,
led by Yadwinski, retaliated with a touchdown late in the second period.
The Jeffs came out on the short end of the unusual three-half game against Colgate
and St. Lawrence. In the first encounter the powerful Red Raiders crushed the Larries
51-0, but in the second half the Sabrina eleven offered Andy Kerr's team more resist-
ance. In this game the first real indications of the Jeffs' defensive strength were seen and,
despite injuries, they held Colgate to two touchdowns. The last half saw the Sabrinas
succumb to the fresher Sr. Lawrence team by 13-0. Two of the Larry backs, who had
not played against Colgate, reeled off sixty-yard touchdown runs.
. i r. ' s LL! a.L.'3i..'-'HQ .-
One Hundred and Seventy-seven
TI-IE - 1937 ULIO
At Schenectady Amherst's smooth running attack overpow-
ered a weak Union team, and Sabrina triumphed 25-O. Crist-
man, sophomore back, counted for two tallies on line bucks, and
Scott's sixty-five yard return of a punt added another. Fleming
was added to the already large hospital list when he was injured
on the opening kick-off. A Garnet punt blocked by Goodell gave
Amherst a safety.
Staving off enemy touchdowns in the first and second quar-
ters, the jeffmen put on a third period rally to beat Rochester
12-O. Roberts made both scores, one on an eight-yard off-tackle
smash and the other a twenty-yard run on the end of a forward-
lateral. Pagnotta and Coey turned in excellent performances,
while Nordburg and Babcock starred for the Yellowjackets.
The Purple and White crushed the tiring Wesleyan forces
in the second half of their first Little Three game and chalked up
a 26-0 victory. The Sabrinas were given a scare when, on the
second. play of the game, Horne raced around end and tossed a
l A lateral to Harris, who was finally stopped on Aml1erst's thirty-
yard line. The hard fought first half ended with the score knotted
Honorary Captain at 0-O. Led by Wanzo, who scored twice, the jeffs put on the
pressure in the second half and tallied four times. The linemen's fast, aggressive play
deserved praise.
Robert D. Fenn
The Sabrinas next defeated a strong State eleven, thus avenging the 19-6 upset of
the previous fall and recapturing the town championship. Despite slippery ground
Wanzo made two excellent runs, the first for six yards and a score, and the second on
the end of a forward-lateral for twenty-five yards. State took to the air and forward passed
the wet pigskin twenty-five times but completed only six. Malcolm, Colucci, Burrows,
Fenn, and Newcomb were oustanding on defense.
Stretching its string of consecutive victories to five, Amherst ran roughshod over the
weak Swarthmore eleven 40-6. In the first period Scott returned an enemy punt fifty
i,1..,l '. i i. - ,'f'fv . vi 1 ' 1 54 X
l
One Hundred and Seventy-eight
iAM1-IERST COLLEGE i
yards to put the ball on the five-yard line. Two more plays pro-
duced the hrst score of the contest. The Quakers' lone score came
late in the first quarter as the result of two passes and several
plunges by Osbourn. From then on the Jeff machine gathered
momentum. Passes and clever open field running netted five more
touchdowns. Bullinger, Roberts, Cristman, Coey, and Scott fig-
ured in the scoring spree, while Hoyt and Newcomb were out-
standing in the line. The third team played during most of the
second half and continued the rout.
Eleven thousand spectators jammed Weston Field at Wil-
liamstown to witness the traditional Amherst-Williams battle. The
powerful Eph eleven kept the Purple and White on the defensive
during most of the contest, while, under Eddie Stanley's leader-
ship, they tallied twice. The 13-0 score is a good indication of
the power of the respective teams. Williams' hard charging line
and fast, heavy backfield was too much for the lighter Amherst
eleven. Precision, deception, and speed were the keynotes of the
Eph offense. Much credit is due to the Sabrinas for their strong
defensive play. Snowball and Kennedy were particularly out-
standing in this respect. Wanzo led the Amherst offense, but Manager
he was only able to get away twice and then just for short gains.
Wright Tisdale
The season was, all considered, fairly successful, and all of the members of the
squad are to be commended for their work. Fenn, Burrows, Malcolm, Goodell, Clarke,
Bowditch, Forman, and Shields finished their college football careers in fine style. After
the season had ended, Bob Fenn, jen' tackle, was elected honorary captain, while Tom
Kennedy was chosen to lead the 1936 eleven.
I 24 I I K' n.4,A.,.,,1. A 1
One Hundred and Seventy-nine
- THE 3 1937 E OLIO
Soccer, l935
The outcome of the 1935 soccer season was highly
successful, considering the unusual rigor of the schedule.
Amherst retained the Little Three championship and lost
two games to large colleges, one to Harvard and one to
Dartmouth, tying with the latter for fourth place in the
New England Intercollegiate League.
A capable Tufts aggregation finally succumbed to the
Purple and White in the third period of a 3-O game. Neil-
son accounted for the first score in the first period, while
Lawton, sub forward, made two successive goals in the third
period.
The game with Dartmouth, an exciting one, found the
Ieffs holding the upper hand for the hrst twenty minutes
of play. Before the end of the quarter West netted a long
penalty kick for the first score. Dartmouth's strength was
Allison W- Mfffsh felt in the second half, and the final score was 3-1 in her
favor.
In what was the fifteenth in the series of games with Wesleyan, Amherst, through
good play, defeated her rival 2-1, after maintaining an advantage gained in the first
period, when Schnepel booted a long scoring shot from outside the penalty area.
Coach
The Jeffs met State in a literal battle, the game being marked more by Herceness of
play than by finesse. The result was a scoreless tie, Amherst's goalie, Weller, making a
spectacular stop of an almost certain State score in the third period.
By playing the best ball of its season to that date, Amherst scored Hrst against a
powerful Harvard squad, Schnepel rallying on a corner shot in the middle of the first
period. Harvard retaliated in the third period, strongly asserting itself with two scores.
Captain Dorman of Harvard made the final tally in the last three minutes of play, making
the final score 5-1.
A close, fast game with the formidable Williams team l
was scoreless until the last period, when Neilson kicked the
winning goal. The superiority of Amherst's strong reserves
gave her the margin that meant victory.
This year nineteen men and Manager Meldrum re-
ceived letters. If there were to be any choice of outstanding
players made, it should include Captain Winston and May-
nard at fullback, Abercrombie and Captain-elect West,
steady and effective at the halfback positions, also, of the
forwards, Neilson, at center, Schnepel, at inside right, and
Mahony, at outside right. Eight Seniors played their last
game: Captain Winston, Abercrombie, Mahony, Maynard,
Neilson, Grose, Pfeil, and Weller, of whom the first hve
have gone through three seasons together as regulars. Dur-
ing this period, no games were lost to a small college and
the Little Three Championship was won three times.
Andrew B. Meldrum, jr.
Manager
One Hundred and Eighty
A AMHERST COLLEGE
LETTERMEN
Albert F. Winston, Captain, Fullback
Allen Abercrombie, Halfback
Minot Grose, Halfback
Robert Hyatt, Halfback
Henry C. Higginbottom, Forward
john Jeppson, Forward
Harry F. Jones, jr., Fullback
Daniel C. Lawton, Forward
James P. MacCain, Forward
Walter B. Mahony, Jr., Forward
Alan C. Neilson, Forward
George D. Olds, III, Forward
Walter G. Pfeil, Jr., Forward
james S. Schnepel, Forward
Hudson A. Smith, Forward
Kenneth M. Walbridge, Forward
Frederic P. Weller, Goal
M. Tilghman West, Halfback
Albert F. Winston
SUMMARY OF THE SEASON
Captain
Amherst ..... .,.....,........ 3 Tufts ,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,.
Amherst ..... ...,. 1 Dartmouth ...........
Aml'lCfSf ..... ..... 2 Wesleyan ,...............
Amherst ..... ,.... 0 Massachusetts Stare
Aml16rSt ..... ..... 2 Harvard ...................
Amherst .................. ..... 1 Williams ....,,
PERSONNEL
ALBERT F. WINSTON ........... .......................,.,.. C aptarn
ANDREW B. MELDRUM ......,... Manager
ALLISON W. MARSH ............ Coach
x
Q L in 4
One Hundred and Eighty-one
Lloyd P. jordan
Coach
THE
1937 . OLIO
Basketball, 1936
LETTERMEN
E. A. Turner, Captain,
J. S. Coey, II, Center
D. W. Holmes, Guard
H. S. Keesey, Forward
R. Malcolm, Center
B. R. Meyers, Forward
C. W. Michell, Guard
J. T. Ramey, Forward
H. C. Reider, Guard
F. O. Schweizer, Guard
R. K. Warner, Forward
SUMMARY OF THE SEASON
Amherst ....................
Amherst .........
Amherst ......
Amherst ..........
Amherst ......
Amhersc ......
Amherst ....,.....
Amherst ..........
Amherst ..........
Amherst ..........
Amherst ..........
Amherst ..........
Amherst .......... ....... 4
Forward
55
50
44
30
30
40
47
37
38
36
35
36
78
Middlebury ....,.. ..... 3 3
Clark ............. ..... 2 6
Mass. State ....... .... 2 4
Springfield 56
Army ................, ..,. 3 5
Coast Guard .,... .... 1 5
Mass. State ....... .,.. 3 1
Williams ....... .... 5 l,
Brown ........ .... 3 4
Wesleyan ....... .... 2 5
Williams ....... ..,, 2 1
Wesleyan ...,... .... 5 0
Opponents ..,.. .,...... 3 41
C. Edgar Phreaner, jr.
Manager
One Hundred and Eighty-two
AMHERST COLLEGE
1936 PERSONNEL
EARL A. TURNER ................,..., .............. ........ C a pt-Hin
C, EDGAR PHREANER, Jn ,..,., A,..,.,.........A.A. M anager
DUNCAN M. HOLTHAUSENW... ....... Assistant Manager
WESBY P, RICHARDS ,.,.,......, ....,., A ssistant Manager
LLOYD P. JORDAN .................. - .......,.. ........................ C oach
THE SEASON
The 1936 basketball team has probably compiled a more
impressive record than any varsity quintet in the history of
Amherst College. For the first time since 1927 it has gained
undisputed possession of the Little Three championship. The
team's record of ten victories during the season is a greater num-
ber of wins than any Jeff five 'has ever scored, and it boasts of
being the first team that has ever beaten both Wesleyan and
Williams twice in the same season.
After experimenting in the early practice games with differ- Earl A- Tuma,
ent combinations of the nineteen players who reported, Coach Captain
Jordan finally welded a winning quintet which met defeat only twice in its twelve-game
schedule. This first-string combination was headed by Captain Earl Turner, whose game
rnidseason comeback from injuries brought the squad out of a two-game slump and led
them to seven consecutive victories. jack Coey, lanky jeff center, was the key man in the
Sabrina attack and rolled up the startling total of 107 points to lead the scoringg while
Dave Holmes, husky and dependable guard, was the mainstay of the Amherst defense.
Sharing the forward position with Turner was jim Ramey, whose accurate scoring shots
Standing: Phreaner, Manager: Michell, Fusco, Assistant Coachg Sherwood, Malcolm, Miller, jordan,
Coachg Scott, Vanclerbreggen, Keesey.
Seated: Reider, Ramey, Holmes, Turner, Captain, Coey, Schweizer, Meyers.
One Hundred and Eighty-three
THE 1937 OLIO
from under the basket many times rescued the jeffs from an unfavorable score. The two
sophomores who saw regular service were Fred Schweizer, at left guard, and Benny Meyers,
who alternated with Turner at left forward.
Although Amhersr's sparkling Captain Earl Turner was forced out of the lineup in
the opening game with a serious hand infection, the Sabrina quintet crushed a highly
touted Middlebury five, 55-35. Lanky Jack Coey, acting captain for the jeffs, was high-
scorer of the evening, dropping in four field goals and three charity tosses.
Next among the Sabrina victims was Clark University who fared no better than
Middlebury and succumbed to the 'Ieffs' offensive finesse, 50-26. An early Amherst lead
allowed every player on the squad except the injured Turner to rake part in chalking up
the victory.
Gaining momentum, the basketball team swept on to whitewash Massachusetts State,
44-24, before a howling crowd of 3,000 partisan spectators who jammed Pratt Cage to
witness Amherst take the first game of the town championship. Again the home team
piled up an early advantage, and the last half saw almost all of the Amherst reserves in
action.
But at this point the team sank into a temporary lethargic slump and dropped its
next two games to Springfield and Army. In the first of these engagements with Spring-
field, Amherst's attack was checkmated by a close Maroon defense for more than three-
fourths of the game, and despite a desperate last minute rally, the jeffs fell before their
opponents, 36-30. Only Benny Meyers seemed able to shake himself loose from his
guard, as he led the Amherst scoring with six field goals. Army offered equally as stubborn
a resistance to the jeff offense in the fifth game of the season and eked out a slim 35-30
victory in a heart-breaking overtime period.
Witli Captain Earl Turner back in the lineup after his injury, the Sabrina quintet
regained its winning stride at the beginning of the second semester and swamped Coast
CHEERLEADERS, 1956
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One Hundred and Eighty-four
AMHERST -ECOLLEGE
Guard, 40-15. Dave Holmes,' playing his usual cool, steady game, was high scorer of
the evening with ten points to his credit.
In the return game of the town series, Amherst again demonstrated definite superiority
over its local rivals by crushing Massachusetts State, 47W-51. The Jeffs jumped into an
early lead and were never threatened despite the efforts of a game State team which fought
until the final gun to tie the score.
In a close, defensive game with Williams the Amherst five managed to stave off a
belated Eph rally and finally defeated its traditional rival, 57-31, to gain the first step
in its drive toward the Little Three championship. A sudden change from a zone to a
man-to-man defense by the Ephs with seven minutes to play caught the Jeffs off balance
and nearly sent the home team down to defeat.
The fourth consecutive victory and seventh win of the season was chalked up at the
expense of the Brown courtmen, 38-34, in a slow and erratic game in Pratt Cage. Jim
Ramey starred on the offense for Amherst, several times making a fast break for the
basket to drop in an easy step shot.
In their next encounter the Sabrina quintet snapped the Wesleyan jinx which had
upset every invading jeff five since 1919 and impressively defeated the Cardinals, 36-25.
Timely baskets by jack Coey and Dave Holmes kept Amherst well in the lead during the
entire second half whenever the Wesmen threatened to rally.
The Little Three championship definitely became Amherst's possession in the return
game with Williams at Williamstown, as the Sabrina quintet overpowered the Purple
five, 55-21. Benny Meyers found his shooting eye in this encounter to lead the Amherst
scoring with eight points.
The climax to the jeffs' championship season came in the final game when they
dramatically quelled a late Wesleyan rally and downed the fighting Cardinal team, 56-50.
Captain-elect jack Coey, southpaw jeff pivot man, was unquestionably the outstanding
player on the floor, and his sixteen points were vital in keeping Amherst's Little Three
slate clean.
One Hundred and Eighty-five
THE i 1937 E OLIO
Baseball, l935
Alfred G. Wheeler
Coach
1 935 PERSONNEL
LETTERMEN
Joseph P. Boyle, Catcher
joseph A. Chapman, Left Field
Terence A. Cordner, Left Field
john O. Epple, Pitcher
George F. Fuseo, Second Base
William F. I-Iomiller, I
I, Third Base
Thomas A. Kennedy, jr., First Base
jones W. Mersereau, Shortstop
Willianu M. Palmer, Pitcher
Earl A. Turner, III, Center Field
Irving Waltman, Shortstop
M. Tilghman West, Th
ird Base
Russell E. Whitmyer, Right Field
GEORGE F. FUSCO ....,.. ....... C apmin
REED E. BARTLETT .......
ALFRED G. WHEELER ...,....
SUMMARY OF THE SEASON
Amherst ....... .................... 3 Clark .............
Amherst ....... 8 Army .....
Amherst ....... 4 M. S. C .......
Amherst ....... 8 Bowdoin ....
Amherst ....... 6 Wesleyan
Amherst ....... 5 Colgate
Amherst ....... 2 Union ...........
Amhers: ....... O Springfield
Amhers: ....... 2 Conn. State ....
Amherst ....... 2 Williams .,..
Amherst ....... 4 Wesleyan
Amherst ....... 9 Wesleyan
Amherst ....... ...... 1 5 Williams .......
Amherst ....... ...... 1 0 M. S. C ...........,..
Amherst ....... 2 Williams .......................
Amherst .......
7
University of Virginia ......
M
imager
.....,...COHCl1
Reed Bartlett
Manager
One Hundred :md Eighty six
A I-IERST COLLEGE
THE SEASON -
The Amherst baseball team of 1935 had a mediocre season
but showed signs of marked ability in winning from such powerful
teams as Army and the highly-praised University of Virginia nine.
The team finished the season with seven wins and eight losses.
The victories were over Army, Connecticut State, Massachusetts
State QQ, Williams, and the University of Virginia. The two
victories over Massachusetts State, one of them a victory at their
commencement game were unusual, but in so far as Little Three
honors went, the season was not very gratifying.
Captain Fusco played a steady game at second base all
season. The rest of the infield was made up of Sophomores, who,
through their inexperience, were one of the weak points of the
team. The aggregation as a whole was weak in the hitting depart-
ment. Turner, with a .520 average, led the hitters, followed
by Epple and Chapman, both .500 hitters. Epple, a Sopho-
more, was the star of the team, being a leading batsman and
pitching all the victories but one. His battery mate, Boyle,
next year's captain, did excellent work in helping steady the
team's pitchers who were all untried Sophomores.
The hrst game of the season with Clark University of
Worcester started with President King throwing the first ball
to Dean Porter and ended with the inexperienced Amherst
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George F. Fusco
Captain
team on the short end of a 4-3 score. Epple, with thirteen strikeouts, showed his worth
as a hurlet. The game was close all the way, being decided in the ninth when Amherst
allowed Clark to score two runs and then failed to bring home any of the three men left
on base in the last half of the ninth.
The highlight of the jeff team's victories was the 8-7 win over a strong Army team
at West Point, accomplished by overcoming a seven run lead. Chapman's home run in
the sixth frame with Waltman and Fusco on base started the Sabrina scoring. Turner
Second Row: Earl, Assistant Managerg Wheeler, Coachg DeBevoise, Epple, Holmes, Waltman, Pag-
notta, Palmer, Bartlett, Manager.
First Row:-Tisdale, Metsereau, Bole, Chapman, Fusco, Horniller, Turner, Boyle, West.
One Hundred and Eighty-seven
. THE - 1937 OLIO
led the Jefifs at bath with two out of four, while Caughey
paced the Army with a triple and two singles. The Sophomores
were still very erratic in this game, though Epple settled down
after the first three hectic innings to quell the Army bats.
The second victory of the season saw Amherst nose our Mass.
State by a 4-3 score on Pratt Field. Epple pitched a brilliant
four-hit game, while Tikofski, State twirler, allowed only six.
Fusco played a steady game afield, figuring in the only double play.
Turner was the batting hero, driving in all the runs which in turn,
were all scored by Epple and Boyle.
Amherst, playing at home, continued its winning ways by
trouncing Bowdoin 8-4. Palmer pitched seven innings and
allowed only one run. Fusco was the defensive star, while Epple,
playing in the outfield, and Whitiliyer did well at bat.
In the first of the Little Three struggles the Jeff nine, playing
at Middletown, managed to tie a veteran Wesleyan aggregation
by a belated rally. Darkness in the eleventh found the score still
six to six. Epple was the star defensively, keeping the Wesleyan
y hits scattered, while Chapman with a homer and two singles was
the Jeff leading srickman.
One of the most extended and disastrous week-ends ever
undertaken by a jeff baseball team, Amherst lost two games to far
superior teams. Colgate crushed Amherst with their powerful hitting at Hamilton, New
York, netting a 27-5 score. When Epple was knocked out of the box, the jeff team was
without a dependable hurler. Kennedy, Sophomore first baseman, was our with an injured
knee, and the Sophomores came up with costly errors at crucial times in both games.
Union continued the slaughter at Schenectady by pounding the Amherst pitchers for a
fifteen to two win. Boyle was the only one who hit at all up to form in these games.
The third Sabrina defeat came when Springfield shut our the
home team 6-0, with Palmer the losing pitcher. Elliot of Spring-
field in a masterful exhibition of hurling allowed only three hits.
Fusco made two of these three hits to excel at bat. The team played
well in losing to one of the strongest teams in the East.
Wilbur N. Earl
Asst. Manager
The Purple nine finally snapped its losing streak by taking
Conn. State 2-1 on Prom week-end. Kennedy and Whitmyer were
the batting stars. With the count tied in the ninth, Whitiiiyer
smashed a line drive to right center to score Captain Fusco with the
winning run. Boyle's great arm and Chapman's fielding ability
were evidenced in this game.
The first contest with Williams saw the Ephmen take Amherst
into camp with a 4-2 victory on Pratt Field. Six errors aheld and
the meager six hits allowed by the opposing twirler, Sheehan,
spelled defeat for the Purple nine, though the game wasn't de-
cided until the ninth inning.
Wesleyan, playing at Amherst, took advantage of the jeff
errors to win a 12-4 victory. Captain Fusco was the star afield,
while Epple, playing in the outfield, drove in three of Amherst's
four runs. A lack of punch was obvious in this game, ren players
being left stranded on the bases. Joseph P' Boyle
Captain-lilect
Wesleyan won the next game 10-9, a play-off of the former tie game. Captain
Edgar's catch of Whirmyer's drive insured victory for Wesleyaii. Amherst netted Eve
runs in this ninth inning rally. The game was marred by the fact that seven errors were
committed by each team.
One Hundred and Eighty-eiehr
MHERST iCOLLEGE
On Decoration Day the Purple nine decisively defeated the Williams team at Wil-
liamstown 15-7. Epple pitched well and was ably assisted by the batting of Chapman
and Cordner, both connecting for homers.
Ar Mass. State, the Sabrina tossers, led by Boyle, knocked the opposing hurler out
of the box and won 10--2. Epple fanned six and only allowed five hits, all singles. Boyle
drove in four runs with a triple and two singles. This marked the Hrst time that Amherst
has won the Commencement game at Mass. State.
With a game on the following day with the University of Virginia, Coach Wheeler
decided to save Epple and bank on the general ability of the home team. Unfortunately,
Stevens of Williams pitched a four-hir game and Amherst never became a threat, losing
by the score of 6-2.
The last game of the season with the University of Virginia saw Amherst in brilliant
form for the Commencement game. The University of Virginia had defeated Yale, Navy,
and Brown on its Eastern tour, and was a highly feared aggregation. The jeifs, however,
inspired by the large gathering of Alumni, took their opponents into camp by a 7-3
score. Chapman, Epple, and Boyle made three perfect bunts in a row for a score, showing
the heads-up type of ball played. Epple, the star Sophomore moundsman, finished a great
year with his sixth victory.
At the close of the season joseph P. Boyle, veteran catcher, was elected to captain
the team in the 1936 season.
1956 PERSONNEL
JOSEPH P. BOYLE ......... ....... C aptain
WILBUR N. EARL ........... ......... M anager
ALFRED G. WHEELER ....... ....... C oach
One Hundred and Eighty-nine
THE 1937 OLIO
ROBERT P.
GEORGE B. BURNETT, JR
Track, 1935
1935 PERSONNEL
JOHN MINNICK .......,.......
RICHARD S. HAWKEY .....
HERMAN V. STEWART ....
ANDERSON ........
...............Co-Captain of Track
.......Co-Captain of Track
.......Captain of Relay
....................Manager
. .....,. ....... A ssistant Manager
GARRETT R. TUCKER, JR ........ ........ A ssistant Manager
ALBERT E. LUMLEY ...........
Albert E. Lumley
Coach
SUMMARY OF THE SEASON
INDOOR SEASON:
Amherst .,..,......... 54 Holy Cross
Amherst .............. 66 Springfield
OUTDOOR SEASON!
Amherst .............. 72 Haverford ..........
Swarthmore
Amherst .,....,..,.... 86 5X6 Wesleyan
Amherst .....,.....,.. 69 1 f 6 Bowdoin ............
Amherst ...... ........ 8 6 1X3 Williams ............
LETTERMEN
Herman K. Beach, Jr ............................ ......... 4 40, 880
Ronald S. Beckett .......... ......... 8 80, Relay
John M. Burrows ........... ....,..................... H ammer
Parke W. Burrows .,....... .....,.....,............ S hot, Discus
Arthur R. English .......
John O. Hall ...............
-8 l P, '
Richard S. Hawkey ................ Hammer, Javelin, Discus, Shot
High Jump, Shot
Hr h um Pole Vault
Richard King .................................................... 50, 100, 220
john Minnick ........................ 440, 880, Mile, 2 Mile, Relay
Frederick F. Moon, jr ............................................... Hurdles
Keith P. Pattengill .............................................. Broad Jump
Stanley Paymer .......................................... Broad jump, 100
Winfield F. Scott ............ Hurdles, Broad jump, High jump
Frederic B. Smead ...................................................... Hurdles
Robert P. Snyder .....,.... ,....... 1 00, 220, 440, Relay
Herman V. Stewart ...... ........ 2 20, 440, 880, Relay
John A. Swainbank
................................. Mile
Proctor C. Twichell ........ .......................... 2 Mile
Harry H. Walsh, jr .......
Philip H. Ward ..........
.........POle Vault
.......sso, Mile
Coach
32
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65 5X6
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Robert P. Anderson
Manager
One Hundred and Ninety
AMHERST COLLEGE
THE SEASON
Undefeated for the third consecutive outdoor season, Am-
hetst's track team stretched its unbroken string of victories to
twelve in 1935 and concluded its schedule with the Little Three
Crown once again in its possession. The Sabrina team gave some
indication of its 1955 potency when it opened the season at the
University Club Invitational Meet in Boston by tying Rhode Island
State for the indoor track championship of the smaller New
England colleges. Coach Lumley's squad coasted through the
rest of its schedule, chalking up six successive victories with little
difficulty. Only against Bowdoin's powerful Polar Bears did the
jelfs meet any genuine match that tested their full strength. In
this meet the one measure that rescued Amherst from certain
defeat was Coach Lumley's eleventh hour strategy in entering
Bub Stewart, crack middle-distance man, in three running events,
all of which the competent captain-elect won handily.
The strength of Amherst's track team, which enabled it to
overpower each opponent in turn, hinged upon a well-balanced
aggregation of individual stars: Bob Snyder in the dashes, Fritz
Smead in the hurdles, Bub Stewart in the middle-distances, Parke
Burrows and Dick Hawkey in the field events. These five out- Gem-ge B, Burnett, Jr
standing performers were well supported by other track men of Asst. Manager
nearly equal ability. Such a combination of strength in particular events and balance in all
was a large factor in the success of the 1935 track squad.
Opening the winter track season at the Millrose Games in New York City, the
Amherst relay team of Snyder, McDermott, Minnick, and Stewart as anchor man, captured
the mile relay title in the college class for its seventh consecutive victory. With Beckett
replacing McDermott, the relay quartet swept on to outclass all colleges entered in the
B. A. A. meet at the Boston Gardens. Paired to race for time against Harvard, a Class
A entrant, the Jeffs outran the Crimson speedsters, their time of 3:29.6 being better than
any other relay team from the smaller New England colleges.
One Hundred and Ninery'one
.. THE 3 1937 E OLIO
The winter indoor track team was equally as successful. At
this same University Club meet the Lumleymen gained a share
in the indoor track championship of the New England colleges
by tying Rhode Island State for first place. Kings first in the
50-yard dash, Smead's victory in the 45-yard hurdles, and Stew-
art's triumph in the half mile, together with Amherst's capture
of the mile relay, were the high points of the jeff win. In fact,
a group of sports writers thought so much of Bub Stewart that
they voted him the second most outstanding performer on the
Held.
In the first of Amherst's indoor dual meets held in Pratt
Cage the Jeffs broke the jinx of never having conquered Holy
Cross by upsetting the slightly favored visitors, 54-32. King,
Smead, Snyder, and Stewart shared the position of leading scorer,
each garnering eight points. Then, to conclude its indoor season,
Amherst crushed a powerful track squad from Springfield, 66-51.
Despite the fact that Stewie Parks, Springlield's one man track
team, entered four events and won them all, the Sabrinas were
I able to conquer the visitors because of their superiority in the
hurdles and the longer running events. Fritz Smead and Frank
Moon smashed the Cage records in the high and low hurdles,
while victories by Stewart, Beckett, Swainbank and Twichell
completed the rout of Springfield in every running event from the 440 to the 2-mile.
Richard S. Hawkey
Co-Captain
Inaugurating its outdoor season with a triangular meet against Swarthmore and
Haverford at the latter's track oval in Haverford, Pennsylvania, the Purple track team
swept first place in eight out of fourteen events to amass a total of 72 points which over-
whelmed Haverford's 46 1 X 6 and Swarthmore's 35 5 f 6. Perfect mid-season weather made
conditions ideal for the Jeffs to play havoc with the existing Amherst College metric
records: Win Scott in the 110-meter high hurdles, Bob Snyder in the 100-meter dash,
Bub Stewart in the 200-meter dash and then again in the 400 meters, Phil Ward in the
1,500-meter run.
At the Penn Relays in Philadelphia Amherst's fast relay quar- an-'vw
tet of Snyder, Beckett, Minnick, and Stewart, running with light-
ning speed, captured the national college mile relay champion-
ship and broke the tape in 3:25.0 to eclipse the Amherst College
record in this event. In the race for the Class B title, however,
the Jeff team placed third behind Pittsburgh and Colgate. The
only Sabrina track entry placed in this meet when John Burrows'
toss of 147 feet 11 1X8 inches won third place in the champion-
ship hammer throw.
Amherst's first Little Three victory was registered at Middle-
town where the Purple track team reached its scoring peak in
whitewashing a Cardinal outfit, 86 5 X6 to 48 1f'6. Led by Parke
Burrows, who won both the discus and shotput, the jeffs seized
all but four firsts, including clean sweeps in the quarter and half
miles. Win Scott and Dick Hawkey were runner-ups to Burrows
as leading scorer, each accounting for eight points. Scott took
lirst in the high hurdles and second in the lows, while Hawkey
duplicated his performance with a victory in the javelin and a
second in the discus.
john Minnick
Co-Captain
One Hundred and Ninety-two
AMHERST i COLLEGE
f Bub Stewart, Sabrina's sensational middle-distance runner,
practically won the closely-matched track meet with Bowdoin
single-handed and enabled the jeffs to nose out the stubborn
Polar Bears by the narrow margin of 69 1X6 to 65 SX6. His victory
in the last race of the day, the 880, provided the margin for Am-
herst's outstanding meet of the year. In this meet the Jeffs check-
mated the reputedly strongest team in New England and 1934
New England intercollegiate title holder. Besides winning the
deciding half-mile in the exceptionally fast time of 2 :00.2, Stewart
also captured the 220 and 440. Parke Burrows, star jeff weight
man, hurled out the discus 128 feet 8 5X4 inches to win that event
and chalk up a new record for Pratt Field.
For the third consecutive year Coach Lumley's track men
retained the Little Three title in the final meet of the season when
they set back an invading Williams squad with the most convinc-
ing defeat recorded in the long history of Amherst-Williams
rivalry. Sweeping four events and placing in every contest, the
jeff team amassed a total of 86 1X3 points to Williams' 48 ZX5.
l Bob Snyder was the individual star on the track, winning the 100,
440 and placing third in the 220.
Captain-Elect
Herman V. D. Stewart
1936 PERSONNEL
HERMAN V. STEWART .......................................... Captain of Track
ROBERT P. SNYDER .................. ......... C aptain of Relay
GEORGE B. BURNETT, JR ......... ........... M anager of Track
GARRETT R. TUCKER, JR ......... ............... M anager of Relay
K. IAN DEANE ........................ ....... 1 Asst. Manager of Track
LEONARD C. MEEKER ....... ........ A sst. Manager of Track
ALBERT E. LUMLEY ................................................................ Coach
RELAY TEAM, 1936
Lumley, Coach, Beach, jeppson, Gowing, Snyder.
One Hundred and Ninety-three
l THE 1937 ULIO -
Cross Country, l935
RONALD S. BECKETT ......... ...... .,..,.... C a ptain
PROCTOR C. TWICHELL ........ ........ M anager
ALBERT E. LUMLEY ...v........................,......,............................ Coach
The Amherst harriers of 1935 were hampered by a decided lack of balance, winning
only one meet, with Vermont, and finishing second to Williarns in the Little Three Con-
test. Gowing, the sophomore star runner, showed remarkable ability by remaining
undefeated until the final Little Three Meet in which he took a close second. Twichell,
Stewart, and Captain Beckett were all dependable runners.
The first test of the season saw the Amherst cross country team end up in a 29-29
tie with Coast Guard Academy at New London. Gowing won the race, followed by
Stewart and Twichell in second and fourth place respectively, all breaking the course
record. At Tufts Amherst lost a close meet by a 26-29 margin, though Gowing took
Hrst place. The high spot of the season came when the Lumley-coached Sabrinas defeated
Vermont 26-29 on Amherst's new four mile course. Gowing and Twichell finished in
a tie for first with Stewart, Swainbank, and Captain Beckett all placing well. In the next
meer, however, Massachusetts State edged out the home team 27-30, in a closely-con-
tested struggle, which saw that brilliant runner Gowing stage a last minute sprint to
capture first honors.
The last meet of the season brought to an end a not too successful season. The
favored Williams aggregation won over Amherst and Wesleyan by a 32-38-51 score.
Gowing suffered his only defeat when he lost an exciting race to Gregory, Eph captain.
Captain-elect Twichell followed in third place with Stewart, Schauffler, and Captain
Beckett finishing the Amherst scoring.
Second Row: Lumley, Coach, Halstead, Beckett, Captain, Snyder, Gowing, Schauffler, Breed, Wedel.
Felt.
First Row: Keep, Furbush, DeWitt, Becker, Twichell, Coe, Thompson, Stewart, Lund, Tylee, Manager,
Swainbank.
One Hundred and Ninety-four
. AMI-IERST COLLEGE
Wrestling, l936
G. REZEAU TUCKER, JR .......,. ......... C aptain
EDWARD L. BUTLER .............. ,...... M anager
FREDERICK HOLTER, JR .,.,.,,..,,,.,.,.,,.,...,.......,,.,...,, ,,....,. C oach
In spite of an early season loss to a strong Williams team the varsity wrestling team
won the Little Three championship for the iirst time in eight years of intercollegiate
competition. Only four meets, all of them Little Three engagements, were scheduled,
and three victories were scored. On the strength of this record it is hoped that more
matches will be included on next year's schedule.
Although the team was inexperienced at the beginning of the season, two members
of the team succeeded in going through the entire schedule undefeated. These men were
Captain-elect Seth Martin in the 145-pound class and Ken Davis, sensational sophomore
118-pounder. Captain Rez Tucker, undefeated since early in his sophomore year, had
one defeat chalked up against him due to a knee injury suffered shortly before the Iirst
Williams meet. Charley Bradley, wrestling in the 126-pound class, also lost only one
match during the season.
The opening meet of the season was dropped by the close score of 16-12 to the
strong Williams matmen. From this point on the Amherst grapplers found their true
strength and swept through the remainder of the schedule, defeating Wesleyan 21-11,
Williams 19-11, and Wesleyan again 22-6.
Eight men received letters for their credible performances: Captain Tucker, Captain-
elect Martin, Bradley, Davis, DeWitt, Gooclell, Harding, and Palmer.
Standing: Palmer, Snowball, Woodress, Breed, Willard, McDaniel, Willianis, Assistant Manager.
Seated: Hemphill, Goodell, Harding, Tucker, Captain. Martin, DeWitt, Bradley, Davis.
One Hundred and Ninety-live
-IE 21937 E OLIO
Swimming, l936
The Amherst College Swimming team of
'36, faced with a long and difficult schedule,
accomplished the feat of winning six out of
seven meets and retaining the Little Three
Championship. Victories were scored over
Springheld, M. I. T., McGill, Worcester Poly,
Wesleyan, and Williams, Army alone defeating
Amherst. There was also an unothcial trip to
Florida during the Xmas holidays and four out
of five meets were won. The team scored vic-
tories over New York Y. M. C. A., New York
University, Rider College, and George Wash-
ington University, losing only to the Brooklyn
Swimming Club, besides qualifying more men
than any other Eastern team in the East and
West Intetsectional Meet held at Fort Lauder-
dale, Florida. The successful swimmers were
Michael J. Kennedy coached by Tug Kennedy and captained by
Coach Kelly, jeff sprint star. Buechner, Green, Kothe,
Lundwall, and Warner performed brilliantly all
season.
The season opened auspiciously with a decisive 46-51 victory being scored by
Amherst over Springfield. Captain Kelly and Green starred, Green winning the 150-yard
breaststroke in 1 :49.4. The second meet saw M. I. T. submerged by the Amherst tankmen
57-20 in Pratt pool.
At West Point the jeffmen lost a hard-fought struggle to the Cadets by a 40-28
score. Though Captain Kelly, Green, and Coombs won in their respective events, the
team succumbed to the well-balanced Army outfit.
The Amherst swimmers resumed their winning streak
by taking McGill University 44-27. Green broke the
record in the 150-yard backstroke with a time of 1:49.3,
while the Amherst relay team consisting of Wisner, Warner,
Buechner, and Captain Kelly swam the 400-yard event in
the record time of 3:49.1.
The next meet was another overwhelming victory for
the jeff tankmen, swamping an inferior Worcester Poly
team 61-16 by taking every first place. Green, Kothe, and
Captain Kelly starred by breaking the 300-yard medley
relay record.
In the initial Little Three encounter the Sabrina swim-
mers submerged a strong Wesleyan team 53-24. Kelly
won the 100 and the 220-yard free style, setting a new
record in the latter, with Warner taking the 50 and Buech-
ner the 440. The Cardinals broke three pool records.
Amherst's Little Three swimming title was retained
as the Jeff natators downed the Williams team 56-21 at
Lasell Gymnasium. The meet was a one-sided contest,
Amherst gaining eight first places to- one for Williams.
The outstanding performer of the day was Buechner, who
was the only double winner and who clipped two and
nine-tenths seconds from the 220-yard free style record. Eric E, 5u,,dqug,,t
Green, Warner, Repsold, and Captain Kelly also set a new Manager
pool record in the 400-yard relay.
One Hundred and Ninety-six
AM
HERST COLLEGE
Points
Name Scored
W. A. Buechner 44
M. A. Kelly .-4-4,-- 29
E, P. Green ...,.... 27
W. A. Wfarner.. 24
E. G. Kothe ...... 20
P. B. Coombs .... 19
G. L. Lundwall.. 18
R. S. Wisner ...... 16
N. B. Repsold .... 14
G. S. Trees ........ 12
A. S. Lapidus .,,. 11
J. C. Quady ........ 11
F. C. Whitmore 11
A. B. Simpson ,... 10
S. E. Whicher .... 10
Matthew A. Kelly
Captain
SUMMARY OF SWIMMING SEASON
AIHHCISI .... ................................. . .. Springfield .,,.,.,,,,.,,
Amherst ..... ....... .,.....,,....,, M . 1, T ,,-',,.,,,,v4,,,,,,,
A1'I1l'lE1'SI .... ,,,., A fmy ,-,,---.,,------
Amherst .... ,,,,, M CGi11 ,l,----,-,,-.-4
Amherst ..,.. ..... W orcester Poly .....
Amherst .... ..... W esleyan ...........
Amherst ..... .... W illiams ........
Amh6rSt --.................................................... 345 Opponents ,..,.,
PERSONNEL
MATTHEW A. KELLY ....,.......,..,,.,....,..,
ERIC E. SUNDQUIST .......... ....,,,.,
MICHAEL KENNEDY .......
U Horace
.. 31
21
40
27
16
24
21
180
.......Captain
.Manager
..........Coach
UNLESS
One Hundred and Ninety-seven
C7
TI-IE 1937 OLIO
Tennis, i935
ALBERT WINSTON ..............,....... ............ ....... C a ptain
PHILIP WARD ..A........... ........ M anager
A. H. SPRAGUE ..,......................................,.,.............................. Coach
Under the leadership of Captain Winston the Amherst tennis team stroked its way
through a rather successful season to win six matches and lose four. Only two of the
four losses, however, were decisive. North Carolina's unusually line team defeated the
Amherst men by a score of 8-1, and Williams piled up a score of 7-2. Harvard and
Yale also downed the Purple team, but only by close scores. It is interesting to notice that
these are the same teams which defeated the Sabrina players in the 1934 season. But at
the other limit of their fortune, the Amherst men won decisive victories over Bowdoin,
Union and M. I. T., and defeated West Point, Wesleyan, and Brown by closer scores.
Last year the New England Intercollegiate Tennis Association inaugurated its new
plan of holding its tournaments at various New England colleges, instead of at Boston, as
has been its practice in the past. Amherst was selected as the lirst host, and the three
days at the College-on-the-Hill, at which more than a dozen colleges were represented,
proved both the wisdom of the plan and the ability of Amherst's players. In the singles
Meldrum was put out in the quarter-finals by Stevens of Yale, the subsequent winner of
the tournament, and Winston reached the semi-finals only to lose to the same man. Win-
ston and Mahony, representing Amherst in the doubles, lasted until the semi-hnals where
they were defeated in a close match by the Dartmouth team which later won the tournament.
The team this year shows promise of being even stronger than last year, since all of
last yeat's team is back, and all will have the benefit of experience.
SUMMARY OF THE SEASON
Amherst .............. 9 Bowdoin ............ 0 Amherst .............. 3 Harvard ..,......... 6
Amherst .............. 8 Union .............. 1 Amherst ...,.......... 6 West Point ...,..,. 3
Amherst ....... 4 Yale .........r........ 5 Amherst .............. 6 Brown ............. . 3
Amherst. ............. 7 M. I. T. ............ 2 Amherst .....,..... 2 Williams ....... 7
Amherst .............. 1 North Carolina.. 8 Amherst .............. 6 Wesleyan ...,...... 3
Sprague, Coach, Meldrum, Hulick, Winston, Captain, Bielaski, Mahony, Coleman.
One Hundred and Ninety-eight
AMHERST i'CCLLEGE
Golf, l935
W. W. LONG ......... ....,......,.. .................. C a ptain and Manager
J. C. CUSHMAN ....... ..............,....,. C aptain-elect
B. CRITCHLOW ..... ......... M anager-elect
Handicapped by lack of pre-season practice for their first match against Yale, which
was dropped 6-0, the Amherst golfers came back the following week to defeat Haver-
ford 4-2, and ended the season a few weeks later against Williams for a record of three
victories, eight defeats and two tie matches. Each match of the thirteen-match schedule
consisted of four twosomes and two foursomes, with only four men allowed to engage
in a meet.
Four men, Captain Long, Critchlow, King, and Cushman, received their letters for
the current season. Requirements for a varsity letter this year provided that a player
engage in at least six matches. Other members of the squad included McCormick, who
played in four matches, and Mustard, who engaged in two.
Following the Haverford victory, Bowdoin and Worcester Polytechnic succeeded in
defeating Amherst, 4-2 and SW--M respectively. Harvard and Dartmouth won by
4-2 and 5-1 scores, while Fordham was tied at 3-all. M. I. T. was defeated 5-1,
but Wesleyan staged a rally to win 4-2 in the hrst of the Little Three encounters.
The Holy Cross match ended in a 3-3 tie but Colgate was turned back, 4-2, in
the next two engagements. Brown defeated Amherst, 3V2-ZVQ. In the last match of
the season the Williams golfers won, 4-2, to clinch the Little Three championship.
A direct change in policy was made this spring which will affect next year's team.
Henceforth, the team will have six members instead of the customary four. The 1936
schedule will open against Army following a trip to Asheville, N. C., during spring
vacation.
l
Cushman, Long, Captain, Critchlow, McCormick.
One Hundred and Ninety-nine
--W 4- - --Jv-
THE 3 19373 OLIO
Ski Team, 1936
C. JARVIS SCHAUFFLER ........ ,..,..... C aptain
CHARLES PARKER .......,.... ,,,,.,.. C oach
Entering teams in four events and participating in one more, the Amherst Ski team
closed its season April 5th in the United States Eastern Championships with an impressive
record, the high spot of which was the Massachusetts Second Class Downhill champion-
ships in which Jarvis and Sandy Schaufilet of Amherst finished first and second respec-
tively, the former establishing a new record for the Thunderbolt trail on Mount Greylock
of 2 min. 26-6 sec.
The season opened with an informal meer with Williams. There were only two
events, Jump and Slalom. In the Jump, Bill Merchant got third place with the second
longest standing jump. In the Slalom, J. Schaulller was first with the time of 31.9 seconds.
This meet was followed a month later by the Dartmouth Winter Carnival where the Inter-
collegiate Ski Union championships were held. Though no individuals placed among
the leaders, a well balanced team, placing consistently in all events in spite of some
severe handicaps, won fifth place in the final team scores among twelve colleges, nosing
out the Williams team by 9 points, and losing fourth place to Maine by a scant 2.6 points.
On February 15, the Massachusetts Third Class Downhill championships were held
on the Mount Grace trail. Jarvis Schauliiler won, succeeding in breaking the old record
of Clements of Williams with the time of 2 min. 46.3 sec. The next week in the second
class championships, the Schaufller brothers Finished first and second.
Standing: R. Walbridge, J. Schaufller, Quarles.
Seated: Cobb, S. Schauffler, Fitts, Merchant.
Two Hundred
.Q
AMHERST .il COLLEGE
FENCING TEAM, 1936
Standing: Sargent, Plumstead, Bzlrghoorn, johnson, Atkinson, Toll. Confh.
Seated: Loomis, Skouras, Raymond, Rosen, Captain, Wilscvn, Willinins.
SQUASH TEAM, 1956
Poor, Mudge, Grose, Sleicher, Captain, Giese, Coleman, Reid.
Two Hundred and One
THE 1937 OLIO
The Managers
WRIGHT TISDALE ....,....... ....... M anager of Football
C. EDGAR PHREANER, JR .....,. ....... M anager of Basketball
WILBUR N. EARL ,.......,.... ..... M anager of Baseball
GEORGE B. BURNETT, JR ..... ....... M anager of Track
The managerial staff is composed of senior managers,
junior assistant managers, and sophomore competitors,
whose function is to handle the business and routine details
which go into the operation of the seasonal schedules in
intercollegiate athletics. This involves acting as the treas-
urer of the squad, equipping the team, planning arrange-
ments for home games and trips, and advertising the par-
ticular team. All work in this department proceeds in con-
junction with and under the supervision of the Athletic
Oliice of the College, in which rests the authority of the
managers.
Appointment to managerial positions is based upon
competition which begins in the sophomore year. There
are four of these sophomore competitions: one in the Fall
run by the football management, one in the Wiiiter by the
Wright Tisdale basketball management, and two in the Spring controlled
Ivfgmaggr of Fogtball by the managements of baseball and track. Positions as as-
sistant managers are determined by the recommendations of
preceding managers and assistants as a result of work done in the competition and are
subject to the approval of the Student Council. The two men placing highest in each sopho-
more competition continue to compete in their junior year, and the winners become senior
managers of football, basketball, baseball, and track, with the men placing second RLIIO-
matically becoming editor of the football program, manager of swimming, manager of
tennis, and manager of indoor track, respectively.
In addition to the managers of recognized varsity and freshman athletics there is
one manager of intramural sports, who takes charge of the organized schedule of inter-
fraternity contests on the campus, and one manager who handles the program of the
Interscholastic Track Meet held at Amherst each Spring, to which neighboring preparatory
schools are invited.
Since the appointment of Lloyd P. jordan as Director of Intercollegiate Athletics
in 1932, interest in managerial positions has taken on new life. Prior to this time a senior
managership had become an honorary position, and most of the business was left to the
discretion of the junior assistants and sophomore competitors. However, in 1932 the
Athletic Office took over the purchase of equipment and such work in which managers
are not sufficiently experienced. This should in no respect be interpreted to mean that
managers have been left to exercise a few meaningless responsibilities. Rather they are
Two Hundred and Two
' THE 3 1937? OLIO
The lnterfraternity Trophy of Trophies
Piling up a substantial lead by garnering
196 points during the fall and winter seasons,
Delta Kappa Epsilon was awarded the Inter-
fraternity Trophy of Trophies for het superior-
ity in the field of sports during the campaign of
1934-35. Although close pressed by Beta, Deke
was victorious in the touch football leagues, and
continued her success into the winter season,
capturing first places in basketball, the handball
tournament, and the swimming meet. Phi Gam,
winner of the trophy for the previous year, was
runner-up by virtue of victories in all three run-
ning competitions, cross country, relay and
spring track. Phi Gam also placed second in
both swimming and tennis. Alpha Delt, run-
ner-up for two consecutive years, ended in third
place although gaining numerous seconds and
thirds in addition to a victory in golf, and was
high scorer for the spring season.
Great interest was evinced in the competition for the trophy, not only by the 446
men who participated in the contests, but also by unusually large numbers of enthusiastic
rooters. Intramural bulletins were published weekly by the athletic department presenting
future schedules and the outcome of past encounters with the standing of the fraternities.
A slight increase in participation in the sports over the record year of 1933-34 was noted.
The final standings for the year are:
Fall Winter' Spring Total
Delta Kappa Epsilon ....... 76 120 11 207
Phi Gamma Delta ,....... 31 55 142
Alpha Delta Phi ......... 28 47 156
Beta Theta Pi .......,, 41 46 2X3 99 2X3
Chi Phi .......... 8 261f2 97
Chi Psi .............. 15 1X2 36 92 1X2
Phi Kappa Psi ...... 38 ifz 32 116 90 zfs
Psi Upsilon ........... 3 28 1X2 491!2
Phi Delta Theta ....,.... 26 18 49
Theta Delta Chi ...... 16 Z1 48
Delta Tau Delta ..,...... 8 11 45
Theta Xi ...............,................ 28 14 42
Delta Upsilon ........................... 11 14 2X5 37 2X5
Lord jeffrey Amherst Club ........................ 5 24 55
First place
winners in each sport and runners-up are:
Touch Football: 1. Delta Kappa Epsilon: 2. Beta Theta Pi.
Cross Country: 1. Phi Gamma Delta: 2. Phi Delta Theta.
Golf: 1. Alpha Delta Phi: 2. Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Basketball: 1. Delta Kappa Epsilong 2. Beta Theta Pi.
Squash: 1. Psi Upsilong 2. Alpha Delta Phi.
Handball: 1. Delta Kappa Epsilon: 2. Alpha Delta Phi,
Swimming: 1. Delta Kappa Epsilong 2. Phi Gamma Delta.
Relay: 1. Phi Gamma Delta: 2. Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Baseball: 1. Chi Phig 2. Alpha Delta Phi.
Track: 1. Phi Gamma Delta: 2. Alpha Delta Phi.
Tennis: 1. Chi Psi: 2. Phi Gamma Delta.
Two Hundred and Four
given free reign to handle the particular phases of their jobs depending upon the responsi-
bility shown by the individual in each case. This new procedure has seen an interest
heightened in the possibilities of managerships. Seasonal reports are now written to
investigate Haws of the system and to suggest improvements. A new emphasis has been
placed upon the well-being of the members of the athletic squads and upon the hospitable
reception of visiting teams.
Arrangements have already been made with Charles T. Wills, Inc., of New York
City, builders of the new gymnasium, to include in their plans a separate oH:1ce for sports
managers.
Third Row: Meeker, Lancaster, Peck, Wilkerson.
Second Row: Twichell, Partridge, Williams, Allison, Lune, Terry, Tylee.
First Row: Stall, Earl, Phreaner, Tisdale, Sullivan, Butler.
Two Hundred and Three
A HERST ECOLLEGE .
FRESI-IMAN
ATHLETICS
-h- THE 1937 OLIO -
Freshman Football, l935
H. JOYS AND V. R. PATTENGILL ..,...... ........ C o-Captains
D. N. SULLIVAN '56 ...................... ....... M anager
A. G. WHEELER ..............................................,......................... Coach
Led by Co-Captains jack joys and Vic Pattengill, versatile halfbacks, the freshman
football team was able to win three out of its four scheduled games this season, including
victories over the Wesleyan and Williams yearlings, to clinch the Little Three champion-
ship. Twenty members of the squad received numerals.
The season opened on Pratt Field against a reputedly strong Roxbury outfit which
was defeated 14-0. It was in this game that one of the cleverest plays of the year was
executed when a triple lateral, Pattengill to Seeley to joys to Munch, gained forty yards
and a touchdown. Two weeks later a strong Lawrence Academy ECRITI handed the Jeffmen
their only defeat of the year, managing to eke out a 6-O win. Wesleyan was turned back
12-0 in the traditional battle between the two schools, and the Little Three championship
was clinched at Williamstown in the last game of the Fall when a pass ro Seeley and a
lateral to Munch scored two touchdowns and a victory, 13-7.
Although comparatively light, the team as a whole developed rapidly, especially the
ends and backfield men. Seeley and Smart were regular starters at the end posts, although
the latter was injured early in the season and was replaced by Stewart and Dow. Spens
and Hubbard saw the most action at the tackle berths, being replaced frequently by Ward.
McNeill, Haigis, Harding and Fitts all alternated at guard while Doherty and Stockbridge
were the mainstays at center. Fullback was handled by Furman, who alternated with
Packard. Packard also played some at quarterback along with Munch. Captains joys
and Pattengill, Kydd and Davidson filled the halfback positions.
Two Hundred and Six
AMHERST -it COLLEGE '
Freshman Soccer, l935
JOHN H. RAY, III ................,...................... ............................. C aptain
JAMES T. CLELAND ............. ..................... C oach
NEWTON F. MCKEON, JR ......I...,............................ Assistant Coach
Strengthened by a team spirit which swept them through their league competition
to a victory over Wesleyan and a tie against Williams, an inexperienced freshman soccer
squad completed a fairly successful season in 1935 and gained a half share in the Little
Three championship. Although they faced a heavily favored Eph aggregation at Williams-
town in their final encounter, the yearling booters outplayed their traditional rivals and
barely missed their second Little Three victory when the game ended in a 1-1 deadlock.
In the season's opener at Deerfield the freshmen made a determined effort to break
the long standing jinx which has turned back all invading Amherst freshman soccer squads
for the last eight years, but finally they, too, succumbed to the powerful Deerfield offense
when a late fourth quarter goal by Keith, the Academy center, broke the scoreless tie and
won the game for the Deerfield team, 1-O.
Showing a marked improvement over their previous form, the yearlings came back
strong in their second engagement and routed the Wesleyan frosh by the score of 1-O.
Captain jack Ray proved to be the key man of the Amherst attack when in the second
period he took advantage of a Wesleyan penalty and kicked the deciding goal.
As a climax to their season, the frosh not only held the strong Williams yearlings
to a 1-1 tie but consistently outplayed them throughout the game. The single Amherst
score came as a result of a persistent and sustained drive on the part of the Sabrina year-
lings. The attack was led by Willis at center forward, while Guest sank the shot.
At the conclusion of the season the following men were awarded numerals: Bell,
Calcutt, Eaton, Fuller, Guerin, Guest, Hall, Hildreth, Hitchcock, Hunt, Ingham, Lawrence,
Johnson, McKinley, Poor, Captain Ray, Stillwell, West, Wheeler, Willis, and Wright.
- - A A .. Q Q - an
Two Hundred and Seven
,-4.
Freshman Basketball, 1936
CHARLES F. OTIS .......,.. ........ C aptain
GEORGE K. ALLISON ....... .................... M anager
JEROME F. PECK, JR ....... ....... A ssistant Manager
ALFRED G. WHEELER .......... .... ..................... C o ach
Although winning only three out of seven games this season, the 1935-36 yearling
basketball team shows great promise of developing into able varsity material next winter.
Captain Charlie Otis ended the season as high point man for the jeffs, closely followed
by Kydd, while Bob Doherty looked best on the defense.
The team started out their campaign with a victory, clicking sufficiently against a
fair Williston Academy aggregation to eke out a 27-26 win. This was followed in
their next encounter against Roxbury with another victory, 43-25. At this time came
the turning point of the season, and three successive defeats were suffered, Deerfield
trouncing the Frosh, 49-33, the Springfield junior Varsity quintet piling up a 53-19
win, and the Wesleyan Freshmen trimming the jeffs 34-31 in their first Little Three
encounter. This last defeat was followed by a victory over the Nichols junior College,
39-28, only to be counterbalanced by a loss to the Williams squad, 55-25.
In addition to Captain Otis, the following men received their numerals: Doherty,
Furman, Hunt, Walker, joys, Kydd, Seeley, Taylor and Van Nostrand.
Standing: Allison, Manager, Wheeler, Coachg Taylor, Haigis, Egloff, Hunt, Thompson. Seeley,
Calcutt, jones, Peck, Assistant Manager.
Seated: Baker, joys, Gleye, Furman, Otis, Capraing Van Nostrand, Kydd, Walker, Doherty.
Two Hundred and Eight
Freshman Baseball, l935
BENNETT R. MEYERS .......... .....A.... c aptain
SAMUEL T. TISDALE .....T....... ........ M imager
FREDERICK J. HOLTER, JR .....................................,.,............. coach
Gaining experience and teamwork with each game that they played during the
1955 season, the freshman baseball team ended the year with victories over Williams and
Wesleyan and successfully defended the Little Three crown.
In the season's opener lack of practice certainly had its telling effects, for the poten-
tially strong yearlings bowed before Cushing Academy, 10-6. A bumpy infield made
it exceedingly difficult for the Amherst infielders to judge the ball, and several hits were
made when the ball took a bad hop into the outfield. Two weeks later the Sabrina cubs
met Deerfield, and after a brilliant pitchers' duel between Michell of Amherst and Ripley
of Deerfield, the prep school team eked out a 1--0 victory.
Despite these two early season losses, the frosh improved with practice and in their
first Little Three encounter whitewashed Williams, 11-1. Tom Whitney, on the mound
for the Jeffs, fanned seventeen Eph batsmen and allowed only Eve hits, while Andy
Simpson and Captain Ben Meyers carried off the batting honors. Westminister then fell
before the revived freshman to the tune of 9-1, with Michell starring in the pitcher's
box and Randy Young at the plate. The yearlings dramatically concluded the season in
their fifth game by trimming the Wesleyan cubs, 5-3. Tom Whitney again turned in a
zine three-hit pitching performance, and Andy Simpson again led the batting attack.
Third Row: Tisdale, Manager, Cristman, Holter, Coachg Griffith, Goodell, Partridge.
Second Row: Parker, Warner, Smith, Balme, Meyers, Captaing Simpson, Roberts, Young, Bodine.
First Row: Francis, Rowland, Lehman, Avery.
Two Hundred and Ten
THE 3 1937 3 GLIO -
Freshman Track, l935
JAMES D. GOWING ........ ........ C aptain
JOHN H. PETERSON ....................... ......... M anager
ELLSWORTH E. RICHARDSON ...................,.......................... Coach
Although failing to compile as impressive a record as the freshmen tracltsters of '37,
the yearling squad of 1938 contained several men who promise to be outstanding varsity
material.
Gowing, who was elected to captaincy of the team, was high scorer with 27 points.
He went through the season undefeated, capturing first places in the 880 and mile runs
in the three official meets as well as the informal one with Mass. State. Dostal excelled
in the discus and in the hammer-throw. A toss of 45 feet, 3 1f2 inches in the Little Three
meet saw Evans win the shot-put for Amherst and establish a new freshman record.
Wilkening, star freshman pole-vaulter, cleared the bar at 12 feet, 1 inch in the Roxbury
meet, setting a new freshman mark and coming within a half inch of shattering the varsity
record. Schauffler, though trailing Gowing, was also outstanding in the distance runs.
In an unolhcial meet against Mass. State, the jeffmen rolled up their only victory,
succeeding in more than doubling the score of the Aggie trackmen, The first official meet
saw Amherst bow to Roxbury by a count of 75 1 X 3 to 50 273. A powerful Dartmouth
team then invaded Amherst to overwhelm the Purple freshmen, 97 to 29. In the Little
Three meet Amherst sacrificed her crown to Williams' first year men, defeated by a scant
three points. When the final tape was broken, the points stood: Williams, 571f2g
Amherst, 54 172, Wesleyan, 42.
Third Row: Diephouse, Wells, Wiggins, Richardson, Coach, Keep, Broughton, Custer, Schauliler,
Williamson.
Second Row: Sawyer, Wanzo, Howland, Dostal, Gowing, Captaing Cole, Evans, Wilkening, Bullinger.
First Row: Steinbrugge, Roberts, Atherton, Edds, Marsh, Estes, Creese.
Two Hundred and Nine
AMHERST COLLEGE
AMI-IERST COLLEGE
Freshman Cross Country, 1935
Chalking up but one victory in five dual meets, the Freshman Cross Country squad
completed a fairly unsuccessful season in 1935, falling into third place behind Wesleyan
and Williams in their only ofiicial meet of the year, the Little Three Championship.
However unimpressive this record may seem, the team was competent and should provide
the varsity squad with a number of excellent sophomore recruits next year in the opinion
of john A. Swainbank '37, varsity cross country veteran, who coached the yearlings.
According to their performances the three high-point scorers of the season were Phil
Moyer, Captain Bill Baker, and Don Minnick. The following men were awarded numer-
als: Baker, Cobb, Davis, Fernald, Kusiak, Mayoral, Minnick, and Moyer.
Freshman Swimming, 1936
The Freshman swimming team showed great promise and a fighting spirit during
the season, though they had the misfortune of losing two of their three meets by narrow
margins. However, the Sabrina swimmers conquered Deerfield for the first time in the
history of their rivalry by a 32-28 score.
In the first Little Three struggle, the Wesleyan Freshmen were the victors over a
fighting Amherst team by a 40-37 score in Pratt Natatorium. Victory in the last event,
the 400-yard relay, decided this exciting contest. Davis of Wesleyan was the high scorer
with 11 points to his credit, while Captain jones of Amherst was not far behind with a
total of nine points. Each team took four first places.
The Amherst Freshmen were once more nosed out in the final event and lost their
final meet of the year to the Williams yearlings 39-38 in Lasell Gymnasium. Captain
Jones, winner of the 50 and 100-yard free styles, and Iron-man Wright, who won both
the 220-yard free style and 150-yard backstroke, were the high scorers of the meet with
ten points each. Kitchell of Amherst and Harwood of Williams swam a dead heat in
the 440 to climax a stirring meet.
Two Hundred and Eleven
3, i, . I 3.3,-
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BOOK SEVE
ADVERTISING
View from Stearm' Cbzzrcb
Henry Adams Co .............
Aime Dupont Studios ........
Amherst College ..........,
Amherst Cleaners ........
Amherst Theatre ........,,..
Amherst Garage Co., Inc .,..... .
Bement Coal Co ...,.....,.....
Carpenter 84 Morehouse r....,.,..
College Candy Kitchen ....,,..
Colyer Printing Company .......
Douglass-Marsh ..,,..,,,.,,r..,,.
Joseph Fessia 8: Co., Inc .........
A. Hastings ,...,...,,,,,,..,,.,,,,,,,
Holyoke Valve 84 Hydrant Co.
Hotel Commander Cambridge..
Hotel Northampton ............,,
Hotel Richmond ..................
-Iahn 8: Ollier Engraving Co ....
Harold B. Ketchen ............
E. 8: F. King 8: Co. Inc ..........
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
. III
VIII
. X
, II
. VI
. III
. VI
VII
I
. XI
I
II
VII
VII
V
.. II
. IV
. IX
.. X
. IV
Louis' Delicatessen ,....
james A. Lowell .............,.............
Metcalf Printing 8: Publishing Co..
Musante's Flower Shop .................,..
Mutual Plumbing 84 Heating Co ,,..
H. E. Northrup Coal Co ................
Roland T. Oakes Co ..,.,..,,, ..
M. S, Paige R Son ......
Pratt 8: Lambert Inc. .... .
Rahar s Inn ............. ..
Rival Foods, Inc .....,...........,,........
Roberts Cash 8: Carry Market .......
Springfield Plumbing Supply Co..
Standard Oil of New York .,,....,..
Eddie M. Switzer .................. ..
The Lord Jeffery ....,,.., .
The Reclaiming Co ....... .
Thomas F. Walsli ...... ....
L. Albert Webb ................. ....
Vlfellworth Pharmacy, Inc .......
VII
VI
III
II
IV
VI
III
V
V
VI
II
IV
VI
II
IV
VII
VII
III
IV
II
COLLEGE CANDY KITCHEN
THE UN DERGRADUATES' TRADITION:-
Going to the Greeks
Irs origin is the Amherst Campus for us and it has spread our to many Colleges
over the country. This proves the faithful service we have rendered for two
decades.
-the meeting place of all
Amherst Alumni and the
pride of every Student-
E HOSPITALITY AND WARM WELCOME SHOWN
TH
TO' ITS PATRONS HAS WON IT MANY FRIENDS
DOUGLASS-MARSI-I
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 I
i l l! EM M TO THE PARENTS
'!lgLiml l' We deliver anywhere and
I gf, lfllfl lfl 5l' fi.iE2ii y ,yl pay all Transportation costs
,alflfl . .
f r yfy Quality Merchandrse
f ff fra?
l
I X l X and sold for less
I
COMPLIMENTS OF
STANDARD OIL OF
NEW YORK
Division of Socony-Vacuum Oil
Company, Inc.
Hotel Northampton and
Wiggins Old Tavern
An Inn of Colonial Cha-rm
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
Delightful Rooms, 32.00 up. Fireproof. Ex-
cellent Food-Popular Prices. The Wiggitis
Tavern and Country Store is furnished with
rt very extensive collection of Early Amer-
ican pieces :incl is most interesting.
LEWIS WIGGINS, Intncllurcl
Joseph Fessia 86 Co., Inc.
Wholesale Fruit aml Produce
185-187 MAIN STREET
I-IOLYOKE. MASS,
COMPLIMENTS FROM THE
Wellworth Pharmacy, Inc.
The Most Up-to-Date and Popular
Store in Town
A crew of eight at your service, in-
cluding two registered men, from
8 A. NL to 11 P. NI.
ON YOUR WAY TO POSTOFFICE
AMI-IERST, MASS.
REMEMBER
MUSANTE'S FLOWER
SHOP
DAILY DELIVERIES TO SMITH AND
MT. HOLYOKE
Phones: 1028-W. Nite 1028-R.
RIVAL FOODS, INC.
CAMBRIDGE--FITCHBURG-NEW
BEDFORD and PORTSMOUTH, N. H
Tel. TROwbridge 2-100
Amherst Men's Motto Is Always
Let Dave Do It
AMHERST CLEANERS
Dyers 86 Launderers
Best Known as the Best
COMPLIMENTS OF
A FRIEND
I-IICKEY-FREEMAN
q
' Dredd
ibz' Ihe
Qgcddjon l Customized Clothes
a
9
4 X il
A
as
.WU J ?
-f Aww..
THOMAS F. WALSH
More Than a Toggery-A College Imlilzztion
The Best in Drug Store Merchandise
The Best in Drug Store Service
HENRY ADAMS CO.
The Rexall Store
3 SO. PLEASANT ST.
AMHERST, MASSACHUSETTS
AMHERST GARAGE CO.,
INC.
Automobile Supplies
REPAIRING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES
XWASHING-STORAGE
Wliere the Thoughtful Man Keeps His Ca
1'
17 S. PROSPECT ST., AMI-IERST, MASS.
THE ROLAND T. OAKES
COMPANY
Electrical Specialties
I-IOLYOKE, MASS.
College Printers
Metcalf
Printing 85 Publishing
Company
51 CLARK AVENUE
NORTHAMPTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Eddie M. Switzer
Clothing
and
Haberdashery
Ma1zufactu1'e1's of
EFKO
QUALITY PAINTS
Wall Paints Enamels
Floor Enamels
INTERIOR FINISHES
INTERIOR VARNISHES
EXTERIOR FINISHES
EXTERIOR VARNISHES
E. Sz E. King 81 Co.
Inc.
BOSTON,MASS. SPRiNGF1Ei.D.MAss.
NEW YORK, N. Y.
THE HOTEL RICHMOND
NORTH ADAMS, MASS.
One of the best moderate priced
hotels in the Berkshire Hills. The
Grill is the finest in Western Mas-
sachusetts, serving highest grade
of food and liquors at popular
prices.
J. F. WALEKER, Mgr.
PLUMBING
IN
NEW GYMNASIUM
BY
Mutual Plumbing 85
Heating Co.
35 SOUTH PLEASANT STREET
Radio and Phonograph
Sales and Service
L. ALBERT WEBB
4 AMITY STREET
Tel. 475-W
ROBERTS
Cash and Carry Market
56 MARKET ST.
NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
Tel. 3504
OLDSMOBILE AND CHEVROLET
Sales and Service
M. S. PAIGE 81 SON
AMHERST
MASSACHUSETTS
TELEPHONE 29
Hotel Commander
Cambridge
CAMBRIDGE
Off Ha1'1,1a1'rl Square
Offers to the Parents, Relatives
and Friends of Amherst stu-
dents the complete facilities and
attentive service of a Metropoli-
tan Hotel. All rooms with bath
and shower from 552.50 a day.
Complete housekeeping suites.
Restaurant and Grill. Facilities
for all Social Functions.
KIRklancl 4800
Wberevei'
maximum beauty and protection must be
combined with low maintenance costs, there
economy calls for the use of
PRATT 85 LAMBERT
PAINT and VARNISH
In Amherst College, as in many other insti-
tutions, schools, public buildings and fine
homes throughout the United States and
Canada, Pratt 8: Lambert Varnish Products
are preserving and beautifying the surface.
Pratt Sz Lambert
Inc.
Paint 5 Vai-nisla Makers
NEW YORK o BUFFALO o CHICAGO
FORT ERIE, ONTARIO
Tel. 550 PIIUUC 290
RAHAR'S INN
Rooms With and Without Bath
Homelike Hospitality-Service-Q L121 lily
7 OLD SOUTH STREET
NORTHAIVIPTON, IVIASSACHUSETTS
Phone 2 32
BEMENT COAL CO.
22 MAI N STREET
AMHERST
D 65' H Cone-Cleanecl Antlaracite
Best Grades Bituminous Coal
AMHERST THEATRE
Amherst, Mass.
WHERE THE BETTER PICTURES
JAMES A. LOWELL
Bookseller
NEW' AND s'rANDA1zD moons
O
College Texts unzl All Student
ARE SHOWN
Springfield
H- E- NOVIIIVUP Plumbing Supply
C031 CO- Company
COAL AND COKE
Navy Standard Coals
Steam - Stoker - By-Product
BURDETT BUILDING
TROY, N. Y.
Supplies for
Sanitary and Heating Engineers,
Sheet Metal Workers, Mechanical
Engineers, Factories and Mills
SOUTI-INVEST CORNER
CHESTNUT AND FRANKLIN STREETS
Ollicc und W1lfClICIll5C
SPRINGFIELD, IVIASS.
Heating and Ventilating in
New Gymnasium Installed
by
The Holyoke Valve
8 Hyclrant Co.
HOLYOKE, MASS.
May We
Serve You
in any future work which you
may do in Athletics whether it
be in school or college?
The
Reclaummg Co.
Speriulisir in
CLEANSING, STERILIZING, REPAIR-
ING AND REBUILDING ATHLETIC
EQUIPMENT
HoLYoKE, MASS.
Visit
THE LORD JEFFERY
A Trea0lway Innv
AMHERST
COLLEGE SUPPLIES
NATIONAL LOOSE LEAF BOOKS
Sheaffer, Parker 8: Waterman Fountain Pens
Your Name Engraved on Pen
COLLEGE BANNERS AND PENNANTS
A. J. HASTINGS
Newsdealer and Stationer
AMHERST, MASS.
Printers . . .
Carpenter 86 Morehouse
cooK PLACE
AMI-IERST, MASS.
Our Reputation
for quality goods, dependability and
service is something of which we are
justly proud. You are assured of com-
plete szttisfaction and full value for
your dollar. We stand squarely be-
nind each purchase, and we aim to
serve you in a manner to make and
keep you Z1 satisfied customer.
Louis' Delicatessen
V
AIMEI DUPQNT
Studicbs
509 FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORK
OFFICIAL PI-IQTGGRAPI-IERS
to the
1937 CLIC
OUND 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
of fine printing plates. That you will be
secure from chance, is our first promise.
JAHN 81 OLLIER ENGRAVING CO.
811 West Washington Blvd., - Chicaso, Illinois
IX
, x
mx l
ln. the foreground - FI. Dearborn referecled
in Grant Park on Chicago's lake front.
llluslratlon by Jahn ff Ollier Arg Smdiqs,
Q l
A Good Product
Good Service
TRY THE FORD V-S
DEPENDABLE - SAFE - ECONOMICAL
SATISFIED OWNERS
Our Service:
MODERN EQUIPMENT
GENUINE PARTS
FAIR PRICES
HAROLD B. KETCH EN
ll EAST PLEASANT ST, AMHERST, MASS
Complete Car Service
AMI-IERST COLLEGE
AT AMHERST, MASSACHUSETTS
A College of Liberal Arts and Sciences-Founded in 1 821
STANLEY KING, LL.D., President
For catalog, descriptive folder, and information concerning
admission, address The Secretary of the Faculty, Amherst
College, Amherst, Mass.
For information concerning scholarship aid, address The Dean,
Amherst, College, Amherst, Mass.
X
BUILD YOUR YEARBOOK
WITH MASTER CRAFTSMEN
. . . POR PINE QUALITY PRINTING IS
No more essential than in school and col-
lege annuals. The story told by copy is
worthless unless the printed pages provide
eloquent testimony of its truthful reproduc-
tion ot campus life.
Production of distinctive printing depends
upon the masterful handling of such tech-
nicalities as layout, artwork, make-ready,
and presswork, also the proper selection of
ink, paper and binding. Consistently, good
printing has been a primary reason Why
The 1937
O I. I O the Colyer organization are chosen as the
Is a Product V i
of our Plant printers for leading schools and colleges.
CCDLYER PRINTING COMPANY
SUSSEX AVENUE AND DEY STREET N NEWARK, N. I.
. . . LARGEST PRINTERS or YEAR Booxs IN THE srzm: or NEW IERSEY . . .
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