Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) - Class of 1925 Page 1 of 482
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1925 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 482 of the 1925 volume: “
g 19 (Kl)e (Epitome 25 m E Ipttmne £ fear Pooh ©Ije Kuiitar ( la%% of Sip ;§nak of the (Class nf 1925 $0 Unite XLIX iO| f RST! . -?k?- ' £A) £sSi3!££ g 19 (D)e aEpitottie ®o alter JRaktglj (©kesntt ■Senoieo (AIutnnxiB of IGeljigl] tEljts uolume of ilje Jipttome ts respectfully, oebtrateh a 19 )t (Epttotm 25 ■■' . Where the Lehigh ' s rocky rapids rush from out the West, Will a qrove of spreading chestnuts, walls in ivy dresst, On the breast of old South Mountain, reared against the sky, Stands our noble Alma Mater, stands our dear Lehigh. Like a watchman on the mountain, stands she grandly bold, Earth and Heaven ' s secrets seeking, hoarding them like gold. All she wrests from Nature ' s storehouse, naught escapes her eye Gives she gladly to her dear sons, while we bless Lehigh. We will ever live to love her, live to praise her name, Live to make our lives add lustre to her glorious fame. Let the glad noes wake the echoes, joyfully we cry, Hail to th . our Alma Mater. Hail, all Hail, Lehigh! pr a. 19 (D)e (Epitome 25 PACKER HALL FROM THE WEST | 19 P)e (Epitome 25 FROM THE GYM THE COMMONS ED 19 dDl)e €]ittcrme 25 83 FROM DROWN HALL CHRISTMAS AND SAUCON HALLS jV.IV Mr.flttfcO s 0 19 D)e flEpttotrie 25 A RAMBLE 19 Ei) ' e dEpttottie 25 a 19 dDl)C tiEyttotne 25 THE SALLYPORT l UBm -. ' ,tr )tajaSH BW M|fr™fr- ? iNrf F- | I ' - ' 1 Tjf | a 1 ' EH-ltf W Wfljj iJi -•—;•- ed|t 3 19 l)e (jEpttcmie 25 i 19 (Etye (Epttottie 25 t 1 _ bbbSB v iJI itr 1{« m LOOKING DOWN THE HILL 19 (D)e dE-pttorne 25 83 I 19 (IDfre (Eyttome 25 A BIT OF CAMPUS COPPEE HALL g 19 t)e dEpttowe 25 i TAYLOR STADIUM DROWN HALL FACULTY- Board of Trustees President Henry R. Price Secretary and Treasurer Walter R. Okeson Assistant Secretary and Treasurer Melvin Schissler Henry R. Price Brooklyn, N. Y. Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbot Bethlehem, Pa. Rembrant Peale New York, N. Y. Warren A. Wilbur Bethlehem, Pa. Albert N. Cleaver Bethlehem, Pa. Charles M. Schwab Bethlehem, Pa. Samuel D. Warriner Philadelphia, Pa. Eugene G. Grace Bethlehem, Pa. Harry C. Trexler Allentown, Pa. Charles D. Marshall Pittsburgh, Pa. HONORARY TRUSTEE Henry S. Drinker Merion Station, Pa. HONORARY ALUMNI TRUSTEES Term Expires H. D. Wilson 1929 Bethlehem, Pa. Homer D. William 1925 Pittsburgh, Pa. William C. Dickerson 1926... New York, N. Y. Taylor Allerdice 1927 Pittsburgh, Pa. Aubrey Weymouth 1928. ... New York, N. Y. A. C. Dodson 1924 Pittsburgh, Pa. ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS Charles R. Richards President Natt M. Emery Vice-President and Comptroller Charles M. McConn Dean John L. Stewart Directory of the Library Philip M. Palmer Head of the College of Arts and Science Percy Hughes Director of Extension Courses Frederick R. Ashbaugh Bursar and Purchasing Agent Neil Carothers Acting Head of the College of Business Administration 21 OTHER OFFICERS J. Clarence Cranmer Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds John D. Hartigan Master Mechanic Paul Roestel Steward of the College Commons; in charge of Dormitories and Drown Memorial Hall LIBRARY John L. Stewart Director Peter F. Stauffer Assistant Librarian PACKER MEMORIAL CHAPEL D. Wilmot Gateson Chaplain T. Edgar Shields Organist COMMITTEES OF THE FACULTY Admission Dean McConn, Professors: Hughes, Thornburg, Palmer, Fox, Thayer, Babasinian, Reynolds Athletics Professors: Reiter, Eckfeldt, Patch Discipline Dean McConn, Professors: Babasinian, Luch, Ogburn; Professor Larkin, alternate Honorary Degrees Pr esident Richards, Professors: Palmer, Stewart, Eck- feldt, Esty, Miller, Butterfield Standing of Students Dean McConn, Professors: Palmer, Stewart, Ullman, Fogg, Esty, Larkin, Stoughton, Eckfeldt, Chapman, MacNutt Stud it Activities Dean McConn, Professors: Schealer, Eckfeldt, Fraim, Larkin, Diefenderfer 22 Lecturers Edward Higginson Williams, Jr., B.A., E.M., A.C., Sc.D., LL.D., Woodstock, Vt. Lecturer on Mining and Geology B.  Yale University, ' 72; E.M., ' 76; A.C., ' 76; LL.D., ' 13, Lehigh University; Sc.D., University of Vermont, ' 12; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Fellow of the Geographical Society of America; Member: American Philosophical Society, American Institute of Mining Engi- neers; Honorary Member of Phi Beta Kappa; One of the Founders of Tau Beta Pi; Professor of Mining Engineering and Geology, ' 81- ' 02; Lecturer on Aiming and Geology, ' 02; Psi Upsilon. Harry Frederick Hoffman, M. D., State Hospital for Insane, Allentown, Pa. Lecturer on Psychiatry Stewart U. Mitman, Ph. D. Deceased Lecturer on Hebrerv Raymond Cooley Bull, B.S., B.A., M.D. Lecturer on Hygiene and Physiology 23 m m Charles Russ Richards, B.M.E., M.E., M.M.E., D. Eng. President of the University University Park Born March 23, 1871, at Clarkshill, Indiana; Bachelor of Mechanical Engineer- ing, 1890; Mechanical Engineer, 1891, Purdue University; Master Mechanical Engi- neering, 1895, Cornell University; Doctor of Engineering, 1920, University of Ne- braska; Instructor Mechanical Engineering, 1891-2, Colorado Agricultural College; Adjunct Professor of Manual Training, 1892-4, Professor Practical Mechanics 1894-8, Professor Mechanical Engineering 1898-1911, Associate Dean of Industrial College 1907, Dean of College of Engineering 1909-11, University of Nebraska; Professor of Mechanical Engineering 1911-20, Acting Dean College of Engineering 1913-15, Dean of College of Engineering 1917-22, University of Illinois; President of Lehigh Uni- versity 1922 — . Consulting Engineer American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Western Society of Engineers; Society for Promotion of Engineering Education. Sig- ma Xi; Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Chi. 12! Henry Sturgis Drinker, E.M., LL.D. President Emeritus of the University Merion Station, Pa. E.M., Lehigh University, ' 71; LL. D., Lafayette College, ' 05; Franklin and Marshall College, ' 10; University of Pennsylvania, ' 11; Princeton University, ' 18; Moravian College, ' 22; Lehigh University, ' 22. Secretary of the Alumni Association, ' 76, and President, ' 79; Alumni Trustee, ' 77- ' 79; ' 89- ' 95; elected member of Board of Trustees, ' 93, and held office as Trustee until ' 05; elected President of Lehigh University, June 14, 1905, installed October 12, 1905, retired December 31, 1920. Admitted to the bar of Pennsylvania, ' 77; Pennsylvania Supreme Court, ' 80; Courts of New York State, ' 99. General Solicitor for the Lehigh Valley Railroad, ' 85- ' 05. Published: Treatise on Tunnelling, Explosive Compounds, and Rock Drills, 78; Treatise on Explosive Compounds and Rock Drills, ' 82; an enlarged edition of Ball ' s Railroad and Telegraph Laws of Pennsylvania, ' 84. Author of various papers read before the American Institute of Mining Engineers. Past Manager and now Honorary Member of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, and one of the founders of the Institute in 1871. Member, Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Historical Society of Pennsylvania; Honorary member of Tau Beta Pi. President of the American Forestry Association, ' 12- ' 15, and member of the Executive Committee, ' 15- ' 19. President of the Pennsylvania Forestry Association; member, Pennsylvania State Forest Commission. Vice-President and Member of the Executive Committee of the National Conservation Congress, President of the Society of the National Reseiwe Corps of the United States, ' 13- ' 14, ' 14- ' 15; Chairman of the Gov- erning Committee of the Military Training Camps Association of the United States, ' 15- ' 19, and now Honorary President; Secretary of the Advisory Board of University Presidents on Summer Military Instruction Camps. Member of the Executive Com- mittee of the League to Enforce Peace and Chairman of the Pennsylvania Branch. President of the Association of College Presidents of Pennsylvania, 1917. Member of Pennsylvania State Board for Registration of Engineers and of Land Surveyors, Club, Philadelphia; Engineers ' Club, Philadelphia. Director of Lehigh Valley Rail- road Company. 25 Natt Morrill Emery, M.A., Litt.D. Vice-President and Comptroller 41 East Market Street A.B., Dartmouth College, ' 95 ; M.A., Lehigh Uni- versity, ' 99 ; Litt.D., Ursinus College, ' 16 ; In- structor, Tilton Seminary, Tilton, New Hamp- shire, ' 95- ' 96; Assistant in English, ' 96- ' 97; In- structor in English, ' 97- ' 02; Registrar, ' 99- ' 12; Assistant to the President, ' 07- ' 10; Vice-Presi- dent, ' 10 — ; in executive charge Jan. 1, 1921- Sept. 1, 1922 ; Phi Beta Kappa ; Phi Gamma Delta. Charles Maxwell McConn, A.M. Dean of the University 1425 Lenox Avenue A.B., University of Minnesota, ' 03; A.M., Uni- versity of Minnesota, ' 04; Instructor of English, Academy of the University of Illinois, ' 04- ' 06 ; Principal of the Academy of the University of Illinois, ' 06- ' 10; Registrar, University of Illinois, ' 10- ' 20; Secretary of the Board of Trustees, ' 10- ' 14; Assistant to the President, ' 20- ' 21 and ' 22- ' 23; Graduate Student at Harvard University, ' 21- ' 22; Dean of Lehigh University, ' 23 — ; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Charles Lewis Thornburg, C.E., Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy and Head of the Department of Mathematics 238 East Market Street Graduate of Marshall College, Huntington, W. Va., ' 76; B.S., ' 81, B.E., ' 82, C.E., ' 83, Ph.D., ' 84, Vanderbilt University; Fellow in Mathematics, ' 81- ' 82; Graduate Fellow, ' 82- ' 84; Instructor in Engineering Department, ' 84- ' 86 ; Assistant Pro- fessor of Engineering and Astronomy, ' 86- ' 95, Vanderbilt University; Professor of Mathematics and Astronomv, ' 95 — ; Secretary of the Faculty, ' 99- ' 00, ' 01- ' 22. 26 William Cleveland Thayer, M.A., L.H.D. Professor of the English Language and Literature 30 West Market Street B.A., ' 76, Columbia University; M.A., ' 84, Wil- liams College; L.H.D. , ' 00, Hobart College; Stu- dent, University of Gottingen, ' 79- ' 81 ; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University; Professor of Mathematics, Hobart College, ' 82- ' 84 ; Private In- structor in Modern Languages, Baltimore, ' 88- ' 91 ; Professor of Modern Languages, Pennsylvania State College, ' 92- ' 95 ; Professor of English, ' 95—. John Lamney Stewart, A.B., Ph.B. Professor of Economics and History Absent on Leave A.B., Philadelphia Central High School, ' 84; Ph.B., University of Pennsylvania, ' 87 ; Wharton Fellow in History and Economics, ' 88; Graduate Student, Department of Philosophy, University of Pennsylvania, ' 83- ' 91 ; Assistant Professor of English, Philadelphia Central Manual Training School, ' 90- ' 92; Professor of History and Eco- nomics, Philadelphia Northeast Manual Training School, ' 92- ' 98; Lecturer on History and Econom- ics, ' 97- ' 98; Professor of History and Economics, ' 98—; Director of the Library, ' 06—; Phi Beta Kappa ; Tau Beta Pi. Charles Jacques Goodwin, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of the Greek Language mid Literature 18 East Church Street A.B., ' 87, A.M., ' 90, Bowdoin College; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, ' 90; Student, Univer- sity of Berlin, ' 96; Professor of Greek, Cornell College, Iowa, ' 90- ' 92; Professor of Greek, Saint Stephen ' s College, ' 98- ' 99 ; Professor of Greek, ' 99—; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Delta Phi. 27 William Esty, S.B., M.A. Professor of Electrical Engineering 42 West Market Street B.A., ' 89, M.A., ' 93, Amherst College; S.B., Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, ' 93 ; Instructor in Electrical Engineering, ' 93- ' 95 ; Assistant Pro- fessor of Electrical Engineering, ' 95- ' 98 ; Asso- ciate Professor of Electrical Engineering, ' 98- ' 01, University of Illinois ; Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, ' 03 — ; Tau Beta Pi ; Psi Upsilon. Howard Eckfeldt, B.S., E.M. Professor of Mining Engineering 438 Seneca Street B.S., ' 95, E.M., ' 96, Lehigh University; Instruc- tor in Mining Engineering, ' 00- ' 02 ; Professor of Mining Engineering, ' 04 — ; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Tau Omega. Preston Albert Lambert, B.A., M.A. Professor of Mathematics 323 North Center Street B.A., ' 83, M.A., ' 91, Lehigh University; Graduate Student in Germany, ' 93- ' 94 ; Instructor in Math- ematics, ' 84- ' 92, ' 93- ' 97; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, ' 97- ' 06; Professor of Mathematics. ' 06— ; Secretary of the Faculty, ' 00- ' 01 ; Director of the Conference Department, ' 08 — ; Phi Beta Kappa; Psi Upsilon. 28 Philip Mason Palmer, A.B. Professor of German and Head of the Department of the Course in Arts and Science University Park A.B., Bowdoin College ; A.B., Harvard University ; Instructor in Modern Languages, ' 02- ' 05; Assist- ant Professor of Modern Languages, ' 05- ' 06 ; Pro- fessor of Modern Languages, ' 06- ' 10; Professor of German, ' 10 — ; Phi Beta Kappa; Theta Delta Chi. Benjamin Leroy Miller, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Geology University Park A.B., University of Kansas, ' 97 ; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, ' 03 ; Professor of Biology and Chemistry, Penn College, ' 97- ' 00 ; Associate in Geology, Bryn Mawr College, ' 03- ' 07 ; Assist- ant Geologist, U. S. Geological Survey, ' 07- ' 13; Professor of Geology, ' 97 — ; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Xi. Winter Lincoln Wilson, C.E., M.S. Professor of Railroad Engineering 1118 West Market Street C.E., ' 88, M.S., ' 01, Lehigh University; Assist- ant Professor of Civil Engineering, Tulane Uni- versity, ' 01- ' 04 ; Assistant Professor of Civil En- gineering, ' 04- ' 07 ; Professor of Railroad Engi- neering, ' 07 — ; Tau Beta Pi. ■29 Robert William Hall, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Biology and Lecturer on Forestry On leave of absence Ph.B., Yale, ' 95; A.B., ' 97, A.M., ' 98, Ph.D., ' 01, Harvard University; Instructor in Biology, Yale University, ' 99- ' 02; Instructor in Zoology and Biology, ' 02- ' 04; Assistant Professor of Biology, ' 04- ' 09; Professor of Biology, ' 09—, Lehigh Uni- versity ; Lecturer on Forestry ; Sigma Xi. Percy Hughes, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy and Education 819 Tioga Avenue Teacher ' s Diploma, Teachers College, New York City, ' 97; A.B., Alfred University, ' 99; A.M., ' 02, Ph.D., ' 04, Columbia University ; Teacher and Principal, Secondary Schools, ' 96- ' 01 ; Instructor in Philosophy, Alfred University, ' 98- ' 99; Assist- ant in Philosophy, Columbia University, ' 03- ' 05 ; Instructor in Philosophy and Psychology, Univer- sity of Minnesota, ' 05- ' 06 ; Acting Professor of Philosophy and Director of Extension Courses for Teachers, Tulane University, ' 06- ' 07 ; Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Psychology and Educa- tion, ' 07- ' 09 ; Professor of Philosophy and Edu- cation, ' 09 — . Charles Shattuck Fox, A.B., LL.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Romance Languages and Lecturer on Economic Geography 445 High Street A.B., University of Rochester, ' 91 ; LL.B., Union University, ' 93; A.M., ' 03, Ph.D., ' 07, Harvard University; Student University of Gottingen, ' 97; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, ' 98- ' 99 ; Student, University of Berlin, ' 99- ' 00 ; Graduate Student, Harvard University, ' 03- ' 05 ; Admitted to Bar, State of New York, ' 93; Instructor in Modern Languages, ' 05- ' 08 ; Assistant Professor of Modern Languages, ' 08- ' 09 ; Assistant Profes- sor of Romance Languages, ' 09- ' 10; Professor of Romance Languages, ' 10 — ; Psi Upsilon. 30 Howard Roland Reiter, M.A. Professor of Physical Education University Park B.A., ' 98, M.A., ' 00, Princeton University; Grad- uate of Summer School of Physical Education, Harvard University, ' 10; Football Coach for the Philadelphia Athletics, ' 02; Athletic Coach, ' 03- ' 05; Director of Athletics. ' 05- ' ll, Wesleyan; Pro- fessor of Physical Education, ' 11 — . Harry M. Ullman, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry and Head of the Department 20 West Church Street A.B., ' 89, Ph.D., ' 92, Johns Hopkins University; Instructor in Chemistry, ' 94- ' 04 ; Assistant Pro- fessor of Quantitative and Industrial Analysis, ' 04- ' 10; Associate Professor of Chemistry, ' 10- ' 12; Professor of Chemistry, ' 12 — ; Tau Beta Pi; Theta Delta Chi. John Hutcheson Ogburn, C.E. Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 625 North Center Street C.E., Vanderbilt University, ' 92; Fellow in Engi- neering, Vanderbilt University, ' 92- ' 93 ; Assistant Astronomer, Dudley Observatory, ' 93- ' 95 ; In- structor in Mathematics and Astronomy, ' 95- ' 06; Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Astron- imiv, ' 06- ' 10; Associate Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, ' 10- ' 12; Professor of Mathemat- ics and Astronomy, ' 12 — ; Beta Theta Pi. 31 Barry MacNutt, E.E., M.S. Professor of Physics 928 Ostrum Street • E.E., ' 97, M.S., Lehigh University; Instructor in Electrical Engineering, ' 99- ' 01 ; Instructor in Physics, ' 01- ' 06; Assistant Professor of Physics, ' 06- ' 09 ; Associate Professor of Physics, ' 09- ' 15 ; Professor of Physics, ' 15 — ; Beta Theta Pi. Arthur Warner Klein, M.E. Professor of Mechanical Engineering 43 Wall Street M.E., Lehigh University, ' 99; Engineer with United Gas Improvement Company, Newark, ' 00 ; Atlanta, ' 01- ' 03 ; Professor of Engineering, Grove City College, ' 03- ' 04 ; Instructor in Mechanical Engineering, ' 04- ' 08 ; Assistant Professor of Me- chanical Engineering, ' 08- ' 10 ; Associate Profes- sor of Mechanical Engineering, ' 10- ' 15; Professor of Mechanical Engineering, ' 15 — ; Tau Beta Pi. Ralph Justin Fogg, B.S. Professor of Civil Engineering and Head of the Department 1024 West Market Street B. S., Tufts College, ' 06 ; Instructor in Civil Engi- neering, ' 08- ' ll; Assistant Professor of Civil En- gineering, ' 11- ' 14; Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, ' 15- ' 19; Professor of Civil Engi- neering, ' 19 — ; Tau Beta Pi; American Society of Civil Engineers; American Concrete Institute; American Society for Testing Materials; Society of Terminal Engineers; Delta Tau Delta. 32 IF Fred Viall Larkin, B.S., M.E. Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Head of the Department 135 Wall Street B.S., ' 06; M. E., ' 15, University of Wisconsin. Member American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers, American Society for Steel Treating, American Society for Testing Materials, Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education. The Telluride Power Company, Telluride, Colo- rado, ' 06- ' 09 ; Empire Engineering Corporation, New York, ' 09- ' ll; Terry Tench Company, In- corporated, New York, ' 11- ' 12; Instructor in Me- chanical Engineering, ' 12- ' 13 ; Assistant Profes- sor, ' 13- ' 15; Absent on Leave, ' 15- ' 16; Assistant General Superintendent, The Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Company, Harrisburg, Penn- sylvania, ' 15- ' 19; Professor of Mechanical Engi- neering, ' 19 — . Myron Jacob Luch, M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory 737 Seventh Avenue B.A., ' 02, M.A., ' 03, Lehigh University ; Ph.D., Tu- lane University, ' 07 ; Teaching Fellow and Assist- ant in Greek, Tulane University, ' 05- ' 07 ; Student at Leipzig and Berlin Universities, ' 10- ' 12; As- sistant in English, ' 04- ' 05; Instructor in English, ' 04- ' 05; Assistant Professor of English, ' 07- ' 19; Professor of English, ' 19 — ; Phi Beta Kappa. Lawrence B. Chapman, S.B. Professor of Naval Architecture 311 East Wall Street S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 10; Assistant in Marine Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 10- ' ll; Assistant Pro- fessor Mechanical Engineering, University of Maine, ' 13- ' 15; Professor of Naval Architecture, Lehigh University, ' 19 — . 33 Horace W. Wright, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Latin 416 Main Street A.B., University of Wisconsin, ' 08; Ph.D., Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, ' 17; Fellow of the Amer- ican Academy in Rome, ' 14- ' 15; Substitute Pro- fessor of Latin, University of Missouri, ' 17- ' 18; Substitute Professor of Latin, Oberlin College, ' 18- ' 19; Associate in Latin, Bryn Mawr College, ' 19- ' 21; Acting Professor of Latin, ' 21- ' 23; Pro- fessor of Latin, ' 23 — . Vahan Simon Babasinian, A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Organic Chemistry 411 Cherokee Street A.B., Anatolia College, ' 95; A.M., ' 03; Ph.D., ' 06; Brown University; Instructor in Chemistry, ' 06- ' 09; Assistant Professor of Chemistry, ' 09- ' ll; Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry, ' 11- ' 18, ' 19- ' 21 ; Professor of Organic Chemistry, ' 22 — ; Research Chemist, American University, Chemical Warfare Service, ' 18- ' 19 ; Tau Beta Pi. Joseph Dorst Patch, Major Inf., U. S. A. Professor of Military Science and Tactics and Head of the Department Carnegie Institute of Technology, ' 09 ; Entered U. S. Army, ' 09; Served in United States, Philip- pine Islands, and France; Commissioned 2nd Lieutenant, ' 11; 1st Lieutenant, ' 16; Captain, ' 17; Major, ' 20; Associate Professor of Military Science and Tactics, ' 22- ' 23 ; Professor of Mili- tary Science and Tactics, ' 23 — . 34 Bradley Stoughton, Ph.B., B.S. Professor of Metallurgy and Head of the Department Sayre Apartments, 3rd and Wyandotte Streets I ' li.r... Sheffield Scientific School, ' 93; B.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 96; Instructor in Metallurgy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 96- ' 97; Assistant to H. M. Howe, ' 97- ' 98; Metallurgist, Illinois Steel Com- pany, ' ! 8- ' 99; Chief of Cost Statistics, American Steel and Wire Company, ' 00; Manager Bessemer Department, Ben- jamin Atha £ Company, ' 01; Consulting- Engineer, ' 02- ' 07; I n-i liu tor. Adjunct Professor, and Acting Head of the Department of Metallurgy, School of Mines, Columbia University, ' 02- ' 08; Member of Engineering Committee, National Council of Defense, ' 18- ' 19; Consulting Metallur- gist, T.)- ' 23; Professor of Metallurgy and Head of the Department, ' 23 — . Neil Carothers, B.A., Ph.D. Acting Professor of Economics and History and Head of the Depart m nt B.A., University of Arkansas, ' 05; Diploma in Economics, Oxford University, ' 07 ; Ph.D., Prince- ton University, ' 16; Instructor and Assistant Pro- fessor of Economics, University of Arkansas, ' 07- ' 14; Fellow, Princeton University, ' 14- ' 16; As- sistant Professor of Economics and Finance, Princeton University, ' 16- ' 20; Commissioned 2nd Lieutenant, 1st Lieutenant, and Captain, U. S. Army, ' 17- ' 19; Economist and Financial Adviser, U. S. Department of State, ' 19; with Guaranty Trust Company of New York, ' 20- ' 23 ; Acting Pro- fessor of Economics and History, ' 23 — ; Kappa Sigma. Stanley Sylvester Seyfert, E.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Electrical Enginet ring 55 West Market Street E.E., ' 04, M.S., ' 09, Lehigh University; Instruc- tor in Electrical Engineering, ' 04- ' 08 ; Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, ' 08- ' 14; As- sociate Professor of Electrical Engineering, ' 14 — . 35 Alpha Albert Diefenderfer, A.C., M.S. Associate Professor of Quantitative Analysis and Assaying 725 West Broad Street A.C., ' 02, M.S., ' 08, Lehigh University; Assistant in Chemistry, ' 02- ' 03 ; Instructor in Chemistry, ' 03- ' 12 ; Assistant Professor of Chemistry, ' 12- ' 17 ; Associate Professor of Quantitative Analysis and Assaying, ' 17 — ; Tau Beta Pi. Thomas Edward Butterfield, M.E., C.E. Professor of Heat Power Engineering 1736 West Union Boulevard M.E., Stevens Institute of Technology, ' 95 ; C.E., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, ' 97 ; Instructor in Mechanical Engineering, ' 12- ' 13 ; Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, ' 13- ' 17; Member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Sigma Xi ; in Coast Artillery Corps, U. S. A., ' 17- ' 19; Major, Coast Artillery, ' 18- ' 19; Professor of Heat Power Engineering, ' 19 — . John H. Bickley, B.S. Associate Professor of Accounting 530 West Union Street B.S., University of Pennsylvania, ' 15; Instructor in Accounting, ' 15- ' 18; Associate Professor of Accounting, ' 19 — . ;n; Gar A. Roush, A.B., M.S. Associate Professor of M taMurgy Wydnor, R. F. D. No. ' 6 A.B., Indiana University. ' 05; M.S., University of Wisconsin, ' 10; Assistant Professor of Metal- lurgy. ' 12- ' 19; Absent on Leave, June, 1918-Feb- ruary, L919; Captain. Ordnance Dept, U. S. A.; Head of Educational Branch, Inspection Division, Ordnance Department; Associate Professor of Metallurgy, ' 19 — . Samuel Raymond Schealer, E.E., M. S. Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering 526 West Union Street E.E., Lehigh University, ' 09 ; Instructor in Elec- trical Engineering, ' 09- ' ll, ' 12- ' 14; Assistant Pro- fessor of Electrical Engineering, ' 18- ' 19, ' 19- ' 20; Associate Professor in Electrical Engineering, ' 20— ; Tau Beta Pi ; Phi Beta Kappa. James Scott Long, Ch.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Inorganic Chemistry R. F. D. No. 1, Coopersburg Ch.E., Lehigh University, ' 14; M.S., Lehigh Uni- versity, ' 14; Assistant in Chemistry, ' 14- ' 15; In- structor in Chemistry, ' 15- ' 17; Assistant Profes- sor of Inorganic Chemistry, ' 17- ' 19; Associate Professor of Inorganic Chemistrv, ' 20 — ; Tau Beta Pi; Theta Xi. Dale S. Chamberlain, B.Ch.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Industrial Chemistry On leave of absence B.Ch.E., University of Michigan; M.S., Lehigh University, ' 20 ; Assistant Professor of Industrial Chemistry, ' 16- ' 20; Associate Professor of Indus- trial Chemistry, ' 20 — . John Eugene Stocker, B.S., M.S. Associate Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 537 Center Street B.S., ' 95, M.S., ' 08, Lehigh University; Graduate Student in Mathematics, University of Chicago, ' 97- ' 98 ; Instructor in Mathematics, Western Mil- itary Institute, Alton, 111., ' 95- ' 97 ; Instructor in Mathematics, ' 03- ' 08; Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, ' 08- ' 21 ; Associate Professor, ' 21 — ; Phi Beta Kappa. Joseph Benson Reynolds, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 721 West Broad Street B.A., ' 07, M.A., ' 10, Ph.D., ' 19, Lehigh University; Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy, ' 07- ' 13 ; Assistant Professor of Mathematics and As- tronomy, ' 13- ' 21 ; Associate Professor, ' 21 — ; Phi Beta Kappa. :;s Ralph Lincoln Bartlett, S.B. Associate Professor o) Mining Engineering 636 Fifth Avenue S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 10; Graduate Student, Lehigh University, ' 12; In- structor in Mining Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 12- ' 13 ; Instructor in Mining Engineering, ' 14- ' 17; Assistant Professor of Mining Engineering, ' 17- ' 21 ; Associate Profes- sor, ' 21—. Sylvanus A. Becker, C.E., M.S. 3 East North Street C.E., ' 03, M.S., ' 09, Lehigh University; Instructor in Civil Engineering, ' 06- ' 13; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, ' 13- ' 22; Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, ' 23—; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Sigma Kappa. Howard Massey Fry, E.E., M.S. Associate Professor of Physics 726 Avenue H E.E., Lehigh University, ' 10; M.S., Lehigh Uni- versity, ' 15; Instructor of Physics, ' 10- ' 17; As- sistant Professor of Physics, ' 17- ' 22; Associate Professor of Physics, ' 23—; Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Tau Omega. 39 Oj£VsT -- ?: Morton Otis Fuller, C.E. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering 732 Avenue H C.E., Syracuse University, ' 10; Instructor, Pur- due University, ' 10- ' 12 ; Instructor in Civil En- gineering, ' 12- ' 17; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, ' 17- ' 22 ; Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, ' 23 — . George Carlton Beck, A.C. Assistant Professor of Quantitative Analysis 628 Prospect Street A.C, Lehigh University, ' 03 ; Assistant in Chem- istry, ' 04- ' 05 ; Instructor in Chemistry, ' 05- ' 13 ; Assistant Professor of Quantitative Analysis, ' 13—; Phi Delta Theta. Robert Pattison More, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of German 1830 Main Street A.B., Lehigh University, ' 10; A.M., Harvard, ' 13; Graduate Student, Harvard University, ' 13 ; As- sistant in German, Lehigh University, ' 10- ' ll ; Instructor in German, Pennsylvania State Col- lege, ' 11- ' 12; Instructor in German, University of Minnesota, ' 15- ' 16; Assistant Professor of Ger- man, Lehigh University, ' 16- — ; Phi Beta Kappa. 40 John Milton Toohy, B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor of Romanci Languages 51 Wall Street B.A., Lehigh University, ' 10; Assistant in Ger- man, ' 08- ' 09; Instructor in French, ' lo- ' 15; In- structor in Romance Languages, ' 15- ' 17; Assist- ant Professor of Romance Languages, ' 17 — ; Phi Beta Kappa ; Alpha Tau Omega. J. Lynford Beaver, E.E., M.S. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering 402 High Street West Chester State Normal School, ' 00; E.E., Le- high University. ' 04 ; Instructor in Electrical En- gineering, U. of Pa., ' 05- ' 07 ; Instructor in Elec- trical Engineering. Drexel Institute, ' 07- ' 16; Sen- ior Instructor in Electrical Engineering, Drexel Institute, ' 16- ' 18; Assistant Professor of Elec- trical Engineering, Lehigh University, ' 18 — ; Tau Beta Pi; Theta Xi. LeGrand Rex Drown, B.S., M.A. Assistant Professor of Education R. F. D. No. 2 B.S., ' 15, Wooslir College; M.A.. ' 16. Columbia University; Graduate Student, Columbia Univer- sity, ' 17; Department of Philosophy and Educa- tion, ' 18- ' 19; Lehigh University Extension and Summer Schools, ' 18. it Homer G. Turner, B.S., M.S. Assistant Professor of Geology 1216 Wood Street B.S., ' 12, Syracuse University; M.S., 14, Syracuse University ; Graduate Student at Chicago Univer- sity, ' 13- ' 14; Assistant in Geology, Syracuse Uni- versity, ' 10- ' 12 ; Instructor in Geology, ' 12- ' 13 ; Assistant Professor of Geology, ' 13- ' 18 ; Syracuse University ; Assistant Professor of Geology, Le- high University, ' 19 — ; Alpha Chi Sigma; Sigma Xi ; Sigma Beta. Parke Benjamin Fraim, E.M., M.S. Assistant Professor of Physics 315 West Fourth Street E.M., Lehigh University, ' 09 ; Instructor in Phys- ics, ' 12; Instructor in Physics, ' 19; Assistant Pro- fessor in Physics, ' 19 — . Howard G. Payrow, B.S. in C.E. Assistant Professor in Civil Engineering 1133 North Main Street B.S., in C.E., ' 07, Tufts College; Instructor in Civil Engineering, ' 16- ' 19; Assistant Professor in Civil Engineering, ' 19 — . 42 Frederick J. Lewis, B.S. in C.E. Assist a)i t Prof cssar in Civil Engineering 1239 Russell Avenue B.S. in C.E., University of Maine, ' 14 ; Instructor of Civil Engineering, Pennsylvania State College, ' 14- ' 16; Instructor of Civil Engineering, Lehigh University, ' 19- ' 20; Assistant Professor, ' 20 — . Kappa Sigma. Warren Walter Ewing, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physical Chemistry 18 East Market Street B.S., Parsons College, ' 12; M.S., University of Chicago, ' 18; Ph.D., ' 20; Sigma Xi. George Bartlett Curtis, B.A. Assistant Professor of Economics 516 Brodhead Avenue B.A., Wesleyan University, ' 16; Member of Amer- ican Economic Association ; Member of American Institute of Banking; Representative of World Book Co., ' 16- ' 18; A. E. F., ' 18- ' 19; Detachment U. S. Armv Students in British Universities, Ed- inburgh, Scotland, ' 19; Foreign Department, Guaranty Trust Company of New York, ' 19- ' 20; Assistant Professor of Economics, ' 20 — ; Com- mons Club; Phi Beta Kappa. Raymond Cooley Bull, B.S., A.B., M.D. Director of the Students ' Health Service 513 West Broad Street B.S., Colorado College, ' 04; A.B., University of Kansas, ' 06; M.D., Jefferson Medical College, ' 09; Interne, Methodist Episcopal Hospital, Philadel- phia, ' 09- ' 10; Practicing Physician, ' 10- ' 12; United States Army, ' 12- ' 19, ' 21- ' 23; Commis- sioned Lieutenant Colonel and retired as a Ma- jor, ' 23; Post Surgeon and Professor of Biology, Virginia Military Institute, ' 20- ' 21 ; Director of the Students ' Health Service, ' 23—. James Alexander Mease, M.E. Associate Professor of Machine Design R. F. D. No. 3, Wydnor M.E., Lehigh University, ' 05; Engineer with the National Tube Company, ' 07- ' 09; Associate Pro- fessor of Machine Design at Pennsylvania State College, ' 09- ' 17; Assistant Chief Engineer of the John W. Cowper Company, ' 17- ' 20; Chief Engi- neer of the F. L. Grant Company, ' 20- ' 21 ; Assist- ant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, ' 21- ' 22 ; Associate Professor of Machine Design, ' 23 — ; Tau Beta Pi. Charles K. Meschter, B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English 637 North New Street B.S., University of Pennsylvania, ' 96 ; B.A., Har- vard University, ' 00 ; M.A., University of Penn- sylvania, ' 07; Ph.D., ' 13; Professor of English and German, Perkiomen Seminary, ' 96- ' 05 ; Pro- fessor of English, Moravian College for Women, ' 10 — ; Instructor in English, ' 05- ' 09 ; Assistant Professor of English, ' 09 — . . li James M. Baldwin Associate Professor of Physical Education Dartmouth, ' 08; Graduate of the Harvard Summer School nf Physical Education; Graduate of the Summer School for Coaches, University of Illinois; Director of Physical Edu- cation, Rhode Island State College, ' 15- ' 18; Director of Physical Education, University of Maine, ' 19- ' 21 ; Athletic- Coach, Trinity College, ' 22; Associate Professor of Physical Education, ' 22—; Beta Theta Pi. Stanley Thomas, B.S., M.S., M.A. Associate Professor of Bacteriology and Acting Head of the Department 37 East Church Street B.S. in Chem., Lafayette College, ' 12; M.S., Lehigh Uni- versity, ' 13; M.A., Lehigh University, ' 16; Student, Grad- uate School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, ' 16- ' 17; Assistant in Biology, Lehigh University, ' 12- ' 13; In- structor in Biology, ' 13- ' 16; Assistant Professor, ' 16; Re- search Bacteriologist, H. K. Mulford, Philadelphia, ' 16; Assistant Director of the Laboratories, ' 17- ' 19; Associate Director in Research and Production Work, ' 19- ' 22; Asso- ciate Professor of Bacteriology and Acting Head of the De- partment, ' 23 — ; Alpha Chi Rho. 9 Frederick R. Ashbaugh Bursar 77 East Broad Street Secretary to the President, 1896-1908 ; Bursar, 1908—. 9 Howard D. Gruber, E.E. Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering 657 Highland Avenue E.E., Lehigh University, ' 09; Instructor in Electrical Engi- neering, ' 09- ' 12; Instructor in Electrical Engineering, Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, ' 12- ' 13; Instructor in Electrical Engineering, Pennsylvania State College, ' 13- ' 14; Instruc- tor in Electrical Engineering, ' 14- ' 16; Assistant Professor in Electrical Engineering, ' 19 — . 45 Morris S. Knebelman, B.S., M.S. Assistant Professor of Mathematics 415 Cherokee Street B.S., University of Pennsylvania, ' 12 ; M.S., Lehigh, Univer- sity, ' 14; Graduate Student, Lehigh University, ' 15; Instruc- tor in Mathematics, ' 13; Assistant Professor of Mathemat- ics, ' 19—. Sidney MacG. Brown, A.B., M.A. Assistant Professor of History and Political Science R. F. D. No. 3, Wydnor A.B., Bowdoin, ' 16; B.A., Oxford, ' 21; M.A., Oxford, ' 21; Assistant Professor of History and Political Science, ' 23 — . Allison Butts, A.B., S.B. Assistant Professor of Metallurgy 1704 West North Street A.B., Princeton University, ' 11 ; S.B., Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology, ' 13 ; Assistant in Metallurgy, ' 16- ' 17 ; Instructor in Metallurgy, ' 17 — . Walter Flamm Quast, M.E. Assistant Pro fessor of Mechanical Engineering 617 Center Street M. E., Lehigh University, ' 14 ; Instructor in Mechanical En- gineering, ' 17- ' 21 ; Assistant Professor, ' 21 — . August Henry Fretz, Ph.B., C.E. Assistant Professor of Geology Easton, Pa. Ph.B., Lafayette College, ' 03; C.E., ' 06; Bridge Engineers ' Office, D. L. W. R. R., ' 06- ' 10; Instructor in Geology, La- fayette College, ' 10- ' 18; Instructor in Geology, Lehigh Uni- versity, ' 18- ' 19; Assistant Professor, ' 19 — . Harry Bridgman Pulsifer, B.S., Ch.E., M.S. Assistant Professor of Metallurgy 1125 Wood Street B.S., in Ch.E., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ' 03 ; Instructor in Chemistry, New Hampshire State College, ' 03- ' 04 ; Instructor in Metallurgy, Armour Institute of Technol- ogy, ' 11- ' 15; Ch.E., Armour Institute of Technology, ' 15; Assistant Professor of Metallurgy, Armour Institute of Technology, ' 15- ' 17; M.S., University of Chicago, ' 18; Pro- fessor of Metallurgy, Monta na State School, ' 17- ' 21 ; Assist- ant Professor of Metallurgy, ' 21 — . 9 Fay Count Bartlett Assistant Professor of Physical Education 704 Dakota Street Harvard Summer School of Physical Training; Columbia Summer School of Physical Training; Instructor in Phys- ical Education, ' 17- ' 21 ; Assistant Professor, ' 21—; Sigma Phi Epsilon. 9 Robert Earl Martin, B.A., M.S. Assistant Professor of Physics 436 Birkel Avenue A.B., Indiana University, ' 17 ; Instructor in Physics, Lehigh University, ' 18- ' 21; Assistant Professor, ' 21 — . Harold V. Anderson, B.Ch.E. Assistant Professor of Chemistry 819 Beverly Street, Rosemont B.Ch.E., University of Michigan, ' 12; Instructor in Chem- istry, Lehigh University, ' 18- ' 21 ; Assistant Professor, ' 21 — . Marcus B. Bell, B.S., Captain Inf., U. S. A. Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics 638 Avenue G B.S., University of Missouri, ' 16; Honor Graduate; Com- missioned 2nd Lieutenant, August, 1917; 1st Lieutenant with 53rd Infantry, October, 1917; Commissioned Captain, March, 1918; With Army of Occupation in Germany, 1919; Assigned to 7th Division, U. S. A., 1920; Assistant Profes- sor, Lehigh University, ' 21 — . Eugene H. Uhler, C.E. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering 1327 Montrose Avenue C.E., Lafayette College, ' 08; Instructor at Pratt and Drexel Institutes ; Instructor of Civil Engineering, Lehigh Univer- sity, ' 19- ' 21 ; Assistant Professor, ' 21 — . George F. Nordenholt, M.E., M.S. Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering 533 Eighth Avenue M.E., ' 14; M.S., ' 23, Lehigh University; Chief Inspector, Electric Service Supply Company, ' 18- ' 20; Instructor, ' 20- ' 22; Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, ' 22 — . 48 Elias Klein, B.S., B.C.E., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physics 456 Montclair Avenue B.S., Valparaiso University, ' 11; B.C.E., ' 12; Ph.D., Yale University, ' 21; Assistant Professor of Physics, ' 23 — . Lawrence H. Opdycke, B.S., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry 47 East Wall Street B.S., Rutgers, ' 13; A.M., Columbia, ' 16; Ph.D., Johns Hop- kins, ' 22 ; Assistant Professor of Chemistry, ' 23 — . Eric Spencer Sinkinson, B.S.C., D.I.C., A. I.e. Assistant Professor of Quantitative Analysis 240 Packer Avenue B.S.C., Sheffield University, England, ' 10; D.I.C., Imperial College of Science, London, ' 17; A.I.C., Institute of Chem- istry of Great Britain and Ireland, ' 18; Associate Science Master, Stramongate School, Kendal, England, ' 05- ' 06; With A. H. Allan, City Analysts of Sheffield, ' 10- ' ll; Re- search Assistant, Sheffield University, ' 11- ' 12; Demonstra- tor in Non-Ferrous Metallurgy, Sheffield University, ' 12- ' 14; Lecturer, Imperial College of Science and Technology, ' 14- ' 23 ; Assistant Professor of Quantitative Analvsis, ' 23—. Robert H. Chance, Captain Inf., U. S. A. Assistant Professor of Military Scienc and Tactics 921 Delaware Avenue Ohio State University, ' 18; Commissioned 2nd Lieutenant United States Army, ' 17: 1st Lieutenant, ' 17; Captain, ' 17; Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics, ' 23 — . 49 Instructors Edward C. Roest, M.A. 524 Fifth Avenue Instructor- in German Peysah Leyzerah, Ph.D. 521 Cherokee Street Instructor in Mathematics Marvin R. Solt, B.S. 124 West Fourth Street Instructor in Mathematics William A. Lambert, B.A., M.A. 1616 West North Street Instructor in English August Concilio, E.E., M.S. 460 Montclair Avenue Instructor in Plujsics Boyd R. Ewing, B.A. 723 Cherokee Street Instructor in Romance Languages JESSE E. Graham, 1st Lieutenant, Inf., U. S. A. 921 Delaware Avenue Instructor in Military Science and Tactics Malcolm Kee Buckley, B.S. in Chem. 438 Carlton Avenue Instructor in Chemistry Morris E. Kanaly 657 Taylor Street Instructor in Physical Education William A. Kriedler, B.S. 225 East Geopp Street Instructor in Biology Harvey A. Zinszer, B.A. 637 Fifth Avenue Instructor in PJiysics Robert C. Cantelo, B.S., M.S., M.A., 402 Wyandotte Street Instructor i)i Chemistry Lester L. Leach, B.S., in M.E. 77 East Broad Street Instructor in Mechanical Engineering 50 Robert P. KOLB, M.E. 7 Finady Avenue Instructor in Mechanical Engineering Archie R. Miller, B.S., in E.E. 1219 Russell Avenue Instructor in Electrical Engineering Charles H. Behre, Jr., B.S. Instructor in Geology 516 Brodheacl Avenue PAUL N. Kistler, B.S. in M.E. 617 Center Street Instructor in Mechanical Engineering George A. Lyle, B.S. Instructor in Mathematics Chi Phi House William B. Shirey, A.M. 315 West Packer Avenue Instructor in Chemistry E. K. Smiley, A.B. Instructor in English 520 Brodhead Avenue James D. Weinland, A.M. Instructor in Psychology Israel Maizlish, Ph.D. Instructor in Physics 15 West Packer Avenue 478 Birkel Avenue Arthur Gibbes Crafts, A.B. Instructor in Physics 822 Tombler Street J. Shepard Webb, B.S. Instructor i i Physics 456 Montclair Avenue Wallace W. Perkins, A.B. 411 Cherokee Street Instructor in Romance Languages Gilbert Convers-Castillejo, B.S., Ph.D. 519 Wyandotte Street Instructor in Romance Languages 51 Allen J. Barthold, B.A. 128 East North Street Instructor in Romance Languages M. S. Noyes, B.S. 22 West North Street Instructor in Marine Engineering and Transportation Ernest Roy Kingsley, B.S. 41 West Church Street Instructor in Electrical Engineering Harry Diamond, B.S. 60 West Market Street Instructor in Electrical Engineering Marcus C. Old, B.A. 726 Cedar Street, Allentown Assistant in Biology Robert Dominick Billinger, Ch.E., 631 North New Street Instructor in Chemistry Harry L. Custard, A.B., M.B.A. 704 Fifth Avenue Instructor in Accounting JUDSON G. Smull, M.S. 66 West Greenwich Street Assistant in Chemistry Jonathan Madden, Sergeant, Inf., U. S. A. 18 West Fourth Street Assistant in Military Science and Tactics Thomas J. Lavin, Sergeant, Inf., U. S. A. 659 Taylor Street Assistant in Military Science and Tactics James R. Boyle, Sergeant, Inf., U. S. A. 440 Mavtel Street Assistant in Military Science and Tactics Alumni Clubs Arkansas Lehigh Club President Secretary John T. Fuller, ' 03 Charles H. Miller, ' 88 Chicago Lehigh Club President ■Vice-President S. E. Lambert, ' 89 D. M. Flick, ' 11 Secretary and Treasurer H. W. Kern, ' 92 Detroit Lehigh Club President N. C. Banks, ' 93 Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer S. P. Hess, ' 10 W. A. Draper, ' 07 Intermountain Lehigh Club President Secretary J. E. Talmage, ' 91 H. L. Baldwin, ' 03 Lehigh Club of Central Pennsylvania President Honorary President W. C. Schulz, ' 17 Hon. William D. B. Ainey, ' 87 Vice-Presidents William Dey, ' 09 S. P. Heitshu, ' 01 W. B. Shirk, ' 20 A. S. Gilmore, ' 03 J. W. Stair, ' 06 T. B. Wood, ' 98 Secretary and Treasurer H. I. Tripp, ' 10 Lehigh Club of China President Te-Ching Yen, ' 01 Lehigh Club of Cuba President Secretary Conrado D. Martinez, ' 01 Alberto R. Arelano, ' 19 Lehigh Club of Neiv England President W. D. Hartshorne, ' 74 Vice-President Secretary L. A. Olney, ' 96 D. K. Dean, ' 06 Lehigh Club of Northern Neiv York- President Secretary and Treasurer E. L. Rich, ' 05 N. R. Munkelwitz, ' 18 Lehigh Club of Northern Ohio President N. A. Wolcott, ' 03 Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer M. H. Schmid, ' 07 George P. Nachman, ' 14 Lehigh Club of Southern New England President Secretary C. H. Veeder, ' 86 J. W. Thurston, ' 96 54 Lehigh Club of Western New York President W. A. James, ' 95 Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer David Childs, ' 98 Richard Stockton, ' 10 Lehigh Home. Club President H. R. Walters, ' 03 Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer C. S. Kenney, ' 10 A. P. Sooner, ' 11 Maryland Lehigh Club President W. Frank Roberts, ' 02 Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer W. D. Janney, ' 83 A. J. Kutzleb, ' 13 Lehigh Club of New York, Inc. President Vice-President Morton Sultzer, ' 12 R. W. Knight, ' 94 Treasurer Secretary W. N. Rorer, ' 12 F. E. Portz, ' 17 Northeast Pennsylvania Lehigh Club President J. M. Humphrey, ' 89 Vice-Presidents Cadwallader Evans, ' 01 E. Schweitzer, ' 07 Secretary and Treasurer Asst. Secretary and Treasurer Atherton Bowen, ' 06 Roy N. Williams, ' 10 Philadelphia Lehigh Club President J. Watts Mercur, Jr., ' 13 Vice-Presidi nts Samuel P. Felix, ' 03 Clifford F. Lincoln, ' 11 Secretary and Treasurer Moriz Bernstein, ' 96 Pittsburgh Lehigh Club President Taylor Allerdice, ' 83 Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer P. H. W. Smith, ' 92 George M. Baker, ' 07 Southern Anthracite Lehigh Club President Vice-President E. W. Walters, ' 12 W. H. Lesser, ' 05 Secretary Treasurer R. B. Serfass, ' 09 H. T. QuiN, ' 11 Washington Lehigh Club President Vice-President Ralph P. Barnard, ' 89 E. A. Keys, ' 99 Secretary Treasurer F. H. Sasscer, ' 10 C. BIRNIE, ' 12 55 Alumni Association of the Lehigh University, Inc. Directors, 1923-1924 President Clarence W. Hudson, ' 89 Vice-President Harry A. White, ' 95 Vice-President Timothy Burns, ' 01 Treasurer John Arthur Frick. ' 03 Secretary Walter R. Okeson, ' 96 Archivist Preston A. Lambert, ' 83 Asst. Secretary and Treasurer... A. E. BUCHANAN, JR., ' 18 Honorary Alumni Trustees Homer D. William, ' 87 William C. Dickerman, ' 96 Taylor Allerdice, ' 83 Aubrey Weymouth, ' 94 Henry Dalzell Wilson, ' 01 Alan C. Dodson, ' 00 r (! Endowment RESOLVED, That the Alumni of Lehigh in Annual Meeting assembled, having considered the needs of our University as set forth in President Richards ' report and being determined that no stone shall be left unturned to make of Lehigh the leading University of her type in this country, do enthusiastically accept President Richards ' plans for a Greater Lehigh and heartily endorse the recommendation made by the Alumni Council for a $4,000,- 000 Endowment Campaign to be carried on during the coming Fall. We will spare no effort to make this campaign an unqualified success and pledge our continued support to the end that our University may realize fully this Splendid and magnificent conception of President Richards. JUNE 9. 1923 Campaign JOINT ENDOWMENT COMMITTEE Honorary Chairman Vice Chairman E. G. Grace, ' 99 Aubrey Weymouth, ' 94 Executive Chairman General Manager W. C. DlCKERMAN, ' 96 W. R. Ok eson, ' 96 H. S. Drinker, ' 71 C. D. Marshall, ' 88 Franklin Baker, ' 95 F. R. Dravo, ' 87 C. W. Hudson, ' 89 H. D. Wilson, ' 01 National Committee on Estimate Faculty Committee and Quota P. M. Palmer Aubrey Weymouth, ' 94 Chairman Chairman Tavlor Allerdice, ' 83 Howard Eckfeldt, ' 95 G. M. Baker, ' 07 Moriz Bernstein, ' 96 P. A. Lambert, ' 85 F. L. Castleman, ' 95 F. V. Larkin, ' 14 F. A. Daboll, ' 96 B. L. Miller Dion K. Dean, ' 06 W. Doushkess, ' 18 R. J. Fogg J. A. Frick, ' 03 N. M. Emery, ' 99 NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE Charles M. Schwab John R. McGinley Chairman Clarence H. Mackay Jules S. Bache J. Hartley Manners Lewis W. Baldwin Dwight W. Morrow Bernard M. Baruch Frank A. Munsey General Robert L. Bullard Grayson M. P. Murphy James A. Burden Alton B. Parker Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler William C. Potter William H. Childs Samuel Rea George B. Cortelyou J. Leonard Replogle Paul D. Cravath Thomas F. Ryan Agnew T. Dice Charles H. Sabin Charles R. Flint Robert A. C. Smith General George W. Goethals Melville E. Stone John Hays Hammond Augustus Thomas Hon. Job E. Hedges William H. Todd Otto H. Kahn Fre-derick D. Underwood Edward E. Loomis Samuel M. Vauclain 58 Endowment Campaign DISTRICT WORKERS Upper New England L. A. Olnev, ' 96, Chairman; H. B. Reno, ' 04, Vice Chairman; Levi Watts. Jr., ' 98; M. A. DeWolfe Howe, ' 86; C. T. Mosman, ' 92; C. E. Trafton, ' 96; A. 0. Fulton, ' 08; H. W. Rowley, ' 85. Lower Neiv England C. H. Veeder, ' 86, Chairman; C. W. Buell, ' 04; S. P. Senior, ' 97; W. P. Spear, ' 18; J. W. Thurston, ' 96; Chas. F. Townsend, ' 95; E. E. Take, ' 12. N( w York Metropolitan C. Philip Coleman, ' 88, Chairman; Morton Sultzer, ' 12, Vice Chairman and General Manager; Norman Merriman, ' 05; A. Parker Smith, ' 84; C. H. Bovnton, ' 89 ; Robert Grier Cooke, ' 84 ; A. E. Forstall, ' 83 ; L. D. Rights, ' 93 ; R. R. Galloway, ' 14 ; W. N. Rorer, ' 12 ; J. T. McNaier, ' 02 ; F. G. Macarow, ' 20; M. Mizel, ' 18; Fitz Wm. Sargent, ' 79; Harris Tilghman, ' 07; L. N. VanNort, ' 22. Northern New York C. P. Turner, ' 94. Central Neiv York D. R. Smith, ' 03, Chairman; Stanley W. Brown, ' 09; B. G. Dow, ' 04; A. E. Meaker, ' 75; P. M. Paine, ' 91. Buffalo and Erie T. Burns, ' 01, Chairman; H. W. Baldwin, ' 96, Vice Chairman; S. T. Harle- man, 01; Thomas Coyle, ' 09; C. H. Field, ' 09; C. B. Pearsall, ' 10; J. O. Putnam, ' 13; R. H. Torrey, ' 09; T. M. Uptegraff, ' 09. Central New Jersey A. P. S. Bellis, ' 09, Chairman; Harold J. Horn, ' 98; Wm. Gunmere, ' 99; Frederick V. Bechtel, ' 08. Philadelphia R. H. Morris, ' 89, Chairman; W. A. Webb, ' 91; C. F. Lincoln, ' 11, Vice Chairmen; Carl A. Baer, ' 08; Morris L. Cooke, ' 95; Franklin Baker, Jr., ' 95; F. A. Daboll, ' 96; H. H. Davis, ' 92; T. J. S. Edelen, ' 04; R. Farnham, ' 99 ; S. P. Felix, ' 03 ; J. G. Fleck, ' 90 ; W. Forstall, ' 91 ; J. W. Ledoux, ' 87; J. Watts Mercur, ' 13; H. S. Miner, ' 88; E. T. Murphv, ' 01; G. F. Pettinos, ' 87; Jos. A. Steinmetz, ' 00; Dr. H. Toulmin, ' 86; R. W. Walters, ' 07 ; S. D. Warriner, ' 90 ; Harry A. White, ' 95. 59 Lehigh University Home Club J. A. Frick, ' 03, Chairman; M. L. Jacobs, ' 10, Secretary; W. L. Estes, Jr., ' 05; E. T. Satchell, ' 00; F. B. Gearhart, ' 01; H. J. Hartzog, ' 04; H. G. Harvey, ' 09; F. V. Larkin, ' 14; J. B. McBride, ' 96; E. T. Satchell, ' 00; F. L. Stephenson, ' 16; R. S. Taylor, ' 95; R. E. Wilbur, ' 04; D. G. Wil- liams, ' 10. Bethlehem Local Dr. W. P. Walker, Chairman; J. E. Mathews, Vice Chairman; A. H. Buck, Secretary; F. R. Bush; Francis Dykes; Ben Goodman; Joseph Mc- Garr; H. J. Meyers. Reading E. A. Quier, ' 91, Chairman; Geo. W. Beggs, ' 95, Vice Chairman; H. J. Kauffman, ' 10; Wm. D. Matheson, ' 90. Southern Anthracite H. H. Otto, ' 12, Chairman; R. G. Miller, ' 20; E. F. Weaver, ' 13; W. A. Richards, ' 17; R. B. Serfass, ' 09; H. M. Smyth, ' 12; E. B. Snyder, ' 14. No rtheastern Pennsylvania E. H. Lawall, ' 82, Chairman; C. Evans, ' 01, Vice Chairman; W. L. Raeder, ' 76; F. P. Houghton, ' 14; C. H. Rhodes, ' 10; S. M. Dessauer, ' 96; J. A. Hart, ' 12. Central Pennsylvania Charles Prentice Turner, ' 89, Chairman; P. L. Grubb, ' 01 ; W. J. Collier, ' 95; R. F. Gross, ' 02; L. G. Krause, ' 01; C. G. Melville, ' 19; M. B. Tate, ' 90; H. I. Tripp, ' 10; C. H. Miller, ' 90; C. J. Langdon, ' 06; S. D. Williams, ' 13. Pittsburgh H. D. Wilson, ' 01, Chairman; F. B. Bell, ' 97, Vice Chairman; George M. Baker, ' 07, Secretary; Tavlor Allerdice, ' 83; T. J. Bray, ' 94; F. R. Dravo, ' 87; H. H. McClintic, ' 88; C. D. Marshall, ' 88; R. T. Morrow, ' 82; P. H. W. Smith, ' 92; H. D. Williams, ' 87. Maryland W. F. Roberts, ' 02 District of Columbia and Virginia R. B. Swope, ' 10, Chairman; C. E. T. Lull, ' 00; D. F. Hewett, ' 02; C. Bir- nie, ' 12; E. R. Greenleaf, ' 20; H. J. Jackson, ' 08; F. H. Sasscer, ' 10. Northern Ohio M. H. Schmid, ' 07, Chairman; P. P. Reese, ' 03; W. F. Bailey, ' 14. Southern Michigan and Toledo W. G. Whildin, ' 95, Chairman; N. C. Banks, ' 93; J. S. Hegeman, ' 02. 60 Northern Michigan S. R. Elliott, ' 97 Middle West S. E. Lambert, ' 89, Chairman; D. M. Flick, ' 11, Vice Chairman. West Virginia W. H. Cunningham, ' 04 Kentucky Wm. Reinecke, Jr., ' 95, Chairman; Wm. J. Borries, ' 05; J. G. H. Isert, ' 05; C. R. Peebles, ' 04. North and South Carolina Theodore G. Empie, ' 94, Chairman; W. H. Grimball, ' 06; G. C. White, ' 97. Tennessee Morrow Chamberlain, ' 00 Louisiana and Mississippi R. W. Wolcott, ' 18 Wash ington J. G. Heinz, ' 00 Oregon Charles J. McGonigle, ' 01 Southern California D. S. Williams, ' 96 Northern California Mason D. Pratt, ' 87 Utah J. C. Dick, ' 95 Arizona P. G. Spilsbury, ' 05 Texas J. B. Townsend, ' 95 Wyoming George Barclay, ' 90 Nebraska Wm. L. DeBaufre, ' 07 Minnesota Charles M. Case, ' 92 Colorado Ralph J. Gilmore, ' 07 Nevada John L. Dynan, ' 09 Idaho E. S. Johnston, ' 16 Porto Rico and Panama M. H. Heck, ' 03 Cuba Jose R. Villalon, ' 90 Europe J. C. Whitmoyer, ' 95 C2 J. F. ROGERS PRESIDENT History HE fall of 1920 produced the Class of ' 24 on Lehigh ' s campus. Being fairly altruistic, with the good of the college at heart, we gave a host of athletes to the varsity teams and wore our frosh caps on Sunday as a partial result. Even in our first year we instigated an old-time spirit of class rivalry at the time of the Sophomore and Freshman banquets. This same spirit we carried into our Soph- omore year. The upperclassmen then en- trusted us with the inauguration of a new system of organized hazing, in an endeavor to create a desire in the Class of ' 25 to fol- low in our footsteps as an example of Lehigh spirit. Throughout this year we success- fully maintained this policy. Aside from this we contributed very largely to the reg- ular college activities. The following year as Juniors, though greatly depleted in number, we undertook with sincerity the task of carrying out our ideas in the role of upperclassmen. Here we co-operated with the Seniors in attempt- ing to advance Lehigh materially as well as idealistic-ally under the guidance of our new president, Dr. Richards. As Seniors we are still doing our utmost to Carry On. We leave disappointed at the fact that we haven ' t seen a football vic- tory over Lafayette. However, we have great hopes for the future and feel that the jinx is getting weaker, due to the suc- cesses in soccer and basketball. We believe that, speaking either historically or prophet- ically, the members of the Class of ' 24 may truly be termed Men of Lehigh. Class of 1924 Colors Black and Gold OFFICERS President John F. Rogers New York Vice-President ALWIN J. HOTTINGER New Jersey Secretary Edgar T. Adams, Jr. Pennsylvania Treasurer Thomas G. Conley Pennsylvania Historian Dan P. Hoagland New Jersey Athletic Iii pres( ntative James M. Degnan, Jr. Pennsylvania YELL Slam! Bang! Rip! Sore! We ' re the Class Of Twenty-f uir! GEORGE JUSTIN ABEL Elizabeth, N. J. Hardly •O ' Abel Gorgeous M.E.; Lacrosse Team (2, 3, 4); Mu- sical Clubs (1, 2); Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Class Football (1, 2), Captain (1); Varsity Club; Delta Upsilon. |f°v| ARDLY has spent a precarious j-j l four years trying to live down K223 the fact that h e hails from Eliz- abeth where the cows meander through the footpaths. That bad start coupled with the Faculty ' s en- deavors to wish him God speed twice a year have had him in a per- petual sweat. We first noticed George during our big fracas with the Sophs when his orb took on a dingy hue. From that time to this he has always been to the fore in class and sectional activities. He turned out to be a mighty nasty lacrosse artist, although at times he has had to explain to Bill O ' Neill just why his stick should take root and sprout leaves on Taylor Field. He has been a great inspiration to Pop Larkin who has learned thru George many new pointers and the many short-comings of his course. Why Hardly went so far as to pro- pose that Allentown and particularly Mealey ' s should be moved just West of the campus. Cars do seem to have a bad habit of refusing to run after midnight. That ' s a fact. EDGAR THOMAS ADAMS, JR. Crafton, Pa. Ed E. T. Addie E.M.; Editor-in-Chief of Burr (4); Managing Editor (3); Associate Edi- tor (3); Editor-in-Chief of 1924 Ep- itome ; Associate Editor of Brown and White (2, 3, 4); Editor of the Senior Class Book; Lehigh Press Club (3); Class Secretary (4); Col- lege Cotillion Committee (4); Inter- fraternity Council (4); Mining and Metallurigical Society; Cotillion; Pi Delta Epsilon, Secretary-Treasurer (4); B. U. X.; Kappa Beta Phi; Cy- anide; Sword and Crescent; Chi Psi. 70 4 1 ING, ring! Telephone, enter JSf. Adams on horseback with his HH hair cut curly and barefoot with his father ' s shoes on. Thus begin- neth the history of Edgar T. Adams, who came to us from Pittsburgh; pure, healthy and innocent. Little would anyone have suspected that a period of four years could have brought about such a change in a boy ' s life. During this period Edgar acquired many habits, chief of which is his inability to get up for break- fast for which he substitutes a roll in bed. Ed leaves us as he entered on horseback, but he is not now an un- sophisticated freshman, but one of Skipper Eckfeldt ' s rough, tough and worldly coal diggers. Oh, dear! CHARLES MAHIN ALFORD East Orange, N. J. Charlie Vic E.E.; Managing Editor of Brown and White (4); Assistant Editor (3); As- sociate Editor (1, 2); Manager of Soccer (4); Assistant Manager (3); President of the Pennsylvania Inter- collegiate Association Football League (4); Associate Editor of the 1924 Epitome ; Musical Clubs (1,2); Soph- omore Council (2); Calculus Crema- tion Committee; Interfraternity Council (3); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4); Senior Class Book Committee; Pi Delta Epsilon; Sigma Phi Epsilon. I FTER graduating from the East Orange High School in 1919 and i d then resting for a year, Charles came to Lehigh. He chose an engi- neering course and then to fill in time began to write for the Brown and White. When you see a slight youth hurrying along with a rather preoc- cupied air, this is Charles. He allows himself the minimum time and some- how just gets there. Being a believer in efficiency, he has had time to engage in his assorted list of activities and withall is one of the few who have never received an E from the Dean ' s office. Charles is a modest likeable chap who we predict will some day be boss of all the Telephone Compan- ies. Sure, I ' ll be glad to. ROBERT HOUSTON ALLAN Jermyn, Pa. Allie Bob Bus.Ad.; Class Baseball (1, 2); Assist- ant Manager Baseball (3); Lehigh Six (1, 2, 3, 4), Manager (4); Junior Prom Committee; Cotillion, Second Vice-President; Kappa Beta Phi; B. U. X.; Sigma Nu. 71 ILUE-EYED Bob is a favorite 0 everywhere. This is not at all SS surprising — in fact it couldn ' t be otherwise. Good looks and a pleas- ant disposition coupled with a marked musical talent is reason enough for anyone ' s popularity. Allie has been a busy man since he came to college — takes Business, you know. His interests have been of a varied nature — having adapted himself in rapid succession to base- ball, wrestling, dance committee woi ' k, and achieved the distinction of being assistant manager of baseball. Not- ably he has taken part in all inter- fraternity contests of basketball, foot- ball, pool, bowling. Bob ' s activities outside of the col- lege sphere have brought him a lot of distinction and fame. You can ' t understand that fully until you have heard him strum his banjo in the Le- high Six Orchestra. From seven to seventy, They all ask for him. It ' s the nuts. CHARLES EMORY ALWINE New Oxford, Pa. •( -harlie Cedric E.E.; Senior Electrical Football; Elec- trical Engineering- Society. r ? |HIS brilliant Electrical comes LjgJ from New Oxford, where he BUI spent the early days handling bricks in his father ' s brickyard. This work developed him into a very husky boy, and consequently he has been try- ing out for the wrestling team, and has also played guard on the famous Senior Electrical Football Team. While at work handling bricks, he got the idea that he would like to build up an education, therefore, came to Lehigh to take up Electrical Engineering. During his first two years in college, Charlie was the type of man known as the woman hater. Then early in his third year a certain eventful night arrived when he had a date with a fair damsel from this vicinity. That night was the turning point in his career. Since then, he has been step- ping out regularly and if the reports are true, he is quite a hit with the ladies. Now that you are about to go out into the world, we wish you the best of luck in the years to come. What Ihe Hell! WILLIAM D. AYERS Branchville, N. J. Bill Ai t rsi( C.E.; Civil Engineering Society; Delta Theta. FTER being interference for him all around the small dance floor, Sc she gasped, My, but aren ' t you the plunging full-back? And Wil- liam laughed; he was having a good time. Never mind, Bill, this is Beth- lehem not Branchville. Bill came to us from Pennington Prep and before that Newton High in order to become a torn and tattered mud be- spattered Civil Engineer. Foolish Bill. But we will refrain from much mud- slinging-. Yet just between friends who was responsible for most of the bull sessions in Section D last year? Chorus — Ayers. Who took Stoichom- ery three times ? Chorus — Ayers. Who breaks half the hearts in this place God forgot? Chorus — Our dar- ling Bill. He has been one of our staunehest friends, and here ' s wishing him success when he gets that di- ploma. That ' s no damn bargain. 72 ERNEST WELLINGTON BAKER Harrisburg, Pa. Ernie Bake Bennie E.E.; First honors in Electrical Engi- neering- (3); Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Elec- trical Engineering Society, President (4); Professional Council, Secretary; Senior Electrical Football: Tau Beta Pi, treasurer (4). -tt-IT was one bright day in the lat- -j-. ter part of December, 1902, S9 when Ernie first gazed upon the light of day. Can you imagine, kind friends, a Christmas gift of which anyone could be more appreciative, we ask you? Well written was the state- ment, Of their own virtues, modest men are dumb, for the only time Bake blows his own horn Is wnen he is sliding the trombone for our band. How his Ernest efforts have been rewarded is best shown by his accom- plishments in college activities. His companionship and wonderful congen- iality have won a place for him in the hearts of all who know him. At their first opportunity, Tau Beta Pi chose him one of their number, and. being an honest man, he was assigned tne task of guarding the empty vaults of the society. Further, by his unani- mous election to the presidency of the Electrical Engineering Socity, he has the distinction of having guided the destiny of the most successful society on the campus. Good morning, gentlemen. 73 EDMUND VAN GILDER BENNETT Lansdale, Pa. El E. V. Met.; Editor-in-Chief of Brown ana White (4), Assistant Editor (3), As- sociate Editor (2); Associate Editor of 1924 Epitome; Senior Class Book Committee; Glee Club (3); Lehigh Delegate to International Newspaper Association Convention 1923; Tau Beta Pi; Pi Delta Epsilon. Vice-Presi- dent (4); Delta Upsilon. [TylOMPARABLE in a way with the vJJ unknown quantity x of alge- reffa braic fame, Ed has plugged his way through four tempestuous years on South Mountain asking few favors. He is first and foremost a worker. His fertile and imaginative mind caused him early to seek fame and fortune among the ranks of Lehigh ' s budding Waterman exercisers, and his ascent to the top has been attained solely by consistent effort. As ye editor of the Brown and White, he has been instrumental in bringing about many innovations and enlarge- ments to it worthy of a university many times the size of Lehigh. Aside from the tribulations of jour- nalism, Ed has found Stoughton ' s tempestuous course in Metallurgy to his liking; so much so in fact that the good key swings to the world in mute testimony thereof. Contrary to the usual custom. ft; B liy MORRIS EARL BISHOP Bethlehem, Pa. Bish ' Wal B.A.; Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Librarian (3, 4); Arts and Science Club, Treasurer (4); Le Club de Quinze, President (41; Freshman Mathematics Prize; Junior Oratorical Contest. tC ISH is one of Bethlehem ' s own L J sons, so there is no mystery in KSS9 his coming to Lehigh. Knowing a good thing when he sees it. explains his entrance into the Arts Course. His interest in this course has been shown by his activities in various clubs, although he tells us that Chem- ical Engineering is to be his fate. It seems as if the campus will feel his presence for several more years. His gym work has largely consisted of blowing his trusty cornet; by means of which he has helped to continue the band for four years. One of his great- est faults is coming to cl asses late and we hope he will rectify this fault when he takes up engineering. Here ' s hop- ing for his success. Just a nice fellow GEORGE WARREN BOGGS, II Melrose Park, Pa. Skinny Washington Bus. A.; Cotillion; Scimitar; Phi; Kappa Beta Phi; Theta Delta Chi. [7 ] EORGE WARREN BOGGS 2ND, [VJ. born in the spring of 1902 at SEb Oaklene, Pa., has, from that time on, had a steady rise in both stature and knowledge. Graduating from Cheltenham High with the Class of 11120 he entered Lehigh the follow- ing fall as a promising but green freshman. Skinny , as he is known to his college mates, has completed the course of Bus. Ad. and has proven himself to be an asset rather than a liability to that department. During his four years in college he has never been a leading figure in athletics or scholastic work but he is of that solid type whom everyone respects and likes. Skinny numbers among his friends many members of the faculty, including the little gen- eral with whom he was always at ease, which is something for any stu- dent to be proud. Great things are predicted for this promising young- man and in the years to come when better rugs are made, Skinny will make ' em. Here ' s to you 01 ' Boy, may everything prove as successful as your Utopias picture. I don ' t know. 74 LUTHER OERBER BOND York, Pa. M.E.; Mechanical Engineering So- ciety. HUTHER, a product of York High, lit 19, came to Lehigh with a ' 1 complete college preparation. His preparation lay in the fact that he had learned how to study. Al- though not participating in any par- ticular branch of athletics, he was in college and so did not fail to do his share of cheering at the college events. Lute soon began to get Pop Larkin in his grasp and gradually be- have; started to step out then ' cause his ' mailing list was too heavy and so he didn ' t actually have the time. Even Dave , the mail man, was com- pelled to ask for a raise. Luther has a few good points which we should not fail to mention. He has an unspotted church record (?). Be- sides visits to Salem , he was a reg- ular attendant at the Nativity Church on Friday nights. Bondie is not related to Uncle Charlie but nevertheless we know he will meet with the same success. What the Hun. HENRY ERNEST BONNEY Pen Ai ' gyl, Pa. Bonnie Hen Rabbit B.A.; Arts and Science Club; Pre- Med Society, Treasurer (3); Wrest- ling Squad (1); Inkwell Club; Rail- road Society; LaCrosse Squad (2, 3, 4); Student Officer, R. 0. T. C. (4); Scabbard and Blade. OEN ARGYL is locally unknown, but this unknown Pen Argyl will ! soon become famous, for Hen is her first son to be a Lehigh grad- uate. His persistency at school as well as his characteristic personality are but two of the attributes that have helped him to be one of the fit in that little episode entitled The Sur- vival of the Fittest. Bonnie en- tered Lehigh with the idea that he was some day, going to be an M.D. Not content with this adventure, he has decided to launch his future in the vast field of railroading. Here ' s hop- ing another L. U. man becomes head of our mode of transportation. The spirit shown by Bonnie and his determination to finish anything he tackles requires no prophecying as to his future success. A host of friends wish him luck in his future occupation, be it what it may. Raspberries, what ' s that? 75 JOSEPH BOYLE, JR. Paterson, N. J. Joe Josie Bus. Ad.; Manager of Lacrosse (4); Assistant Manager (3) ; Cotillion; Var- sity Club; Class Baseball (1); Kappa Beta Phi; B. U. X.; Sigma Nu. Four years ago amid the mills Of silky Paterson, over the hills, A young man came, of stature small, And climbed the stairs of Packer Hall. Registrar Walters beamed and smiled And asked our Joe how time be- guiled, And what on this bright sunshiny day Caused him to wander down this way. An education, sir, said Joe , In things it ' s good for me to know. Baldy ' s fame is far and wide And I ' d like to study by his side. I stand before this noble college All spiked to climb the tree of knowl- edge; To learn whether cheese is paramag- netic, And why Aristotle was peripatetic. Now look at Joe, diploma in hand, And see if you see in him the man Who said that learning to him was so dear And he ' d have nought to do with drinking beer. Oh Boy! 76 WARREN JAMES BRIDEGAM Reading, Pa. Bridge Bridey Arvie E.E.; Electrical Engineering Society, Treasurer (4); Railroad Society (4); Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Senior Electrical Football Team. CHILDREN ' S BEDTIME STORY Broadcasted from Station WJB, Reading, Pa. I J ? l WO dollars, please, said the doc- [V J tor, as he picked up his empty EBB satchel and turned toward the door. These, my dears, were the first words our friend, Warren James Bridegam, heard on that eventful night of January 5th, 1901. 1 think, my darlings, that he came into this world rather cheap. In his Freshman year he was little known nor long remembered , except after E.E. meets, when he remained to wash dishes, like all my dear little girls. And so, dears, he went on, studying and playing in the band, and hark, all your little ears, for Lehigh has a good band, and finally at the end of his Junior Year he was elected Treasurer of both the E.E. and Rail- road Societies, presumably being most at home when using his favorite expression, Two dollars please, lis- ten darlings and you shall hear him. Good night, my dears. This is radio broadcasting station WJB, Reading, Pa. Two dollars, please. RICHARD JOSEPH BUCK Bethlehem, Pa. ' Dick Joe Buckie B.A.; Lacrosse Team (3, 4); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Inter-Fraternity Council, Vice-President; Chairman Sophomore Banquet Committee; Chairman Senior Banquet Committee; Cotillion; Scimi- tar; Varsity Club; Sword and Cres- cent, President; Beta Theta Pi. I K|0 be born in Bethlehem; brought l y j up in Bethlehem was the fate E8H of Richard Joseph. How he has survived under such circumstances is impossible of comprehension. He started off by puzzling the profs in his knowledge of the maze; he then amazed the college world by an esca- pade of far-reaching importance to the then sophomore class — in brief, he laid hands upon the sacred person of the sophomore president. Dick is quite a romantic person; kidnapper, athlete, social nobleman, Y. M. C. A. mogul, and shining light of the environs known as Bonus Hill. We know of no one who has taken a greater interest in college activities, or who has played the game with greater benefits to himself and to his class than this same Richard. We feel sure that his vigorous inter- est in everything that makes up our college life is the criterion of his fu- ture success, and here ' s a hearty Good Luck to one who has helped so greatly to make ' 24 what it is. JESSE ALBERT BUGBEE Trenton, N. J. Bozo Jess ' Al 77 C.E.; Musical Clubs (1, 2, 3); Class Basketball (1); Cotillion; B. U. X.; Kappa Beta Phi; Chi Psi. npillG-HEARTED Jess, who has Lg J been pursuing an education at ESS Lehigh for the past four years, was first noticed in Trenton, N. J. He came to us with a reputation of being inclined to exaggerate a few, but this was soon squelched and is now only heard in New Schools and etc. He sold half of Trenton one night for an- other round, but instead of closing the deal borrowed fifty cents (his long reach came in handy). Jess ' ability of a musician has un- doubtedly been heard of in all parts of the world. Victor Herbert speaks of Jess in the following terms, In all my experience as a critic, I have never heard his equal! His social career is limited to House Parties where he is seen only at meals; not including breakfast. His appearance at B. Thorpe at a dance one night went big until a week after- ward when his girl had a toe ampu- tated; still, Jess is considered a good dancer. Jess also has two claims to fame since he is the original founder of the Fish Club and the Champion Gate Crasher of the Lehigh Valley. FRANK TAYLOR Bl ' MBAUGH Monessen, Pa. Bummy F. Met.; Business Manager of Burr (4), Business Staff (2, 3); Football Squad (1, 2); Basketball Squad (1, 2); Class Football (1, 2); Class President (3); Sophomore Council; Interfratemity Council, Secretary (4) ; Chairman Junior Prom Committee; Cotillion, Vice-President; Scimitar, President; Kappa Beta Phi; Square and Com- pass; Pi Delta Epsilon; Sword and Crescent; Cyanide; Theta Delta Chi. ON February 19, 1902, Frank ar- rived among the citizens of Mo- 82a nessen, the town of multitudi- nous nationalities. When he became a man, he started on what was to be- come an intercollegiate career. Cor- nell and Pitt took Bummy for a fall and then in September, 1920, he ar- rived among We Men Of Lehigh. Here he threw out his anchor and has, with several exceptions, gone along swimmingly. Being modest, he hates to tell the boys, but he is to be the future oper- ator of the home town foundry and machine works — therefore his course. Bummy has proven to be a loyal friend and a steadfast supporter and leader of many student activities. He has his mind set on success and here ' s wishing him luck in his affairs, both business and of the heart. Damn that Physics Department. PAUL SHAFTER BURT Washington, D. C. Burty Shaftah Bus. Ad.; Rifle Team (1); Assistant Manager Football (3); First Honors Business Administration (3); Inter- fraternity Council (3); Senators Club; Cotillion; Phi Sigma Kappa. TROUDSBURG, Monroe County, Pa., home of rattlesnakes, Dem- ocrats and poor liquor, claims Paul Shaffer Burt as one of its na- tives. We will forgive all the rest of it, if it keeps sending us men of Burt ' s type; for they sure sent us a mighty fine fellow, a good student and a hard worker when they put Paul on the D. L. W. and tagged him for Le- high. Paul is a real student of busi- ness administration. Burt is one of the older Seniors, for he was kept fairly busy in France and hospitals when he should normal- ly have started college. But then he did his part there and came to us with a steadier head than most of us pos- sess. He started in the Mining Engi- neering Course, but it took him but little time to decide that he did not want to grind away at theory. Paul now lives in Washington, D. C, and in closing let us wish him luck in life with Caroline, sunshine and just a bit of moonshine. Got any money? PAUL FREDERICK CAMPBELL Swedesboro, N. J. Soii i C.E.; Class Baseball (1, 2); Wrest- ling Squad (4); Civil Engineering So- ciety, Vice-President (3) President (4) l E was christened with a good ViJ name from the Bible but things S 3 got mixed up and the name Soup resulted and he no longer an- swers to the original handle. When Baldy heard of him, he recognized him as a fellow clansman, but unfor- tunately all of the professors are not Scotch and so Soup has become a true expert in the art of passing fall exams. He has a system all his own, guaranteed 100 per cent, successful, but I warn you who want to try his method, it isn ' t easy. Baseball has al- ways been his by-word, but that be- came too strenuous and he took up wrestling (on the mat) and we wish him lots of luck this season. With his little five-inch slip stick and the Civil ' s bible, the Carnegie handbook, and a sufficient factor of safety, we all are sure that he will slip his way through to something worth while. No Kidding. WILLIAM PAUL CANAVAN Chester, Pa. ( ' a a a i B.A. m ILLIAM P. CANAVAN was born W twenty-six years ago in the his- £33 toric town of Chester, Penn- sylvania, which is the oldest town in this state. He was educated in the public schools and was graduated from Chester High School in 1920. After finishing up at Chester High he came down to Bethlehem to finish up his education at Lehigh. As a stu- dent in the Arts and Science course he has been very well liked while here among us. Although Bill has had pretty tough sledding through his college courses, his abundance of good sense should insure him of real suc- cess when he leaves us to go out into the wide world. Oh joy ! 79 JOSE MARIA CAROL Cardenas, Cuba ' Joe ' Pepito Moco C.E.; Track Team (1, 2, 3, 4), Cap- tain (4) ; Class Track (1, 2, 3, 4) ; Var- sity Club; Tau Beta Pi; Cyanide; Sword and Crescent; Theta Kappa Phi. i i| E present for your approval, the vl Lehigh track team. $9 This tropical specimen (Cuban polar bear) even at a very early age decided he must needs become a great man. Hence his migration to the United States, where he set the ball rolling at Rockhill College. Outgrow- ing this place and already excelling in scholarship and athetics, he went to Perkiomen School, where he pre- pared for Lehigh. Here he was ac- tive in athletics and graduated with honors. At Lehigh he hasn ' t fallen down on the job, but rather has climbed an- other rung on the ladder of success. He sports a Tau Beta Pi key, an L etc., and is a popular boy about the campus. Joe does a mean hundred yards and also holds the 220-yard dash and low hurdle records at Le- high. We believe your success out of school will be even greater than in school, so go to it, Joe ; we wish you luck. Wise up! SO KUANG-MING CHANG Shanghai, China Wang Met.; Mining and Metallurgical So- ciety. I jTK| OWARD the close of the event- I wj ful year, the year of 1899, John GUIS Hay proclaimed the well-known Open Door policy. This same year Chang was launched into the world. Look, what a wonderful career he led in his fatherland. Scholarly, yes, he was. What ' s more, going from the kindergarten to the Nanyang School he was crowned with many honors including president of his class and manager of the school soccer team. Then he went to North China to at- tend the Tsing-Hua College, situated in a suburb of the Chinese capital, where he absorbed much of the liter- ary niceties and also adopted the sym- bols of the great literary pursuit, eye- crystals. At the age of twenty-one he arrived at Lehigh, attempting to be a Metal- lurgical Engineer. We find him here learning a liberal education, a profes- sion, and a good sort of a chap known for a while as Student Chang. Mis- taken is anyone who does not regard him as a good skate. In the near future may we not find him successful in all his undertakings and happily surrounded by a new fam- ily at Shanghai, the first word of Land. All right. FRANK LAWTON CHILDS New York, N. Y. i ' htriili ' Locomotive ' Bus. Ad.; Assistant Manager of Ten- nis; Student Officer, R. O. T. C; Class Football (1, 2); Freshman Prom Com- mittee; Scimitar; Kappa Beta Phi; Sigma Phi. l -r ' IT would be a most difficult thing -- A to describe Frank Childs in this BBS short space. His virtues are many; his vices are few. Taken to- gether, however, we find a rare com- bination that is hard to beat. Frank came to Lehigh after a glo- rious career at Lawrenceville, nor does it stop there. One need only know him well enough to judge his true worth. He has been active in college affairs and he has made a great many friends; he was born with a keen sense of humor, which added to a pleasant personality have and will in the future take him a long way in the hard road of life. Frank ' s conquests have been many, he is an all around athlete, in love affairs he has been most successful; well he ' s just irresistible. But a word of warning, girls, he is a bad actor in a taxicab. Yes, and what ' s more he is always late. Now that ' s really funny because locomotive is a syn- onym for Frank Childs. In closing, we wish you all the luck in the world. I ' ll beg your pardon. CONRAD F. CLOTHIER Germantown, Pa. ( ' miiiii Moose E.M.; Soccer Team (4); Theta Tau- Beta Theta Pi. n ERE we have another, born in that sleepy city of Philadelphia and one who smilingly takes his Aew York roommate ' s wise cracks. The Moose has never told of any startling events about his childhood, but it is known that he entered Ger- mantown Academy at an early age. After spending twelve years at prep school, Connie was attempting to choose what college he would enter. But before that question was settled, he had made a much greater decision. The Navy lured him away from his educational routine. Over two years was passed in such a fashion. When the war was over, Connie chose to enter the Colorado School of Mines. There he was a member of the varsity boxing and baseball team. One mis- take Connie made was that he waited too long before he transfered to Le- high. During his short time in Beth- lehem, however, he has earned him- self much praise playing varsity soc- ser for the Brown and White — not mentioning that he is an excellent mixer among men. Not so hot. SI THOMAS GEORGE CONLEY, JR. Pittsburgh, Pa. Tom Irish u Si E.M.; Class Baseball (1); Class Treas- urer (4); Intel-fraternity Council (3, 4); Mining and Metallurgical Soci- ety; Kappa Sigma. aMONG the great men who have met me, is our own Tom Cy ffi Conley. He is a strong believer in Rockefeller ' s saying Put Money to Work and also in a certain per- sonage by the name of Bacardi. However the motto Put Money to Work rates rather high with Tom as is evidenced by the four-wheeled chariot which he put to work last fall in taking some of the boys to the games played away. Tom started to our noble institution with full intention of becoming a Business man, but discovering that he was too bright for such a course, he decided to become a member of Skip- per ' s Pick and Shovel Gang. With the aid of a few substitutions and much study (?) he has about com- pleted his college career and will now probably sell stocks and bonds on Wall Street or help the steel industry in Pittsburgh. Oh, I substituted for that course. CHARLES TAYLOR CORNELIUS Pittsburgh, Pa. Co iy M.E.; Circulation Manager of Burr (4)- Business Staff (1, 2, 3); Assist- ant Business Manager of 1924 Epi- tome; Cotillion; Pi Delta Epsilon; Delta Phi. 82 Sri VERY vicinity has its heroes, V% Squirrel Hill is no exception. SB When Corny came to Lehigh the elders nodded their heads in ap- proval, their loved one was on the verge of great experiences and they had little to fear. But, friends, time brings changes; experience in the ways of the world leaves only sorrow and sadness. The elders were right, Corny has had his experiences, oh classmate, why have you brought upon you these dreadful things; the road to hell i3 paved with good intentions. Oh Corny, despite your wicked- ness, you are lovable; your very coun- tenance beams with good humor, you are a charming combination of heav- enly saintliness and hell fires. To sing your praises would take too long, your character is unsullied, your ability is great, your accomplishments are many; you ' ve got the goods, your rec- ord shows it, and your friends swear by you. Does anybody want that last piece of cake? GEORGE EMIL WAGNER CORNELIUS McKeesport, Pa. Comic Kid Bus. Ad.; Varsity Soccer (1, 2) ; Wrest- ling Squad (6); Class Vice-President (1); Intert ' raternity Council (6); Co- tillion; Scimitar; Kappa Beta Phi; Cyanide; Psi Upsilon. r HHIS little fellow has been a fix- Lggj ture out in front of Coppee Hall EBB for so many years that he is pointed out to freshmen as the oldest living undergraduate in the Univer- sity. He came here in 1918 full of the se- rious resolve to study Chemical Engi- neering. After several rushes out of the Chemistry Building and a few val- entines, he decided that his career lay in the business world. He, accord- ingly, became a first rate yes man for Baldy, and has continued ever since until in 1924 his parents insisted that he graduate or go to work. George is a born movie hound and has probably paid enough admission to the movies to build the steeple on Memorial Hall. Golf is his mania, as evidenced by the fact that he appears frequently on the campus in knickers. This attire is very becoming to one oi such small stature, and has come in handy at times when he wanted to earn a few cents selling papers. Any mail? LAYLON LAVERN CLTP Williamsport, Pa. ( ' uppie L. L. M.E.; Junior Second Honors in Me- chanical Engineering; Railroad Soci- ety, Secretary (3); Inkwell Club, Sec- retary (3); Rifle Team (1); Junior Varsity Soccer Team (3, 4); Mechan- ical Engineering Society. GUPP hails from that famous old lumber town — Williamsport. He Bi is far from being a stick, him- self, however. At first he thought high school was all foolish and tried to work in a ma- chine shop. Finally he got next to him- self and took up his high school work again and finished in great shape. Now he was looking for more worlds to conquer and decided to start out on Lehigh. Cuppie found he was go- ing to have his hands full but never said Die and hence comes out near the top again. Cuppie expects to put the knowl- edge he acquired by hard plugging to use as a teacher of others. We are sure he will put the stuff across and wish him much success in his chosen profession. Hello there. 83 JOHN VINCENT DANKO Byram Shore, Conn. Dank Jay-vee E.M. ijjtflHEN you analyze most worth- ' while careers, you find that the SSffil individual involved usually gave a hint of his real fiber in early life. This is conspicuously true of Dank. At sixteen, while still at school, he became connected with the F. S. Odell Engineer ing Corporation, Civil Engi- neers. It was not long before Dank showed real promise. He was soon permitted to run surveys and compute data. Dank not only girds himself with confidence, but digs for the facts and knowledge of his undertakings. He was seventeen when he graduat- ed from Greenwich High School. De- spite the fact that his time was very much occupied with his hobby, engi- neering, he found time to earn his let- ters in basball and football. Dank had a definite plan in life; he was to be a Mining Engineer. He therefore scoured the country for the best University. After attending Car- negie Tech, Colgate and Cornell suc- cessively for short periods, he almost won the sobriquet of Tramp Stu- dent. But he was not satisfied un- til he had the best. Finally Lehigh was selected where the guiding powers that be gave him the training he desired. JAMES MICHAEL DEGNAN, JR. Bethlehem, Pa. ' Jimmie •Atlas 84 E.E.; Manager of Baseball (4), As- sistant Manager (3); Basketball Squad (1, 2, 3); Calculus Cremation Committee; Sophomore Banquet Com- mittee; Junior Prom Committee; Chairman Prom and College Cotillion Committee; Interfraternity Council (3); Arcadia (4); Athletic Represen- tative (4); Cotillion; Cyanide, Vice- President; Sword and Crescent; Phi Delta Theta. [irtl ITH brains plotted as abscissas M and good looks as ordinates, the eJ a above curves are obtained. There is no error in the calculations, but the data as recorded is a mistake. We might also add that with a few more brains Rube Goldberg ' s famous bird, the Ikmik, would be obtained. Jimmy is one of those unfortu- nate individuals who was tricked by fate and had to be born in Bethle- hem. But he has those Stirling quali- ties and that come to mamma look , or in other words, a bigger and better Lehigh. However, having been graduated as an E.E., Jimmy will start selling flat irons for further study in his course. We hold no doubts as to his success and wish him all the luck in the world, but as a last warning Jim- my , keep away from Barnum or Bailey, as we don ' t want to lose you. DONALD BENNER DICK Hazleton, Pa. Don ' ' Dick Bus.Ad.; Football Squad (2, 4); Class Football (1, 2); Sigma Chi. pp ] AZLETON is noted for its hard- j-JH boiled, fair and handsome sons, 9B and D. B. Dick is certainly no exception to the rule. He survived a turbulent childhood in the wilds of Hazelton only to be transplanted to Bethlehem. The only things he brought with him were a travelling bag and an enor- mous appetite. Not being a devoted follower of Euclid, he joined the co- horts of Baldy, under whom he served as a shock absorber. D. B. often went back to the old homestead weekends to stock up with victuals, but found enough time during the week to break the hearts of the Beth- lehem flappers. These successes with the ladies did not turn his head, however, and un- less we miss our guess he will someday be president of a large stripping com- pany. WALTER MILLER DIENER Hamburg, Pa. M.E.; Mechanical Engineering Society. [ ]HIS promising young Mechanical I V j comes from the shores of the HE? Schuylkill. Since earliest boy- hood it has been his greatest ambi- tion to find out why the wheels go ' round. Clocks were his favorite di- version. But although he was able to tak e them apart, it was far beyond his best endeavors to reassemble them. Thwarted in this, he tried time and again to solve the mystery and as often failed. At last, made desper- ate by these failures he came to our Alma Mater. Here he hoped to learn the secret arts and mysteries of mech- anisms. With this ambition filling his soul he has fought his way through nearly four years of college life and has thus far succeeded in spite of at- tempts of the faculty to down him. Now at the threshold of success in Lehigh, he believes he has learned those secrets which so baffled him years ago, and is ready to step out into the World of cogs and wheels and create rather than destroy. We wish him luck and God ' s speed in his am- bition for we are sure that he will attain the highest goal of success. •What the hell. ROBERT CHARLES DIETRICK High Bridge, N. J. Bob Wuzzer B.A.; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4).  rt HEN our class entered as Fresh- men, there came with it a little 3S9 fellow who had just a small ex- pectation of completing his course. However, he has stayed with us and is still a member of the class. It was not long before he attracted the attention of Baldy and life in his classes took on a new aspect. From the very first day, when he received a rather humorous moniker for murder- ing the English language, to the last class, where he sat in the front row of his Economics class, considered to be the only proper place for him, he rarely escaped his remarks. But we hope that this has not all been in vain and perhaps some good may come out of New Jersey. He has caused us some little con- sideration because he is still unde- cided as to the profession he will enter when he grows up. His fate is un- doubtedly settled in the eyes of the gods but as yet he has shown no signs of it. The least we can expect is that Lehigh has been more than a mere education to him. My goodness. JOSEPH BUDDING DIETZ Lancaster, Pa. Joe Ch. E.; Tennis Squad (1, 2, 3); Stu- dent Officer, R. O. T. C; Chemical So- ciety; Kappa Sigma. HOUR years ago when Joe left Lancaster for Lehigh, he did so SBH with the intention of conquering the scholastic world; but since then he has become aware that there are othei worlds to conquer, for he has con- tracted that weakness for the other sex, so common to Lehigh men. They certainly give a rush — we wonder what the allurement is — probably his curly red hair. Some say it is some- thing else! Joe has not confined his activities to the above mentioned, for he has been working steadily with his tennis racquet believing that it is soon time for a Lehigh man to carry Tilden ' s crown away — but we will let him tell us about that in the American some day. Of course, a man cannot play tennis all his life; so Joe during his four years stay with us, has been get- ting the cold dope on how to be a world beating Chemical Engineer and we wish him all the success possible. ATTILIO I ' ERE DiGIULIAN Washington, D. ( ' . Reds Apt C.E.; Burr Board (3, 4); Class Foot - ball (1); Living Group Football (3); Section Chief (3); Senators Club, Treasurer (3, 4); Civil Engineering Society, Treasurer (3), Secretary (4); Tau Beta Pi. I FTER trying to decide what col- lege to honor by his presence, 9 Reds played on a hunch and entered Lehigh with the class of ' 23. In the middle of his sophomore year he became ill, and withdrew from col- lege for a year. His second advent came in due time and Reds cut out the fooling and began working in ear- nest with the result that he was re- warded by the Bent and the prayers of Pinkie. He now divides his time between bouts with The Club and discussing Pedagogy with — well, never mind who. He, with Wildeye Bill as his as- sistant, has been engaged by the Bab- son Institute to prepare charts on the fluctuation of the quantity and quality of the so-called amber fluid. Since he is a countryman of the great Enrico, Attilio aspires to be a singer. Tough, Reds, but Nature gyped you in that respect. But in summation. Reds has shown that he has the stuff and is bound to succeed. All your friends are wish- ing you the best of luck. No kidding? KENNETH DONALDSON Washington, D. C. Red Pinky ' C.E.; Manager of Tennis (4), Assist- ant Manager (3); Mustard and Cheese (• ' !, 4); Wrestling Squad (2); Senators Club (3, 4); Phi Sigma Kappa. iC EDS hails from Washington, • £ D. C, and due to the comely SH color of his hair was soon dis- tinguished amongst the Frosh way back in the fall of 1920. He started out in his sophomore year to be a credit to his Alma Mater by learning the game of wrestling, and went to the mat, one lamous smoker, battling a Japanese student. Due to a little bothersome, recur- ring, thing called mat itch he was forced to leave the game and he turned to other fields of endeavor. He started as a recruit for chorus of the now famous Musical Show put on by the Mustard and Cheese in the spring of 1923. Success was not to be denied and he gained the position of lead-off man for the chorus and incidentally shook a mean foot. About this time Reds began to take a deep interest in tennis and after much rolling of courts he now runs off the managerial job in great fash- ion. Everywhere the tennis team goes Reds is sure to follow. We wish you all kinds of luck, Reds. If any. WILLIAM ROBERT DRAKE Reading, Pa. Sparkie Grin ' -Pretzel Bill C.E.; Berks-Lehigh Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Civil Engineering Society. 1771 BOUT four years ago a timid LI looking young man alighted Vf M from the Queen of the Valley wondering as all engineers do whether he was entering for his own or Le- high ' s good. He has probably found out that it was not the latter. Bill came from that town of pretzel twisters called Reading just about four years ago. Besides taking the Civil Engineering course at Le- high he ventured to explore the deep mysteries of the feminine sex. That ' s what we call the spirit of the grave. However we have often wondered what influenced a certain Bethlehem girl to move to Reading because she can ' t see him as often as she might have in Bethlehem. If you should ask any student on the campus who Bill Drake was he would answer in one of two ways. The first would be Oh, that course crabber while the second would be He ' s a pretty bright fellow. All joking aside we wish you a bright future and hope that some day we can get a pass when you become president of some great railroad. Well, I ' ll be damned. WARREN NEWTON EDSON Scranton, Pa. ' W. N. ' Newt C.E.; Civil Engineering Society; Me- chanical Engineering Society. fw ARREN hails from Scranton, the vi native land of the coal-crackers, SSSs and cracking hard problems is his favorite occupation. In spite of this, his boyhood ambition was to in- vent something that would do away with all forms of work. With this idea in mind he enrolled in the Me- chanical Engineering Course at Le- high. Two years of this, however, taught him that mankind was fairly well off after all, and that his inven- tion was not due for several thousand years. Refusing to be discouraged by having his fondest hopes blasted, he decided to build up the world and promptly changed to Civil Engineer- ing. Thus far he has found his col- lege course to be well suited for the foundation of his life ' s work, and with the approval of the faculty, will soon enter upon it. If his past achieve- ments are any indication of those of the future, we are sure that he will be highly successful. Course Crabber. SS ROBERT WILLIAM ENNIS Mount Penn, Pa. ' Bob ' Deep ' Robbie ' C.E.; Cross Country Team (2, 3, 4); Track Team (2, 3, 4); First Honors in Mathematics (2); Second Honors in Physics (2); First Honors in Civil En- gineering (3); Alumni Prizes (3); Civil Engineering Socity. | | the day Bob was born, nature I vJj was smiling, but fate laughed BB out loud — laughed because of the trick she had played on us. One would think by looking at this land- scape that the boy must be terribly dumb, but in spite of this he has proven himself an A-l student and a man who knows his stuff. Robbie spends his spare time in trying to burn up the track. We often find him training overtime at the Collie. ' This fellow, Deep, has captured some honors as a stellar student and we look to him to carry away more honors, not only in his Alma Mater, but for all time, wherever he may go. The effortless and confident manner in which he solves seemingly difficult problems, is an asset which is bound to put him in an enviable position, and he is sure to be a great credit to Lehigh. No kiddin ' . S ' .l PAUL BUTLER FLECK Pittsburgh, Pa. Pete Lead E.M.; Mining and Metallurgical Soci- ety; Theta Xi. !.£ • IOUR years ago the peace and j quiet of the Dutch town of Beth- SBH lehem was quite abruptly and suddenly interrupted with the arrival of the shining light pictured above this article. Never before had Pete seen quite such a town as Bethlehem; it may likewise be said that Bethle- hem had never had the pleasure of entertaining such a character as Lead before. For three years Pete remained perfectly contented with the fair ones of Bethlehem, but in his Senior year, growing tired of the Bethlehem brand, he switched his night headquarters over to Easton. Paul is a young man of whims; he is never satisfied unless he is doing something different than the common herd. To such an extent has this ten- dency been carried lately that he has declared war on all meat and refuses to eat it. However to be different must have its advantages, for Rud- yard Kipling ' s soldier said before he went crazy: Oh, for something dif- ferent ! Paul is just this something different that has kept many of his fellow students from losing their minds in the gruelling grind of studies. Hell with it. DOSTER FOCHT Trenton, N. J. ' Doc: Waubt E.M.; Class Basketball (1); Football Squad (2); Lacrosse Squad (3, 4); Mining- Society. OOSTER entered Lehigh via Blair __ Academy fired with that determ- E21 ination, with which all freshmen seem to be possessed; namely, to break all records for study. However, while not very well ' acquainted with Doc ' s early days at college, it hardly seems possible that he wasted much time in finding that Bethlehem and vicinity offered many attractions for him other than merely scholas- tic. In fact. Waubuno ' s reputation has spread to other parts of the world, and from the Canadian wilds come reports of his daring exploits while perform- ing the duties of an Indian guide. This remarkable woodsman ' s instinct, so highly developed in him, probably helped in his startling discovery of the Cave. Indeed this uncanny instinct should prove af great value to him in later life, after he enters the mining game, in discovering new gold mines or one thing or another. This together with Doc ' s good nature and his desire to play fair at all times should carry him far in his profession. Holy Smokes ROBERT LOUIS FRANKE Johnstown, Pa. Die Bob B.A.; Sigma Chi. [55] HIS is Bob ' s first year at Le- | V - J high and in the short time he U9 has been here, he has made a host of friends for himself. Four years ago he entered Dickinson Col- lege with the idea of becoming a law- yer, but the fame of Lehigh attracted him to our midst and he has already assumed much of the cherished spirit of his new Alma Mater. In his pre- vious three years at college he was an active personage on the campus and was among the organizers of the Press Club, which now sends the news of college activities to the newspapers of every town whose sons are at Dick- inson. He has taken part in perform- ances of the Dramatic Club and car- ried off many literary honors. Since coming to Lehigh his daily activities have been limited to Coppee Hall and the Library in pursuance of Baldy ' s well known assignments to the Jour- nal of Commerce, but he has still found time to acquaint himself with many of those institutions not a part of a college course and has become tuly one of us. Yeah? 90 OTTO HERBERT FRITZSCHE Irvington, N. J. Frit: Herb C. E. l HAT ho! what manner of man is vlJ this? No, people, you are SB wrong-. ' Tis a Jersey mosquito. See his pretty smile ? That ' s what makes all the fair damsels throng to him. Now you wouldn ' t think it to look at him, but it ' s so. Aside from sleeping, his favorite pastime is writ- ing voluminous letters. We cannot say to whom, but he comes from Bal- dy ' s favorite state (Jersey), and so she must live there somewhere. An- other thing he likes to do is to go to the gym and hide from Bart. But when he takes Geodesv he doesn ' t go at all. However, Otto is a nice quiet sort of a cuss until someone does some- thing he doesn ' t like. Then a long string of fine Civil Engineering lan- guage starts to emanate from his lips. But a good vocabulary is quite neces- sary to an engineer. So Fritz has a good start in that direction. His fine qualities cover his little failings, as anyone who knows him will tell you. Because of this he is going to be a great success in his line — which, by the way, is extremely powerful. My Gosh! ELISHA GEE, JR. Denver, Colo. Lish ' WeeGee ' B.A.; Mustard and Cheese (2, 3, 4); Wrestling Squad (4); June Ball Com- mittee; Class Day Committee; Cotil- lion; Scimitar; Kappa Beta Phi; Al- pha Tau Omega. 91 ONE fine day, four years ago, our friend, Elisha Gee, hailing from EO) Exeter, entered our midst. The record he made at Exeter was a good one and those who knew the wild west- erner predicted great things for the youth from Denver, the city where the sun shines 363 days a year. Things have happened — yes, many things, and WeeGee has made good; it would be a most difficult thing to tell of all or even most of his numerous victories. In the classrom, on the campus, and on the gilded ballroom floor Wee- Gee has excelled and reached a degree of perfection which few have exceeded. Who can foretell the future? From all indications we shall hear more from Elisha Gee. When WeeGee leaves college he is going back to the good old West and Denver. In leaving the East he leaves behind him a host of sincere friends — friends who wish him every success possible and we know that whatever happens WeeGee will come out on top. Howling poor form. PAUL LeROY GERHAKT Reading, Pa. Fat Puss Geary E.E.; Glee Club (1, 2,3); Berks-Lehigh Club, Vice-President (3); Senior Elec- trical Football; Electrical Engineering Society. EDWARD WERREY GORHAM Brooklyn, N. Y. ON that memorable day in Sep- tember, 1902, the stork did a f££«! very usual thing. ' Twas only an innocent brown-eyed babe, and they named it Paul LeRoy. At Reading High we found him forging to the front, being graduated with honors, near the head of his class. Then he wisely chose Iehigh. Fat really is an accomplished fel- low, bringing forth unusual sounds from the piano, and being the song bird of his class. His mother said he was born with a strong voice. He is always busily engaged in telling how he flunked the last quiz or final, but he is modest, and is really a bright fellow. Geary , the handsome fel- low with the laughing brown eyes, is a prince of a chap and when the time comes to settle down, he ' ll be of the settling kind. Paul wants to take the place of Steinmetz, and we feel sure that what- ever he does, success will be with him, and so we say bye-bye to him with our best wishes for a happy future. Jumpin ' Christopher. Luke ' Ed Ch.E.; Band (1,2,3); Rifle Team (1); Sophomore Council; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Theta Xi. 02 DWARD W. GORHAM of Brook- lyn, New York, first drew his S2i breath on July 11th, 1902. He at once signified his intention of mak- ing himself heard in this world. He is still following out his first inten- tion. He prefers the loud speaker to the head piece. After sliding through the public and high schools of Brooklyn in the easi- est possible way, he managed to talk his way through the University in the regular four years ' time, and now pro- poses to follow his early plans of be- coming a political wind-jammer or nurse to the exhaust of an obsolete tin Lizzie. As a member of the University band he early showed he was the outstand- ing figure in producing noise, and his retirement at the end of his third year brought peace and joy to University life, for his fellow students. His machine gun practice was a record in M. S. T. work. Although a target was never hit, the noise he managed to produce won the esteem of all his superiors and the envy of his comrades. Poosh ' em up GEORGE TINSLEY GRAHAM Bethlehem, Pa. ' Tins ' George Bus. Ad.; Assistant Manager Soccer (3); Sophomore Cotillion; Chi 1 ' si. 7-r ES, gentle reader, this is Tins y himself. This lad was born in IBs the Mecca of all Meccas, some twenty-three years ago — yes, it was Souse Besslem. After struggling manfully through the grades, he was turned over to Scrap and his assistants at Beth- lehem Prep, for further instructions and in 1919 he was able to enter Le- high, where he plugged along until the end of his Sophomore year and then you know how ' tis. Tins left school for a year, returning in 1922 to resume his studies. A year in the cold, cold world did him a lot of good for since his return to college he has buckled down to hard work and made sure that in ' 24 he would receive the coveted sheepskin. n closing let it be said that if more of us had his willingness to serve, his quiet attention to his own business, the success which will be his might be ours. No kidding. GEORGE LORENZO GRAMBS Scranton, Pa. Grambo Gayorgos B. A. f3 NTER Grambo , the boy from V% Scranton. At an early age he ' 1 exhausted the educational res- ervoir of Scranton Central High School then headed for Bethlehem and en- rolled at Lehigh, where he has won a reputation of being a consistent work- er, not only at his books, but in other lines of activity as well. George is a pre-Divine, resident in Leonard Hall, and possesses the qual- ities and traits that a real preacher ought to have. Because of these we are certain that a great future is awaiting him. He is bitterly opposed to the Ku Kluxers and often loses sleep argu- ing against them. The eagerness with which he devotes himself to any task that he undertakes assures all those interested that he will give a good ac- count of himself. When it comes to athletics Gram- bo is somewhat hindered due to his eye-sight, but in Tennis he displays the form that Tilden and Sandy Wie- ner have been trying to develop. In short, he is a good scout. We feel certain that he will do justice to his profession immediately upon en- tering it. The Church has need of more such men. Will I. or won ' t I HARRY ROSS GREER Atlanta, Georgia. Ross ' Greer ' B.A.; Arts and Science Club, Vice- President (4); Treasurer (3); Le Club de Quinze, Vice-President (4); St. Paul ' s Society, President (2, 4); Rob- ert W. Blake Society, Secretary-Treas- urer (4). 7 ] OSS GREER was born under the J t erotic southern sun, and, hence, US has always been precocious in matters of the heart. We have heard that he had his first love affair at the age of five, and that the first literary composition which ever came from his hand was a love-letter to his teacher. It goes without saying that Ross is a capital student. But most of his energy has gone into his hobby, men- tioned above. He has a way of quot- ing Dante, which makes Hell seem like a cottage built for two. His supreme achievement was made early in his senior year, when the chief female dig- nitary at Fern Sem allowed him to have Sunday afternoon tea there at the invitation of one of the teachers. As far as the records show, no other Lehigh undergraduate has ever done this. Unless Ross decides to become a missionary, which is not very prob- able, he will most likely become Bish- op of Bushkill Center. Ye Gods! CARROLL BREWSTER GRACE, JR. Philadelphia, Pa. Brew Pete M.E.; Soccer Team (2, 3, 4), Squad (1); Class Sergeant-at-Arms (2, 4); Class Relay Team (1); Varsity Club; Phi Club; Cotillion, Executive Com- mittee; Mechanical Engineering So- ciety; Delta Phi. VOLUMES could be written about our friend C. Brewster Grace, iS a Jr. Brewster is a good student, a hard worker, and has gone through Lehigh in a creditable manner; in the things he has tried, he has excelled. It seems only fair, however, to tell the truth; you boast that your lire is on open book — let us turn to the in- dex — under M — Oh, here it is — Mis- sion furniture. Brewster, you are an honorable man, — did you, or did you not pay for the damage? Perhaps we should investigate some of tne other letters in the index, but for Brew ' s sake we will leave this undone, Brew is a versatile youth — he reaches sublime heights, and then again he sinks to lower levels. Among his accomplishments we hear he is a good soccer player, — at least he kicked the winning goal in one of this sea- son ' s games. Brewster, you will get there, in the future we expect to see you far ahead in the race of life. Darn if I know. 94 JAMES STEWART GRIM Kutztown, Pa. -St, w ' Benny Joe ' E.E.; Cheerleader (3, 4); Junior Ora- torical Contest; Senior Electrical Football; Electrical Engineering So- ciety, Vice-President (4); Tau Beta Pi; Delta Theta. | te ]AVE you ever heard of Kutz- j— Jj town? Kutztown is a place BS somewhere in Pennsylvania, famous for its Normal School, Cave, and Stew Grim. No, he is not the author of the well known Fairy Tales, nor is he a relative of Grim Death. He is an embryo electrical engineer. His record seems to indicate that he chose the right course. The Bent which dangles from his watch chain is evidence of the fact that he is doing something for Le- high outside the classrooms. Besides a strong and well trained mind, Joe has a strong and well trained voice. The strong part he used for leading cheers and the well trained part for the Glee Club. Both were howling successes. Stewart is the type of man of whom Lehigh can well be proud; the kind of fellow it is good to know. He is al- ways willing to lay his own work aside to help someone else. He leaves col- lege with the best wishes of all his classmates. Good luck, Bennie, old boy. Ding busted. GEORGE HAMPTON Bridgeton, N. J. Squire Cappie Ch.E.; Class Football (1, 2); Track Squad (2, 3); Second Honors in Chem- ical Engineering (3); Student Officer, R. O. T. C. (4); Arcadia (4); Scab- bard and Blade; Chemical Society, President (4); Tau Beta Pi. Secre- tary (4). XF you haven ' t heard of Bridge- ton, New Jersey, I must tell you jSsS at the beginning that it is some little county seat and claims the dis- tinction for its glass and peach in- dustry and last but not least of being the birthplace of George. The ability of an officer in the Army is measured by the amount of work he can get somebody else to do and so we must give Harap credit for being an able captain. He has also many times come near causing a riot by his casual, but popular, words to his bunch of dirty Chemicals: Refreshments will be served in the usual haunt be- low. He has loafed as much as the rest of us, but he does things just so much better that we predict he won ' t be a beaker boy all his life. He threatens to desert Chemistry when he leaves here but all we can say in parting is that, even if he never learns to dance, he ' ll make good. Your dam-ned well right. EDWARD PAUL HARTMANN Bethlehem, Pa.. Ed ' •Eddie E. P. ' Met.; Band (1, 2, 3, 4), Manager (3, 4); Leader (4); Metallurgical Society, Treasurer (3); Cotillion; T. P. Club; Mustard and Cheese (2); Square and Compass Club; Mining and Metallur- gical Society (4); Delta Upsilon. Ij IHE largest town on the Harris- l y j burg Peneplain boasts of a fa- ESBi mous steel mill whose products are internationally famous. But Beth- lehem has produced a better known personage than the best tool steel heretofore made. Eph Hartmann started his career as a mechanical en- gineer in 1917, then changed to B. A., and finally gave Lehigh a year ' s rest while filling a job. He then decided that his course should be in the scien- tific line and started to master the baffling passageways of Metallurgy in the fall of 1921. Ambidextrous, did you say? Ed- die claims that he can play anything that makes music. Houdini with all his skill cannot be compared to Eph with a saxophone. The way he leads the band down the field is symbolical of Ed. Al- ways leading the gang, whether in work or play, that summarizes Eph. When the time for parting comes, we feel we will all lose a loyal friend; what more can be said of any man? Here ' s luck to you, Eddie ! Yes— 4f— if— if— if. STANLEY LeROY HAUSER Kutztown, Pa. Stan Met.; Manager of Track (4); Assist- ant Manager (3); Circulation Manager of Brown and White (4), Brown and White Board (3); Assistant Editor of Y. M. C. A. Handbook (4); Mining and Metallurgical Society, Curator; Band (1, 2, 3); Tapping Pot Club; Varsity Club; Cyanide; Sword and Crescent, Treasurer; Phi Sigma Kappa. i[il E remember Stan as a fresh- vl man, a very quiet studious chap. 3S9 He reminded us of one of those 96 kind of fellows that goes about his business without bothering anyone much and not wanting to be bothered much himself. But we soon found out that we did not know the real Stan. In the course of his college career Stan has turned out to be a real live- wire, go-getter fellow. By patient plugging and personal merit he grad- ually accomplished success in many forms of college activities. In fact, by the time his senior year rolled around, between his college activities and his scholastic work he is so pressed for time that he can hardly do himself justice with the ladies. Some day after Stan graduates we expect to see him as the successful owner of a large up to date foundry, putting into practice many of the things he has learned while at Lehigh. Say fellows. RICHARD ARTHUR HAWKINS Forty Fort, Pa. •Dick Ray E.M.; Lehigh-Lackawanna-Luzerne Club; Mining Society; Arcadia (4). | | H! you say, Here ' s a man who I vJM has dedicated himself to the SSSZM church. Well, gentle reader, we hate to fool you, but the above mug is an honest-to-God likeness of a no- torious Koal Kracker from Forty-Mile (or is it Forty-Fort?). This miner, Hawkins, like most of his genus, is given to the use of evil-smelling pipes, ancient head-gear, and round, mouth- filling oaths. He may not be able to tell you how many angels can dance on the point of a needle, but ask him how many one-eyed Jacks in the deck. Passing rapidly to a more pleasant side of this many faced personality, let us note that Dick is a lover of the Great Outdoors, a Man of the Open Spaces. In fact he often brings the outdoors in, shaped, shall we say, like a basket of trout, or a pocketfull of rocks. However, that you may not judge too harshly, we note on the left-hand side of the balance sheet, that Dick is a man of his word and a good fellow to tie to. Say. Jack, where do you get that stuff? ROBERT AUGUSTUS HECKERT Brackenridge, Pa. Bob Heck B.A.; First Prize in Junior Oratorical Contest; Arts and Science Club, Pres- ident (4); Robert H. Blake Society, Vice-President (4); Professional Club (4); Y. M. C. A.; St. Paul ' s Society. ©OB came to Lehigh in the Fall of ' 20 with a hearty smile on his ffiSS face and the determination to make good his time spent in the halls on old South Mountain. It is with a great deal of pleasure that we are able to say that at the end of his four years Bob ' s face still wears the same old smile. This smile not only shows that friendly is he whose face it adorns but also ' that he has been successful in what he has planned to do. For Bob has made good at Lehigh. Our hero came to Le- high for an education, he knew how to get it, and he got it. It seems to be Bob ' s ambition to tie samples of education in little pack- ages and distribute them to the young fellows out around Pittsburgh in fu- ture years. Here ' s to you Bob — Success in all you undertake. May the future be as bright for you as your cheerful company has been to us in the past four years. Shucks. FRANCIS LYNN HENDRICKSON Woodbury, N. J. Henry Flynn ' E.M.; Cotillion; Phi Club; Theta Delta Chi. Y IYNN, more properly called - - Handsome Harry, came to us ' 01 from the sands and mosquitoes of South Jersey, having received his preliminary training at said locus. Finding the life very strenuous at Le- high he soon began to flourish a few gray hairs which added dignity to the already dignified Beau Brummell. It did not take Lynn long to realize that education was spelled with a capital E, after which he migrated south to take up agriculture. Here he was inspired to take up Mining Engineering and once more made Lehigh his Alma Mater. We hope however that if he takes up a pick and shovel and dig9 for natural gas, and in the event that he is successful, he will remember that we have enough at Lehigh and will not pipe it here. If Skipper does not keep him here in June we will look to see him with J. P. M. on Wall St. or else in the movies. We hope he will conquer that rich heiress of whom we hear so much, as yet he has not met the lady, so watch out, girls. Sleeping till nine tomorrow. CHARLES ALBERT HEIMBROOK Bethlehem, Pa. ' Heimie Kid Bus. Ad. 98 f N a summer day, back in 1900 the I vJN Happy Hamlet of Nuremberg, BS Pennsylvania, had its noonday siesta rudely broken by a succession of hitherto unheard of howls. All other methods of identification prov- ing fruitless the town sport recognized it as the Double Yell of Lehigh. Members of the family being question- ed it was brought to light that Charles A. Heimbrook had just been delivered by Stork Express and was letting the world know it. Eleven years later the Happy Ham- let saw the last of the embryo Lehigh Frosh when his father removed to Bethlehem to acclimate his son to the rigors of Old South Mountain. After breezing through Bethlehem High School with apparent ease and eclat, and having a natural bent to- ward mathematics he decided to take up Business Administration and who would blame him? Anyway, taking his personality and the application to work he showed dur- ing his term at Lehigh as a criterion, we fail to see why in after years he should not bring credit to his Alma Mater and be the howling success he was reputed to be in his infancy. Oh, Hell. w ft WALTER GOTTLIEB HESKE Bethlehem, Pa. Steinmetz Met. a HEARTY laugh is heard. We turn around and sure enough, 9 m it ' s Walter, one of the easy- going Senior metallurgists. After exhausting the knowledge ob- tainable at Bethlehem High School, he (Walter) decided to enter Lehign. Although small in stature, he soon proved his excellence in scholarship and even more noticeably, his ability to sling the bull. Although he is not president of his class, he has won the friendship and acquaintance of scores of men around college, due to his readiness and willingness to help his classmates. He even aspired to being a tutor but never got courage enough to ask monetary recompense. Walter, however, does not like to be rushed, in fact he tries to get out of work at times. His chief ob- stacle for four years was not being able to get gym credit without going to the gym. Not much is known about his social affiliations with the fair sex, but we have our suspicions. Good luck to you, Walt ! That ' s all bull. EDWARD HASKELL HEWSON Madison, N. J. • ' Hack Ed Taxi Tickstrip N.E. OON ' T rush, girls, this is only Ed- ward Haskell Hewson, alias Ell Hack. He is one of those modest fellows who claim brains and good lucks don ' t go together — hence his good looks. Swarthmore High School had Hack thrust upon it and there he received most of his prep school train- ing. Madison, N. J., had to finish the job. Swarthmore ' s co-eds were not enough attraction for September, 1919, found Eddie numbered among Le- high ' s freshmen. February, 1921, found E. H. Hew- son listed with the class of 1924. To make a short story long, we just can ' t keep the women away from him. It was soon found our Sheik needed some protection and so our good friend, Rev. Trafford, took him under his wing and to date he seems to be pei ' forming his duty as well as can be expected. Girls and socials seem to occupy most of Ed ' s time. When he has nothing else to do he attends classes in the Naval Engineering Department. We are hoping Hack will some day revolutionize the United State Mer- chant Marine. I ' ipe Down! CHARLES FRANCIS HILLER Buchanan, Mich. Charlie Fran Heck B.A.; Wilbur Scholarship Prize; Junior Honors; Arts and Science Club; Club de Quinze, President (3); Deutscher Verein; Robert W. Blake Society. l jIHE District of Columbia and the 1 V l state of Michigan are both con- hSUB testing for the honor of having given Charlie to Lehigh. His youth- ful days were spent in Washington, but later he traveled westward and received his preparatory education in Buchanan High School. Youthful hab- its cannot be conquered, however, and every vacation sees Charlie sud- denly transferred into Mr. Hiller on his way to the proud capital city. His record at Lehigh Is sufilclent proof for even the most skeptical of the fact that when he is at school he does as the scholars do. He began by capturing the Wilbur Scholarship, the prize for the best standing in the Sophomore Class, and he continued this by taking first honors in the Junior year. He says he is going to take an ac- tive part in life as a Michigan lumber- man, but how he expects to overcome his inclination toward the fair — city we do not know. In any case we are sure that he will make good use of his Lehigh training. Yes, of course. DAN PARMLEE HOAGLAND. JR. Bayonne, N. J. Shorty Shrimp B.A.; President of Y. M. C. A. (4); Mustard and Cheese (3, 4) ; Circula- tion Manager of 1924 Epitome ; Class Historian (4); Cotillion; Cyan- ide; Chi Psi. 7- EARS ago some enterprising cit- izen decided to capitalize the Els American ' s love of travel and speed by building a stream-line lunch room that resembled a cross between an interurban street car and an Erie Railroad caboose, it was a most in- genious device and the maker usually wrote in letters of gold in some con- spicuous place, Made in Bavonne, N. J. As a member of the Mustard and Cheese cast he ably portrayed the native dance of old Erin as only a Bayonner could have done. The fa- miliarity with which he was hailed at the ' Gym ' testifies to his ability along athletic lines, although his abbrevi- ated stature handicapped him in all sports where size was a prime requi- site. As an active member and Pres- ident of the Y. M. C. A. Shorty re- vealed his capacity for executive work. In short, he enjoyed his four years at Lehigh immensely and in the process managed to accomplish a good bit. Tough! 100 WILLIAM HENRY HOMEYER Jersey City, N. J. Whitey Herbie ' B.A.; Football Squad (4); Deutsche!- Verein; President (4); Class Secretary (3); Mustard and Cheese (3); Sopho- more Council; Freshman German Prize; Arts and Science Club; Inkwell Club. tC I ILL has been sadly handicapped 0 since birth. He is one of those 3323 chaps who come from Down New York way — you know — they leave the train at Manhattan Trans- fer with some casual remark about down town and quicker this way, don ' t you know. You ' ve guessed it! He was born and raised in Jersey City. Someone got hold of Bill during his infancy and convinced him that a course at Lehigh would wipe out the unfortunate fart of his birthplace — at least, Lehigh ha done it ' s best. And Lehigh ' s best efforts have sci red once more over Jersey City, for Bill has become a familiar figure about the campus. Naturally i made mistakes — his early misfortune pursuing him no doubt. However, a glance above at his record will show that he retrieved the honor losl as a danci i by being chosen as chief I leul scher of the Deutcher Verein. Never mind, we ' ll continue to keep Jei City on our list if they send more of Bill ' s calibre. GEORGE WHITEFIELI) HOPKINS Jr. Cleveland, Ohio. Hop M.E.; Burr Board (2, 3, 4, 5, 6); Art Editor (3, (5); Senior Class Book Com- mittee; 1922 Epitome Board; Ar- cadia, Prosecuting Attorney; Second Intercollegiate Conference, 1923; Pi Delta Epsilon; Cyanide; Psi Upsilon. YflOOKING up the historical rec- Xk ords of the university in an era ■' 0 beyond the memory of this class, beside his name we see such entries as entered, dropped, re-entered, re- signed, and re-re entered. Indicating by the standards of the ancient wise men that he will win success thru per- severance. Also we noted his bill of lading, marked Shipped from Cleve- land. Among the circles of I lie so-called g I mechanicals he is well known as a course-crabber, having only omitted mi rale occasions to speak freely regarding the text hooks, pro- fessors quizzes, inventl is, etc., and en traced his troubles back to old Asa himself. With a sigh of re- lief his instructors will wish him the usual tough luck. ' So this plumber drops the chase for a degree, picks up the hunt for a career -try and find it. 101 ALWIN JULIUS HOTTINGER Kenvil, N. J. ■Hotty Hot Met.; Manager of Wrestling (4); As- sistant Manager (3); Member of In- tercollegiate Wrestling Association; Tapping Pot Club; Mining and Metal- lurgical Society, Vice-President (4); Football Squad (1, 2) ; Wrestling Squad (1); Lacrosse Squad (1); Junior Ban- quet Committee, Class Vice-President (4); Varsity Club; Cyanide; Interfra- ternity Council; Class Sports (1, 2); Sword and Crescent; Phi Sigma Kappa. HOTTY hails from the crossroads bearing the name of Kenvil, in SZS that far-off country called New Jersey, where the only excitement is caused by an occasional explosion of the Hercules Powder Works. This blond Swiss has been strug- gling with the mysteries of Metallurgy for four long years and oft times has put old Dan ' l and his Lions to shame when it came to knocking off re- exams. However, he has always shown the fighting spirit and crashed through at the critical moment much to the chagrin of the Nutty Physics and Thorny Math, departments. He is most deserving of future success and all of his college pals wish him the best of luck and happiness in Harris- burg and in life. Know vour stuff? 102 FRANCIS ALEXANDER HUNTER Hoboken, N. J. Frank Jerry Bennie Havens ' Oboken M. E.; Baseball Squad (1); Arcadia (4); Student Officer, R. 0. T. C. (2, 3); Mechanical Engineering Society; Theta Kappa Phi. n TlIS a remarkable metropolis, that | V- j concentrated distillery dubbed EDH Hobucken and may we not easily explain Frank ' s eccentricities by naming that city as his hailing port? Evidently the famous appetite pop- ularly ascribed to buck privates extend to the officers as well for Frank pos- sesses a devastating desire for food in any form. His stay at West Point was responsible for this. Frank ' s college days were some- what rough and the biggest bump was Met Problems and Calculus, but he claims they aren ' t necessary for a city Treasurer. We feel sorry for his future secre- tary as he developed a broken arm rather frequently and always had someone to handle his mailing list and thus slipped through many a tight squeeze. Despite all difficulties he has man- aged to overcome the obstacles to the attainment of his ambition and — are we mistaken or do I hear the wedding bells tinkling faintly in the distance? Come heah, ya gol darned stinking Freshman. HEBER ASHE INGOLS Newark, N. J. Hebe Ch.E.; Delta Theta. |l v| E admits it, ladies and gentle- j-JJ men, he admits that he left BB Williams to take up chemical engineering at Lehigh. We hope he has seen his mistake by this time. Soon after coming here he became a member of the Mountain Climbers Club by rooming at Taylor Hall. It was while living here that Baldy established Heber as our illustrious economist. Just ask him what we do with gold besides giving it away, at Christmas time. No doubt he knows now. Last summer the government at its own expense tried to make a soldier out of him at Camp Meade. We understand the week ends in Washington and Baltimore were glo- rious. At present Heber is our hu- morist in the daily grind. Wise cracks soon trace themselves to him; and then no work gets done. We often wonder why those reports never want to come in on time. Better see He- ber and ask him if Nazareth is to blame. For crying out loud! JOHN JAY IVORY JAMIESON Frackville, Pa. Jamie Snoozer Met; Sigma Chi. ON the fall of 1920 our little white haired hero, John Jay Ivory iSO Jamieson, came out of the woods. He doesn ' t know why, but anyway, when the train stopped at Bethlehem, Iv piled off, saying to himself, This looks like a fine place to start a pickle factory. However, upon looking the town over a little more closely, he discovered our Uni- versity, so he gave up his original pro- ject and set out to make himself a great metallurgist. Of a naturally modest and retiring nature Iv at first said practically nothing and was very hard to become acquainted with, but like the proverbial clam he came out of his shell and since then has been a powerful factor in all sessions. Iv , during his four years here, has also accomplished something else. He has won for himself the nickname of Snoozer for at any time, day or night, Iv can always be found slum- bering peacefully. In closing, Iv is a great boy with a wonderful disposi- tion and I ' m sure we all like him. What the Hun. EARL HELMES JAMISON Hazleton, Pa. .In mi Diesel M.E.; Class President (1); Kappa Sigma. Iz yI OOD things come in small pack- I vJ. ages so tis often said and if you SB had Jamie ' s line of bull you ' d knock them all dead. Jamie always was strong for pol- itics; we mean, of course, natural pol- itics; he also is strong for national biscuits and cheese tit-bits . It is said Jamie can talk politics with the best of the beer guzzlers (but then, who couldn ' t under those conditions) ? Jamie was born with a piston of a Diesel Engine in his hand. Al- though he cannot even reach the fly- wheel of this engine, that doesn ' t mean he ' s ignorant of its functioning; far from such. Because of his close connection with aforesaid engine, he has begun to re- semble one in operation; namely, full of compressed air and always spark- ing off, therefore, the boys dubbed him Diesel . But now coming back to earth, let ' s enumerate his good points; namely, genial personality, good disposition, connaisseur of good liquor and a judge of « niien, a gentleman and a scholar, so be it. Here it is. GEORGE FRENCH JENKINS Binghamton, N. Y. Jenks Junkie E.M.; Swimming Team (1, 2); Class Football (2); Mining and Metallur- gical Society; Cotillion; Kappa Beta Phi; Theta Delta Chi. 104 IAVING terrorized all the neigh- bors, teased all the girls and £33 made friends with all the dogs in his native city of Binghamton, N. Y.; George shifted his sphere of oper- ations to Cornell. There, failing in his policy of teasing the Profs, and having dreamed dreams of ever chang- ing adventure in the fields of Mining Engineering, George changed his course and college. During hi- four years at Lehigh, Jenks with his ever present smile, his remarkable personality and gen- eral good fellowship has won for him- self many honors and warm friends. Now having completed his four years of classes and having turned over half of the rocks in Lehigh and Northampton county, Jenks is on the threshold of realizing his youth- ful dreams. In years to come when the compiler of Who ' s Who turns the most eminent conqueror of the wilderness, his old class mates will not be surprised to learn that George is the man. What ' s the hurry? ALFRED WILLIAM JOHNSON West Harford, Conn. Al Pop John E.E.; Musical Clubs (1, 2, 3); Inter- fraternity Council (4); Electrical En- gineering Society; Alpha Chi Rho. fr{ HE above is what Pop calls a IVjJM portrait. He admits he is a HBB learned student of Electrical En- gineering, no matter what Bill Es- ty has to say about it, and therefore he refused to have anything but a meditative pose occupying the above space. After John had spent a year prac- ticing the art of sailing Uncle Sam ' s ships on land, he decided he needed further education and he wasn ' t here a month before he found his decision was correct. He agrees with the rest of us that there are still a lot of things he doesn ' t know. Al has that biggest asset a man can possess — a congenial personality and the ability to get along with any- body. Perhaps that is the reason for the most important event in his col- lege career that happened last July 4th. We aren ' t quite certain what happened, but every time that date is mentioned he beams with joy. Armed with these assets and the uncanny determination to attain the goal he sets, we feel sure that it will not be long before Pop will in- crease some future edition of Who ' s Who. Hey Frosh. GORDON TYRON JONES Ewardsville, Pa. Joiiesy Joe B.A.; Lacrosse Team (3, 4); Arcadia, Treasurer (4); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4); Club de Quinze; Arts and Science Club; Sigma Nu. aUST as there is a saying that all good things come in small ftya packages — it can be established as a truism that people with the most commonplace of names may be the most extraordinarily gifted individu- als — witness Jones. He was rescued from a dangerous locality — Edwards- ville, his home town, being a coal min- ing center by a vision of greater service. Obeying the call to Go South, my lad, Go South, he came to this city of higher learning. After at- tending Bethlehem Prep for a year, he fairly jumped into Lehigh. That is, he must have jumped for he gained, and held throughout his four years here, a lead over many of his class- raa ' cs m the h 1:1 of ci llsge aotrvitisc. We remember him as a thorough stu- dent, a congenial and trustworthy friend, the wielder of a mean club at lacrosse, and with all, ever faithful to the duties of his profession — the Min- istry. Holv lightning on a limb. 105 RALPH JOSEPH KASPER Ridgefield, Conn. Kas N.E.; Glee Club (3, 4). Y jOOK here, look here; do you see ■- i this ? Here is a real Connecti- 3B cut Yankee. He hit this lonely burg only four short years ago, but look at the change; compare the two pictures. Now he ' s going to leave us for other ports. (Other ports is a fact, for he is one of the Men of Le- high ' who is going to set the sea on fire). Now need more be said? What does everyone say of a sailor? To be truthful, Ralph is a student. He was very seldom seen at the Col- lie, disporting himself among the lady (?) rodents; and as for Bob ' s — he couldn ' t go there. Explanation? He is bashful; that is, he doesn ' t like to be seen with his friends. But he has a reputation: he ' s the man who inspired the writing of The Sheik. He is also the student addressed by Borden Room of Burr fame. Just ask him what he means by Anything but that, Pa; anything but that. But he ' s a gentleman — well liked by all. He ' s a thinker, and if he thinks over his work as he studied his proofs, his row-boat yard will be a success, with a large S. I ' m bashful. WALTER WILLIAM KEMMERER Wind Gap, Pa. K ern Bill ' Walt B.A.; Arts and Science Club, Secre- tary (4); Club de Quinze; Robert W. Blake Society. [px] NE wild day in the latter part of I v-J March, twenty-one years ago, H9 witnessed the arrival on this mundane sphere of Bill. He passed his youth near Wind Gap under the shadow of the Blue Ridge and after annexing all the knowledge to be had in that breezy town he journeyed to Nazareth. Here he gained numerous honors scholastic and fistic and on graduation decided to come to Lehigh. So in the fall of 1920 he began his career on South Mountain bent even- tually on becoming an engineer. How- ever, as he ascended the scholastic heights he found his time calling and has fitted himself to be a pedagogue with the idea of becoming a mission- ary to his people, whom he hopes to dra upward into the light of wisdom. Go roll yourself. 10G WILLIAM L. KITCHLINE Bethlehem, Pa. Bill Kicky B.A.; Deutscher Verein, Secretary (4); Arts and Science Club. [jyTlAXUFACTURED in Bethlehem K J — here is a purely home-town E9H9 product. Although Bill is rather short in stature and one of the youngest members of the class, he does not rank so low in his mental ability. This ability has not been shown as well in his classical subjects as in his engineering work, in which he seems to take a greater interest. His liking for mathematics is shown by the fact that he has taken some branch of it every term of the four years. Living on the west side, quite a dis- tance from College, the Lehigh Valley Transit Company has benefitted by his attendance at Lehigh. It was a com- mon sight to see Bill rush out of a classroom, and down the hill in close pursuit of a car, usually overtaking it at 3rd and New Streets. Bill likes Lehigh so much that he intends to remain here two mine years, in which he will take up engi- neering work. All we wish him in these years is the same amount of success that he has enjoyed through- out the last four years. I hope to tell you. HERMAN EUGENE KIEFER, JR. Quincy, 111. Gene Kief Baron C.E.; Student Officer, R. O. T. C. (2); Arcadia (4); Civil Engineering Soci- ety; American Society of Civil Engi- neers; Theta Xi. 107 OMETIME about the beginning of the twentieth century, there ■i was born into this world, and added to the population of these United States, one Eugene. Rumor had it that the boy was descended from that famous ancient leader, Prince Eugene of Savoy — and well might this be so, for does not the name come from the Greek Evyeios, meaning well born, of noble race ? Influenced by these early develop- ing ambitions, he entered Lehigh and took up the study of Engineering. But being a true son of the twentieth cen- tury, he soon found that college life consisted by no means entirely of trig tables and steel cables, and en- tered unrestrainedly into the follies and foibles of the Jazz Age. He be- came a football fan, a sofa-salaman- der, sat up until 3 A. M. playing poker and munching pretzels in a supersatu- rated atmosphere of Luekys, he danced, he learned the technique — and the thrill of cutting classes, he cut out Coles Phillips silk stocking ads, and wore his goloshes unbuckled thru wint er snows. Well, Holy Hell! JOHN C. KITCHEN, JR. Columbia, N. J. Kitch j. c: Ch.E.; Class Basketball (1); Basket- ball Squad (3); William H. Chandler Chemistry Prizes (1, 2, 3); Wilbur Physics Prize (2); Second honors in Mathematics (2); First Honors in Physics (2); First Honors in Chemical Engineering- (3); Student Officer, R. O. T. C. (4); Chemical Society; Amer- ican Chemical Society. rv lHOUGHT is the essence of all l jjj .success. KmW The little town of Columbia lays claim as the birthplace and home of John. He had not long- been a student at Lehigh, having matriculated in the Chemical Engineering course, when he displayed brilliant ability in the line of work he pursued and naturally at- tained a very good scholastic record. In the first year ' s of John ' s college career he gave most of his classmates the impression of being a misogynist. This impression, however, soon be- came vague when it was learned that Kitch left town quite frequently on a leave of absence to call on a fair damsel in Portland, Pa. John steers for the copper industry, where success will undoubtedly crown his efforts. Wait till I write her a letter. WALTER CONRAD KLEIN Walt Shylock B.A.; Robert W. Blake Society, Presi- dent (4); Club de Quinze, Secretary- Treasurer (4); Mustard and Cheese (3, 4); Price Prize for English Com- position (1); Arts and Science Club. EOUR years ago, there came from Pottsville a youth whose name gEfl was Walter Klein. He was fair to look upon, resembling divine Apol- lo, and, consequently, during his first two years here Walt spent most of his time in the cave of Venus. The remainder he expended in the wr iting of erotic verse and of the composition which won the Price Prize. At the beginning of his Junior year Walt went to work in earnest and has been working hard ever since. He has found his ideal and is working for it (?). His poetry is of a high order and I venture to prophesy that, as the years roll on, we shall hear of him from many quarters, — as a successful minister and writer, at least. Damnation! 108 WALTER EARL KNOUSE Washington, D. C. Walt E.E.; Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Senator ' s Club, Vice-Pres. and Secretary (4). irtl ALTER E. KNOUSE hails from Washing-ton, L). C, the play- 333 ground of the nation ' s represen- tatives, and he has brought with him some of the humor and good natured geniality of that place. At the beginning of his Junior year Walt pulled the biggest surprise of all by introducing to us his better half, a Washington belle by the name of Bauer, and we cannot help but think that Walt must have been a card shark in his day for he certainly has selected a right bower. To Walt also belongs the honor and privilege of being designated pop since he has the one and only bouncing baby, born while at school on Septem- ber 21, 1923, and we feel justly proud of the class baby. During his sojourn with us Walt has been a consistent and steady worker, but during his Senior year something has gone wrong. He has thrown cau- tion to the winds and has gone in for higher math, which certainly deserves the name higher. Tell us, if you can, was the lower atmosphere too cramped ? RAPHAEL KRAVITZ Atlantic City, N. J. Ray E.M.; Sigma Alpha Mu. TLANTIC CITY ' S representa- tive to the Class of 1924 was a 9ffiX man who, during his high school career, made up his mind to go out into the world and try his luck in en- gineering. In making his choice of colleges, it seemed only natural for him to choose Lehigh University. That September found him leaving the all-year- ' round resort for this great institute of learning. The opening of school found Ray enrolled as a student in the Civil En- gineering Department, but after two years of hard work he finally decided that he would much prefer Mining Engineering; he accordingly changed to Skipper Eckfeldt ' s popular de- partment. Although not an athlete, he has shown great interest in all branches of college activities. When Ray marches down the aisle of Packer Chapel to receive that ever cherished sheepskin, Lehigh will lose one of her staunchest adherents. What do you say? 109 JAMES PORTER LANGFITT Parkersburg, W. Va. ' •Pete ' Doc ' S)iake ' X B.A. and M.E.; Manager of Football (1924); Assistant Manager (3); Cy- anide; Sigma Chi. N the fall of 1920 a mild and un- assuming lad from the Moun- 9S9 tain State registered at Lehigh, this person being none other than James Porter Langfitt. Pete had all the ear-marks indicative of a Lehigh man and showed the true spirit of the college in scholastic, athletic, and so- cial activities. In his fourth year he reached the top wrung of the ladder in all three. In his selection as foot- ball manager for 1924, the college showed good judgment, for Porter will, through his keen insight and lev- el headedness, render an invaluable service. It takes a good man to get two degrees in five years, but that is his objective and he will attain it. Although during his first two years Porter maintained that five years was a long time to stay in Bethlehem, so far north of West Virginia, however, in the last two he has found things more homelike and it is safe to say That no greater love hath any man for Bethlehem (?) than he. What d ' ya say? 110 GEORGE AUGUST LAUX Baltimore, Md. Aug M.E.; Tau Beta Pi. [TTIEORGE was not born in 1915; I vJ. that was the year he graduated Bfl from the Baltimore Polytechnic Institute. After a lapse of six years the books came rather tough and though hard work cleared the fog away, it took Tau Beta Pi to convince him that he was not so dumb after all. Besides, George had the added re- sponsibility of keeping his handsome young brother (fully illustrated on our right) in the straight and narrow path. In this he was only partially successful and even George has been seen at the Coloseum on several occa- sions. George is very quiet and even tem- pered except when aroused by such things as Notes on Machine Design, at which times he becomes very vio- lent and bursts forth with a vocab- ulary which could only be acquired after many years of experience. His wonderful talent was soon recognized and he was sought out by many stu- dents who lacked the proper phrase to completely express their opinion of a certain course or a certain professor. George lives by the Golden Rule, only he improves upon it. His worst faults are his generosity and his mod- esty. Hello girls. LOUIS ALBERT LAUX Baltimore, Md. Lou M.E.; Rifle Team (3); Lehigh-Mary- land Club, Secretary (4); Mechanical Engineering Society, Vice-President (4); Tau Beta Pi; Delta Theta. I v s I HT S comes from Baltimore, Md., iy j where he graduated from B. P. BHB I. He caught the faculty nap- ping and managed to sneak in as a full fledged sophomore. However, he trotted out his stuff and now sports a Tau Bet key which he shines lustily before each quiz. Lou has not confined all his ener- gies to the books for he wields a mean musket on the rifle team. Our Lou maintains that he is a confirmed bachelor. It may be so, but give him time, he is still growing. Laux leaves Mr. Lehigh ' s College with the best wishes of his class mates and all Asa ' s sons expect great things of him in the near future. I Call. Ill BERTRAM RICH LEVY Brooklyn, N. Y. Bert Rocks E.E.; Class Baseball (1, 2); Mustard and Cheese (3, 4); Electrician (4); Lyrics for Musical Show (3); Arca- dia (4); Sophomore Council; Pi Lamb- da Phi. I j K|HE above sketch is none other |v J than our own little runt. EBB Bert is a product of Boys High School, Brooklyn, which has but one claim to fame. (Editor ' s Note: See above diagram.) On entering Lehigh, Bert aspired to the career of an Electrical Engi- neer, but since his sojourn here his en- thusiasm has become dampened and he has lost his aspirations. He still continues to bear up under Bill Esty ' s line and the rest of the grind, await- ing the day when it ' s all over and the fight is won. Our near Adonis will no doubt engage in business as a silent partner in a certain well known tlroi. We blush to tell of his many esca- pades with the fair ones and while this may seem like the usual line of bunk — Bert has figured in many a one and has come out unscathed. With his pleasing disposition and willing, friendly manner, we can pre- dict nothing but great success for him in his business and other endeavors. Bert goes forth from Lehigh with the stamp of our approval. Knock-out. CHARLES FITTING LINGLE Harrisburg, Pa. Buddy ' •Chief Bus.; Basketball Team (1, 2, 3, 4), Captain (3, 4); Football Squad (1, 2, 3, 4); Varsity Club; Cyanide; Sword and Crescent; Sigma Chi. Iwl P from the wilds of central Penn- vJM sylvania came our Buddy four BBS short years ago. Before enter- ing Lehigh, Buddy went to Harris- burg Technical High School, where he was a football star, playing on that famous interscholastic champlonsnip team in the backfield next to Carl Beck. Buddy will always be remembered here at Lehigh for his basketball play- ing. For four years he has been the mainstay of the team and for the past two years he has captained the team. This is quite a record for college bas- ketball, but the crowning act in his basketball career was this year, when he and his teammate won two straight victories from our Maroon and White rivals from down the river. Buddy also has quite a record as a weekender; he goes home nearly every weekend, supposedly to see the folks, but murder will out, and those of us who have seen her certainly admire his taste. The Chief has had tough sled- ding with his studies, but stick to it and you ' ll get that dip yet, old scout. We wish you the best of luck, Buddy. HARRY THEODORE LITRE Millville, N. J. ' Hoto H. T. C.E.; Business Manager of 1924 Epit- ome; Varsity Cheer Leader (2, 3, 4); Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Musical Clubs (2, 3, 4), Business Manager (4); Burr Board (1, 2, 3, 4), Advertising Manager (4); Class Track (1, 2); Senior Class Book Committee; Civil Society; Sword and Crescent, Vice-President; Cyanide; Pi Delta Epsilon (3, 4), President (4); Delta Upsilon. LTyiOXFIDEXTIALLY, we are told I v-lj that Harry furnished the inspi- Kft ' i a ration for The Sheik ; and who can tell for even stranger things than that have marred the serenity of South Bethlehem. We do not know however that the famed Dapper Dan has nothing on H. T. as a high step- per among the five hundred of B- thorpe and Cedar Crest. As a man-about-campus H. T. can ' t be matched. A glance at the above activity list will furnish sev- eral eye-fulls for the most skeptical. We have been reliably informed that he has as many activities as Stein- metz has degrees. Among the prob- lems which the C.E. Department will puzzle coming generations is to calcu- late the stresses set up in H. T. ' s watch chain by a concentrated load of 27 g ' old charms at its center. By Golly. 112 WILLOUGHBY JAMES LONG Bethlehem, Pa. Met.; Interfraternitv Council; Scab- bard and Blade; Theta Xi. iC I ILL came to Lehigh from Beth- 0 lehem Preparatory School armed SB9 with a firm resolve to master the problems and to conquer the diffi- culties of the course in Metallurgy. After successfully weathering tem- pestuous seas of Hydraulics and grop- ing thru a maze of Integral Calculus he forged to the top like a cork. Bill ' s act however is one of bril- liant audacity in the case of the rest- less sex. His power of command, his striking delivery and his convincing repartee has driven more than one social contemporary to seek revenge in a reduced volume of social etiquette. But in all this it is Bill ' s inveterate habit of coming to classes every morn- ing in a car that shows earnestness of purpose. Yes, you are right, the car is a Brill. Bill ' s affable disposition, as a source of sparkling humor and his in- tense desire to be fair in Collegiate Activities have achieved for him the sincere wishes of his class. We judge by the past and have no fear of the future. Success to you, Bill. How about that now? 113. EDWARD THOMAS WARREN LORD E. T. W. Ed Philadelphia, Pa. Ch.E.; Student Officer, R. O. T. C; Chemical Society, American Chemical Society. | py| AZE, dear reader, upon the man I jJj from Tioga! Consider his intel- fcStfi ligent look! His parents thought that he looked intelligent the third day after he was born. Of this he assures us, however, that he remem- bers nothing. But why, say you, is this handsome young man called ' the Man from Tioga ' ? Therein lies no secret. ' Twas in the class of the august Professor Stewart that he re- ceived that name. A name which does honor to the bearer of it; and to that select district of the City of Phil- adelphia. Where, said the profes- sor, gazing down from his professor- ial heights, do you come from? We, said Edward, call it Tioga. The professor continued to gaze down from his professorial heights, licked his pencil point, held it over his mys- terious little book, and then remarked: Well so do WE. Bui hark! ' Tis whispered that it is not only in the class-room that Ed- ward shines! Consider that he may resemble a certain former movie ac- tor who uses the hair tonic known as Yasaline. I don ' t know . DONALD CAMERON LUCE Don Cam Joe Scranton, Pa. E.E.; Baseball Squad (3, 4); Cotillion; Secretary A. I. E. E.; Cyanide, Sigma Chi. tffiH OME years ago, to be exact it was four, there was more or less chaos in one of our leading mining centei ' s. This was caused by the discovery of an electri- cal genius in the embryo in the per- sonage of Donald Cameron Luce. And so it was that he descended upon Le- high where Asa Packer molds the des- tinies of such men. Of Don ' s suc- cess we are certain for such deter- mined efforts cannot go unrewarded, especially when linked with a happy smile and cheery hello as all receive when they come in contact with him. We are still a bit doubtful as to why he desires a position with the Public Service of New Jersey; however, we are sure he will gain as many honors in this field as in college which were of the very highest. I ' M bite. ADRIAN MORRELL MacKENZIE Mac Ad Englewood, N. J. Bus. Ad. I WAY back in the dark ages of 1901, the little town of Engle- B%m wood, N. J., was honored by the appearance of a so-called Scott. Mac says only the name is left, but Baldy kind of made him live up to it. He and Art , the inseparable bud- dies, though on the verge of crabbing the course at times, deserve credit for living over on the North Side and hiking it, every day, just for the priv- ilge of paying toll for four (4) years. Disdaining the ordinary pleasures of life, this Jerseyite, rose from the hum- ble and humiliating position of a freshman, to the dizzy heights of a Senior, seeing many drop by the way- side and profiting by their example. His diploma seemed to be a magnet for him and drew him on. If he makes out in life as well as he did at Lehigh he has no kick coniin. So here ' s luck to you, Mac. Honest! 114 SIDNEY THOMPSON MacKENZIE Sid Mac Philadelphia, Pa. N.E.; Class Secretary (2); Class Football (1, 2); Football Squad (2); Lacrosse Team (3, 4); Squad (1, 2); Cotillion; Phi; Scimitar; Cyanide; Delta Phi. ONE day in September, four tu- multous years ago, an observ- BH vant loiterer at the Lehigh Valley station watched the passengers alight from the Philadelphia express, just arrived. His glance passed from one individual to another until it rested on a tall gaunt youth nervously toy- ing with his baggage. Little would one suspect that this curly-haired, awkward freshman was Sidney Thomp- son MacKenzie, later to become the perfect man and no less perfect lover. Sid came to us fresh from Ger- mantown Academy — he made friends from the first — his achievements are numerous — a boy with many virtues and to be truthful fewer vices — he is good natured and his smile seems to be a hear t breaker; that is judging from the number of affaires he has had. However, we wouldn ' t say he was exactly fickle. We feel Sid will deliver the goods — he ' s got everything to his credit and if his business ability is as good as his line we need have no fears as to what he will do in the future. I ' ll bite! What? JOSEPH A. MAGUIRE Bethlehem, Pa. Mac Joe Molly B.A.; Cadet Major, R. O. T. C. (4); Scabbard and Blade, Captain (4); Le- high University Catholic Club, Pres- ident (4); Class Baseball (1); Class Football (2); Class Track (2); Deut- scher Verein; Junior Banquet Commit- tee; Senior Class Book Committee; Chemical Society (1, 2). 115 JOSEPH ANTHONY MAGUIRE, V- affectionately known as Mac , 552 was born on January 29, 1900, in Philadelphia, Pa. He entered Penn University in the fall of ' 18. The fol- lowing year he decided to step out and meet the cruel world face to face. As with everything else, Mac was suc- cessful at his work but still he was not satisfied. The thirst for real knowledge became stimulated once more. After considering several well- known seats of learning, he finally de- cided on Lehigh and in his own opin- ion he could not have made a wiser choice. Anyone, glancing at the rec- ord he has made during the four years of his sojourn hereabouts, will read- ily see the type of man he is. With his scholastic training almost com- pleted, the friends of Joe Maguire, to a man, wish him all the success and honors that can be attained by hu- mans as they believe him to be a man among men and deserving of the best. Chick. WILLIAM SAMUEL MAJOR Roebling, N. J. • ' Bill Ch.E.; Chemical Society, Secretary (3). ry IE ' S little but he ' s nice. Bill is a small man from a cS gross and much famed city — we shan ' t tell you what the city is for such might constitute the anti-climax to what we just said. Well, anyway this little package of flesh seems to possess some winning- ways, by means of which he has made many life-long acquaintances. This holds especially true for members of the fairer sex. It was learned that he is a strong believer in WINE, WOMAN, and SONG. However, the consensus of opinion of his classmates is that he can ' t sing, so he decided to make up for this deficiency by laying much stress on the remaining two. He seems to be quite industrious, but he is a firm believer in Safety First. This statement was ascer- tained by the fact that when he opens or closes a switch in the Laboratory he closes his eyes and trusts to luck that everything will be O. K. We remain uninformed as to what career Bill will follow, but wherever he goes, may he fare well. LEON NATHANIEL MANDELL Philadelphia, Pa. Shorty ' •Runf Ch.E.; Class Baseball (1); Class Bas- ketball (1); Soccer Squad (3, 4); Stu- dent Officer, R. O. T. C. (4); Chemi- cal Society. 116 OH, would some power the gif ' te gie us, 823 To see ourselves as others see us. A Short Interesting Student , some one has cut out and pasted above his door in Taylor Hall. Behold him as Section Chief trying to make the freshman behave. With seventeen freshman running loose in the sec- tion, what do you think of his chances. Everyt hing has its limits and he is just discovering what shortness limits. Shorty as we call him in the chem- ical course came to Lehigh from Frankford High, Philadelphia. Here he had bluffed his way through some- how. The first summer at Plattsburg, we will mention in passing, he says he had a glorious time. This fall almost every afternoon in the week one may see him urging the soccer scrubs along. He is captain, and in the spe- cial games often earns a victory for the team. On Wednesday ' s he is still on the upper field drilling a platoon. Then after all is said and done, what more can be done. How would you like to — FREDERICK THURMAN MARTIN Harrisburg, Pa. Fritz Cholly Abe Pasteur Ch.E.; Chemical Society; American Chemical Society. [irflHAT have we here? Turn back ' the pages of recorded time, and Wggd if you can find another such human specimen as this, then you will have succeeded where the writer of these lines (a most patient man) has failed. Few there are, indeed, who can I ' ast of being unique, but among them our scientific friend takes a prominent place. Scientific? Aye! And more than that. Fritz is a strange bundle of contrasts. On one hand the chemist, the physist, the engineer, and on the other, the lover of beauty, art and culture! One who will take photographs of a good-looking dam- sel, for scientific purposes, but who would shy at being introduced. The careful, painstaking student of such chivalric arts as fencing, but one who avoids presenting his best side to the fair sex. Curses. he says, on these college snakes who bandoline their hair! I ' ll have none of it! He is a lover of hoary ancient lore and mag- ic, yet at the same time he is comput- ing the cost ner cubic foot of the mosl improved form of salt factory. WARREN S. MASTER Reading, Pa. Met Dutch E.E.; Berks-Lehigh Club, Secretary (3); Electrical Engineering Society. [v K|HIS boy sometimes called Met I wj but most commonly known as HJ0 Dutch, first saw light in the city of Reading, Pennsylvania, and not in Allentown as the name would im- ply. There he grew up, after a fashion; and after graduating from the Read- ing High School he entered Perkiomen at the age of 16 and there completed his preparation for college. It had always been his intention to become an engineer; and it was this idea, coupled with ambition and desire to do big things, that brought him to I. chigh. Even from the beginning of his high school career he had taken a greal liking to drawing and had made it one of his favorite pastimes. His favorite pastimes now seem to be going to the Colly and discussing automobiles. nximl the campus lie is famous for his ability to juggle such strange things as Flections and Amperes ; in tact, it is believed that he once dis- integrated an entire coluomb at the unbelievable rate of .0026 Beavei per second. The class wishes you success so go- get-it. (are lief ill. THOMAS MAXWELL Baltimore, Md. Thai Tom Wang Legs E.E.; Lacrosse Squad (2, 3, 4); Le- high Maryland Club, Vice-President (4); St. Paul ' s Society; Electrical En- gineering Society; A. I. E. E.; Theta Xi. © ALTIMORE has given us Poe, , Bonaparte and Babe Ruth, but 3SS9 the greatest of these is Max- well. This typewriting engineer came to Lehigh from Baltimore Polytechnic Institute with ambition to be an Elec- trical Engineer. Buffeted about by surging passions and beset on every side by Laboratory Reports, Tom, like old Penn, fought on — and con- quered. How do you like that, Tiny ? Nevertheless, Tom has been a member of the lacrosse squad for three years and has been right smart in pulling ' em out of the air. Perhaps we might also allude to his catalogued list of eligibles which he leaves as a memorial to the most deb- onair freshman. Tom ' s ability to take part in col- lege activities and at the same time keep up well in his studies and his general attitude has won for him the admiration of his entire class. We have no fear for his success and we shall have sympathy for his competi- tors, because it is Tom . I)amn-fi-know. 118 JOSEPH ALOYSIUS McBRIDE Philadelphia, Pa. Mac Confidential The Fly M.E.; Lacrosse Team (3, 4); Class Baseball (1); Arcadia (3); Theta Kappa Phi. YfX AC in the days of not so long K jj ago, a laughing-lipped lad from BSUfl Frankford-on-the-L, eager to glean info of a mechanical nature, stepped into our midst, and while he has done some stepping since then, it wasn ' t in that part of Lehigh ' s anat- omy known as the aforementioned midst. Boy, page Confidential McBride. Next to strutting down the mam drag, with his goulashes unbuckled, Joe ' s fondest pleasure is teiiing parlor stories. Of course the nature of the stories depends upon the con- tents of the parlor at that time. Now, boy, page Miss , of Pittsburgh. Girls, you must be from the home of Carnegie Tech or you don ' t rate with Our Joe. Confidential has a peculiar habit of taking you aside, as tho he were about to relate some juicy scandal or give you the inside dope on Who ' s what and why, even tho it is merely to ask What time is it? In Lehigh Men Who Are, 1928 edition, we feel sure that a certain page will be devoted to the achieve- ments of the Hon. J. A. McBride. ATTABOY JOE. That indefinable subtle something. ROBERT LESTER McINTIRE Butler, Pa. ' Bob Mack Bus.Ad.; Cotillion; Theta Delta Chi. TTIOBERT LESTER hails from that • t town which lies just out in the B9 sticks north of Pittsburgh, called Butler. After pursuing- the role of the town beau brummel he in- vaded Bethlehem one bright fall morn- ing in 1920 in hopes of taking the town by storm. After going thru all the necessaries he settled down to the task of becoming an M.E., but after a year of this he saw his mistake and immediately took to the arduous task of changing his course, and finally en- tered the Business College. In college, Bob has been successful in every sense of the word. Friends, honors, and the respect of his fellows are his. Being a great follower of the trend of mind of those gentlemen who are upsetting all the dope in Rus- sia he has caused numerous flurries in many of his classes and more than one professor has had to admit his cleverness and ability along the so- cialistic lines. If his future success is marked by his present ability we have no fear for Robert ' s position when he returns for his twenty-fifth reunion. Great Guns! RUSSELL HENRY METZNER Wheeling, W. Va. Metz Rus M.E.; Cotillion; Theta Delta Chi. CURING the breezy month of Sep- ___ tember, 1920, the young gen- IBs tleman pictured above blew into our fair midst. Russ hails from the wilds of West Virginia, that state of beautiful women and corn likker, but in order to fool the boys, he spent two years at Exeter, absorbing the New England atmosphere. During his four years here, Russ has been quite the student, in fact, he has earned in some circles the worthy title of Course Crabber. It is also rumored that Russ made Tau Beta Pi, but being of a retiring and modest nature, declined the honor, because of the publicity attached thereto. Russ claims he is sure of at least two things in his young life, that he is going to be a bachelor, and that he will post-grad at Harvard for a while. The writer is inclined to doubt both of these assertions. He predicts the advent of some sweet little lady, who will cause Russ to take a sudden and awful flop. Having thus been in- veigled, the bachelorhood and Har- vard plans will be out, Russ will set- tle down in tin- holy state of Matri- mony. Good Heavens. WILLIAM CHARLES MEYER Bethlehem, Pa. Bill E.E. HND now we come to our old friend Bill Meyer. Back in the Zm 90 ' s when Bill was born things were distributed in generous proportions. As a result, Bill feels somewhat above his classmates. You see, he stands about 6 ft. 4 in his stockings. Bill has always lived at home, and, of course, under parental eye has naturally applied himself assiduously to his studies — usually spending not more than six nights a week out. You see Bill is a very popular young- man in his own home town. Also there are the young ladies. But you would be surprised how Bill comes up smiling; he never repeats a subject and is very little worried by finals. Bill is undoubtedly the most ami- able man in the class. If you feel in- clined to dispute this just read what follows and forever remain silent. You know Bill is a radio shark; also, Bill has taken several lectures and lab. courses with the Dutchman. Recently, Bill spent considerable time helping the Dutchman set up a radio in his home. Can you beat that for a good natured, forgiving charac- ter? Now, let ' s see. PHILIP ROBERT MILLER Bethlehem, Pa. Phil Bob B.A.; Deutscher Verein; Pre-Medical Society, Vice-President (4); Pi Lamb- da Phi. XN spite of the fact that Philip Robert Miller was born and bred Wti in Bethlehem, he really isn ' t such a bad sort of fellow. It is true that he seemed satisfied to live here for twenty years, but at least he spent four of these years in the best place in Bethlehem — Lehigh! For some reason Phil wants to be a doctor. We think we know why, but, of course, that ' s a secret. But then it does mean at least eight years of col- lege, which is a lot easier than being thrown out into the cruel world; es- pecially, if you like to take things easy. Phil isn ' t lazy or anything like that, but he has never been over- anxious to be introduced to work. Phil is the Colly ' s steadiest cus- tomer; not because he likes the Colly, but because a dance is a dance. Colly excepte d, Organic is Phil ' s favorite indoor sport and anything less than a 9.5 makes him feel bad. But virtue will be rewarded and some dav we hope to hear great things of Dr. Paul R. Miller. Not so bad. JOHN RALPH MI LUG AN East Liverpool, Ohio Bus.Ad.; Mandolin Club; Arcadia (3); Sigma Phi Epsilon. rpFl FORTUNATELY, «j erry  was [vAJ forced to give up hope of ever SBB being President when he opened his eyes on the morning of March 3, 1901, and found that the stork had dropped him in Cameron, W. Va., a few miles across the Ohio line. His career as a scholar started at the institutions of the aforementioned town and when he had learned all there was to be taught there Lehigh claimed him as one of her victims and for four years he dodged the boss on the hill. His principal reason for not making Phi Bet was to keep the school free from autocracy. Among the Colli ege Girls Jerry was quite the Duke and many of them were captivated by his English ways. One of the damsels was quite disap- pointed when in reply to her question if he was from London, he said. No, from Liverpool. Jerry expects to spend the next few years showing the gas companies the correct way to handle the business end of their operations. We wish him all the success possible. What gozzon here? CHARLES BAYARD MITCHELL II. Woodbury, N. J. ' •Milch Bugle E.M.; Football Squad (1, 2, 3); Base- ball Squad (1); Lacrosse Team (3, 4); Squad (2); Golf Team (3, 4); Class Football (1, 2); Freshman Banquet Committee; Cotillion; Arcadia; Chair- man, Arcadia Dance Committee; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4); Mining and Met- allurgical Society; Kappa Beta Phi; First Honors Mining and Metallurgi- cal Engineering (3); Tau Beta Pi; Theta Delta Chi. 121 HARLES BAYARD MITCHELL 2ND, better known as Bugle , 1522 came to us just four years ago as a Jersey mosquito. Bugle hailed first from Penn Charter, Philadelphia, where he was captain of football and an all-scholastic halfback. He has de- veloped here at Lehigh into a great golfer, the little he has had time to play the game with the other activi- ties he has been connected with, and is a fai ' ly good lacrosse player, hav- ing played in several games last year. Mitch has scrubbed four years on the football team, has proven himself worthy of the golf team, and should have his letter in Lacrosse before the year is out. Mitch has, in conjunc- tion with his athletic work, won the highest honor of an engineer and that is Tau Beta Pi. He has left a hole here in college ranks that will be hard to fill. MYRON TURNER MOORE Youngstown, Ohio. ' Mike ' •Empty Dinty Bus. Ad.; Sophomore Banquet Commit- tee; Junior Banquet Committee; Kap- pa Sigma. ffi ANY times we have wondered L l whether Mike couldn ' t be GOB classed as one of the original Three Wise Men. He came to Lehigh a worn, plodding engineer, and to say the least, a near benedict. But times are modern and Mike is now an able business men — carefree and girlfree. Of late we are beginning to doubt the latter, for from all possible news sources, Mike is now traveling back over the old (fe)mail list! But alas, he claims he is strictly in love, and we wish him luck in this venture. As fortune has played a great number of cards in his favor, he possesses an enviable record of good scholarship, a winsome smile, and an engaging way with the women. We have no cause to doubt that in some future time, Mike will bring honor to the Buckeye State and Le- high. No kidding or nothing. HENRY PARSONS PALMER Langhorne, Pa. Deacon Hank C.E.; Cheer Leader (2, 3, 4); Soccer Squad (1); Assistant Manager Bas- ketball (3); Class Historian (1); Class Banquet Committee (1); Class Dance Committee (1); Cotillion, Treasurer; Phi; Scimitar; Kappa Beta ' Phi; Cy- anide; Delta Phi. TiTlACK in 1900 the Palmers cele- jcJ brated the big event of Dea- SS9 con ' s birth. From then on this became one of the historical dates in Langhorne, Pa. After graduating from George School, Henry entered Lehigh, where he enrolled in the Civil Engineering Course. For four years Bethlehem society has been excep- tionally increased by the presence of Deacon , who can be seen at every social event of the valley — until now, Bethlehem looks forward with dread for the duller years to come after the departure of his glowing personality. But, perhaps, sometime in the years to come, there may be more Palmers at Lehigh. But Henry ' s years at col- lege have not been devoted entirely to academic and social activities — for he has been a factor in managerial com- petitions and a cheer leader who will be remembered for years. Damn if I know. 122 DONALD ADELBERT PARSONS New Rochelle, N. Y. Don Aloysious Pars M.E.; Swimming Team (2, 3, 4); Glee Club (1); Deutscher Verein, Treasur- er (4); American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers. n TI HIS young gentleman hails from l j J a place called New Rochelle ESB0 which according to all indica- tions is a village in the vicinity of Noo Yok. Not withstanding this enormous handicap Don has managed to face the world with a smile which is indeed a great achievement. Donald has been known to leave the splendid city of Souse Besslem quite frequently over the weekends for the wilds in which New Rochelle is lo- cated. There surely must be a cause. It is known that he goes home to see how the Haynes is running and that it wouldn ' t do for him to let his col- lege work interfere with the manage- ment of such a good car. Donald has worked hard while here at this University, and his greatest desire is to get his sheepskin. He will probably, like the rest of the M.E. ' s spend his time after graduation chas- ing B. T. U. ' s or entropy. We wish him the best of success. Sec!! Is that so!! 123 JOHN ALEXANDER PATTERSON, JR. Bywood, Pa. ' ( Jap Ch.E.; Class Baseball (1); Class Foot- ball (2); Chemical Society. J3] VERY season is marked by some VJA outstanding event. Witness the W fall of 1901, when on the 17th of September, Pat made his bow to what is known as modern civiliza- tion in the City of Brotherly Love. After graduating from West Phila- delphia High School, his thirst for knowledge pointed the way to old South Mountain. So, in the fall of 1920, he migrated to Bethlehem and informed Thorny of his intention to revolutionize the Chemical industry. Being a cosmopolitan young fellow, Pat soon became a resident of the Citj of Bethlehem. For, besides spend- ing the time here during the regular college year, he has not missed a sin- gle Summer School. It was during Summer S.-hool that he acquired the mania for tennis and when no classes were in progress, he could frequently be seen pursuing the elusive ball around the court. He has been observed quite frequent- ly taking the P. R. flier to Phil- ly. No one can be sure as to the object of these visits, but in all cases of doubt, cherchez la femme. He intends to go into the chemical field as an engineer. Want to play pinochle? FREDERICK JOSEPH PEARSON Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Freddy Frit.-. B.A.; Club de Quinze; Vice-President (3); Robert W. Blake Society. |j K| HREE years ago last fall, a large Lgj j portmanteau was observed mov- SBB ing up Delaware avenue towards Leonard Hall. As it drew nearer, who should be revealed as the motive power of this piece of baggage but Fred Pearson. He entombed him- self in his room and spent the first night of his college life in study. This has brought its full eompensatkms, and Fred is among the scholastic elect. Recently, however, he has begun to do his work merely as an avocation. What will happen ? He will probably teach Church History at a theological seminary, and marry her when he reaches his professorship. Good! JOHN MARSHALL PIERSOL Philadelphia, Pa. Piery ' ' Abe L24 E.M.; Mustard and Cheese (3, 4); President of Mining and Metallurgi- cal Society (4); Sophomore Banquet Committee; Junior Prom Committee; Senior Class Book Committee; Inter- fraternity Council (2, 3, 4) ' ; Cotillion; Scimitar; Cyanide; Delta Tau Delta. | K| HE time-honored adage, Variety l y j is the spice of life, appealed to E lia Piery even from his early childhood, so after his first exposure to studies at the William Penn Char- ter School he plunged into a collegi- ate atmosphere. Fortunately for him, as the newness of college wore off, another chance for variety in the form of army beans beckoned, and we next see him in the Tank Corps. When France had been made inter- esting for tourists, Piery returned to Penn and resumed his attendance at classes. One year on the trolley car campus , and his desire for variety again got the upper hand. Having al- ready been a member of the classes of 1921-1923, our own 1924 was a strong attraction so he enrolled at Lehigh in the fall of our Freshman year. In choosing the Mining profession we feel that he has made a wise de- cision and that never again will his longing for variety be unfulfilled. ELDRIDGE EDWARD QUINLAN Yonkers, N. Y. Qtiiiiny Blossom Bus.Ad.; Scimitar; Chi Phi. | | N Pre-Yolstead days the City of I vJ[ Newark was famous for its six- K H teen breweries. Those days are gone forever, but fame has come to it through other channels, for it was from this fair city that our Eldridge came in the fall of 1920, to enter Le- high. Unschooled in the ways of the world as a freshman he early acquired those graces which mark the man of affairs. In fact the events of his early career at Lehigh kept the editor of Town Topics busy. However, under the able instruction of Baldy and with the aid of me notes, wisdom came. He is blessed with a frankness, intelli- gence, keen perception, and ability to back up what he says. Quinny has been seen often of late in a racy car, but this mystery is easily solved, for one has but to cherchez la femme and, voila, it is solved. Seriously, though, if frank- ness of speech and a likeable disposi- tion count for anything, more will be heard of Quinny in the years to come. Hey, Course Crabber! THEODORE HORACE RAKESTRAW Bethlehem, Pa. Ted Big-boy E.M.; Mining and Metallurgical So- ciety. [y HHEODORE H. RAKESTRAW, r -sj erstwhile Ted, was born in the HB3 land of Stoke-Pogys and mar- row pic; from whence he migrated at an early age to Roumania. When the Germans overran that country, Ted soon saw the errors of his ways and hied him to the good old U. S. A. Here he is a law abiding citizen, if he can be said to abide anything or any place, for this is the crux of the mat- ter, gentle reader: T. H. has tingling soles that ache to tread God ' s great, free, open spaces. He longs to test the spell of the Yukon and see the haunts of the silences. The dim, far distant Empyrean realms of knowl- edge also hold a lure for the form of our hero, bulking at the horizon of the known and classified. Doctor Illu- minatissimus seems synonomous with Ulysses and Mighty Nimrod to our be- lovod-of-the-Gods, therefore to become all three is but a simple task. Well, may Dame Fortune and Lady Luck smile on you, Ted, and as they will you will find better answers to life ' s questions than Magmatic Segre- gation. Like the time — 125 PAUL WILSON REDLINE Bethlehem, Pa. Bed ' ' Reddie E.M.; Class Football (1); Class Bas- ketball (1); Class Baseball (1, 2); Tennis Squad (3); Wrestling: Squad (1, 2, 4); Mustard and Cheese (2); Mining Society; Phi Sigma Kappa. 0|ED is a native and is proud of ■BE it. At an early age he conceived ifis the idea of taking a course at Lehigh. He seldom missed a game and when he did it wasn ' t his fault. Fences and cops meant nothing to him in those days. He graduated from high school here and then went up the street to college. Paul, first started in as a Mechanical, but the atmos- phere of the department did not meet his expectations so he changed to Min- ing. While in this department he tried to convince Turner that things are not as they seem. Although Red is quiet and unassuming, there is deter- mination and grit in back of him, which will carry him over many rough places. You and me both. BENJAMIN HARVEY REESE Kingston, Pa. Ben Ten Per Cent Bus.Ad.; Band; Mandolin Club; Le- high-Lackawanna-Luzerne Club. 126 QMONG the riff-raff and debris found in the business depart- 9£m ment, none is more outstanding than the one represented by the above contour map. Parenthetically, we may remark, that no prizes will be given for finding the largest num- ber of bird ' s nests, squirrel food, or packages of Sweitzer cheese in the picture. This is a picture of youth in- carnate, and if its head were con- cealed beneath an ancient golluf cap, it might be recognized as Reese. While we are on this unpleasant subject, it would be advisable to note that Ben is working his way thru college, due to the invention of a sci- ence known as Black Jack. To the uninitiated we further add that Black Jack can best be utilized in paying quantities between the hours of 11 P. M. and 5 A. M., and Ben is, in all things, a conscientious worker. On the other hand, Ben, having his eye attracted to the popularity of Mr. Stillman, has crashed thru the business course near the top of the class, and is now set for the presiden- cy of the National City Bank. Let ' s go over to Allentown. WILLIAM AARON REYER Northampton, Pa. mi Abey Chem. Deutseher Verein; Chemical Society; Sigma Chi. DO, gentle reader, the above mug was not snatched from the SB rogues ' gallery; if the thought- ful photographer had not erased the iron filings from his chin, it might be recognized as a caricature of none other than our little Abey Reyer. We might state that Bill shoots a nasty line, well oiled with Nujol. For instance, after returning from a weekend at home, it runs something like this: Oh, boy, I had the nuts of a jane out Saturday night. SOME SHAPE, followed by the rantings of an inmate of Rittersville. Bill is a prominent clubman of Northampton and can be found any Saturday night up at the Ampton Club, shooting pool with the boys. He is quite ambitious, taking two courses simultaneously. One is under Dr. Ull- man and the other under Prof. Mealey. He will probably get a Phi Bet key in the latter. Seriously, tho, Bill is sociable, friendly, and has more friends than he imagines. He has the best wishes of a host for his success in banking. (Incidentally, Bill is studying chem- istry.) Gtfs Paste. CHARLES LEWIS RICE Hazleton, Pa. Charlie Chuck C.E.; Class Historian (3); Kappa Sigma. fli HAT a blessing it is that, as we MJ mow older we look upon the fol- 3KS lies of youth in a different light, and change from the ways of a care- free boy to the more settled existence of one who realizes that to graduate from Lehigh, one must be a student! Charlie is typically such a person. In his early years of college, he played the part of the carefree one, cut he has grown to appreciate the strength of that little word WORK ' , and he has been very faithful to his studies. Of a jovial disposition and quiet na- ture, he is well liked by all of his classmates, and we cannot but pre- dict a successful career for him, no matter what he chooses as his life work; for with it all, he is blessed with what is commonly known as level-headedness. How ' s things? 127 JANVIER MAYHEW RICE Bridgeton, N. J. Jan January E.E. ■=Y|ANVIER m - RICE, mathemati- O- cian, astronomer, movie hound, fl and woman-hater (?), whose fa- vorite trick it is to take exception to and then proceed to prove differen- tially or by induction that the author is all wrong; hails from a pretty little spot not too far from the city of Philadelphia to make it rural. To see Janvier (Mayhem for short) amble across the campus with his singularly individual stride does not mean that he is necessarily awake since it is often necessary to jolt him into the mortal sphere to get a response, or, perhaps, jolt him out of a mental brown. Ask him where his slide ru ] e i s — he don ' t know. Our illustri- ous Mayhem successfully eluded all laboratory work for the last two years and we are still wondering how he did it and having done it, what he does with all the time this puts at his disposal. Despite all the banter, May- hem is a pleasant, jovial, good-na- tured scout. Aw! Get out! LOUIS MOORE RICHARDS Somerville, N. J. ' Pop Play Lew ' ' Dick M.E.; Dormitory Chief (4); Class Football (2); Mechanical Engineering- Society; Student Officer, R. O. T. C. (4). YflOUIS MOORE RICHARDS, alias A4 Pop, came to Lehigh Univer- ' 9 sity to enter the college of Me- chanical Engineering after spending two years at Bethlehem Prep. Pop is a chap full of surprises but the big- gest surprise he ever pulled was when in May, ' 23, he announced to the world that there w as now and had been since the preceding August a Mrs. Louis M. Richards. This information went a long ways in explaining the daily let- ters and the consistency of the week- end trips home to the little town of Somerville, N. J. During his college career he resided at Taylor Hall, where he entered whole-heartedly into the social and economic life of the student. Here in his senior year he was elected Dorm Chief. In the fulfilling of this office his honor was quite the executive, be- ing a fair and just judge in the mat- ters brought befoi ' e him. Here ' s to you, Pop. Our most hearty and sincere wishes go with you as you journey along life ' s highway. You owe me. 128 EDWARD HARDY RICHARDSON Malvern, Pa. Rich C.E.; Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Sophomore Council. EVERAL years ago in the town of Malvern a great event hap- pened. This was the advent of our friend Rich into this world of ours. Nobody heard of Malvern be- fore but Rich claims that it is the best town going and has argued the point quite often so we will have to take his word for it. In his earlier life he must have had the idea that he would like to be a school teacher. Otherwise he probably would not have gone to West Chester Normal unless it was because the ratio of about 10 to 1 in favor of the girls. However after graduating from Normal he decided to be a Civil Engineer and chose Lehigh as the proper place to learn all about that mud-bespattered profession. Since coming here he has been heard by all whenever the band plays. He oper- ates a Euphonium. Rich is always full of the old Lehigh fight and plays the game square. No doubt he will be heard of in later life and we all wish him the best of luck. Hey, listen. RALPH SHELLY HITTER Quakertown, Pa. Ritter Ed Erve E.E.; Football Squad (4); Wrestling Squad (3); Senior Electrical Foot- ball; Electrical Engineering Society. 129 Y? OOKING at the innocent face of - - the young man above, you S i would not think that he is con- sidered the Sheik of Quakertown. He holds a record that many would like to have; that of never being in Bethlehem a weekend for three years. He thus hardened himself up for a strenuous football career his senior year by riding in the trolley. He was the star halfback of the Taylor Hall and Senior Electrical football teams, being a consistent gainer, and a hard man to stop. He is so often heard to mutter to himself and anybody listening close- ly can hear the word Sheba. Ru- mor has it that she is a young lady Ritter met while working for the Philadelphia Electric Company. He made quite a reputation for him- self as an Electrical Engineer while working for the company just men- tioned. Ritter is a very popular man with both his fellow classmates and with the faculty members that he came into contact with. Good luck, Ritter, we hope to see you a great Electrical Engineer of the future. Holy cats. ARTHUR PARSONS ROBERTS Englewood, N. J. Art Robbie Bus. Ad.; First Prize in Mathematics (1). a LONG about the time that Teddy Roosevelt started in to break SZ H up the Trusts, there was anoth- er event of vital importance in the United States, when Art made his first bow to the world. This event also happened in the metropolis of New York city, but was not given the publicity of the Trust Busting Ted- dy, hence the ignorance of the public in regards to the event. Ever since he was knee high to a grasshopper, Art had one object — to soak up knowledge. After he went through the schools of Englewood, graduating with honors at the head of his class, he decided to look for other fields to conquer. So he hied his way to Bethlehem, where the fa- mous institution of learning is lo- cated, and there settled for four years, learning the game of Business. He has carried on his old rep, and has shone in all his studies a regular demon for work and always knows his stuff. He just loved to sit back and watch the other fellows take exams. More power to you Art — we ex- pect to hear great things of you in the future. Can you bend that? EDMUND LEWIS ROBINSON Bethlehem, Pa. Eddie Robbie E.E.; Rifle Team (1, 2, 3, 4), Man- ager (4); Class Baseball (1); Soccer Squad (2, 4); Lacrosse Squad (2); Mustard and Cheese Show (3); Glee Club (3, 4); Student Officer, R. O. T. C. (3, 4); Railroad Society; Elec- trical Engineering Societv; Vice- President (3, 4). I EHOLD one of the future ' s greatest scientists. As an in- 3223 exhaustable experimenter and inventor, one will have to go far to find his equal. He has continually kept his Brother Electricals in good spirits by his fancy fire-works dis- plays and Acyclic Dynamo inven- tions. His first two years among us were largely spent on his Steel Steed and in attending a record number of Course Society meetings. Eddie is of a philosophical na- ture, and is a bug on travel. We have heard him even talk of, When I go around the world, etc. Good luck, old man, you may go yet. How- ever, Eddie seems to have a def- inite and constructive Philosophy of Life and he has made many warm friends through his likeable person- ality and sincerity. That gives me an idea. 130 HARRY GEORGE ROBINSON Trenton, N. J. Robby ' ' H. G. Me reury M.E.; Class Football (1, 2); Sopho- more Council; Cross Country Team (3); Track Squad (3, 4); Inkwell Club; Railroad Society; Mechanical Engineering Society, President (4); Tau Beta Pi. ft OUR years ago, one of De La- I j  j val ' s budding geniuses arrived HBfl in the little town of Bethlehem — but not in a manger. For two years he successfully avoided the eyes of the faculty, but at last Baldy dis- covered the dreadful truth — and ap- propriately christened him. From youth his mind had been attracted by the heights, and, as one means to this end, he joined the autumn leaf harriers, becoming famous as a mountain climber. As a junior, he was in charge of the refreshments of the M.E. So- ciety, and made good use of the pro- verb, The shortest way to a man ' s heart is through his stomach ; as is proven by the fact that he was chosen unanimously as the President for the following year. V predict that the De Laval Tur- bine Company will enter upon an era of unprecedented prosperity, from the day this blooming genius gradu- ates. Ho-oly Smokes. JOHN MEALY ROBINSON Pittsburgh, Pa. Johnnie ' Robby Pee-Wee ' M.E.; Mandolin Club (2); Rifle Team (2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Junior Banquet Committee. aOHNNIE hails from Pittsburgh having first heeded the call of S3 the Colly sometime in the fall of nineteen twenty. Since then his efforts along all his lines of endeav- or have been successful to the nth degree. To quote a certain well known poet he is a man not to be laughed at and scorned because he is little of stature. Johnnie is a bit too much addicted to hard work and high marks to be a real social light but he is far from a course crabber. The merry plink of his tenor banjo is one of the more pleasant things about the dorms and an informal session takes on new pep when he appears. On the whole, we are here to state, in the argot of the streets, that the guy who gets Johnnie to work for him is sure one lucky bird. Judas Priest. 131 KN Nil £« . 1 ■R ( 1 HENRY GORDON ROGERS Newark, N. J. H. G. Rogers Mercury Ch.E.; Tennis Squad (1, 2, 3, 4); Band (3, 4); Arcadia (4); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Tau Beta Pi. I j p||HE above representative of that |V j popular species, Homo Collegi- CSUfl ans, descended upon us four years ago from a suburb of New York — Newark, N. J. Gordon arrived, an unsophisticated Freshman, and started off his college career with the disadvantage of being ambitious. Recalling his youthful experience in dominoes and rum, most of his eve- nings are now spent playing Ma Chung, where insistent winning has made his war cry Gimmi famous. For recreation, Gordon is a faithful follower of any one of a dozen film stars, feminine of course. We had hoped that he confined his attentions to the screen, but lately, frequent trips home, various colored envelopes and a mysterious telephone call have raised our suspicions. We hear that the Harvard business school will be augmented by his pres- ence next year, and although he ap- pears to be deserting a professional career, in the preparation of which he has been so successful, we do not fear for his success. Hey Jack, are you going out to- night? JOHN FREDERICK ROGERS Buffalo, N. Y. Freddy Bus. Ad.; Manager of Football (4), Assistant Manager (3); Wrestling Team (3, 4), Squad (2); Baseball Team (1, 2, 3, 4); Class Football (1); Class Track (1); Class President (4); Student Officer, R. O. T. C; Class Vice-President (3); President of Ath- letic Council (4); Advisory Council of Y. M. C. A.; President of Varsity Club; Interfraternity Council, Pres- ident (4); Cotillion, President; Phi Club President; Cyanide, President; Sword and Crescent; Sigma Phi. I ROM Nichols Prep, in the wilds J of Buffalo, hails this little fel- ftlA l ler with the handsome, dimpled countenance. As a freshman Fred- dy won the title as Lehigh ' s Babe Ruth , when he established quite a record for home runs. From then on he has been hitting everything in both social and athletic activities as a mere at his record will show. Freddy is a hard worker and one of the busiest men in the univer- sity, but he is a friend and counsellor to both high and low alike. His suc- cess has not changed him in the least, and today he stands out as one of the most popular and finest men as a glance at his record will show. No hard feeling; treat them all alike. HENRY AUGUSTUS KOHKEK Lancaster, Pa. Gus Hank M.E.; Railroad Society, Secretary (1, 2); President (3, 4); Professional Council, President (4); Phi Sigma Kappa. |v 55j| HIS unhappy individual conies I wj from the Garden Spot of the Bffl United States — Lancaster, Pa. Although he says it ' s a great city, we doubted it until we learned that it ' s the home of the Hamilton Watch and the Little India Umbrella. Gus prepared at Franklin £ Marshall Academy for his years of toil at Le- high and after looking over various other universities, campuses and cur- riculums, decided to matriculate here. He blames Kay Walters and others for his decision. His hobby might dub him Knight of the Iron Way for all his interest is centered in watching the choo-choo cars, hence his title 2-8-2 (for locomotives and Gus are inseparable) (at least in the course of his line of conversation). He has confided to me that some day he expects to own and run a few systems of his own (but he failed to mention just what kind of systems he had reference to). Never mind Hank , (dd Kid, we wish you luck and if the worsl comes will buy you a railroad. JACK ELTON ROSS Newark, N. J. Jack C.E.; Band (2, 3, 4); Civil Engineer- ing Society. ijil HEN Jack first arrived in vi Bethlehem four years ago, a new 3S§ free interpretation of Fresh- man regulations was his sole desire. He also found that he had quite a pull with his department, but the only pull he finds now is the result of a force which has its center of attrac- tion over on the North side of the river. He gets his gym credit walking back and forth and we believe the fac- ulty should give him more than one hour credit for it. In his sophomore year he persuaded Joe to let him try a cornet. At first it was a trying time for all of us who lived with him but his persistence finally won out and you can find him sporting a L U sweater whenever the band is performing. Whenever a debate on the merits of respective courses is stalled Jack is always present protecting the repu- tation of his own course. He is a true Civil Engineer in every way and i big things from him. Sure. I ' m not proud. 133 MILTON SAMUEL ROTH Butler, Pa. Speed King ' B.A.; Football Team (2, 4); Track Team (2, 3, 4); Cotillion; Phi; Cy- anide; Deutscher Verein; Alpha Tau Omega. f 7]ILTON SHAKESPEARE ROTH l jj was born on the outskirts of the tiiUo Battlefield of Gettysburg on the 25th day of April. Six years lat- er we find him attending a country school. During the summer months his playground was the battlefield. At the age of 14 years he was pre- pared to take the High School en- trance examinations. His next field of activity was in Butler, Pa., where he graduated from Butler High School in 1917. The World War attracted his atten- tion and after enlisting was shipped to Plattsburg, N. Y., where he re- ceived a commission as Second Lieu- tenant of Infantry. He served as bay- onet instructor in the Replacement Di- vision of Camp Grant, 111., from where he received honorable discharge. Milton Roth entered Lehigh Univer- sity from Carnegie Tech. in Septem- ber, 1920. After following his course in Civil Engineering another year, he transferred to the Department of Arts and Science from which he hopes to receive his degree. 134 ERNEST ALLEN ROUCH York, Pa. Ernie Whitey VI. E.; Mechanical Engineering Soci- ety. RNIE wandered up this way in the fall of 1920 to try his luck ' at finding the missing centrodes. Those of us who have tried the same know what a job he had in front of him. The missing centrodes must have been found because he ' s still with us. Ernie has always been a hard worker. But don ' t let him kid you that he doesn ' t enjoy a good time like the rest of us. Just why he used to frequent the Nazareth Pike in an Overland is still an unsolved mystery. We live in hopes for a solution. He is interested in what is called superpower. We are glad to know that there is some one who knows what that term means. We ' ve got to hand it to him on picking out such a field for his future work. Leaving a few remarks about the town he hails from to the last, though we cannot say it is the least because all we ' ve heard about is York, Pa. Some of us think it ' s our second home town. We wish him great success for if effort counts at all success should be his. What ' s t ' hurry? JAMES LEO SANFORD Brooklyn, N. Y. Jim ' Sccx-Air Gyp B.A.; Football Team (4), Squad (1, 2, 3); Track Team (2, 3, 4), Meyer Cup (3); Sergeant-at-Arms (3); Varsity Club; Sword and Crescent; Cyanide; Beta Theta Pi. O EARLY twenty-six years ago, so the story is told, our hero first 8JtB saw the light of day in Brook- lyn. A direct descendant of the fight- ing Irish, he was looked upon with great pride as a future president. After knocking around a while our friend decided to explore the mysteries of Canada. Soon Jimmie heard the bugle call and enlisted in the Army of the Re- public. Three long years later he had completed this job and was looking around for new fields to conquer. It took exactly one year to convince the Profs at Mercersburg that he was de- serving of a diploma. With this valu- able piece of sheepskin under his arm he set out for Old Lehigh. He seemed to be on the fair road to suc- cess, despite a few of our mutual friends, when he met a girl. This fall he returned to us a married man. We are rooting for him and all join hands in wishing him the best of luck. I won ' t argue. SIDNEY LINCOLN SATTENSTEIN Sid Satty Reading, Pa. E.E.; Lacrosse Squad (2, 3, 4); Senior Electrical Football; Berks-Lehigh Club; Electrical Society; Tau Beta Pi. 135 ©EHOLD, dear classmate, the map of our smiling brother electrical, SS Sid. He is the only member of the class who has a perpetual smile on his face, and it is for this reason that a former faculty member was inspired with the idea of rechristening him Smilax. We beg to state, how- ever, that this was a faux pas, for the Tau Beta key, which, like the smile, is always displayed, is a sure sign that he does not cling to others. A sport in which Sid takes the keenest delight is to imitate Professor Esty teaching A.C.M. to a section ot Senior Electricals which invariably pays undivided attention — 10 every- thing else, as the sound of sawing wood would seem to indicate. Developing into a lacrosse player rapidly, Sid threatens to promote stiff competition for others on the squad and help roll Lehigh ' s name far- ther skyward. Not in lacrosse alone, lint as an Electrical Engineer, Sid bids fair to become one of the world ' s greatest. Best luck, Sid, may suc- cess be yours! Holy Smoke. OLIVER HUBBARD SAUNDERS, JR. Brooklyn, N. Y. Ollie Sandy M.E.; Soccer Team (3, 4); Soccer Squad (1); Junior Cheer Leader; Class Baseball (1); Delegate, Silver Bay Conference, 1923; Mechanical Engi- neering Society. LIVER ' S college career is sum- marized in one word — a meta- Ela morphosis or in Horatio Alger ' s style From Chrysalis to Butterfly, or the Rise of a Sheik. It was an ex- ceedingly hot September day when Ollie made his Bethlehem debut — an inquiring, innocent and perspiring freshman— to be staggering past the famous Broadway loaded to the scup- pers (with traveling paraphernalia ot course) anxious to come to grips with Thorney. Achievements aplenty dot his career — a member of the first soccer team to beat Lafayette, Freshman baseball, a bowler de luxe, a swimmer and the holder of the handball championship together with Sailor Hewson are some of his athletic feats. His ability for absorbing knowledge is shown by the way in which he learned Reading pinochle a la Sattenstein. He is also chief of Section E and holds the long distance sleeping record of the section. Now I ask you, how can a man with such diversified accomplishments and the sincere wishes of his friends be- come aught else but a success. Worse than that. AUSTIN BARTHOLOMEW SAYRE Glen Ridge, N. J. Austy B.A.; Manager of Basketball (4), As- sistant Manager (3); Junior Prom Committee; Arcadia, Secretary (4); Class Treasurer (3); Cotillion; Cya- nide; Sigma Phi. «v| R. SAYRE, Austin Sayre, if you !| please, to the front. Some day VMM you are going to hear more about this Sayre boy. He has made an excellent start at Lehigh and for me to write his history is to write his praises. Austin decided to come to Lehigh after a short stay at Haverford. From the first he has done things — he has been active in college affairs. Yes, fond reader, he has been a shining light in all fields, social as well as others. Girls are one of his specialties and believe you me, he shows good taste. When you tangle with him, you meet real opposition — the opposition of one accomplished at the art — and it is certainly discouraging. Sayre, if we appear to ride you, it is only be- cause we are jealous. By the way, Austin comes from Glen Ridge, N. J., but we won ' t hold too much against him for that for he doesn ' t expect to be there much longer. Hey, Hey, Hey. WALLACE MENGEL SCHLEICHER Maplewood, N. J. Wally Slike N.E.; Leader of Mandolin Club (4), Mandolin Club (1, 3, 4); Arcadia (4); Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Tau Beta Pi; Phi Sigma Kappa. I v I U R distinguished naval engineer [VJN left home, sweet home in Ma- HH plewood, N. J., to embark upon the vast sea of college life with no more weapons than a saxophone un- der one arm and a mandolin under the other. As for their effectiveness, men of Lehigh, judge for yourselves. Do we like to listen to his Mandolin Club and step to the tune of the Le- high Collegians ? I ' ll say we do! And as for our Band on which Wal- ly has served so tirelessly, his will leave a place hard to supplant. But with all his music, Wally hasn ' t played Nero with regard to studies. He must have tooted nu- merous correct notes on that horn of his, because Tau Beta Pi keys don ' t grow on trees. The only question we would like to ask is, what makes Wally succumb to the homing instinct with such reg- ularity? At least the effect (who- ever she is) is such as to make his good humor and even temper inde- structible. So when the Admiral takes his leave may we wish him Bon Voyage for life. So long, boys. ALBERT NOVINGER SCHULTZ Williamsport, Pa. Bert Al E.E.; Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Electrical En- gineering Society; Delta Upsilon. ms 137 fw ILLIAMSPORT is justly proud V of yon smiling countenance who decided to attempt the ascen- on of the famed Lehigh ' s rocky rap- ids. After residing with us for a couple years in the town made fa- mous by good steel, Bert decided that Mr. Lehigh had already acquired too much of his time and money and became resigned to his fate and four years in Bethlehem have resulted. To reveal a carefully guarded secret with the ladies Bert is equalled by few and excelled by none. His charms can best be summarized in a bit of verse once penned by an en- raptured maid which read we are told: Ashes to ashes and dust to dust; when Bert rolls his eyes, in God we trust! Seriously, he aspires to be classified with SteinmetZ and like celebrities and to that end has been enrolled with Professor Esty ' s dynamo tantalizers for the last twenty-fifth of a century. We Eeel sure of his ultimate success and await with bated breath the day when we shall be electrified, along with possibly a few others, with the news of his rapid progress. Tell her I ' m not in. PAUL ENGLEBERT SCHWARTZ Harrisburg, Pa. Pablo Bus. Ad.; Class Baseball (1, 2); Track Squad (3); Student Officer, R. 0. T. C. (4); Band (2, 3); Y. M. C. A. Committee (3); Inkwell; Arts and Science Club.  ii|ANT to hear about Pablo ? To Vl£ begin with, Pablo is only a SKS nickname, and does not indicate a Spanish line of descent. It is hardly necessary to say Schwartzie is a Dutchman. Not long after the class of 1924 entered Lehigh as freshmen, some at- traction in the vicinity of the Liberty High School drew Pablo quite fre- quently to that part of Bethlehem. We have never heard the details but judging from the many telephone calls that came from a voice decidedly un- masculine, we often wondered whether this attraction was a she and whe- ther this she sang in the choir. This has become history for it seems as though Pablo has found a new world to conquer. As a student, Pablo never made an auspicious record and neither class mates nor instructors granted him much of a chance in crashing through his examinations. Pipe down, I wanta study. JOHN JOSEPH SHIGO, JR. Hazleton, Pa. Jack ' Joe ' B.A.; Lacrosse Team (3, 4); Football Squad (3); Class Football (2); Man- ager Freshman Tennis; Freshman Banquet Committee; Cotillion; Kappa Beta Phi; Sigma Nu. HROM the jungles of that un- known region, in which Hazle- BBa ton is an oasis, came the above young man to our noble institution to get a liberal education and all that sort of thing. He decided from the beginning to pursue a policy of ex- treme liberalness in every direction and has participated in all the known forms of college activity from the gridiron to the ball room and all in- termediate points. The fact that he is popular with the feminine gender is readily proven by even a hasty glance at the accompanying portrait obtained at great expense from Beth- lehem Bill McCaa who needs no in- troduction. He has that valuable characteristic of being able to rise to the occasion and has invariably responded to the satisfaction of ail of his professors when these occasions, which come but twice a year, have presented them- selves. Shootl 138 WALTER SIMEON SKEELS Rochester, N. Y. Walt Shu Skeezix E.M.; Junior Associate A. I. M. E. ZTlXPERIENCE is the best teacher V gravely says the sage. If so, iffiB Sim should know his stuff. Yes, the Sophomore Council made a mistake when they charged him with cutting cheering practice; Walter had already seen the simple days, having started his collegiate career at Alle- gheny College, where he wasn ' t given the privilege of a full Frosn year. Understand, he broke in upon the peace and quiet of Newark College, where he finished their two-year course. By this time Sim knew a good college when he saw one, so he jumped the first train for old Souse Bethle- hem. When wrestling season came around, Walter was out on the mat but this was short-lived, since after Ted Burke tried to put a knee thru his eye, all of Sim ' s time was taken up in explaining that he had not been in a fight with anybody. One girl must have believed him since there isn ' t any other explanation as to why he has a private wire to a certain house on West Fourth Street. Technically speaking FREDERICK DEPPEN SNYDER Harrisburg, Pa. Dep Fred Ch.E.; Sigma Phi Epsilon. 139 I ERE is another contribution from the city of Harrisburg to the SB9 tame of Lehigh. Dep spent many long hours pondering over his future after he had received his di- ploma from the Harrisburg Academy. But being from the leading village there was only one logical place he could go to complete his education and in due time he arrived in South Beth- lehem. That is the story of how our hero came to college. During the four ensuing years Fred made good use of his time both in and out of school. In some mysteri- ous maner he worked his way into the good graces of Bethlehem ' s Irish pop- ulation and now can walk in perfect safety through any part of Northamp- ton Heights or Shanty Hill. This great achievement was no doubt, due in part to that beloved cap which al- ways accompanies him on these ex- cursions. The Ice Cream profession needs trained men and Dep will no doubt answer the call in the near future. Think of ice cream made, sold and eaten by Lehigh men. But whatever it is, we know he will make good and we wish him every success. Be that as it may. ARTHUR WELLINGTON SPRINGSTEEN Detroit, Mich. Art B.A.; Track Team (1, 2, 3, 4); Bas- ketball Squad (1); Football Squad (1, 2, 3); Class Football (2); Class Ath- letic Representaive (2); Cotillion; Sigma Nu. DETROIT, proud of its Fords, can now point with pride to its fu- !Ell ture physician. That makes two things for the city to be proud. In his first year in college Art tried all the various forms of athletic activity, but had a hankering more toward the track than the other courses offered and decided to devote all his energy toward that pursuit. He proved his merit by winning the coveted L in his first year. Although we know that Art will make a good doctor we are afraid that there will be a run on the apple mar- ket when some husbands get wise to him. It is said that all doctors need patience and that is where Art is well supplied. A pleasing disposition, winning smile and an exceptional abil- ity to spring- wise cracks has made Art well liked among his fellow stu- dents. He will pursue his medical career in the west somewhere and the future will no doubt find him settled down in some nice unhealthy town do- ing a big business. We are sure he WILLIAM WATSON SPRINGSTEEN Detroit, Mich. u BiR Bus.Ad.; Football Team (1, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Lacrosse Team (3, 4); Basketball Team (1, 2, 4); Class Pres- ident (2); Varsity Club; B. U. X.; Kappa Beta Phi; Cyanide; Sword and Crescent; Sigma Nu. will succeed. I S you all know, Detroit is a far off city, and so when Springy % came east to Lehigh he, no doubt, had visions of finding the place where the sun rises. Now Lehigh isn ' t exactly the center of the universe, but with his coming a new star of the first magnitude appeared in college ranks. P ' or, from the day of his first game for old Lehigh on down through four years of college football, his ag- gressiveness and spirit on the grid- iron has marked him as a bright, shin- ing light. Lehigh Fight is charac- terized by Bill and the team he cap- tained will be remembered as the scrappiest bunch of players that ever wore the Brown and White. One of his outstanding merits is his ability to speak on any subject, at any time — or to debate any question from both sides and win either way. To listen to him is to be convinced! In short, he is energetic, courageous, and well-liked by all. Let ' s see. Hello, stuff. 140 EDWIN LEWIS STAUFFER Northampton, Pa. Ed Pete Ch.E.; Chemical Society; Americafi Chemical Society. HOUR years ago, covered with ce- ment dust, Edwin Lewis Stauf- 5E3 fer straggled into town and en- rolled at the University. At first Ed had difficulty in making himself understood having a bad habit of re- placing his v ' s with w ' s, but he soon learned to speak English and ever since has been one of the master minds of the course that deals with test tubes, beakers and bad smells. Ed ' s one fault is procrastination. Everything is put off until over Sun- day. However for some unforseen reason, who knows what, Ed al- ways comes back on the following Monday with nothing accomplished. Ed has somewhat of a leaning to- ward invention and at present is deeply concerned with a series of tests he is making on a new type of pop- pet valve. In spite of his many faults Ed has really accomplished a goodly lot dur- ing his four years here and his future success is assured for his heart is im- mense and is located in the right place. I ' ll do it over Sunday. PAUL HERTZLER STERN Elizabethtown, Pa. Sternie Kellcn B.A.; Class Baseball (1); Wrestling Squad (2); Cheer Leader (3); Student Officer, R. 0. T. C. (4); Musical Clubs (1, 2, :;. 4), President (4); St. Paul ' s Society; Inkwell Club; Arts and Sci- ence Club. 141 r- N 1920 when Paul came from - -• Elizabethtown on the P. R., SSS little did he realize that he would graduate from this University. His first act when he arrived here was to indulge in a Penna. Dutch conver- sation with Dutchy, of the Math Dept. Dutchy gave Paul some good dope so he took the B.A. course. At that time however no one noticed him. Now after being with Percy for four years Paul knows psychology and makes use of it. As a result his fame extends from coast to coast, nearly. He is quite reckless. He has broken several girls ' hearts, several strings on that noisy instru- ment he plays in the Mandolin Club, several plates while slinging hash and a number of other things. One New York paper said that he and Irene Castle made an ideal dancing couple. Paul modestly says he is not that good. In his senior year Paul bought two-thirds of a car. He kept it until his dad heard of it and then sold it to the junk dealer. I ' m pure. FRANCIS CARROLL STILLE Woodbury, N. J. St ilh Any el-face E.M.; Associate Editor of Brown and White (1, 2); Cotillion; Mining and Metallurgical Society; Theta Delta Chi. |v«f | HE best white sands for glass I V j making, they say, came from EBB Clayton, N. J. But Clayton fur- nished a fairer product for Lehigh than any of the glass in the Packer Hall windows. Carroll Stiile ' s the one. September, 1920, found him at Lehigh trying- to get a stait in that course which attempts to teach us how 10 dig sand, coal, and all that neces ny raw material. Being a Miner, probably enables him to dig up this stuff called per- sonal magnetism, which is evidenced by the picture gallery in his room. The Louvre hasn ' t a thing on the wails of Carroll ' s room. Why the Inter-state Commerce Commission was, for a time, considering very seriously put- ting a stop on him carrying pictures from Woodbury to Beslem. Carroll says they don ' t mean a thing, for they all want to be sisters, but I have me doots. But after all is said and done, when we get the good old sheepskins, we are going to lose a mighty true and loyal friend. What better can be said of any man? Best of luck, Stille! Course-Crabber! ELI HOWARD STRAWN Quakertown, Pa. Strawny ' Johnny C.E.; Class Football (2); Civil Engi- neering Society. gl TRAWNY same to Lehigh after knocking all his studies at Quakertown High School for the proverbial loop and he sought new and harder fields to conquer. It did not take much seeking to discover that there was a way of taking things easy and still stay in college. Movies kept him busy and as Quakertown was so near Bethlehem, the temptation to spend week-ends home could not be re- sisted. There must be good reasons for a man to do that regularly. After a quiet year on the North Side, Strawny moved South and has slept during aftei ' noons and usually nights in the Dorms. Whatever time remains after the women and movies have made their claim upon his time is given to study ( ?). Regardless of the fact that he pursues the course characterized by Baldy as the Recreation Course he applies himself to his books at times with a diligence that bears all the earmarks of that rare phenomena in Mr. Lehigh ' s College — work. Keep it up, Strawny, they ' ll take a good man in the Loop Course any day. Doggone. JOHN CASSEL SWARTLEY, JR. Doylestown, Pa. Jack Wagnalls B.A.; Brown and White Business Staff (2, 3, 4); Business Manger (4), Circulation Manager (3); Assistant Business Manager (2); Vice-President Intercollegiate Newspaper Association of the Middle Atlantic States (4); Arcadia (4); Pi Delta Epsilon; Sigma Phi Epsilon. OMING to Lehigh unheralded and unsung, a native of the WW peaceful hamlet of Doylestown, ' Jack has found time to do many things. Deciding on the B.A. course as being a suitable preparation for the study of law, he has particularly enjoyed the cultural subjects which the rest of us shirk so willingly. Early in his Sophomore year he came to the conclusion that the Brown and White could use the services of an intelligent young man. Qualifying without mu ch difficulty for the business staff, John has been in- strumental in handling the financial details connected with increasing the size of the paper. Believing, in common with many captains of industry, that business deals of magnitude are consummated on the golf course, Jack has assid- uously cultivated the game. RALPH CHRISTIAN SWARTZ Allentown, Pa. M.E. Rafe Associate Editor of Burr (4); Deutscher Verein (3, 4). I T was a dark and stormy night, and the stars were shin- SftS ing bright when in a place called Allentown, the stork a funny child set down. February was the month and it was the twenty-eighth. And ever since that day to comrades ' long the way, he brought a lot of fun and joy, that little boy. When he used to bite his toes, or fall upon his nose his friends would burst with shrieks till the tears ran down their cheeks. But tho ' he was ungainly, and he used to act inanely, his brains had always got him by until he came to old Le- high. Of course a girl has he, and a pretty one is she, but then these slim young Romeos are always fine at be- ing beaux. Another year, the die cast until he graduates at last. Oh, yes, it ' s very tough, says he, But then I ' m really dumb, you see. ' But heark- en friends, the truth I know, the fac- ulty won ' t let him go, because they I be dumbbell so. Well, I ' ll be cock-eyed with grief. 143 JAMES STANSBURY THAYER Baltimore, Md. Jimmy ' Jim M.E.; Lehigh-Maryland Club, Presi- dent (4); Square Compass, Secre- tary (4); Railroad Society; Mechani- cal Engineering Society. X r IM ' S apparent seclusion from V- the fair sex might have led 1222 us to believe that they held no charms for him, but the regular ar- rival of a missive told us his secret. Uncle Sam is always on the job, as we all well know, but he was too slow for Jim, so he brought his bride back with him to help ( ?) him through his Senior year. We join in extending sympathy to the bride, for three years has taught us Jims ' affinity for chalk and love for an argument. Horses. 144 WILLIAMS HOWARD HOLLAND THOMAS New Haven, Conn. Tommy Bill Volcano B.A.; Brown and White Board (3, 4); Assistant Business Manager (3); Glee Club (3, 4), Quartet (3, 4); Beta Theta Pi. [ ]ANY years ago Williams Hol- | M land Thomas drove through the BOB Lehigh Valley, little did he know that he would ever have Lehigh for his Alma Mater. His boyhood days were spent in New Haven, but of course not his week ends for at an early age, Bill was found studying drama and comedy on Saturdays in New York. As time rolled on, Bill entered Yale. Later he became the long distance champion, commuting from New Haven to classes at Colum- bia. A few weeks after registration, two years ago, a well dressed character appeared in Packer Hall, who later proved to be none other than the orig- inal Bill. This is the same time he attracted considerable attention by asking Thornie for a cigarette and a match. During Bill ' s two years at this college, he has been very active on school papers and along musical lines. We all wish for his success after graduation, but still hope he will not be prevented from his usual week end trips. Be with you in a minute. WALTER SCOTT THOMPSON, JR. Sunbury, Pa. Tommy Tom E.E. rt] ALT. S. THOMPSON, JR., the w radii) shark of the E.E. group, SSS hails from Sunbury. Pennsyl- vania. During his first two years Tommy stepped out with the boys but since he has taken unto himself a better half, he has cut classes at the Colly and at Mealey ' s in a deplorable manner, his attentions now being de- voted to his wife and radio research. Tommy has written numerous arti- cles on radio for magazines and is up to the ne k in work all the time, both radio and keeping his cozy apartment ship-shape. When it comes to a dis- cussion between Professor Seiferl and Tommy on his pet theories, you sure get an earful. You wonder which is the dynamo and which the motor, or probably whether they are not both idling on the line. With it all Tommy is a good na- tured chap, has a pleasing personal- ity and we hope that when he runs the Bell Telephone Company in Phil- adelphia he will keep out of politics. All right — let ' s go. HUGH MOORE TROLANI), JR. Philadelphia, Pa. Hughie C.E.; Civil Engineering Society. Tgl ARLY in the fall of 1920 there V- arrived in Bethlehem, a long, fffiS and somewhat lean fellow from Philadelphia. A few minutes later he joined the line in front of Freddy Ashbaugh ' s window, and shortly afrer Hughie was enrolled as a student. at the institution on old South Moun- tain. Being ambitious, he settled down on the North side of town. Ln order to get his daily exercise by rush- ing over to his eight o ' clock classes. Later, like most C.E. ' s, he acquired the habit of laziness and moved over to the campus. Early in his career as a Civil he de- veloped the homing instinct, and each weekend could be seen wending his way, via the P. R., to Philly. This may explain his utter lack of interest in the feminine population of Beth- lehem, although no one has definite proof as to the reasons for these fre- quent visits. In his four years among us, ' Hugh- ie has made himself well known to many and well liked by all. He is never known to be in a bad humor after nine o ' clock in the morning. Meet you on the Bummer. 145 ROY EZRA HOLZMAN TROUTMAN Bethlehem, Pa. Trout ' ' Dick Ch.E.; Wrestling Squad (3); Student Officer, R. O. T. C; Junior Oratorical Contest; Chemical Society. I v l HE best source of proof is ex- l j periment. EBB When Roy first made his ap- pearance around the campus, the cas- ual observer would never have dis- cerned that he was here determined to seek the Elusive Molecule and finally t-Kk the potent letters Ch.E. ' be- hind his name. But the determination existed nevertheless, and since, With determination comes success, Roy is still among those present. ' Once, however, the lure of the past overpowered his scientific instinct (it is rumored that he was quite an ora- torical genius in his Prep, school days) and he entered the Junior Oratorical Contest. Our own opinion of the mat- ter is that the judges failed to appre- ciate Roy ' s Irish brogue. But, any- way, the affair served to turn his mind to poetry in which his future looks very rosy. At present his attention seems quite concentrated on a mem- ber of the fair sex in Philadelphia. Perhaps Roy thinks as most of us, Poetry is a catalyst in the reaction of Love. No kiddin ' . 146 JOHN MITCHELL TUGGEY, JR. Bethlehem, Pa. Mitch Mike B.A.; Class Baseball (1, 2); Club de Quinze; Arts and Science Club; Sigma Chi. UT of the Canadian wilds there came a youth, callow and know- S2a ing not that which lay before him, yet feeling that sudden mystery of environment. After having four years carved out a name for himself within the precincts of Bethlehem Prep, mostly upon the wooden benches he decided that there was more chance for advancement across the river. Away from the stress of paternal op- pression, and under the careful eye of the College of Arts and Sciences, this callow youth was nurtured and became a Sophomore. We have talked to him, laughed with him, argued — as a matter of course, and have come to the conclusion that a wee bit of Scotch may cover many ills. We speak only of the blood, be- cause everyone knows that the Vol- stead Act is rigidly enforced in Beth- lehem! Mitch has ambitions of over- throwing all existing conventions, and denies vehemently any intention of fol- lowing in his father ' s footsteps. But we are sure that, no matter what he does. New Jersey will always hold a strange and unaccountable fascination for him. Good luck, old Top. I don ' t believe it. i F w H w 41 ' JH RALPH EDWARD UNDERWOOD Great Neck, N. Y. Ted B.A.; Editor Freshman Hand Book (4), Assistant Editor (3); Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Swimming Squad (2, 3, 4); Mus- tard and Cheese (3, 4); Club de Quinze; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (4); Ar- cadia (4); Mechanical Engineering So- ciety (1); Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Chi Rho. I IED ' S big brother, Doc Under- I v j wood, most probably, was the CSUa main reason why Ted came down from the Big Town to conquer Lehigh. Whether he came to keep Doc company or to show him who was the better student, will be left to those who know them both. Ted was an engineer in his Fresh- man year, but his apparent love for the Arts dissuaded him from the math- ematical grind and he became a B.A. man. He has found ample time to take an active part in campus life. The University Band has boasted of his able work on the drums for his en- tire four years and the Lehigh Valley never heard a better trap drummer. Ted showed an intense philan- thropic interest when he published the Freshman Handbook for the Class of ' 27, and he also occupied a chair in the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. His devo- tion to his course awarded him mem- bership in the Club de Quinze and the Arts and Science Club. Hell no. STANLEY JOSEPH URBAN, JR. Allentown, Pa. Stan Dutch ' 147 E.M.; Class Football (4); Lehigh Uni- versity Catholic Club; Allentown-Le- high Club; Mining and Metallurgical Society. I OR four years the present class I of Senior Mining Engineers has SIB been blessed ( ? ) with the pres- ence of the Dutchman depicted above in all his glory. Each term through- out his college career, they have ex- pected to be his last, but somehow he has managed to stick with us despite the best efforts of the Faculty to sum- marily oust him from our otherwise happy lives. Dutch has plugged away through his four years, perhaps doing more work than any other member of his class. Although handicapped by the fact that he has had to commute to the University from Allentown, he has attended every class day in and day- out. Urban is noted as a pugilist; he lets on that he is a real tough Dutchman, but his classmates have no fear of him since he, like Samson, has had his punch taken away from him. It is rumored around that the Allentown girls after a strenuous struggle finally got the best of him. Be that as it may. Stan has made some real friends who wish him every possible success. Why worry, such is life. JOHN HARRISON VAN DYKE Pittsburgh, Pa. Johnnie Van Jack M.E.; Assistant Manager Soccer (3); Class Tennis (1); Tennis Squad (2,3); Tennis Team (4); Kappa Sigma. I AN came to Bethlehem four years ago, a mere pup, inex- BB perienced in the ways of the world, but nevertheless, eager to learn. He is of a reserved nature, and very modest when questioned concerning his strange power over women. Gaze into that winsome face and judge for yourself, gentle reader, whether this Adonis has not captured the heart of some sweet young thing. Ah, you have guesed it. There is a girl ' s pic- ture in the back of that fertile mind, cluttered though it be with cosines and asymptotes. There is only one thing which can cause a single man to stop and gaze longingly into the display window of the furniture stores, and that reason invariably wears skirts. During his eventful college life, he has at times been led into the paths of wickedness. We can excuse minor vices, by passing it off as wild oats, but horrors! this last is too much. His most recent depredation is smoking! He excuses himself by proudly assert- ing that he has at last passed the twenty-one year mark. Huh! Rl ' EL DEXTER WARRINER Philadelphia, Pa. Dex E.M.; Wrestling Team (2, 3, 4), Cap- tain (4); Arcadia (3, 4), President (4); Cheer Leader (3, 4), Head (4); Class Baseball (1); Freshman French Prize; Junior Banquet Committee, Chairman; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Min- ing Society; Scabbard and Blade; Stu- dent Officer, R. O. T. C; Varsity Club, Treasurer; Cotillion; Scimitar; Kappa Beta Phi; Tau Beta Pi, Vice-Presi- dent; Cyanide, Secretary-Treasurer; Sword and Crescent; Delta Phi. | Kl HE kid — Ruel Dexter Warriner; I V need anything be said concern- D Ufl ing what Dexter has done in col- lege — one glance at his honors and you have the story. A leader in activ- ities, in athletics, and in scholarship — his record is an unusual one and one of which to be justly proud. R. D. came to us from St. George ' s; young, unsophisticated, so we thought, and meek. Yes we sus- pected he had it in him and it wasn ' t long before we were sure of it — in four years he crashed through with a glorious career which Lehigh will not soon forget. Who ' s got my mail? 148 WILLIAM WEHRENBERC. JR. Baltimore, Md. E.E.; Lehigh-Maryland Club; Electri- cal Engineering Society. I j pjl HREE years ago, after having IVj N left his name in the Hall of BHH Fame at Baltimore Polytech- nic Institute. Smilin ' Bill wended his way to the little town of Bethlehem with the intention of entering Lehigh University and some day capturing an E.E. degree. He has lived up to all his resolutions but don ' t get the idea that all he has done was to study. Besides the rou- tine duties of his course, he has found time to make the electrons in the vac- uum tubes of his radio set do some marvelous stunts. Also, he has been seen quite frequently escorting some member of the fair sex about the city. If you ever decide to build anything electrical, from a door-bell to a power plant, get Bill to design it — then you ' ll know it will be right. Since so much has been said, we can rest assured that he will make a mark in all he undertakes, be it en- gineering or matrimony. Here ' s wish- ing him success. What ' s the idea? GRAHAM WENTZ Scranton, Pa. Snapper Boon, Ch.E.; Sigma Chi. XN the fall of 1920 Scranton mourned the loss of several of S3 her younger citizens and not the least of these was our own Snapper. better known to his immediate fam- ily as Graham Wentz. His first plan was to take a year ' s rest here before going to M. I. T. and he therefore, chose the Chemical En- gineering course. After one year here, however, he saw great possibilities in Lehigh as well as Bethlehem and he decided to stay awhile. His natural talent has been well exercised in the Chemical course for he is g ifted with what are commonly called chemical mitts . One of his stumbling blocks has been German, but this is due to the fact that Scrantonlans are more accustomed to the easier languages, such as Polish, Lithuanian, etc., etc. A Lit might be said fur Snapper , but in short he ' s a good scout and it has been said of him that you can ' t get him sore, and with qualifications such as these he is sure to be a suc- ■■i - s when In ' leaves Old Lehigh to go out into the cold, cruel world. Fair to middlin ' . 149 ELLIS LINCOLN WERFT Altoona, Pa. Ellis ' Calhoun E.M.; Class Football (1, 2); Football Squad (1, 2, 3); Mining Society; Ar- cadia; Tau Beta Pi, president (4); Delta Upsilon. DO, this is not the photograph of a bootlegger in Rogue ' s Gallery, 3S3 but merely the likeness of a son of Lehigh from a railroad town some- where in the Alleghenies. His birth- place notwithstanding, Calhoun is real- ly not so bad after all for he has taken an active part in many college affairs and has made his mark in scholarship, especially in Railroads (ask Windy). In common with some other mortals we know, our hero has a glaring weak- ness for the fair sex. If, however, there is any truth in the axiom, There is safety in numbers, he is safe, ab- solutely. It is a known fact that he has dragged some mean women to each and every house party as well as to the great majority of dances in Bethlehem and Allentown. How he gets ' em nobody knows but he does get ' em. Give Ellis a waxed floor and good music or his land dreadnaught and a mellow moon plus any one of his affinities and the rest of the world can roll by. Let ' s see you go! ANDREW NEWTON WIEGNER Bethlehem, Pa. ' Newt Netvts Andy C.E. • i nti i KIKE Charity, Newt began at home bv graduating at Bethle- 3 hem High School in 1920 and then pursuing a course in Civil Engi- neering. Pursuing is just the word when you think of it, and just how diligently he worked is measured by the results achieved. His uncanny de- sire for technical fact, his ability to make eight o ' clock classes with unsur- passed regularity and his desire to be just a good fellow has won for him the admiration of his class. Just why he was named Andrew Newton is not quite understood but it might be said that he has the vir- tues of Andrew and the vices of New- ton. There are two things we cannot ac- count for, viz., the falling of that old apple on our old friend Isaac Newton, and what fell and bounced off Newt ' s dome. Newt admits he wants to be a Civil Engineer, so all rumors to the contrary are null and void. We feel sure that his success is im- minent and is assured by his dogged perseverance. Oh hang it. 150 BRUCE KUGLOW WINGATE Reading:, Pa. Kuglow C.E. Ml HEN Kuglow came to Lehigh, vlJ he brought with him that pe- SSS9 culiar Reading; accent acquired in early childhood by contact with the Dutch of Berks County. During- his early infancy at Lehigh, he rapidly developed an experimental ability in the shooting - line and ever since has been spending his spare time in Krause ' s shop devising all sorts of shooting accessories. The Miliary Sci- ence Department recognized his abil- ities and put him in command of the Heavy Artillery of the organization, which in a short time became a very efficient and awe-inspiring unit. It often has been said that Kuglow would make a great orator, which can be vouched for by his associates to whom he expounds his principles and doctrines. He also has a keen sense of humor and can always appreciate a good joke, whether old or new and it is very amusing to observe him put- ting over some old joke on the crowd that he has sprung on them five or six- times before. His future and success is assured. What. ARTHUR C. WOOD Providence, R. I. Art Woddy B.A.; Club de Quinze; Arts and Sci- ence Club; St. Paul ' s Society; Wilbur Prize in Freshman English. I v K I HIS man ' s name is written in the l J book of life. We are sure that EDD he is slated to be a bishop. Where, we cannot tell. Arthur is one of the best under- graduate Latinists of late years, and, in Greek, the realization of Professor Goodwin ' s most Hellenic desire. Be- sides this he is no mean juggler of He- brew vowels, and when he studies his lessons in this subject, sounds like Abraham eating matzoths in a Jewish butcher shop on Friday night. Arthur was in charge of a mission in Allentown throughout his college course and accomplished more than any of his Leonard Hall brothers in that way. He already has the genuine clerical dignity, and his entering the seminary will be only a matter of red tape. Hang it all. 151 MAURICE ORR WOODROW Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Maurice Woody C.E.; Theta Xi. [yfTlAURICE O. WOODROW came to |iM| Lehigh from Mansfield State Normal School with a hetro- geneous collection of fluctuating ideas, one being a fancy that he would make a Civil Engineer. Three years of serv- ice in the recent unpleasantness were enough M. S. T. for him so he put forth his dogged attempt to pass Freshman German, which he finally did; since then he has never ceased bragging about it. Woody ' s uncanny ability to pass a few hard subjects and laugh at the easy ones, his refreshing, impulsive, pessimistic attitude has opened the eyes of his fellow students. Woody explains it all by saying that he is going to teach school. This may ac- count for his oily line. We both envy and fear for th e youngsters Woody teaches, but his oily line cannot be passed over lightly. Eight years an athlete (when whiskers were a re- quirement) and two years at the front leave him ample space to reminisce, his vivid imagination and spontaneous vocabulary are ever in support. Woody ' s recent attempt to come back in the cage have left him in a state where motion is painful so we ' ll let him rest here. Holy jumping! 152 WILLIAM POTTER WOOLDRIDGE Pittsburgh, Pa. Bill Will Curley E.M.; Assistant Manager of Lacrosse (3); Student Officer, R. 0. T. C. (2, 3); June Hop Committee; Interfra- ternity Dance Committee (4); Kappa Sigma. H, to be big and tall and hand- some, with curly locks to boot! ifega • ' ' Tis a consummation devoutly to be wished, murmurs Bill be- tween giggles and blushes. He has just completed his college career, and when one realizes that it took three Prep schools to prepare him for more advanced work, we consider it nothing short of a miracle that he is graduating from the same college which he entered as a Freshman, and has done it in four years, in the bar- gain! Like several more of the sentimen- tally inclined Seniors, Bill nas picked up something more than a mere store of knowledge. We don ' t know if he has set the big date as yet, but when we see the blissful look on his face when he comes from her home, we venture that it won ' t be very long. We know that he will miss Bethle- hem in the warm summer months to come, for it is doubtful if the Smoky City, otherwise known as Pittsburgh, can produce pretzels and beer of the Souse Besslem quality. It won ' t be long now. WARREN WEBSTER YORK Scranton, Pa. Wan y ' •II . W. Web 0. . ' . Bus. Ad.; Manager of Swimming ( ll, Assistant Manager (3); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Treasurer (4); Cotillion; Var- sity Club; Sigma Nu. rt] HAT will four years at Lehigh ' do for a person ? Gaze above 9B3 and find your answer. The erst- while freshman from Scranton has progressed nobly, being one of the few who can boast of a drag with the renowned Baldy Stewart. Warren ' s activities have been diver- sified and every project has been en- tered into with his charactristic en- thusiasm. In his Sophomore year, he made Cotillion and was on the track squad fighting gamely with the rest of the two milers. In his Junior year he was Assistant Manager of Swim- ming and it might be added, that he took honors in business, in spite of the fact that he did not neglect Cedai Crest. This year finds him at the managerial helm of the Swimming Team and the season under his guid- ance bids fair to be the best for some time. In all his dealings he displays the qualities of a man — straight grain- ed, unvarnished, white throughout. Wot in ell. 153 TUNC YUAN Peking, China Tung ' ■Tim E.M.; Tennis Squad (3); Mining and Metallurgical Society. I v pj| UNG came to us from the Tsing l y j Hua College, Peking, China. BIB Tung has more than made the grade and when he leaves us this spring to go back to his native land, he goes as a full-fledged Mining Engi- neer. Tung ' s career in college was more or less staid and uneventful until last spring when he blossomed out and bought one of the mining trip cars from Bart. This act was the begin- ning of his downfall. He and his room- mate Harry Su took turns from then on in knocking over stone walls, curb stones, telephone poles, etc. It re- mained only for the Mine Surveying trip to Carbondale last summer to complete his downfall. While there it is said that he was inveigled into a 1 1 hi n.iin by some of the clever mining associates. This was not so bad, but his experiences next day in the mines should prove a lasting lesson to any truth-seeking and law-abiding China- man. T ' re Class of 1924 rises to salute you, Tung , as true blue and wish y hi every pnssi!ilr success as a Mining Engineer in the land of the rising sun. Go ahead. JOHN PHILIP ZANNARAS Chios, Greece. John N.E. ijS] HILE you readers of the Epi- A tome were playing- with your 3Sa lilocks, or perhaps dollies, as the case may be, a little boy in Chios was amusing - himself with integral signs and infinitesimals and hyper- bolic functions. Later, tiring of these trifling toys of his childhood days and having learned all that Uncle Euclid and Mr. Pythagoras could teach him, John Phi decided to go farther afield in his search for knowledge as his forbear Diogenes took a lantern and searched for an honest man, so also Zannaras decided to take a mazda and search for a perfect differential. The fame of the firm, Thornburg and Lam- bert, Math Shark Manufacturers, reached him, with the result that John came to Lehigh and for the past four- years has lived in a world of Calculus, Advanced Differential Equations, An- alytical Mechanics and what-not. Besides proving that 1 is equal to 0, John has also proved himself a good scout; always willing to help a fel- low student and never too impatient to spend any length of time in explan- ations. Some day, in our children ' s children ' s school books, along with Aristotle and Plato and Archimedes, will appear the name of one John Philip Zannaras. CHARLES EDWIN ZIEGENFUSS Bethlehem, Pa. Ziggy Piggy Bus.Ad. SgTj IGGY entered this portion of the Z-J solar system on October 27. gig-l 1895. Since Theodore Roosevelt was also born on this day of the month we are predicting great things for Charlie. He attended the Bethlehem Public- Schools and made a creditable record. Later he entered the employ of the Bethlehem Steel Company from which position he entered the United States Army as a buck private. After knocking- off a few bodies and get- ting knocked off himself he was dis- charged from service with a top kick- er ' s warrant. Upon leaving the government hos- ital, Ziggy felt the urge of addi- tional mental development and enroll- ed at Penn State from which place he transferred to Lehigh, where he be- came a student in the college of Bus- iness Administration. Ziggy has overcome many obsta- cles in completing his college course; evidently, showing the same pep in college work, that brought him from buck private to top sergeant. More power to you Charlie. Hell ' s Bells. Opinions HE greatest weight should be given the opinions of men who are on the eve of graduation from college where they have had many mishnias of concentrated knowledge forced into their up- per strata. In order, then, to secure the opinions of these Future Great , we, the Class Book Committee, had the audac- ity to distribute questionnaires among our classmates asking them their opinions on such important matters as the Colosseum, Mealey ' s and the New School. The result was astounding! After many days of pleading and begging, the opinions came in — a maze of knowledge which we feel is a mere indication of the vast fund which had collected during our four, the, six or more years of drinking from the fount of Asa Packer ' s halls of learning. The compiling of these opinions has been a pleasant hut tedious task, due to the fact that the ballots were written in everything from phonetic- spelling to Chinese. However, we feel well repaid for the edification it has given us and the deep insight into the thoughts and feelings of our fellow classmates. Many a seemingly innocent and unassuming young man has completely changed our former opinion of his virtue and purity by his horrible and unprintable opinions, while many of our noted wild and erring classmates have exhibited to us their true kind and loving natures for the first time. Be that as it may, you will find in the next few pages a vast and unlimited supply of nonsense which is the true Lehigh spirit of ' 24 ex- pressed in wit, gravity and otherwise. THE BEST SINCE 1866 is the way Franke so aptly puts our opinion about the class of ' 24. Another angle to the status of our illustrious class is given by Tom Maxwell who states that we are the best that ever drank to Asa. Degnan claims we are a class divided — divided into three fac- tions, namely: Bob Young ' s, Eddie Mc- Govern ' s, and Culhane ' s. Cupp thinks it is good — what ' s left of it. While Joe Boyle clinches the entire argument by calling it 200 Proof. What more can we say ? NOT SO HOT With these three words, York ex- presses the consensus of opinion of the Senior Class in regards to our friendlv contemporaries, the Other Classes. A bunch of dead-heads is the conclusion reached by Dex Warriner. Hopkins briefly says n. g. ; while our eminent Doctor Focht says his opinion isn ' t fit to print. Ayres points out that they are coming along , which is a point that none of us can gainsay. 155 I ■AN EXTINCT UTOPIA is the tribute Heller gives to the pres- ent Arcadia. This name seems to epito- mize the opinion of the Senior Class in regards to this august body, Doster Fochl stoops to conquer by asking What ' s it for now ' . ' , while John Jay Ivory Jamieson likens this body to that famous old piece, The Old Gray Mare. AN EXCLUSIVE BULL SESSION declares Diener in referring to our Inter- fraternity Council which is ably substan- tiated by Kemmerer who states that this assemblage is comparable to the League of Nations . York claims them to be all men of honor, while Bill Long makes the potent remark that they are always throwing dirt. Jenkins, however, hits the nail on the head when he scornfully points out that their meetings are nothing but wasted time. THE INTERCOLLEGIATE WRESTLING ACADEMY With this neat title. Baker gives us his opinion of Mealey ' s. This famous danc- ing emporium is also lauded by Skinny Boggs who declares it a good hunting ground. We wonder what he means. Shigo claims to have been kicked out of better places, while Eddie Hartmami takes the cake by pointing out that it is usually a good fight. THERE ' S THE RUB quotes Edsori from Shakespeare in refer- ence to the Colosseum. This is just an- other subtle meaning which is beyond the comprehension of the Class Book Committee. Kiefer says I have never been there — sober. The more se- rious side of the dance hall is brought out by George Hampton who asks where is my wandering girl tonight? Bishop claims it to be one of the best arenas of the Lehigh Valley, and Bob Allan says it is a good butcher shop. NICHT SO GUT Thus Joe Maguire delivers his candid opinion of our triplet sister city, Allentown. Master goes Joe one better with his neat statement the Land of the Dutch and the home of the Dumb. Focht again comes to our rescue by taking the pecuniary viewpoint and asking is it worth the carfare? However, Bonney gave us the real opinion of our class when he made the potent remark nice women. PITTSBURGH ' S ONLY RIVAL ' This name given to us by Hiller banish- es all doubts from our minds as to the smoky atmosphere of Bethlehem. Quite another aspect of our little Dutch town comes from Burt, who states that it is Hollywood ' s rival. Jimmy Degnan says my home town is a one horse town ; to this statement the majority of us agree with the possible exceptions of some of our white winy brothers. Bob Allan claims it to be an old home for fat cops , while Campbell probably comes nearer to the truth with his statement, a home for bootleggers and bats. TO HELL WITH LAFAYETTE says McBride in speaking of the town down the river, known as Easton. Ted Rakestraw climbs to the hall of fame when he cracks wise by saying it would be better off the map, while Laux puts it quite delicately when he says it ' s polluted. Donaldson makes the potent remark thumbs down , which seems to agree with the feelings of the majority of our class. WHERE ' S THE HOSE? is the firemen ' s pet expression on their arrival at a fire, according to Martin. George Laux concedes that they add to the confusion at the conflagra- tion. Wood asks why call them firemen? while Bill Long claims they know where to get good beer. Kemmerer says they are good Haus im Pfeffer players. but Burt gives us the utmost in sarcasm by stating that they would make lovely sailors. ' AS BROAD AS THEY ARE LONG is what Taylor Cornelius thinks of our policemen, while Van Dyke wants to know what they eat to get so fat. Along the same line Degnan breaks forth with a subtle bit of humor when he states that they are underfed. Ray Hawkins goes into details and states that they earn their graft. Hunter, speaking from ex- perience, says that they are good boot- leggers. We cannot vouch for this, but they at least ought to be good at some- thing. According to Langfitt, they only have one virtue and that is dumb. 159 EXPENSIVE writes Bob Allan in expressing his views on Registration. To much red tape comes in unison from Bonney, Degnan and Drake. Gerhart thinks it is a su- preme test of intelligence, while Ingols scornfully points out that it is an awful mess , joe Boyle stoops to conquer when he asks How is it done? NO SOAP With this expressive remark, Don Luce expresses the opinion of the majority of our class in regards to Fern Sem. Di- Guilian declares he hasn ' t any inside dope which can hardly be questioned, while Troland substantiates Bed by daring anyone to try and get in. Tom Maxwell gives us the philosopher ' s viewpoint with his statement Once in, never out. Once out, never in. Saunders banishes all doubts from our minds in regards to the Moravian Seminary for Women by declaring it to be a closely guarded secret. A REAL COLLEGE PAPER with these words, Freddy Rogers, our president, gives us his opinion of the status of the Lehigh Brown and White; we all agree with you, Feddy. Gordon Rogers goes into details and states that the Around the Campus column is a great addition. Brewster Grace claims that it makes the New York Journal seem conservative. HOT HUMOR with these two words, Allan describes his opinion of the Lehigh Burr. Too much work comes in unison from Adams, Bumbaugh, and Hopkins, while Hottinger claims it to be the best ever. Meyer gives us another angle on the Burr by warning us to peruse before distributing. Gerhart puts it quite nicely by stating that it is a sure means of gloom dispelling. CAPITALIZED HOT AIR declares George Hampton in reference to the Lehigh Band. Grace seems to think it is a noise carnival by stating that he thinks the clarinet will win. The opinion of the majority of the class is that it needs Joe , while J. M. Rice makes a statement that can ' t be refuted when he says that it makes Lafayette ' s so-called band sound like a mouth organ. BOTH ROBBERS is Tom Maxwell ' s opinion of the Young Brothers, Ed and Bob. Kemmerer goes into details and declares they are co-operative — first, poison and then Bromo-Satisfier. One can ' t exist without the other states Luke Gor- ham, while George Hopkins substantiates him by saying they ought to combine . George Laux comes nearer to the truth by conceding that they strive to satisfy. SPELLED WRONG declares Paul Miller in reference to the famous Hill-to-Hill Bridge, but then Paul is a little bit biased when you think that he comes from Bethlehem. Strawn gives us the pecuniary side of the new bridge by conceding that it will be a penny saver , while Red DiGuilian claims it to be the missing link. A monument to Bethlehem is the tribute given to it by Bishop. Jimmy Degnan claims it should be from college to Hotel Bethlehem , with whom some of us heartily agree. Bridegam takes the marbles with his neat statement that it is a concrete idea. A SWELL PLACE for a murder , with this neat statement George Cornelius describes his opinion of The New School; some of the fellows in the recent raid would undoubtedly express quite similar opinions. Jamieson thinks it ' s a mis- leading name, while Porter Langfitt claims that it is nothing new. Puts on the finishing touches , says Roberts, which is another statement that none of us can gainsay. ASK DAD HE KNOWS suggests Stern in stating his opinion of House Parties. Kiefer calls them endurance tests, while Bill Wooldridge thinks they are an education in themselves. Shigo gives us the real opinion of the class when he states that they are too expensive. WHEN GREEK MEETS GREEK quotes Walter Heske in regards to the Colonial Restaurant. Ros bif comes in unison from Troland, Wentz and Wiegner, while Burt scornfully points out that it is Greecy. Speaking from person expe- rience, George Cornelius declares that it is a riot every Satui ' day night about 12M. A WISE OWL With this potent remark, Diener gives us his opinion of the new Dean. Hugh Troland gives us another angle on the Dean when he accuses him of being sys- tem personified ; you must have been thinking of Registration, Hugh. Saunders banishes all doubt in regards to the light the student body takes the new Dean in by stating that he is a welcome addition. Thompson substantiates this statement by merely saying, he ' s white. 163 DEUCEDLY INCONVENIENT — for some , scornfully points out Wood in regards to the world-famous Eighteenth Amendment. George Hopkins thinks it ' s a waste of paper , with whom the majority of us seem to agree. What ' s the use, comes in unison from Donaldson and Jenkins, while all Lynn Hendrickson can say is that it ' s all wrong. THE 1.5 STEPS is what need reforming in college declares Bill Long, with whom the ma- jority of us heartily agree. Underwood advises us to ask the Dean , while Edson suggests that their might be something wrong with the Faculty. Strawn thinks that the main thing that needs reforming is the hill, turn it around so we always go down. The most of the class reported that there was not enough space to list all of the things that need reforming here at college. I GREW ONE INCH reports Shorty Hoagland as his greatest achievement while here at Lehigh. Kasper reports that he got something for nothing at the Supply Bureau ; it certainly must be some feat to put something over on Freddy Ashbaugh and his cohorts. Hunter claims that he went from Lehigh to Carnegie Tech, 72 cents and a lower berth which is indeed an achievement of which to be proud. Carrol Stille takes the marbles however by sleeping in class with his eyes open. ENTERED THE SEA OF MATRIMONY according to Ziegenfuss is the worst thing that he has ever done; this should serve as quite a warning to the rest of us poor bachelors. Alwine claims that he wasn ' t in a condition to remember; we can but wonder what he means in these days of the 18th Amendment. Bridegam claims that he did worse than that. Hottinger stoops to conquer when he declares that he threw moths on Barry, the Nut ' s, overcoat. IN SHORT PANTS is the way Paul Fleck claims he kissed the first girl, while Ed Robinson did the deed with fear and trembling. Jimmy Sanford says I accomplished it by my own system — it can be learned on the re- ceipt of five (5) dollars ; it evidently works too, because Jimmy came back to us this year with a blushing bride. George Hopkins breaks forth with another subtle bit of humor when he states the first girl was Eve, and that was before my time. 165 Faculty Ballot Wisest Stoughton— 51 Lambert— 21 Eckfeldt— 14 Thinks He Is Bickley— 31 Martin— 20 Larkin— 18 Dumbest Kingsley — 62 Payrow — 31 Pulsifer — 12 Knows He Is Payrow — 54 Uhler — 33 Zinszer — 18 Handsomest Stoughton — 48 Palmer — 28 Toohy — 23 Thinks He Is I .vie — 11 Bickley— 38 Martin— 12 Homiiest Hughes— 51 Zinszer— 31 Roush— 20 K nows He Is Zinszer— 42 Hughes— 23 Martin— IS Laziest Ogburn— 102 Bartlett— 15 Esty— 11 Windiest Wilson 61 Esty— 38 Luch— 13 Best Sleet Producer Esty— 38 I ,uch— 24 Butz— 14 Best Mexican Athlete Larkin— 41 Esty— 33 Behre— 21 Best Sport Fretz— 34 Fuller— 30 T. .. hy— 25 Most Conceited Lyle- 12 Bickley— 38 Fraim— 21 Most Considerate Eckfeldt— 51 Stoughton— 36 Fuller— 22 Most Eccentric Hughes— 84 Lambert— 28 Thornburg— 23 Most Popular Eckfeldt— 52 Reiter— 43 Toohy— 28 Most Unpopular Kingsley — 41 Bickley — 38 Leyzerah — 21 Most Sarcastic Stewart — 54 ECnebelman — 33 Fogg — 21 Most Deserving of Pity Curtis — 41 Martin— 32 Leyzerah — 10 Biggest Bluffer 1 .arkin— 31 Pulsifer— 30 Lull— 29 Easiest Bluffed Bartlett— 38 Uhler— 23 1 .uch— 17 Best Entertainer Fox— 39 Toohy— 34 Fry— 25 Most Comical Fox— 45 Beaver— 24 Seyfert— 21 kicst Bull 83 167 Conclusion The work at last is done. Or is it ? We do not know and yet we feel that we have bored you quite enough. We have hoped that the readers of the foregoing portrayal or betray- al or what-you-will of our class. If you have, we congrat- ulate you. If you haven ' t, we at least give you credit for sticking it to the end, even unto this conclusion. To be sure, our work is incomplete, for who could write such a history of mankind in so short a book. We feel that a few thousand more pages should have been employed, but then we are human and the typewriter runs hard. The Senior Class Book Committee wishes to take this op- portunity to thank the class for its co-operation in this great undertaking. We also wish to thank Bill McCaa, our pho- tographer, The Read-Taylor Press, our printers and engrav- ers; our Junior associates for their patience, great help, and masterful work. It has been a great pleasure to compile this data, and we hope that it will serve as a cherished keepsake and comforter to the members of our illustrious class in their old age. Harry T. Litke Charles M. Alford Joseph A. Maguire Edmund V. Bennett John M. Piersol George Hopkins Edgar T. Adams, Jr., Editor IC8 LEHIGH W. C. GREER. JR. PRESIDENT History HOUGH cut off in its prime by the severe scholastic require- ments of the freshman year, the Class of 1925 never-the-less is rounding out its third glorious year amid the congenial sur- roundings of South Mountain. As Freshmen we won the majority of the Founders ' Day Sports. As Sophomores we did not. But we find it pleasant to reflect that, both as freshmen and as sophomores we outwitted our oppressors at both class banquets. Under the able leadership of our field generals, the Class of Twenty-Four was out-maneuvered and in spite of much prep- aration on their part. After noses were counted it was found that only twenty-six of our bravest had fallen. Then our soph- omore banquet. Twenty-six read our history and realized that they were not to deal with an unorganized mob and if they hoped to offset our previous success they would have to put forth extra effort. They did and though it cost them considerable money, it was of no avail. So deeply laid and so ably executed were our plans that every man was there was not a sinlge frosh in sight. The banquet itself will live in our memories for- ever. Twenty-five has made good the promises of its first year. The individual members have made remarkable successes both in the classroom and on the campus. When we take our positions on the campus as seniors, it will be with the knowledge that both as individu- als and as a body we shall be able to preserve the customs and traditions of this great her- itage. Historian. Class of 1925 Colors Purple and White OFFICERS President W. C. Greer, Jr. Vice-President R. B. Adams Secretary L. C. WOLCOTT Treasurer W. G. FULLARD Sergeant-at-Arms W. H. Walker Athletic Representative E. M. Burke Historian H. E. Stahl YELL Rip! Ray! Rip! Rive! One, Nine, Two, Five! Rip! Ray! Rip! Rive! One, Nine, Two, Five! Junior Class Abel, David Heaton B.A. Adams, Robert Burnette, K2 Bus. Akinlis, Joseph Michael Ch.E. Allen, Charles Wesley, AU E.M. Allen, Walter Rue E.E. Ambler, Charles Merrill, 2N Bus. Argens, Richard George B.A. Astarita, Francis Sanford, AXP Bus. Austin, James Bliss Ch.E. Ayers, Clarence Cornelius E.E. Barton, Frederick Charles, $2K Bus. Batz, Kenneth William Yates M.E. Bayles, Quintin Allison Lerch, SN M.E. Beck, Frederick Charles, 0K$ E.E. Beggs, Charles Wendell Ch.E. Behr, William John, Jr., X$ N.E. Berg, Frederick Christian, 2 I E N.E. Bergen, Lewis Spaden E.M. Berger, Francis Joseph E.E. Bevan, James Elmer E.E. Bidwell, James Truman, ' ¥ B.A. Binkley, Edward Lehman E.E. Blake, Alfred Greene, X ' L ' C.E. Bokum. William Harold, ICS E.E. Bond, Louis Boutell, AT M.E. Borda, Russel Berger Bus. Borden, Robert Oswald, ©H M.E. Bowman, John Gheen C.E. Britt, Therman Paul, SN Bus. Brookfield, Frederick, ¥T Met. Brooks, Charles Emery, KA M.E. Brown, Ernest Embich E.E. Brown, Merritt Weaver B.A. Bunn, George William, I SK B.A. Burke, Edmund Michael, ATO C.E. Burnes, William Ryan, SX C.E. Burton, John Taylor, X I C.E. Callow, Michael John, 0 rA Met. Campbell, Andrew Hister, XW C.E. Castleman, Francis Lee, Jr., SX B.A. Chambers, Harold Blair Met. Cheel, Robert Duncan, OH M..E Childs, James Lawton, S 1 Bus. Cohen, Milford Hersh, IIAV Ch.E. Colclough, William Fred., Jr., 6AX B.A. Cook, Nevin John B.A. 174 Ogontz, Pa. Brockton, Mass. Newark, N. J. Reading, Pa. E. Orange, N. J. Abington, Pa. San Francisco, Cal. Asbury Park, N. J. Washington, D. C. Chester, Pa. Tenaflv, N. Y. Stapleton, N. Y. Charleston, S. C. Philadelphia, Pa. Wilkinsburg, Pa. Montclair, N. J. Philadelphia, Pa. Matawan, N. J. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Frackville, Pa. Portland, Ore. Hagerstown, Md. Pittsburgh, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Front Royal, Va. Lansdale, Pa. Rydal, Pa. Svracuse, N. Y. Glen Ridge, N. J. Lebanon, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. E. Stroudsburg, Pa. Pittston, Pa. Port Chester, Pa. Chestnut Hill, Pa. Salt Lake City, Utah Pottstown, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Lancaster, Pa. Ridgewood, N. J. New York, N. Y. Charleston, W. Va. Catasauqua, Pa. Drums, Pa. Coopcrsmith, Charles Cottman, Llewellyn Powell, KA Coulton, John Marshall, 2N Craig. John Horner Croll, John Harold, SX Curtis, Edward Aloysius, $2K Davis, James Harnor, 2nd, ©AX Davis, Richard Light, l ' (- Day, Hugh Taylor Dietrich, Horace Wilcox, 2N Dorton, Frederick Babcock, AXP Douglas, Norman Engleman Drury, William George, — IA DuBois, Allen Carson, T Dudley, Thomas Underwood Dykes, Henry Victor DuPuis Eames, George Manson, Jr. Egolf, Harry Louis, Jr., I 2K Elmer, Robert William Entrekin, Paul Britton, . Everhart, John Laurence Feick, Rufus Daniel hinegan, Paul James, HK ' l ' Fister, Lee Harold Flory, Curtis Bertram, Jr. Frey, Frank Gustave, Jr., KA Fullard, William George, XM ' Gairns, William Otto, Vl Gallagher, Charles Barto Garra, Edward Joseph Geho, Charles Henry Gibson, Kenneth Durward, ATQ Gondos, Robert Zoltan Green, Thomas Edgar, iX Greene, Henry Eckford, Jr., KA Greer, William Chamberlain, Jr., Grieb, Conrad Keital Groner, Stephen Sheldon, Gruhn, Arthur Max, V Gyourko, Joseph Edward Halls. Norman Winston, K2 Harmon, Herbert Greason, X ' l ' Harris, Abraham Buckley Hay, Erroll Baldwin, Jr., ' I Hess, Howard Samuel, !X Holzshu, Charles David, HZ Horn, Franklin Lefever C.E. Philadelphia, Pa. B.A. Baltimore, Md. C.E. Red Bank, N. J. Ch.E. Slatington, Pa. E.M. Steelton, Pa. E.E. Lambertsville, N. J. B.A. Clarksburg, W. Va. E.M. Lebanon, Pa. B.A. Philadelphia, Pa. C.E. Baltimore, Md. B.A. Baltimore, Md. Chem. Baden, Pa. C.E. W. Pittston, Pa. B.A. Clayton, N. J. Ch.E. Middleburg, Va. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Bridgeport, Conn. E.M. Philadelphia, Pa. Eng.Phys. Bridgeton, N. J. E.M. Swarthmore, Pa. Ch.E. Bethlehem, Pa. Ch.E. Kutztown, Pa. B.A. Burlington, N. J. E.E. Reading, Pa. Bus. E. Orange, N. J. M.E. Baltimore, Md. B.A. New York, N. Y. Ch.E. La Grange, 111. B.A. Asbury Park, N. J. B.A. White Haven, Pa. Ch.E. Allentown, Pa. Bus. Belleville, N. J. Ch.E. Philadelphia, Pa. Bus. Butler, Pa. Bus. New York, N. Y. 9AX Bus. Woodbury, N. J. E.E. Baltimore, Md. Bus. Syracuse, N. Y, Bus. Brooklyn, N. Y. M.E. Eckley, Pa. B.A. Youngstown, 0. M.E. Ridgewood, N. J. Ch.E. Baltimore, Md. M.E. Philadelphia, Pa. Bus. Hellertown, Pa. E.E. Cumberland, Md. Bus. Allentown, Pa. 175 Howland, George Asbury Ch.E. Hursh, James Sharpe, AXP N.E. Hutchinson, Stuart Buckler, 20E C.E. Ingols, Heber Ashe Ch.E. Isaacs, Kenneth Lothaire, XX M.E. Jones, Edwin Pritchford, 2nd, KA Bus. Jones, William Joseph, Jr., M0 E.M. Keating, Miles James, Jr. Bus. Keim, John Kenneth M.E. Keller, Edwin Walker, B0TI B.A. Keller, Francis Randolph E.E. Kerr, Harry Knight Ch.E. King, Arthur Stanley M.E. Kingham, Laurence Brewster, AXP Bus. Kinzie, Raymond Horatio C.E. Kirchner, Earl Lorenz Ch.E. Kittinger, Spencer Colie, AT Bus. Koegler, George Franz, B0FI B.A. Krazinski, Lea Charles E.E. Krellberg, Alfred Street, SAM Bus. Lambert, Ralph Arthur, XX E.M. Lang, Elheim, SAM Ch.E. Law, James Graham, l rA Ch.E. Lawall, Paul, XX E.M. Leavens, William Barry, Jr. E.E. Lee, Russell Werner, 20 Ch.E. Leib, James Fulton, 0E Bus. Lerch, Franklin Stewart B.A. Leshefka, George John Eng.Phy. Levitz, Max, IIAO Bus. Levy, Maurice Bert, IIAO Met. Lewis, Robert, SAM Bus. Ludwig, Edward Henry Barthold, X I ECh.E. Lundberg, George Otto, $A0 M.E. MacFate, Robert Preston Ch.E. McKee, John Edwin Ch.E. McKenzie, Alfred Crane, XW B.A. McMorris, William Barnhart C.E. McWilliams, Charles A. Sinclair, 20 N.E. Matthews, Armstrong Robertson, XX E.M. Mayberry, Harold Bus. Metten, William Murray, ATA Bus. Miller, Howard Frederick, 0H M.E. Miller, William Hurxthal, AT E.E. Minster, Pemberton Foster, OTA Bus. Moran, Eugene Francis, Jr., B0FI N.E. Asbury Park, N. J. Newville, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Newark, N. J. Scranton, Pa. Bellevue, Pa. Norberth, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Toms River, N. J. E. Orange, N. J. Tamaqua, Pa. Washington, D. C. Buffalo, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Mahoney City, Pa. New York, N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. Phoenixville, Pa. Bloomsburg, Pa. Catasauqua, Pa. Maple woods, N. J. Ottawa, 111. Baltimore, Md. Freemansburg, Pa. St. Clair, Pa. New York, N. Y. Hazleton, Pa. Edgemere, N. Y. Tompkinsville, N. Y. Lansing, Mich. Bethlehem, Pa. Newport, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Harrisburg, Pa. New York, N. Y. Nashville, Tenn. Mahoney City, Pa. Wilmington, Del. Easton, Pa. Glendale, 0. Bristol, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. 176 Moreland, Lester Duane, A It 2 M.E. Trenton, N. J. Moritz, George Robert Met. Allentown, Pa. Myers, John Alfred, XT M.E. York, Pa. Neely, Frank Rogers, l Q B.A. Ben Avon, Pa. Nehemiah. Maurice Albert, SAM Ch.E. Brooklyn, N. Y. Nicholls, Edward Samuel Ch.E. Bethlehem, Pa. Nicola, Oliver Peter, Jr., B0n E.M. Pittsburgh, Pa. Noerr, Robert Collyer, Jr. Ch.E. Hartford, Conn. Norton, Robert Osgood, I M.E. S. Orange, N. J. O ' Brien. William Coleman, $2K E.E. Washington, D. C. Orr, Earl Haas Met. Lansdale, Pa. Palmer, Arthur Carl, S$E C.E. New York, N. Y. Palmer, Herbert William L.A. Pen Argyl, Pa. Parker, Norman Douglas, Jr., I SK E.E. Washington, D. C. Paxton, George Benjamin M.E. Harrisburg, Pa. Pfaffhausen, Herbert Less M.E. Union Hill, N. J. Pharo, Homer Durand Ch.E. Bayonne, N. J. Phillips, Harry Kenneth Bus. Glen Ridge, N. J. Pilat, William James, 2N B.A. New York, N. Y. Pineda, Louis Guillermo E.E. Maracaibo, Venezuela Pittenger, Harry Joseph E.M. Bethlehem, Pa. Piatt, Ellis Halsted, - B.A. Washington, D. C. Polatchek, Jerome Julius, LI A ' l E.M. New York, N. Y. Porter, Clarence Henry, AY M.E. Washington, D. C. Purdy, Victor Moreau Met. Brooklyn, N. Y. Rankin, Bryant Loose Met. Reading, Pa. Ratajczak, Frank Xavior E.E. Reading, Pa. Reid, William Alexander M.E. Glen Ridge, N. J. Rice, Hugh Banker, AXP C.E. Roanoke, Va. Rice, Mark Samuel Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. Roberts, Carlton Mitchell C.E. Asbury Park, N. J. Roberts, Paul Eagon, —X B.A. Parkersburg, W. Va. Rorabaugh, Merrill Schaeffer E.E. New Kensington, Pa. Ross, Rodney Wyckodd, «l ' - Bus. Asbury Park, N. J. Rostow, Lawrence, IIA ' I ' Ch.E. Newark, N. J. Roth, Milton Samuel, ATQ B.A. Butler, Pa. Samuels, Fred Herman, IL J B.A. Newark, N. J. Saxtan, Eugene Harris, X I ' Bus. Jersey City, N. J. Schlicht, William Michel, T Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. Schock, Harvey Harold Ch.E. Shartlesville, Pa. Seely, Robert Inglish C.E. Keansburg, N. J. Senior, Palmer Newman, (-) X E.M. Bridgeport, Conn. Serrell, Arthur Harold, Jr., I 0 M.E. Brooklyn. N. Y. Shartle, John Herbert, I K C. E. Lancaster, Pa. Sholes, Charles Latham, H Bus. Short Hills, N. J. Siebert, John Carl Met. Coopersburg, Pa. Siegmund, Harry Lowe Ch.E. 177 Harrisburg, Pa. G Smith, Morris Sparhawk, X VY M.E. Smith, Walter Reynolds, XT ' B.A. Stahl, Harry Ernst, Jr., N B.A. Stauffer, Willis Keiter, AT E.E. Stazinski, Peter Felix M.E. Stelle, Kenneth Lawrence, KA Bus. Stott, Frank Janney, iM E Bus. Su, Harry Fang Piu E.M. Swank, Dallas Lester E.M. Taylor, Robert Sayre, X ¥Y B.A. Taylor, Thomas Frederic C.E. Thomas, Hopkin Buckland M.E. Thomas, William Howard Holland, BeriB.A. Trumbore, Clarke Richard B.A. Trumbore, Frederick William B.A. Trushel, William Carl B.A. Tyler, Walter Simeon Ch.E. Underwood, Lloyd Fletcher Ch.E. Unkles, John Jacob, $AQ Bus. VanNostrand, Erwin Skidmore, Jr. M.E. Verlenden, John Boyd, 2$E C.E. Volkmar, Karl C.E. Walker, William Higham, AXP E.M. Wallace, Kenneth Campbell Ch.E. Waltman, John Richard, 2$ E.M. Wardell, Weston Burnet, AXP Bus. Washburn, Lindsley Morgan, 1 SK Bus. Weissenborn, Albert Edward E.M. Welch, Heister Jacob N.E. Weston, Thomas Carroll M. E. Williams, Laurens Augustine Peter, U ' YB.A. Wilmor, George Lincoln, ATA Met. Wilson, Lorenz Henry M.E. Wolcott, Leslie Carl, KS E.E. Wurster, Luther Conrad E.E. Swarthmore, Pa. Carbondale, Pa. Trenton, N. J. Bethlehem, Pa. Plymouth, Pa. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. Amoy, China Binghamton, N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. Bangor, Pa. Catasauqua, Pa. New Haven, Conn. Bethlehem, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Warren, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Chatham, N. J. E. Orange, N. J. Toms River, N. J. Darby, Pa. Williamsport, Pa. Riverside, N. J. Bridgeport, Conn. Bethlehem, Pa. E. Orange, N. J. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Montclair, N. J. Elmira, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Woodstock, Vt. Hazelton, Pa. Wilmington, Del. Warren, 0. Harrisburg, Pa. 178 History F. J. STEPHENS PRESIDENT ' WAS but a year ago that we blos- somed forth with our emerald intelligences. We were caught without matches and at times were reprimanded because of misplaced hands. Traditions, however, were soon learned and organization followed. In fact, never was such organization seen in the history of Lehigh, for we have the brilliant distinction of anticipating the sopohomore banquet some days before it was held. An- ticipation was not all, however, we even transported sophomores to numerous, divers and sundry redoubts in the Lehigh Valley. This incident coupled with our winning the Founder ' s Day contests proved that the con- stituency of our class was of the sort that Lehigh wants. As a whole, our first year was varied and taught us how we must be in future years, if the standard of this univer- sity is to be upheld. With this in mind we started in this year by taking care of that problem to which all sophomores are assigned — Frosh. Our suc- cess in this effort lies in the fact that our goal was to make the existence and behavior of the new bunch bearable to the upper classes without making college life distaste- ful to the Frosh themselves. If in the future our class is as good so- cially and athletically as it has been in the first two years of its existence, we can say truthfully that we have done noble. 181 Class of 1926 Colors Black and White OFFICERS President F. J. Stephens Vice-President F. Mercur Secretary and Treasurer H. Law Sergeant-at-Arms N. L. Bond Historian J. A. Shartle Athletic Representative E. D. Pakenham YELL Rickety-Riekety-Rickety-Rix! One Nine Two Six! 1 88 Sophomore Class Alden, Charles Whiting, AY E.M. Allard, Charles Norman Ch.E. Althouse, Ernest Emmanuel E.E. Anderson, Paul Sutro Bus. Applegate, William McLean E.E. Ash, Charles Elwood, Jr., 6K$ M.E. Ayers, Elwood Bowers, Jr., 0AX M.E. Bachman, Joseph Peter, Jr. Bus. Bachman, George, Jr., AXP C.E . Barnes, John Francis E.M. Bayard, Arnold Aaron M.E. Bell, Davitt Stranhan, ATQ M.E. Best, Ralph Walter E.E. Bigley, James Warren E.E. Binai, Rong Ch.E. Bingle, Francis Xavier, 1 ' Y Bus. Bissinger, John Abraham, Jr. M.E. Bishop, Bruce Hunter, AY M.E. Bogart, Louis Bus. Bond, Nelson Leighton, 1Q Bus. Borneman, Walter Hauck E.E. Bousch, Gilbert Wesley E.M. Bridge, Ernest Laithwaite, I rA B.A. Brinser, Donald Christian, I 2K B.A. Broad, Cornelius Zabriskie, W E.E. Broome, Ross Alexander Bus. Brown, LeRoy Augustus, AXP C.E. Brown, Willard Marshall Ch.E. Buell, David Clinton, X I E E.M. Buenning. Carl Anthony, I SK E.E. Burgess, Henry Russell, ATQ C.E. Bushar, Harold Gordon C.E. Campbell, James Edward, Jr. Ch.E. Canfield, Donald Bus. Case, Rowland Bertram M.E. Cetina, Renan E.E. Chadwick, Howard Cornelius, K2 Bus. Chew, Edmund Freeman M.E, Comstock, Clinton Samuel M.E. Cooke, Theodore, 3d, AXP Bus. Corson, Osman Myron, AY E.E. Cottman, William Watson, Jr. M.E. Couch, Leonard Huguenor, ' Y Bus. Cressman, Paul Kreidler B.A. Cresswell, Herbert, XN M.E. Cryder, William Adams Bus. 184 Steelton, Pa. Wildwood, N. J. Hamburg, Pa. Westfleld, N. J. Red Bank, N. J. Kingston, Pa. Melrose, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Camden, N. J New Paltz, N. Y Philadelphia, Pa. Pittsburgh, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Kingston, Pa. Washington, D. C. New York, N. Y. Harrisburg, Pa. Scranton, Pa. New York, N. Y. Caldwell, N. J. Millville, N. J. Harrisburg, Pa. Glen Ridge, N. J. Harrisburg, Pa. Ridgewood, N. J. Scranton, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Palmerton, Pa. Middleton, N. Y. Easton, Pa. Pittsburgh, Pa. Pottsville, Pa. Oyster Bay, N. Y. Caldwell, N. J. Phillipsburg, N. J. Vera Cruz, Mexico Woodbury, N. J. Mantua, N. J. Ridgewood, N. J. Pikesville, Md. Cape May, N. J. New Hope, Pa. Buffalo, N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. Scranton, Pa. Berwick, Pa. Cummings, Benjamin Wilson, 3d, KA Cyphers, Kenneth Alexander Dalgleish, Robert Hamilton, X ' l ' Dancy, John Lloyd Davis, Clyde, 1 F A Deck, Ausben Riege DeLong, William Fox DeWitt, William Carpenter, Jr. Dunn, Robert Clarence, QE Dutt, Loris Merritt Dwyer, William Joseph Dyson, Robert Harris, X Eagleton, Sterling Paul Earl, John Goldsborough Elliot, Lewis Charles, Jr. Ellis, Franklin Griffith Estevez, Fernando Eucibio Evans, Merle Albert, N Faga, Edgar Monroe Flammer, Russell Bernard Forbes, Joseph Palmer, il I E Foster, Arthur Fouchaux, Julian Ellis Fountain, Robert Fielder, Jr., X x l ' Fraivillig, Leonard Martin Frasca, Modestino John Frauenheim, Richard Joseph, KS Freeman, Robert Edgar, i!X Fulton, Arthur Logan Gibb, John Valentine, K — Giles, Edward Maynard Glass, Samuel Kenelm Glenn, Graeff William, iM Godshalk, Gerald Desmond, AY Gordon, Malcolm Kenneth, Jr. Gorgas, Charles Crawford Griesemer, David Elias Gunther, Frank Joseph Haas, Charles Francis Haefeker, George Augustus, I rA Halteman, Austin Shaffer Hanlon, James Paul, HK I Harley, James Stott Harris, Arthur Digby Harris, Murray Duncan, 2$ Harris, Myron Wilkins, X t Hartke, John Joseph, Jr., - K I Hayes, Daniel Frank, Jr. Bus. Pottsville, Pa. M.E. Bethlehem, Pa. M.E. Washington, D. C. E.E. Phoenixville, Pa. Bus. Pittsburgh, Pa. Ch.E. Dover, N. J. E.E. Philadelphia, Pa. M.E. Phillipsburg, N. J. Bus. Park Ridge, N. Y. B.A. Bangor, Pa. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. E.E. Washington, D. C. M.E. Cleveland, 0. N.E. Easton, Md. C.E. York, Pa. Ch.E. Allentown, Pa. C.E. Chester, Pa. E.M. Ebensburg, Pa. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. C.E. Chambersburg, Pa. E.E. Big Stone Gap, Va. E.E. Paterson, N. J. Bus. South River, N. J. C.E. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Stamford, Conn. Bus. Pittsburgh, Pa. Bus. Camden, N. J. B.A. Catasauqua, Pa. E.E. Haddon Heights, N. J. Ch.E. Paterson, N. J. Bus. Philadelphia, Pa. M.E. Elkins Park, Pa. E.M. Lansdale, Pa. Eng.Phy. New York, N. Y. Bus. Paterson, N. J. M.E. Allentown, Pa. Bus. Brooklyn, N. Y. E.E. New York, N. Y. B.A. Tamaqua, Pa. C.E. Allentown, Pa. E.E. Freeland, Pa. M.E. Coatesville, Pa. C.E. Hackensack, N. J. E.M. Marquette, Mich Bus. Newfield, N. J E.E. Eckridge, Md E.E. Paterson, N. J 185 Heath, Donald Austin, B0FI Henderschott, Harold Clark, X V F Henke, Herman John Henry, Alvan LeRoy Henry, Gerald Boyd, X i ' Hess, Harry Charles, ATA Hoffman, Kenneth Landes, BOF! Holloway, Albert Marks Hornbaker, Donald Griffin, AY Huaman, Filiberto Hubbard, Sheldon Crouter, KA Hunter, Joseph Eastham, PSK Huyette, Samuel Louis, AXP Jackson, Joseph Gray Jarvies, Edward Aloysius Jedlicka, Frank Eugene, AT Jennings, Albert Edward Johnsen, Ernest Andrew Kear, Frank Gregg, Jr. Keen, Frank Porter, 2N Keller, Charles Ferdinand Kemp, Arthur William Kennedy, Richard Morris, S I E Kenworthy, William Bartle, Jr. Kiefer, Elmer Joseph, Jr. King, Frederick William Forbes Knerr, Russell Peter Knipe, Septimus Lean Kutz, Samuel Edward Lang, George Isaac Laramy, William John, SX Law, Hartland Lesh, Stogdell Stokes LeVan, James Henry Levin, Nathan, FIA I Lewin, Henry L ' Hommedieu, Paige Drake, X Light, John Dirks, OA0 Linck, Robert Charles Lister, William Harry, AY Loebell, Richard E. Long, George Davis Lucente, Romeo Julius, 0K ( I McCance, Edward Gilmour McCormick, Niel James McFarlan, Alden Irving, A0 McGoldrick, Hugh Francis, B0F1 McKenzie, Frank Russell, M0 E.M. E.M. E.E. Bus. B.A. Bus. E.M. B.A. M.E. M.E. E.M. B.A . Bus. Ch.E. M.E. E.E. C.E. Chem. E.E. Bus. Ch.E. B.A. E.E. B.A. M.E. M.E. B.A. C.E. M.E. Bus. E.M. Ch.E. E.E. C.E. M.E. Bus. Bus. B.A. C.E. M.E. Ch.E. C.E. Bus. B.A. Met. M.E. B.A. M.E. 186 Jersey City, N. J. Newton, N. J. Honesdale, Pa. Flemington, N. J. Buffalo, N. Y. Massilon, 0. Ventondale, Pa. Alden Station, Pa. Clarks Summit, Pa. Lima, Peru Palma Sola, Fla. Jenkinstown, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Bala Cynwyd, Pa. E. Orange, N. J. Baltimore, Md. Bethlehem, Pa. Warren, Pa. Minersville, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Harrisburg, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Lansford, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Stroudsburg, Pa. Glen Head, N. Y. Allentown, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Easton, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Altoona, Pa. Camden, N. J. South River, N. J. Minersville, Pa. Trenton, N. J. Maiden, Mass. New Brunswick, N. J. Lebanon, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Rockville Center, N. Y. Malba-Whitestone, N. Y. Bo livar, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Bayonne, N. J. Medford, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Mackey, Theodore William Maise, Domenic Manuel, David Fuller, l H Mapes, Harold Edward, 2N March, Robert Carl Richard Mastriana, Samuel Gabriel, (-)K 1 Mattern. Robert Jones, Jr., ' I ' l ' Maxwell, John Walter, Jr. Meden, Frederick Elof Mercur, Frederick, l Merrill, Howard Elwood, N Meurer, Louis George, Jr. Meyers, Edgar Janvier Meyers, William Earle, 1 1K Miller, Gordon Blair, 2N Miller, Herbert Allison Miller, William James Mong, Donald McMillan Monteverde, Francis Morris, James Reed, Jr., M ' Morris, Stanford Runyan Morrison, James Robert Burns Murray, William Elmer, Jr. Nagel, George Samuel Nicholas. Charles William, 0AX Nicholson, Charles Houston Olwine, John Clayton, X I Osborn, Howard Milton Oswald, Ernest Paul Pakenham, Edward Dudley, EN Partridge, Harvey Kelsey, Jr., Patty, Clairbourne Watkins, BHII Pease, George Warren, X ' F Pease, Morris Gabriel Perry, John Richard Pattison, ATQ Perry, Wilfred Eugene, ' l ' K Phillips, Forrest Edwin Phyfe, Herbert Lloyd, BOH Pierce, Ira Elford Piatt, Worthington Elmore Poliska, Stephen George Pollack, Edward Wells, IIA ' I Presbrey, Clifton Hyde Price, Joseph Christian Prior, Charles Malcolm, K2 Purcell, William Wendall, DF A Pursel, Robert Newton, ( )E E.E. Bethlehem, Pa. E.E. Camden, N. J. C.E. Philadelphia, Pa. Bus. Glen Ridge, N. J. E.E. Philadelphia, Pa. C.E. Dunmore, Pa. Bus. Huntingdon, Pa. N.E. Philadelphia, Pa. E.E. Chatham, N. J. B.A. Hazelton, Pa. B.A. Garrett, Pa. Bus. Flushing, N. Y. E.E. Bridgeton, N. J. Bus. E. Stroudsburg, Pa. Bus. Huntingdon, Pa. Bus. Huntingdon, Pa. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. E.E. Erie, Pa. E.E. Lambertville, N. J. Bus. Pittsburgh, Pa. E.M. Bristol, Pa. M.E. Auburn, Pa. M.E. Louisville, Ky. E.E. Abbottstown, Pa. B.A. Butler, Pa. Ch.E. Bethlehem, Pa. Ch.E. Newark, N. J. E.E. Vineland, N. J. M.E. Lancaster, Pa. B. A. Brooklyn, N. Y. B.A. Merchantville, N. J. E.M. Little Rock, Ark. Bus. Ridgewood, N. J. M.E. Steelton, Pa. E.E. Centerville, Md. E.E. Hartford, Conn. Ch.E. Bethlehem, Pa. C.E. New York, N. Y. E.E. Peckville, Pa. M.E. New Haven, Conn. C.E. Tavlor, Pa. Bus. New York, N. Y. E.M. Arlington, N. J. C.E. Tacloban, Leyte, Philippine Islands Bus. Ridgewood, N. J. C.E. Plainheld. N. J. M.E. Danville, Pa. 187 Randies, Merritt Emmet, t SK Rankin, William Price Rapp, Howard Heath Rathbone, William Vinton, SX Raught, Roland Davis Jones Rebmann, Henry Bertram, OFA Reinoehl, John Benjamin, SOE Rerig, Eugene Lyons Reusch, Walter George Reynolds, Thomas Francis Rich, Herbert William, S$E Richman, Edwin, Jr. Rigg, Edward Fletcher, ATQ Roberts, Charles Bayard, 0E Roberts, John Eldon, AY Robinson, Hugh Wilson Robinson, Thomas Edmond Roeder, Elton Mohr Rowley, Thomas Clarence, B0FI Rush, Frank Schuyler Sail, George Leonard, SAM Sauerbrun, Irving Nelson Schmidt, John Henry, ATQ Schmoyer, Paul William, AXP Scholly, Francis Royden Schroeffel, John Bishop Schuhle, Frank Frederick Schwartz, Siegmund Philip, Jr. Schwimmer, Herman Victor, FIAO Scott, Wilson Winfield, Jr. Scrivener, Samuel, Jr., I A0 Seaman, Herbert Henderson, $ T Seely, Harold Morris Seeman, Fred Charles, Jr., 0H Shaheen, Philip Joseph Shartle, John Adam, X«l Shellenberger, John Sheppard, Kenneth Anthony Shipley, Herbert Mapes, SN Shoup, Raymond Arthur Shuhart, John Henry Smith, Charles Edward Smith, Frederick Calvin Smith, Gilbert Robert Snyder, William Cordes, Jr., SO Spalding, Fitzhugh Preston, M ' Y Sparks, Robert Staples, William Frank Met. Ogdensburg, N. Y. Ch.E. Phoenixville, Pa. B.A. Philadelphia, Pa. Ch.E. Parkersburg, W. Va. M.E. Lewes, Del. E.E. Philadelphia, Pa. Bus. Tremont, Pa. E.E. Hazelton, Pa. Bus. Queens Village, N. Y. M.E. Bethlehem, Pa. E.M. E. Orange, N. J. E.E. Haddon Heights, N. J. Bus. Burlington, N. J. C.E. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Bus. Buffalo, N. Y. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Trenton, N. J. E.E. Bethlehem, Pa. Met. New York, N. Y. B.A. South Hampton, N. J. Bus. Philadelphia, Pa. C.E. Elizabeth, N. J. M.E. Millington, N. J. Bus. Allentown, Pa. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. M.E. Camden, N. J. Bus. Brooklyn, N. Y. E.E. Bridgeport, Conn. Bus. Brooklyn, N. Y. E.E. Catasauqua, Pa. E.M. Washington, D. C. Bus. Plainfleld, N. J. Bus. Keansburg, N. Y. E.E. Roland Park, Md. Bus. Cranford, N. J. M.E. Franklin, 0. M.E. Bayonne, N. J. C.E. Bridgeton, N. J. E.E. Brooklyn, N. Y. E.E. Reading, Pa. E.E. Bethlehem, Pa. Chem. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Pen Argyl, Pa. E.E. Jeddo, Pa. E.M. Snow Shoe, Pa. M.E. Kenneth Square, Pa. E.E. Far Rockaway, N. Y. Bus. Bridgeport, Conn 188 Stein, Emil B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. Stephens, Fred James, K — C.E. Franklin, N. J. Stevens, William Ronald C.E. Hackensack, N. J. Stofan, Andrew B.A. Eckley, Pa. Stofflet, Millard Abraham B.A. Nazareth, Pa. Storer, John Waddell. K2 Bus. Wheeling, W. Va. Stover, Arthur Piatt, T Ch.E. Wilmington, Del. Swindells, William, VI ' C.E. Portland, Ore. Taylor, Charles Gibson, A.TQ E.E. Pittsburgh, Pa. Thorpe, Gardner Belknap, Hftll Bus. Babylon, N. Y. Trainer, Robert Leonard, — C.E. Irvington, Pa. Travis, Frank Glen, ' 1 F Bus. Pittsburgh, Pa. Varga, Vincent Ignatius C.E. Bethlehem, Pa. Vermel. Charles Reed, I K Bus. Camden, N. J. Visintainer, Alfred Alexander, OK ! ' C.E. Mt. Carmel, Pa. Waesche, William Henry, 2N Bus. Waldron, John Wesley. 2$E Ch.E. Walters, Emerson LeRoy Bus. Washington, William deHertburn E.E. Waters, Walter Brittain B.A. Watson, Charles Wilbur E.E. Walters, John Waldner B.A. Weaver, Russel C.E. Weinstein, Benjamin B.A. Wetzel. Roland Martz B.A. White, Henry Brooks. i!X E.M. Wickes. Robert Boal, 2$ B.A. Widdowfield, William Crippen, AY E.E. Williamson, Henry Thelbert, 2K Bus. Winchester, Robert Caskey, iM ' E B.A. Wintermute, Gerald Hiks E.E. Yeager, James Roland, ATQ Bus. Zug. Charles Keller, Jr., X E.E. Zurn, Oliver Franklin, 3rd, AXP Ch.E. Si iM Baltimore, Md. Philadelphia, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Riverton, N. J. Newark, N. J. Madison, N. J. Ashland, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Mt. Vernon, Va. Clark ' s Green, Pa. Phillipsburg, N. J. Phoenixville, Pa. Newton, N. J. Reading, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. 189 I. W. LITTELL PRESIDENT History ORN— On September 19, 1923, another Freshman class. On that eventful day we emerged | ' ' % from Chapel and were greeted ■a.ELj | by the Sophomores, who lost no time in trying to subdue our pent-up excitement. After putting us thru the usual Freshman stunts we were told what our duties were for the coming weeks. We were forced to accept these terms for the next two weeks. Then came those eventful Founder ' s Day Sports . The Sophomores entered these sports in very high spirits, but the Frosh saw to it that these spirits were greatly dampened. We defeated them in the majority of these sports, and by so doing acquired the respect of the college for a time. We also attained that longed for privilege of wearing civilized hats on Sunday. Soon college thoughts turned to football and then the true spirit and fight of ' 27 showed itself. We had some very prominent men on the Varsity eleven that had such a very successful season. When interest in football waned it was turned to basketball. The Freshman team of ' 27 was one of the strongest in the history of the university, de- feating their old rivals, Lafayette. We also had representatives on the powerful Brown and White five that so decisively defeated Lafayette for the first time in some years. To date these are the achievements of our class, but, with spring sports, class banquets, and various other college doings ahead we hope to continue as we have started, and in succeeding years to be regarded as a class, strong in spirit, and one that carried that spirit into each activity in which it entered. Historian. 193 Class of 1927 Colors Blue and Gold OFFICERS President I. W. LlTTELL Vice-President R. A. Harrier Secretary D. T. Ross Historian M. Fulton Treasurer J. S. Ford Sergeant-at-Arms L. N. Mills YELL Ki ! Ki ! Sis ! Sis ! Boom ! Boom ! Bah ! Twenty-seven, Twenty-seven, Rah ! Rah Rah! Freshman Class H Ake, Theodore Allen, John Bolen, Jr., AXP Ames, Charles Savage Anderson, Frank George Arnold, Edwin Brown, K2 Ashcraft, Edward Davis Aykroyd, Marshall John Azpurua, Fernando Capriles Bailey, Walter Conrad, Jr., $TA Baker, Ralph William Ball, Russell. AXP Bambas, Stephen Walter Barba, Charles Elmer, AT Barr, John Hope Sloan Barron, Elwood M. Barrowclough, Kirk McCarter Bartoo, Elfred Garret Bascom, Warren Broughton Beans, John James, K S Beck, Robert Lewis, AT Beggs, George Harper Bentz, Gene W. Bennicoff, Lewis George Berger, Clyde Alvin Bester, Harold Fendrick, KA Birely, Frederick A. Bittrich, Carl Louis Bletz, Ira Mellinger Bloor, Ralph Loveland Borchers, Harry John Bowler, Charles Wilbur Boyd. Oliver Kreger, 6AX Brandon, Ford Compney Bricker, George Krall Bridewell, Charles Fielding, X)¥ Britton, Challis Broad, Lambert Edward Broads, Irving, IIA ' I Brooks, James Richard Browell, Jack Nelson Brown, Carlton Ernest Brown, Charles Walker, Jr. Brown, Harry Arthur Brown, William Nicholas, 0K t Bush, Rudolph Myers Butz, Richard James Met. C.E. B.A. E.E. B.A. E.E. Bus. C.E. Bus. Ch.E. B.A. B.A. M.E. M.E. Ch.E. C.E. C:E. C.E. Bus. M.E. E.E. B.A. C.E. E.E. Bus. E.E. Met. E.E. Ch.E. Bus. M.E. B.A. Met. E.E. C.E. E.E. B.A. B.A. Bus. Bus. Ch.E. Ch. E. Ch.E. E.E. C.E. Ch.E. 196 Canton, Ohio Washington, D. C. Scranton, Pa. Takoma Park, Md. Pittsburgh, Pa. Mullica Hill, N. J. Bethlehem, Pa. Puerto Cabello, Venezuela Germantown, Pa. Roanoke, Va. Roanoke, Va. Simpson, Pa. Newton, Mass. Wayne, Pa. Peermont, Pa. Chester, Pa. Ridgewood, N. J. Allentown, Pa. Wheeling, W. Va. Millville, N. J. Reading, Pa. Mill Hill, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Palmerton, Pa. Hagerstown, Md. New Oxford, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Columbia, Pa. Trenton, N. J. Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Glenside, Pa. Monessen, Pa. Beaver Falls, Pa. York, Pa. Pittsburgh, Pa. Scranton, Pa. Nazareth, Pa. Yonkers, N. Y. Miami, Fla. Palmerton, Pa. Washington, D. C. Bethlehem, Pa. Lebanon, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Washington, D. C. Allentown, Pa. Canney, Arthur Warren .M.I]. Cannon, William, Jr. I ' .us. Cassel, Charles Harold M.E. Castor, Norman Richard C.E. Cawley, Francis Ferris B.A. Chacey, Joett Allen N.E. Chase, Robert Gorden, A 1 ' Bus. Chiles, Franklin Groman Ch.E. Chiodo, Leo Joseph E.E. Clark, Rogert Conant M.E. Class, Charles Frank, Jr., $2K C.E. Clement, John Sullivan, HK«1 B.A. Cohen, Milton Harvey, IIA I Bus. Cohen. Marcus Ovid, llA ' l ' M.E. Concilio, Vito Angelo, 6K$ Ch.E. Conneen, Andrew Martin, 3rd, X I M.E. Conrad, Harrison Whittingham C.E. Converse, Curtis Vaughn Bus. Coombe, William Thomas Bus. Cooper, Frank Edward C.E. Covert, John Addison, X ' l ' C.E. Cowan, Frank Bertine E.E. Cox, John Philip E.M. Crane, Richard Taylor, .VI ' Bus. Crawford, Frederick Rufus, ATA B.A. Croxton, John Caventry Bus. Cunningham, David Schreiber, I AO E.M. Danzilio, Barton Cannon, I K B.A. DeGray, Richard John Ch.E. Delmotte, Richard Wilson, $2K E.E. DeMott, Howard Douglas E.E. DeMoyer, John William, Jr. E.E. Diener, John Bertram M.E. Dietrich, Henry Buckley, 2N Bus. Dietrich, Noah Donald, SN Bus. Dinkey, Charles Eugene B.A. Doll, Frederick Tilghman B.A. Dwyer, William Francis, Jr. E.E. Eckstein, Mortimer, 1 1 A 1 ! ' B.A. Elliot, James Marshall E.E. Ely, Paul Coughanour, X Met. Evans, Edward Whiting M.E. Ewertz, Gordon Erie E.E. Farrell, James Henry, Jr. E.M. Ferris, Irving Meister, XM f B.A. Feuerbe.ch. William Ferdinand, AXP Bus. Finlay, Jack Pearcc B.A. Fisher, Frederick Mertz, KA Ch.E. 197 Paterson, N. J. Bridgeville, Del. Lansdale, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Archbald, Pa. Paterson, N. J. Clark ' s Summit, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Dunmore, Pa. Canton, Ohio Harrisburg, Pa. Williamsett, Mass. Lewistown, Pa. Washington, D. C. Newton, N. J. Maplewood, Pa. New York, N. Y. Athens, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Shamokin, Pa. Pittsburgh, Pa. Glen Cove, N. Y. Leonia, N. J. Belmar, N. J. Pittsburgh, Pa. Cleveland, 0. Ben Avon, Pa. St. George, N. Y. Ramsey, N. J. Harrisburg, Pa. Hackensack, N. J. Camden, N. J. Hamburg, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Bethlehem, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Easton, Pa. Trenton, N. J. Marcus Hook, Pa. Monessen, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Elizabeth, N. J. Centralia, Pa. Westfield, N. J. Richmond Hill, N. Y. Redlands, Cal. Wyoming, Pa. Fister, Harold John Fitch, Charles Perkins, B0n Fluck, Robert William Ford, John Simpson, B0L1 Fort, George Lafayette, J ' SK French, James Ralph, OTA Frey, Julian Jorden Friebely, Carl Daniel, Jr. Fuller, Charles Rawson, $SK Fulton, David Mercier, AXP Furnival, George Edward Garcia, Emilio Garrison, John Hazlett, AY Gessner, Charles Booth, 0AX Getz, Benjamin Leo Gisriel, John Walter, 2N Glocker, Rudolph Karl Goodfellow, Owen Davis Gordon, Perry Wescott Gould, William Gray, James Mitchell Greenburg, Davis Gresh, Walter Autrum Griffith, Charles Beall, X Grunwell, Gilbert Butterfield Gualco, John George Guerrero, Louis Francisco Gutowitz, Herman Joseph Hague, John Leopold, I SK Hamrah, Elias Alexander Hanna, Charles Warren, X3 Harrier, Robert Austin, KA Harvey, Wilbur Edward Hawkins, Wallace Randolph Hayes, John Boniface, B0II Heaton, Hugh Hedenberg, George DuBoise, Jr. Heir, Clinton Franklin Heine, Laurence Joseph Heller, Rogers Stephen deHerrera, Jose Uslar Hertzler, John Rowe Higginbottom, William Eric Hoffman, Harry Swartzlander Hoffman, John Albert Holmes, John Middleton Hood, George Washington, Jr. Hoover, Dudley Allen Ch.E. Allentown, Pa. E.M. Asbury Park, N. J. E.E. Allentown, Pa. E.M. Houston, Texas Met. Minneapolis, Minn. E.E. Oil City, Pa. Bus. Batimore, Md. E.E. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Flushing, N. Y. Bus. Baltimore, Md. C.E. Philadelphia, Pa. M.E. New York, N. Y. M.E. Pittsburgh, Pa. C.E. Toledo, Ohio Bus. Allentown, Pa. Met. Baltimore, Md. B.A. Grateford, Pa. M.E. Coatesville, Pa. C.E. Allentown, Pa. E.M. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bus. Middletown, N. Y. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. E.E. Hummelstown, Pa. M.E. Washington, D. C. C.S. Punta Gorda, Fla. Bus. Maueh Chunk, Pa. E.M. Brooklyn, N. Y. B.A. Amityville, N. Y. Bus. Oradell, N. J. Bus. Brooklyn, N. Y. Ch.E. Cranford, N. J. E.M. La Crosse, Wis. Met. Catasauqua, Pa. C.E. Gloucester City, N. J. B.A. New Britain, Conn. Ch.E. Reading, Pa. M.E. Milton, Pa. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. E.E. Bethlehem, Pa. M.E. Stroudsburg, Pa. C.E. New York, N. Y. M.E. Lancaster, Pa. M.E. Baltimore, Md. E.E. Yardley, Pa. C.E. Fleetwood, Pa. Met. New York, N. Y. Bus. Weehawken, N. J. B.A. Buffalo, N. Y. 198 Hosking, Herbert Tage, Jr. Houseman, Kenneth Francis, l ' (-) Humphrey, Conrad Emil, ( l l ' Jacobs, Harvey Joseph, (-)lv I ' Jewell. Nathaniel Fariveel Jochum, Albert Johnson. James Dunlop, T Jones, Hugh Clifford Jones, Walter Theodore Jones, Webster Sonber Kanasut, Dieu Kear, Carl Irvin Keller, Edward Bernard Keller, Eugene Alvin Kelly, John Schagle Kemp, Theodore Halsey Kennedy, George Frederick, S E Kensing, Alfred Kenneth, AXP Kent, Lewis Shaw, KA Kerr, Edmund Bigler, ATQ Kettcrer, Paul Elmer, I rA Kinn, Edwin William, HK I Kirkwood, Thomas Alexander, ATO Kissel, Glenn Windsor, 2$ Kittinger, Irvine Johnston, Jr., A V Kittleberger, William Walton Kilzinger, Stanley Arthur, IIA I Kline, Leonard Isadore, SAM Knebels, John Henry Kost, Edward Paul Krey, Norman Louis Krone, Edward Louis, 0E Kuck, George Justus Lair, Walter Benton Lake, Edward Earl Lambert, Herbert Schrick, I A0 Laudenbach, Herman Henry Lear, Caesar Clinton Lee, Walter John, Jr., VI Lenna, Harry Albert, SN Lewis, Harry Walter Lewis, Robert Beckwith Littell. Isaac William Liversidge, Preston Moore Lobo, David Loeser, Albert Richard, 2N Long, Lewis Longstreet, Robert Louis Chem. Philadelphia, Pa. M.E. Plainfield, N. J. E.M. Kingston, Pa. Bus. Hammonton, N. J. Ch.E. Olean, N. Y. Bus. Richmond Hill, N. Y. Bus. Wingina, Va. Ch.E. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. B.A. Bath, Pa. B.A. St. Clair, Pa. M.E. Washington, D. C. M.E. Minersville, Pa. Ch.E. Perkasie, Pa. M.E. Takoma Park, D. C. Bus. Phoenixville, Pa. E.E. Ridgewood, N. J. C.E. Lansford, Pa. Bus. New York, N. Y. Bus. Montclair, N. J. Bus. Clearfield, Pa. Bus. Butler, Pa. M.E. West Hoboken, N. J. Bus. W. Pittston, Pa. Bus. Cleveland, Ohio Bus. Buffalo, N. Y. C.E. Curwensville, Pa. B.A. Yonkers, N. Y. B.A. Pottstown, Pa. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. Met. Bethlehem, Pa. Ch.E. Washington, D. C. Bus. Hackensack, N. J. B.A. New York, N. Y. M.E. Phillipsburg, Pa. Bus. Perth Amboy, N. J. Bus. Somerset, Pa. B.A. Nazareth, Pa. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. Bus. Westfield, N. J. B.A. Jamestown, Pa. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. M.E. Bethlehem, Pa. N.E. Staunton, Va. Bus. Cynwyd, Pa. M.E. Caracas, Venezuela B.A. Elizabeth, N. J. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Asbury Park, N. J. 199 • gv - ' . -. ' v ;: - Loomis, George Emerson Lovell, Frederick Harris, ©AX Lum, Philip Livingston Swinnerton Luria, Israel David, IL I Lynch, Allen Clard MacFadden, Donald Schoonmaker, AY McCarthy, Balin Allen McCoombs, Charles Edward McCord, Herbert Weymouth, AXP McCullough, Walter Homer McGurl, Gilbert Vincent McKechnie, Edward Maginnis, Hamilton John Maier, Curtis Eugene Manner, Richard Jacob Martin, Harry Turner, AFIA Marvin, Robert William Matheson, Kenneth Darragh Metz, John Henry Michelena, Domian German Miles, Irving Beardsley, X ' l ' Miller, John Howard Payne, OA0 Miller, John Stanley Miller, Roger Light Miller, William Crichton, M0 Mills, Lucius Nichols, KS Moclair, Joseph John, B0II Molitor, Arthur Albert Nagel, Charles Herbert Newiski, Anthony Theodore Ness, Henry Clarence Nevins, Samuel Lyle Newcomb, Curtis Sylvester, I A0 Nicholas, Joseph Anthony, 0KO Nichols, John Hall Nitchie, Spencer Holmes, FTA Norbeck, Carl Frank, KA Nutting, Harry Otis, M0 Olton, Frederick Hastings, 0AX Ortlip, William Marshall, OA0 Oswald, Edwin Miller, E$E Oswald, John Randolph Ott, Frank Wesley Owens, Sidney James Palau, Conrado Palm, William Flickinger Parker, Albert Marcus, I rA E.E. M.E. M.E. B. A. E.M. B.A. B.A. Bus. M.E. C.E. Ch.E. E.M. M.E. E.E. E.E. Bus. M.E. B.A. E.E. N.E. E.E. E.M. C.E. C.E. Bus. Bus. Bus. Ch.E. B.A. Chem. C.E. C.E. M.E. E.E. M.E. C.E. M.E. E.M. Bus. Ch.E. Ch.E. M.E. Bus. B.A. Bus. Ch.E. M.E. 200 Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Cranford, N. J. Chatham, N. J. Jleading, Pa. Pitman, N. J. Kingston, N. Y. Pen Argyl, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Flushing, N. Y. Vandergrift, Pa. Minersville, Pa. Franklin, N. J, Philadelphia, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Glen Ridge, N. J. Waverly, Pa. Pittsburgh, Pa. Scranton, Pa. Puno, Peru Mount Vernon, N. Y. DuBois, Pa. Harrisburg, Pa. Lebanon, Pa. DuBois, Pa. Newtown, Conn. New York, N. Y. Swedensboro, N. J. Brooklyn, N. Y. Scranton, Pa. York, Pa. Hokendauqua, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Dunmore, Pa. Brooklyn, N. Y. Cranford, N. J. LaCrosse, Wis. Lebanon, Pa. Cranford, N. J. Oxford. Pa. Arlington, N. J. Catasauqua, Pa. Bangor, Pa. Apolla, Pa. New York, N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. E. Orange, N. J. Parsons, Ira Manning, Jr., KA Passant, John Edward Pennington, Carl Shaw Phillips, Arthur Harrison, K2 Picking, Jay Wilfred Poor, Benjamin Wood, AT Posey, James Byron, AXP Racz, James Charles, Jr. Raine, Robert Newton Raliegh, Walter Allen, Jr. Rambler, Ralph Cassell Reed, James Joseph Reed, Thomas Henry, K2 Richards, Robert Wardick, ATQ Ridsdale, John Gordon, iiX Rights, Herbert Theodore Riskin, Milton Bernard Roberts, Charles Wilson, Jr. Robinson, Kenneth Irvin, AT Robinson, Thomas, ATQ Roderick, Rees Morgan Roe, James Baynard Ross, Donald Thornton Rubsamen, Herbert Schultz, B0II Russell, Hiram Brooks Sample, Edgar Hoopes Sampson, Henry Hazen Sandwick, Charles Martin Sarmiento, Antonio, Jr. Sarson, Harry Fowler, X VY Sasse, Louis Henry Saxton, Robert Hibberd, ATQ Schaffer, John Abraham Schaeffer, Max William Schaub, Carl Martin Schmnlz, Frederick Willard, ATA Schmertz, Edward Augustus Schmutz, George Henry Schoenly, Jackson Heiss Scholl, Roy Franklin Schwab, Edward Franklin Scott, Thomas E., Jr., 0K I Seaman, Stephen Francis Shaner, William McBride, AXP Shonk, Albert Davenport, $DK Shultz, Samuel Thompson, KS Shartleff, John Edgar Bus. Baltimore, Md. M.E. Philadelphia, Pa. C.E. Trenton, N. J. E.E. Reading, Pa. E.E. Somerset, Pa. E.E. Glendale, Ohio C.E. Bethlehem, Pa. Bus. New Brunswick, N. J. M.E. Scranton, Pa. Bus. Baltimore, Md. E.E. West Hanover, Pa. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Geneva, Italy E.M. Pittsburgh, Pa. Ch.E. Washington, D. C. E.E. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Philadelphia, Pa. M.E. Millville, N. J. Bus. Hackensack, N. J. Ch.E. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. B.A. Sudlersville, Md. B.A. Wilkes -Barre, Pa. B.A. Murray Hill, N. J. C.E. Williamsport, Pa. E.E. Bethlehem, Pa. M.E. Westfield, N. J. B.A. Elmira Heights, N. Y. E.E. Santruce, Porto Rico Bus. E. Orange, N. J. E.E. New York, N. Y. Bus. Chicago, 111. Bus. Allentown, Pa. E.M. Womelsdorf, Pa. Met. Freeland, Pa. Bus. Weehawken, N. J. E.E. Atlantic City, N. J. M.E. West Hoboken, N. J. C.E. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Bath, Pa. E.E. Ambler, Pa. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Philadelphia, Pa. Bus. Kingston, Pa. Ch.E. Danville. Pa. Bus. Clark Summit, Pa. Sidebotham, Horace Williams, HX Sigafoos, Andrew Wilson Sinwell, Paul William Sitler, Charles Everett Smeltzer, Norman Harold Smith, Cedric Leland, 4?rA Snyder, Charles Samuel Sosa, Ricardo Spalding, George, I Spatz, Norman Samuel Spillman, Emil Henry Staller, Alf red William Stevens, Samuel Carlton, XI ' Stoddard, Elwood Strohl, Paul Gogel Sullivan, Walter Francis Swinton, Neil Williams, iM Symons, Ralph Hampton Terry, Frederick Barnett, i! ] E Thum, Kurt William, ATQ Tijerino, Caesar Dardnaius Timen, Lawrence Sigmund, SAM Toadvine, George Henry, Jr. Trumball, Albert Henson Tyler, Nathan Irving Uebelhart, Donald Nicholas, ZN Ulmer. Louis Norman, KA Ungerleider, Abraham vanBilliard, Mitchell Walter vanHorne, Roger Harold, XT Waesche, Charles Stewart, SN Walborn, Charles Faust Welck, Willard Raymond Walter, Carl Emil Warner, Lyman Darling, ZX Weaver, Paul Lawrence Weinroth, Leon. SAM Webster, Joseph Field Wenner, Roy Bruce, Jr. Werntz, Donald Burleigh Wertman, Paul Samuel Weynberg, Bernhard Lewis, FIA$ Wilhelm, Frederick Harlan Wilkinson, Charles Stewart, I A0 Willis, Charles Ethelbert, Jr., S$ Wilmurt, William Foster, : ) X Wilson, William vanZandt, ATA Bus. Philadelphia, Pa. E.E. Phillipsburg, N. J. E.M. Bethlehem, Pa. M.E. Mauch ' Chunk, Pa. Bus. Bellefonte, P a. B.A. Wakefield, Mass. E.E. Northampton, Pa. E.E.Salta, Argentine Republic, S. A. M.E. Florence, Ala. E.E. Bernville, Pa. Met. Catasauqua, Pa. E.E. Pottsville, Pa. M.E. South River, N. J. E.E. Bangor, Pa. C.E. Cementon, Pa. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Marquette, Mich. C.E. Johnstown, Pa. Bus. Waynesboro, Pa. B.A. Newark, N. J. E.E. New York, N. Y. B.A. White Plains, N. Y. B.A. Williamsport, Pa. M.E. New York, N. Y. Ch.E. Midland Park, N. J. Met. Canton, Ohio C.E. Pottsville, Pa. M.E. Phillipsburg, N. J. B.A. Bethlehem, Pa. Ch.E. Philadelphia, Pa. Bus. Baltimore, Md. C.E. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. C.E. Lehighton, Pa. C.E. Baltimore. Pa. E.E. Brvn Mawr, Pa. N.E. Duyden, N. Y. N.E. Greenville, Pa. Bus. Philadelphia, Pa. C.E. Philadelphia, Pa. M.E. Coatesville, Pa. Met. Palmerton, Pa. B.A. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bus. Bethlehem, Pa. B.A. Ben Avon, Pa. B.A. Richmond, Va. N.E. New Rochelle, N. Y. Bus. Glen Ridge, N. J. Wolford, Joseph Glenn B.A. Wood, Gar Stephens B.A. Wood, Thomas James Met. Wooley, John George Patrick C.E. Wright, Kenneth Arden C.E. Wright, Thomas Joseph E.E. Zimmerman, Erick Karl Ch.E. Tarentum, Pa. Collegeville, Pa. Palmei ' ton, Pa. Noble, Pa. Williamsport, Pa. Bethlehem, Pa. Passaic, N. J. 203 Special Student Burnham, William, 2$ Spl. Bus. Dyche, James Albert, ATA Spl. Bus. Fernandez, Carlos Alberto, 2 I E E.M. Spl. Frantz, Russell Herling E.E. Spl. Kanaly, Morris Eugene, 0K$ Ch. Spl. Lyons, Henry Francis, Jr. E.M. Spl. Miller, Harry Bachman Bus. Spl. Schatz, George Whenhold E.E. Spl. Smith, Charles Adelbert Met. Spl. Spieler, Augustive Merle Bus. Spl. New York, N. Y. Towaco, N. J. Buenos Aires, Argentine Republic, S. A. Catasauqua, Pa. Belmont, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bethlehem, Pa. Allentown, Pa. Columbus, 0. Rochester, N. Y. Graduate Student Rousing, Niles Met. Randers, Denmark 204 FRATERNITIES CLLlte fnllnliunq arc the Jfratcnttttcs haOiitq, (Chapters at Hehiqh lluilirrsitu 207 The Greek Letter Fraternities Having Chapters at Lehigh University In the Order of Their Establishment Date of Establishment 1872 1882 1884 1884 1884 1885 1885 1886 1887 Fraternity Chapter Chi Phi Psi Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Rho Delta Phi Eta Psi Upsilon Nu Theta Delta Chi ..Nu Deuteron Delta Upsilon Lehigh Sigma Nu Pi Phi Gamma Delta Beta Chi Sigma Phi Pennsylvania Alpha . Phi Delta Theta Pennsylvania .. 1887 Sigma Chi .... Alpha Rho 1888 Delta Tau Delta Beta Lambda ....1888 Beta Theta Pi Beta Chi 1890 Kappa Alpha .. Pennsylvania Alpha 1894 Chi Psi Alpha Beta Delta .1894 Kappa Sigma Beta Iota 1900 Phi Sigma Kappa Nu 1901 Theta Xi Eta 1904 Sigma Phi Epsilon ....Pennsylvania Epsilon 1907 Pi Lambda Phi Lambda .1915 Alpha Chi Rho Phi Mu 1918 Theta Kappa Phi Alpha 1920 Sigma Alpha Mu .Sigma Iota 1923 208 Chi Phi PSI CHAPTER Briarfield, Bethlehem. In Urbe George R. Booth Caleb S. Kenny Albert Brodhead Robert U. P. Mackall Charles M. Dodson Irvine McHose G. E. Thackeray IN Facultate George A. Lyle In Universitate Nineteen Twenty-four E. E. Quinlan Nineteen Twenty-five J. T. Burton E. B. May, Jr. W. J. Behr, Jr. E. H. Saxton, Jr. Ninetei n Twenty-six J. C. Olwine J. A. Shartle P. D. L ' Hommedieu M. W. Harris Nineteen Tiventy-seven C. YV. Hanna R. Van Home A. M. Conneen George Spalding m 21; ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha University of Virginia Beta Massachusetts Institute Gamma Emory College Delta Rutgers College Epsilon Hampden-Sydney College Zeta Franklin and Marshall College Eta University of Georgia Theta Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Iota Ohio State Kappa University of Wisconsin Lambda University of California Mu. Stevens Institute of Technology Nu University of Texas Xi Cornell University Omicron Yale University Pi ._ Iowa State College Rho Lafayette College Sigma .University of Illinois Tan ....University of Alabama Phi - Amherst College Chi Dartmouth College Psi Lehigh University Omega Georgia Institute of Technology Alpha Tau University of Michigan Alpha Chi Ohio Wesleyan w Alpha Tau Omega PENNSYLVANIA ALPHA RHO CHAPTER University Campus, Bethlehem, Pa. Founded 1865 Established at Lehigh 1882 In Facultate Edward Hasey Fry Howard Eckfeldt John Milton Toohy Judson Gray Smull In Urbe Dr. E. S. Mantz, A. I. Dr. R. J. Yost, A. I. E. E. Wright, A. P. L. L. Bentley, B. P. A. S. Blank, H. P. W. C. Dietrich, A. P. L. G. Barthold, A. P. H. S. Barthold, A. I. M. L. Horn, A. I. F. N. Fritch, A. I. H. J. Fritch, A. I. S. F. Mutart, H. P. M. Metzger, A. I. C. Knauss, A. I. Nineteen Twenty-four Elisha Gee Milton S. Roth William J. Hoffman Nineteen Twenty-five Lester D. Moreland Edmund M. Burke Kenneth D. Gibson Nineteen Twenty-six Charles A. Stillman James R. Yeager John H. Schmidt Davitt S. Bell Edward F. Rigg Russell H. Burgess John R. P. Perry Nineteen Twenty-seven Herbert W. McCord Kurt W. Thue Thomas A. Kirkwood Robert H. Saxton Edmund B. Kerr Jonett A. Chacey ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Beta Washington and Lee University Delta University of Virginia Xi Trinity College, North Carolina Pi .....Tennessee University Omega University of the South Alpha Beta University of Georgia Alpha Delta University of North Carolina Alpha Epsilon Alabama Polytechnic Institute Alpha Zeta Mercer University Tun University of Pennsylvania Alpha Theta.... Emory College Alpha Iota...... . Muhlenburg College Alpha Mu Adrian College Alpha Nk Mount Union College Alpha Omicron St. Lawrence University Alpha Pi.... ...Washington and Jefferson College Alpha Rho ... .. .Lehigh University 216 Alpha Tan ....Southwestern Presbyterian Univ. Alpha Upsilon Pennsylvania College Alpha Psi Wittenberg College Alpha Omega University of Florida Beta Alpha Simpson College . ' . in Beta Southern University Beta Gamma ...Mass. Institute of Technology Beta Delta University of Alabama Beta Epsilon Tulane University Beta Zeta University of Vermont Beta Eta Ohio Wesleyan University Beta Theta Cornell University Beta Kappa Hillsdale College Beta Iota Georgia School of Technology Beta Lambda University of Michigan Beta Xi Charleston College Beta Omicron Albion College Beta Pi Vanderbilt University Beta Upsilon University of Maine Beta Psi Leland Stanford, Jr., University Beta Omega Ohio State University Beta Tan Southwestern Baptist University Gamma Alpha Colby University Gamma Beta Tufts College Gamma Gamma Rose Polytechnic Institute Gamma Delta Delta Brown University Gamma Zeta University of Illinois Gamma Theta University of Nebraska Gamma- Eta University of Texas Gamma Iota University of California Gamma Kappa Western Reserve University Gamma Mu.. University of Kansas Gamma Nu University of Minnesota Gamma- Xi University of Chicago Gamma Omicron Purdue University 217 Delta Phi NU CHAPTER Founded 1884 229 Warren Square, Bethlehem In Urbe Alan C. Dodson Gerald Thorpe Truman M. Dodson Robert L. Wilbur Robert H. Sayre 3rd In Universitate Nineteen Twenty-four Ruel Dexter Warriner Charles Taylor Cornelius Sidney T. Mackenzie Carroll B. Grace, Jr. Henry Parsons Palmer Nineteen Twenty-five William Otto Gairns Nineteen Twenty-six Paul Sutro Anderson Nineteen Tioenty-seven Walter John Lee, Jr. ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha Union College Beta Brown University Gamma New York University Delta .. Columbia University Epsilon Rutgers College Eta University of Pennsylvania Lambda Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Nu - Lehigh University XI Johns Hopkins University Omicron Sheffield Scientific School Pi Cornell University Rho University of Virginia Sigma Trinity College Tan Illinois University Psi Upsilon ETA CHAPTER Founded in 1884 Eighth Street and Broadhead Avenue In Facultate Charles Shattuck Fox, A.B., LL.B., A.M., Ph. D., 1 Preston Albert Lambert, B.A., M.A., H William Esty, LL.D., A.M., 1 ' William Allen Lambert, B.A., M.A., H In Urbe The Rt. Rev. Ethelbert Talbott, A.M., D.D., Z Robert Sayre Taylor, B.S., H Robert Park Hutchenson, E.M., H John Sage Viche, E.E., H Robert Wallace Gillespie, B.A., Z Lucien Esty, B.A., V Alexander Peet, B.A., B.B. William Rowland Clothier, B.A., T 225 Psi Upsilon In Universitate Mi! eteen T wenty-fo u r James Andrew Boyd George Emil Wagner Cornelius George Whitfield Hopkins, Jr. Nineteen Twenty-fire Frederic Brookfield Henri Victor de Puis Dykes Morris Sparhawk Smith Laurens Augustus Peter Williams Robert Savre Taylor, Jr. Francis Xavier Bingle Louis George Meurer Nineteen Twenty-six Leonard Huguenor Couch Fitzhugh Preston Spalding William Cannon, Jr. William Shaner Nineteen Twenty-seven John Middleton Holmes Edward Whiting Evans Harry Fouler Sarson ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Theta Union College .Delta New York University Beta Yale University Si u ma Brown University Gamma Amherst College Zi ta Dartmouth College Lambda Columbia University 1833 1837 1839 1840 1841 1842 1842 1843 Kappa Bowdoin College 1843 Psi Hamilton College 1843 ...Xi Wesleyan University 1858 Upsilon University of Rochester 1860 Iota Kenyon College 1865 Phi University of Michigan 1869 Omega University of Chicago 1875 Pi Syracuse University 1876 Chi Cornell University 1880 Beta Beta Trinity College 1884 Eta Lehigh University 1891 Tau University of Pennsylvania 1891 Mu University of Minnesota 1896 Rho University of Wisconsin 1902 Epsilon University of California 1910 Omicron University of Illinois 1913 Delta Delta Williams College 1916 Theta Theta University of Washington 1920 Nu University of Toronto 227 Interfraternity Basketball Season 1923-1924 First Round Delta Upsilon defeated Theta Xi. Chi Psi defeated Sigma Chi. Kappa Sigma defeated Chi Phi. Delta Tau Delta defeated Phi Gamma Delta. Beta Theta Pi defeated Sigma Phi Epsilon. Phi Sigma Kappa defeated Delta Phi. Alpha Tau Omega defeated Sigma Phi. Alpha Chi Rho defeated Psi Upsilon. Pi Lambda Phi defeated Theta Delta Chi. Second Round Sigma Nu defeated Kappa Alpha. Delta Upsilon defeated Phi Delta Theta. Delta Tau Delta defeated Kappa Sigma. Alpha Tau Omega defeated Alpha Chi Rho. Chi Psi defeated Delta Upsilon. Third Round Beta Theta Pi defeated Delta Tau Delta. Alpha Tau Omega defeated Phi Sigma Kappa. Sigma Nu defeated Pi Lambda Phi. Semi-Finals Sigma Nu defeated Alpha Tau Omega. == Efis Theta Delta Chi Nil Deuteron Charge University Campus, Bethlehem, Pa. In Facultate Founded 1884 P. M. Palmer H. M. Ullman IN Urbe c. I. Anderson L. T. Grace E. L. Myers R. A. Burlingame M. L. Jacobs C. T. Lehman A. S. Coolev A. Johnston H. A. Luckenbach T. Earle A. B. Johnston P. I. Luckenbach E. L. Farabaugh I. E. Keadv W. T. Maguire E. W. Grace W. R. Okeson R. W. Wolcott 231 H. T. Morris Theta Delta Chi In Universitate Seniors Frank T. Bumbaugh Robert L. Mclntire George F. Jenkins F. Lynn Hendrickson F. Carroll Stille C. Bayard Mitchell 2nd George W. Boggs, 2nd Russell H. Metzner E. Halstead Piatt Juniors Thomas E. Green E. Bowers Ayres C. Latham Sholes 6th William C. Greer James H. Davis 2nd Sophomores Charles W. Nicholas Freshmen William F. Wilmurt Frederick Lovell Frederick Olton Charles B. Gessner Oliver K. Boyd 232 EB CHARGE ROLL Alpha Union College 1847 Epsilon College of William and Mary 1853 Zeta Brown University 1853 Eta Bowdoin College 1854 Kappa Tufts College 1856 Xi .. Hobart College 1857 Nu University of Virginia 1857 Phi ... Lafayette College 1867 Chi University of Rochester 1867 Psi Hamilton College 1868 Omicron Deuteron Dartmouth College 1869 Beta Cornell University 1870 Pi Deutt ron College of the City of New York 1881 Rho Deuteron Columbia University 1883 Nu Deuteron Lehigh University 1884 Mu Deuteron Amherst College 1885 Gamma Deuteron University of Michigan 1889 Iota Deuteron Williams College 1891 Tau Deuteron University of Minnesota 1892 Sigma Deuteron University of Wisconsin 1895 Chi Deuteron George Washington University 1896 Delta Deuteron .University of California 1900 Zeta Deuteron McGill University 1901 Eta Deuteron Leland Stanford, Jr., University 1903 Theta Deuteron Massachusetts Inst, of Technology 1906 Kappa Deuteron University of Illinois 1908 Xi Deuteron University of Washington 1912 Lambda Deuteron Toronto University 1912 PJii Deuteron University of Pennsylvania 1915 Beta Dent, nm Iowa State College 1920 233 : ■; - Scv.=a £SSits=seM=Sfc3M«cs Sc=t Fraternity Dances Alpha Chi Rho November 24, 1923 Chi Psi March 7, 1924 Delta Upsilon .December 15, 1923 April 16, 1924 Kappa Sigma February 5, 1924 Phi Delta Theta ...March 15, 1924 Phi Gamma Delta April 5, 1924 Sigma Chi February 5, 1924 Sigma Nu ..December 19, 1923 April 12, 1924 Theta Delta Chi March 22, 1924 HH53HJ=SWP3E3HH5=.. ' =iPitSS; S=.=.5=,=..t=i5= 1 =, ra3E3:ow=ra=t 5=S=D=8=® 234 Delta Upsilon Founded 1885 H. W. Piatt C. I. Lattig R. M. Luckenbach G. G. G. J. Abel E. V. Bennett E. P. Hartmann W. H. Miller C. W. Allen W. II. Lister F. J. Gunther J. E. Roberts B. W. Poor D. S. McFadden LEHIGH CHAPTER University Park RESIDENT MEMBERS S. J. Bessemer A. W. Chenowith C. E. Siebecker J. W. Adams S. W. Chiles G. M. Donaldson Harris J. K. Killmer ACTIVE MEMBERS Nineteen Twenty-four A. N. Schultz W. H. Miller R. M. Rice C. W. Allen H. T. Litke C. C. Kittenger E. L. Werft Nineteen Tiventy-five C. C. Kittenger C. H. Porter L. B. Bond A. M. Grunn Nineteen Txventy-six (). M. Corson B. H. Bishop G. D. Godschalk Si, a U i) Tiri nty-seven C. E. Barba, Jr. W. K. Stauffer 237 W. C. Widowfield D. G. Hornbaker F. E. Jedlicka R. G. Chase I. J. Kittenger, Jr. ACTIVE CHAPTERS OF DELTA UPSILON Williams Williamstown, Mass i ru I Mien Schenectady, N. Y 1838 HiimUK.il Clintou, X. V 1847 Amherst Imlierst. Mass 1847 Western Reserve Cleveland. Ohio 1811 Wesleyan Middletown, Conn 1850 Colby Waterville, M - 1852 Rochester Rochester. X. Y 1852 Middlebury Middlebury, Vt 1856 Bowdoin Brunswick. Me 1851 Rutgers Xi-w Brunswick, X. .1 ! v - ruinate ..- ■Hamilton, X. Y 1865 ,.„ Yuri; New York City, N. 1865 Miami .Oxford, Ohio l ' ' v l !r ;,„„ .Providence, R. 1 1868 Com,.!! Ithaca. X. Y 1869 Marietta Marietta, Ohio 1870 Syracuse Svracu.se, X. Y ' .--7: ' . Michigan ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . Ann Arbor, Mich 1R76 Northwestern Evnnston, 111 1880 Harvard ' • t ' a ml.ri,! . Mass 1881 Wisconsin Ma.lis.ni. Wis 1885 l.afavette Easton. Pa 188b Columbia • N ' i ' ork City, N. Y 1885 Lehigh Bethlehem. Pa 1885 Tufts ' Tufts Co liege. P. O., Mass 1886 De Fauw ' (ireeneastle, Ind 1 7 Pennsylvania 1 ' hila.Irlphia. I ' a 1888 Minnesota Minn. a). lis. Xlinir 1890 Techn gv Boston. Mass 1891 Swartbmore ' Swarthmore, I ' a 1894 Stanford Stanford Dniv. P. 0., Calif 1896 California Berkeley. Calif 1896 Met. ill Montreal, P. Q., Canada i v,|v Nebraska Li nn ' In, Neb 1898 Toronto Toronto. Out.. Canada 1899 111. I ' .itil I !.. l| a __„n, 111 1904 bus. Ohio 1905 , Wash 1910 College, I ' a l ' - ' H .1913 i r est Lafayette, 1ml loomington ' . Ind. .. ittsburg Kans 1920  re 1922 v., 1922 238 VnVrV Sigma Nu MEMBERS Nim U en Twenty-foui M. Glen E. F. Sheetz A. W. Springsteen R. H. Allan N. C. Carter W. W. Springsteen T. P. Britt J. J. Shigo J. Boyle, Jr. W. W. York G. T. Jones Nineteen Twenty-five G. B. Miller H. S. Hess C. M. A. M. Ambler E. H. Stahl A. S. Bayles J. M. Coulton Nineteen Twenty-six H. E. Mapes H. Cresswell H. W. Dietrich E. D. Pakenham W. H. Waesche M. A. Evans H. M. Shipley E. P. Keen H. E. Merrill Xini tet a Twenty-Si V( n H. B. Dietrich C. S. Waesche N. D. Dietrich J. W. Gisriel A. R. Loeser H. A. Lenna D. N. Uebelhart 241 ACTIVE MEMBERS Gamma Delta Stevens Beta Beta Depauw Rho Missouri Gamma Tan Minnesota Gamma Beta Northwestern Beta let a Purdue Beta Rho University of Pennsylvania Gumma Gumma Albion Beta Eta Indiana Gamma Mu Illinois Gamma Iota Kentucky Epsilon Kappa - North Dakota Beta Psi California Gamma Lambda Wisconsin Delta Gamma Columbia Beta Chi Stanford Delta Psi Bowdoin Epsilon Zeta - - Florida Epsilon Iota ... - William and Mary Gumma Alpha Georgia Tech Delta O micron ..Idaho Gumma Omicron Washington-St. Louis Beta Nu Ohio State Delta Delta Penn State Delta Xi Nevada Epsilon - Bethany Gumma X a Michigan Delta Lambda Brown Pi - Lehigh Epsilon Epsilon Oklahoma Agricultural Upsilon Texas 242 Delta Pi Geor e e Wa Ki £ Delta UpsUon ' ; ™ Delta .1 ' ' ,.r u- , « , , „ ,. ,, Washington State D Epsilon Gamma Beta UpsUon Delta • ' ' '  Delta Sigma Beta I i pa Delta Kappa Delta Tau Delta ( ' In - Epsilon Theta Sigma Gamma Zeta Wesleyan Rose Polytechnic Dartmouth Carnegie Kansas Agricultural Delaware Oregon Agricultural Trinity Massachusetts Technology Vanderbill ( tregon , ' . ' , ' Chicago Gamma Rho ,. „. ■? IZZ 9 N,„,h Georgia ■■Afetura. ' ,, ' , Mt. Union BeTTheta Alabama Polytechnic Delta Eta % g Epsilon Beta ,., , ■Delta Epsilon Oklahoma Delta Bho Colorado Agncultura ,, rp, ,. Cornell Gamma I lieta _ . ■ T zSKS (,llllllllil I si .■' . ■. ,, . Virginia l ' : Gecigia Gamm a Epsii™ Z ----- Lafayette ,,:::: ■.-.,, • : .... Colorado Mines (,,: ■:::::, Ph, -- P SS Dzlta Tk i. Lombard Ztszlon Alphz Aibc  Delta Mn ... V,; Ste tso B2 ' - ::z Xmf -7;, ■■;;:;;;::::::::::::::::.... Kansas G , ' ,. ,„, Arkansas •.7 r ivieitei Delta . . ------. ■■R ™ e Lambda Washington and L Gamma Pi XWst Vn-gmm y Emory Beia Sig - Ve ™ Beta Mn - y .yc. t J I •;.- : Williarn Jtwall Epsilon Eta Tennessee Maryland Tulane Washington-Seattle Louisiana .North Carolina Delta Phi Beta Phi ... Gamma Chi p s j r„t„ o,„irro„ University of the South Beta T,n, North arolma State Delta Sn u U me A Iota ■•■Howard 243 grSWSi ifei£Srifcifci Mrffi Interfraternity Bowling (Incomplete) Third Round Theta Xi defeated Delta Upsilon. Sigma Chi defeated Chi Psi. Chi Phi defeated Kappa Sigma. Phi Gamma Delta defeated Delta Tau Delta. Beta Theta Pi defeated Sigma Phi Epsilon. Phi Sigma Kappa defeated Delta Phi. Sigma Phi defeated Alpha Tau Omega. Alpha Chi Rho defeated Psi Upsilon. Theta Delta Chi defeated Pi Lambda Phi. Sigma Nu defeated Kappa Alpha. First Round Theta Xi defeated Phi Delta Theta. Alpha Chi Rho defeated Sigma Phi. Sigma Nu defeated Theta Delta Chi. Second Round Sigma Chi defeated Theta Xi. Alpha Chi Rho defeated Phi Sigma Kappa. 244 log o J Sat r ,J % - 1 K ba L Jfl Hi ,is k Kajjl Br i ■=a. vf _sT ' 4P L; Phi Gamma Delta BETA CHI CHAPTER University Campus, Bethlehem, Pa. In Facultate Natl M. Emery, M.A., Beta Chi William L. Estes, M.D., Theta A. Harry Fretz, C.E., Sigma Deu- Captain M. P. Bell, Chi Mu teron IN Urbe ( ' . L. Elliott, Sigma Deuteron J. T. Woodring, Epsilon Deuteron L. D. Lazarus. Epsilon Deuteron W. R. Shimer, Beta Chi George R. Brothers, Beta Chi J. M. Diefenderfer, Epsilon Deuteron Frank S. Jackson, Alpha Chi X. M. Downes, Beta Chi Fred A. Johnson, Beta Chi Loyal A. Showdy, Sigma Tail George B. Weigel, Chi A. G. Rau, Beta Chi J. N. Critchlow, Gamma Phi George F. Hocker, Chi Owen R. Sherriff, Beta Chi Theophil H. Mueller, Beta Chi Elmer B. Shawl, Sigma Nu J. S. Stevens, Alpha Phi Paul W. Walters, Sigma Nu 247 In Universitate George A. Haefeker, ' 24 D. Foster Minster, ' 24 Wilson G. Boyden, ' 24 James G. Law, ' 25 Michael J. Gallow, ' 25 Stephen S. Groner, ' 25 Frank G. Travis, ' 25 Robert J. Mattern, ' 25 Ernest L. Bridge, ' 26 Clyde Davis, ' 26 H. B. Rebmann, ' 26 Herbert H. Seamon, ' 26 William W. Purcell, ' 26 James R. Morris, ' 26 Cedric L. Smith, ' 26 Hugh W. Robinson, ' 26 Harry A. Pickel, ' 26 Spencer H. Nitchie, ' 27 Conrad E. Humphrey, ' 27 Louis H. Burkhart, ' 27 Conrad W. Bailey, ' 27 Louis H. Sasse, ' 27 Paul E. Ketterer, ' 27 James R. French, ' 27 ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Section IV Delta - - - Bucknell Xi Gettysburg Sigma Deuteron Lafayette Beta Chi - Lehigh Beta Mu Johns Hopkins Beta - Pennsylvania 248 Sigma Phi ALPHA OF PENNSYLVANIA IN Urbe Warren Abbott Wilmer F. Donald Schreiber Robert E. Wilbur Elisha Packer Wilbur A. Bartholomew Sayre Robert Osgood Norton In Collegio Nineteen Twenty-four John Frederick Rogers Nineteen Twenty-fire Russell Werner Lee Frank Lawton Childs James Lawton Childs C. A. S. McWilliams John Richard Waltman William Burnham Murray Duncan Harris Glenn Windsor Kissel Nineteen Twenty-six Graeff William Glenn Robert Boal Wickes Frederic Mercur William Cordes Snyder, Nelson Leigh ton Bond Xitu teen Twenty-seven C. Ethelbert Willis, Jr. Neil William Swinton 251 Sigma Phi Founded at Union College 1827 ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha of New York Union College Beta of New York Hamilton College Alpha of Massachusetts Williams College Delta of New York Hobart College Alpha of Vermont University of Vei ' mont Alpha of Michigan..... University of Michigan Alpha of Pennsylvania Lehigh University Epsilon of New York Cornell University Alpha of Wisconsin. University of Wisconsin Alpha of California University of California WW 252 1 Pl Franklin H. Brunner George 0. Lundberg Rodney W. Ross David F. John Howard Miller William C. Miller C. H. Wilkinson Phi Delta Theta PENNSYLVANIA ETA CHAPTER In Facultate G. C. Beck, A. C. In Urbe Herbert Hartzog Nineteen Twenty-foui John J. Unkles Nim ti en Tin nty-five Richard L. Davis Rogers Neely Arthur Serrel Nineteen Tin nty-six Samuel Scrivener Edward Fago Light Russell McKenzie Nineteen Twenty-sevi n Herbert Lambert William Ortlip C. F. Class R. Loomis 255 Manuel John Dirk L. Legoure Duggan James M. Degnan William J. Jones Bud Nutting 0. Cunningham K. Hooseman CHAPTERS IN ALPHA SOUTH PROVINCE New York Delta Columbia University Pennsylvania Alpha Lafayette College Pennsylvania Beta Gettysburg College Pennsylvania Gamma.. ..Washington and Jefferson Pennsylvania Delta Allegheny College Pennsylvania Epsilon Dickinson College Pennsylvania Zeta University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Eta Lehigh University Pennsylvania Thet a.. ..Pennsylvania State College Pennsylvania Iota University of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Kappa Swarthmore College 256 Sigma Chi ALPHA RHO CHAPTER 240 E. Broad Street, Bethlehem, Pa W. P. Hanck H. Hanck In Urbe A. E. Eberman G. Yocum C. Hohle In Universitate C. R. Radford E. T. Lipps Donald C. Luce Donald B. Dick Graham Wentz Nineteen Twenty-four George W. Callahan, Jr. Charles E. Lingle J. Porter Langfitt John Jay I. Jamieson John M. Tuggey, Jr. 259 Nineteen, Twenty-five Paul B. Entrekin William J. Laramy Paul B. Entrekih Kenneth L. Isaacs William R. Barnes William A. Reyer Francis Lee Castleman, John H. Croll Ralph A. Lambert Paul Lawall Armstrong R. Mathews W. Vinton Rathbone Charles K. Zug, Jr. Nineteen Twenty-six H. Kelsey Partridge, Jr. Robert H. Dyson H. Brooks White Robert E. Freeman Nineteen Twenty-seven R. Gordon Ridsdale Lyman D. Warner N. Richard Castor ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Kappa Blackwell University Tin In ....Gettysburg College Omicron - Dickinson College Phi :.... Lafayette College Alpha Chi Penn. State College Alpha Rho Lehigh University Beta Theta University of Pittsburgh Ma Mu University of Virginia Phi Phi ... University of Pennsylvania 2(50 sas v 1 Delta Tau Delta BETA LAMBDA CHAPTER In Facultate Paul N. Kistler, T. Ralph Justin Fogg, B.M. In Urbe Edward F. Gray E. S. Tishirky Edmond W. Young Paul H. Leinhaus Albert T. Spencer Ninetet n Twenty-four John Marshall Piersol Ralph Waldo Emerson Nim U i a Twenty-five William Murray Metten Arthur Piatt Stover George Lincoln Wilmot Alien Corson Du Bois William Schlicht 263 Harry Charles Hess Frederick W. Schmalz Thomas Robinson Nineteen Twenty-six Philip J. Shaheen James Albert Dyche Frederick R. Crawford Nineteen Twenty-seven W Van Zant Wilson, Jr. Sidney James Owens James Dunlap Johnson H. Turner Martindale, Jr. ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha Allegheny College Beta Ohio University Gamma Washington and Jefferson Delta University of Michigan Epsilon Albion College Zeta Western Reserve Kappa Hillsdale College Lambda Vanderbilt University 264 Roll of Active Chapters .1 Ohio Wesleyan University Nu Lafayette College Omicron University of Iowa EUo Stevens University of Technology Tim Pennsylvania State College Upstton ....Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Phi Washington and Lee Chi Kenyon College ))) nu University of Pennsylvania I ' .i tit Alpha Indiana University Beta Beta Depauw University Beta Gamma Wisconsin University Beta Delta University of Georgia Beta Epsilon Emory College , ' , ta Zeta Butler College Beta Eta University of Minnesota Beta Theta. University of the South Beta Iota University of Virginia Beta Kappa University of Colorado Beta Lambda Lehigh University Beta Mu Tufts College Beta Nu Massachusetts Institute of Technology Beta Xi Tulane University Beta Omicron Cornell University Beta Pi Northwestern University Beta Rlio Leland Stanford University Beta Nu University of Nebraska Beta Upsilon University of Illinois Beta Phi Ohio State University Beta Chi Brown University Beta Psi Wabash College Beta Omega University of California Cam ma Alpha University of Chicago Gamma Beta Armour Institute of Technology Gam ma Gamma Dartmouth College Gumma Delta University of Virginia Gumma Epsilon Columbia University Gam ma Zeta Wesleyan University Gamma Eta George Washington University 265 Gamma Theta Baker University Gamma Iota University of Texas Gamma Kappa University of Missouri Gamma Lambda Purdue University Gamma Mu Washington University Gamma Nu ..University of Maine Gamma Xi University of Cincinnati Gamma Omicron Syracuse University Gamma Pi Iowa State College Gamma- Rho University of Oregon Gamma Sigma Pittsburgh University Gamma Upsilon Miami University Gamma Phi Amherst College Gamma Chi Kansas State College Gamma Psi Georgia School of Technology Gamma Omega-... University of North Carolina Delta Alpha University of Oklahoma Beta Theta Pi BETA CHI CHAPTER In Facultate Charles Lewis Thornburg, C.E., Ph.D., John Hutchinson Ogburn, C.S., B. L. Barry McNutt, E.E., M.S., B. James Baldwin, A. 0. Earl Kenneth Smilie, B.A., B 2 IN Urbe Alfred John Standing, A. S. John Arthur Glassier, M. E. Wellington Van Wormer, N. Arthur Cabot Cusick, B. X. Edwin Burnett Payson, X. Richard Joseph Buck In Universitate Nineteen Twenty-four Conrad Fries Clothier Edwin Walker Keller James Leo Sanford Nineteen Twenty-five Robert Stanford Webb George Frantz Koegler Oliver Peter Nicola, Jr. William Howard Thomas Eugene Francis Moran, Jr. Nineteen Twenty-six Donald Austin Heath Claibourne W. Patty Thomas Clarence Rowley Kenneth L. Hoffman Charles Perkins Fitch Gardner Belknap Thorpe Hugh F. McGoldrick Herbert Lloyd Phyfe Richard B. Thomburg Nineteen Twenty-seven Roger Conan Clark John Finlay Robert Beckwith Lewis John Simpson Ford John Boniface Hayes Hebert S. Rubsamen DISTRICT IV Roll of Active Chapters Alpha Sigma Dickinson College Alpha Chi Johns Hopkins University Beta Chi Lehigh University Phi University of Pennsylvania 270 KA Kappa Alpha PENNSYLVANIA ALPHA In Urbe Dr. William L. Estes, ' 95 Robert N. Bird, ' 02 Rev. Robert M. Merriman In Universitate Ninetet n Twenty-four Harry David Gihon, Jr. Kenneth Lawrence Stelle Nineteen Twenty-five Charles Emery Brooks Henry Eckford Greene, Jr. Llewellyn Powell Cottman Sheldon Crouter Hubbard Frank Gustav Frey, Jr. Edwin Pitchford Jones, 2nd Nineteen Twenty-six Benjamin Wilson Cumming 3rd Nineteen Twenty-seven Julian Jordon Frey Louis Norman Ulmer L. Manning Parsons, Jr. Harold Fendrick Bester Lewis Shaw Kent Carl Frank Norbeck Fred Mertz Fisher Robert Austin Harrier 273 PENNSYLVANIA ALPHA Roll of Active Chapters New York Alpha Union College 1825 Massachusetts Alpha ..Williams College - 1833 New York Beta.... ...Hobart College .. 1844 New Jersey Alpha ....Princeton University .. 1852-1855 Virginia Alpha University of Virginia 1857-1860 New York Gamma... ...Cornell University 1868 Ontario Alpha Toronto University 1892 Pennsylvania Alpha Lehigh University ...1894 Quebec Alpha ..... McGill University 1899 Pennsylvania Beta University of Pennsylvania. 1913 Chi Psi ALPHA BETA DELTA University Campus IN Urbe George Bogart Blakeley Samuel Thomas Mitman George Henry Blakeley Arthur Jackson West John Edgar Miller Wilson In Universitate Nineteen Twenty-four George Tinsley Graham Beverly Stewart Galloway Edgar Thomas Adams, Jr. Daniel Parmerly Hoagland Jesse Albert Bugbee Alfred Crane McKenzie Andrew Heister Campbell Nineteen Twenty-five Alfred Green Blake Herbert Greason Harmon William George Fullard John Alfred Myers Walter Reynolds Smith Nineteen Tiventy-six James Truman Bidwell Harold Clark Hendershott Cornelius Zabriskie Board Gerald Boyd Henry Robert Hamilton Dalgleish George Warren Pease Robert Fielder Fountain William Swindells Nineteen Tiventy-seven Charles Fielding Bridewell Charles Beall Griffith John Addison Covert 2nd Irving Beardsley Miles Irving Meister Ferris Samuel Carlton Stevens Pledi i il Walter McCulla, ' 26 Roll of Active Chapters PI Union College Tint a - Williams College Mu Middlebury College Alpha Wesleyan College Eta Bowdoin College Phi Hamilton College Epsilon University of Michigan Chi Amherst College p s i Cornell University N u .....University of Minnesota lata University of Wisconsin Rho Rutgers College Xi Stevens Institute of Technology Alpha Delta University of Georgia Beta Delta Lehigh University Gamma Delta.- Stanford University Delta Delta University of California Epsilon Delta University of Chicago Zeta Delta University of Illinois Psi Delta University of Colorado Eta Delta University of Oregon Tlida Delta University of Washington Iota Delta Georgia Institute of Technology 278 Kappa Sigma BETA IOTA CHAPTER 216 West Fourth Street, Bethlehem, Pa. F. J. Lewis, X. In Facultate H. V. Anderson, In Urbe J. H. Diffenderfer, B.I. L. B. Kehler, B.I. John P. Shonk, B.I. Kenneth M. Raynor, B.I. J. H. Stoll, B.I. Ariel Wear, X. William H. Kelchner, B.I. Claude N. Wvant, Z. Albert Beebe In Universitate Senior Thomas Great Conley, Jr. Myron Turner Moore Joseph Budding Dietz Charles Lewis Rice Earl Helms Jamison John Harrison Van Dyke William Potter Wooldridge Junior Robert Burnette Adams Norman Winston Halls William Harold Bokum John Waddell Storer Leslie Carl Wolcott Soph o more Howard Cornelius Chadwick John Valentine Gibb Richard Joseph Fraunheim Charles Valentine Prior Frederick James Stephens Freshman John James Beans Walter Allen Raleigh Lucious Nichols Mills Thomas Henry Reed Arthur Harrison Phillips Samuel Thompson Shultz 281 • V . j j ji |; B . J! $ v •■' fc ! • . ' W % : ,. p ' ' :; ' ' Jsai ' • ' ' S ' l ■fe ' . «-- ; - A . ' K5 t W 6 4 u i UnVw H a liiHi |i|i OKI - ' ■■: , -«£ -j CHAPTERS OF THE SECOND DISTRICT Gamma Upsilon Rutgers Alpha Kappa ... - Cornell Beta Iota Syracuse Gamma Zeta New York University Pi Swarthmore Alpha Epsilon University of Pennsylvania Delta Beta Lafayette 282 @ H. J. Schrauff R. S. Rhoads C. A. Buenning B. C. Danzilio E. R. Fuller Phi Sigma Kappa NU CHAPTER Bethlehem, Pa. ACTIVE MEMBERS Nineteen Twi nty-four A. J. Hottinger K. Donaldson S. L. Hauser W. M. Schleicher P. S. Burt Nineteen Twenty-five E. T. Patton L. M. Washburn D. C. Brinser W. C. O ' Brien F. C. Barton H. Egolf E. A. Curtis G. V. Bunn N. D. Parker J. H. Shartle W. E Nineteen Twenty-six M. E. Randies J. E. Campbell H. T. Williamson W. E. Perry A. D. Shonk R. L. Trainer Nineteen Twenty-seven E. G. Bartoo G. L. Fort Roll of Active Chapters Alpha Mass. Agricultural C Beta Union Univ Gamma Cornell Univ Delta West Virginia Univ Epsilon Sale Univ Ze ' .a College of the City of New Eta Maryland luiv Theta Columbia Univ Iota SI. ■veils Institute Of Teellll Kappa Pennsylvania State C Lambda George YVashington luiv Mn University of Pennsy] Xu Lehigh Univ Xi St. Lawrence Univ Omicron Mass. Institute of Techn Pi Franklin and Marshall C Sierraa St. John ' s Ci Tan Dartmouth C Ipsilon Brown Univ Phi Sw.ul liim.re C Chi Williams O Psi University oi Vii Omesa University of ' alii Alpha Deuteron 1 niversitj t II Beta I). ' liter. in University of Mini Gamma Deuteron Iowa State C Delia Deuteron University of Mic Epsiion Deuteron Worcester Poly. Ins .eta Deuteron University of Wis, Eta Deuteron Universitj I N Theta Deuteron Oregon Agricultural C lota Deuteron Kansas State Ci Ka i Deuteron Georgia School I Techn Lambda Deuteron University of Washil Mu Deuteron I Diversity 1 Mo Nil Deuteron I. eland Stanford, Jr., Univi 286 sm Theta XI ETA CHAPTER Lehigh University, 111 East Church Street, Bethlehem. Pa. In Facultate J. S. Long, Ch.E., M. S. Paul W. Memmert E. H. Hollenback In Urbe J. L. Beaver, E. E. R. D. LaWando Gerald Sullivan, Z. Maurice 0. Woodrow Edward W. Gorhan In Universitate Nint t, t n Twenty-four Paul B. Fleck Herman E. Kiefer, Jr. Willoughby J. Long Thomas Maxwell 289 Nineteen Twenty-five Howard F. Miller Robert 0. Borden R. Duncan Cheel James F. Leib Charles D. Holzshu Robert N. Pursel Robert C. Dunn Jackson H. Schoenly Curtis S. Newcomb Nineteen Twenty-six Charles B. Roberts F. C. Seeman John B. Schroeffel William E. Murray Nineteen Twenty-seven Edward L. Krone Roy F. Scholl ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.. 1864 Beta Sheffield Scientific School 1865 Gamma Stevens Institute of Technology 1874 Delta Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1885 Epsilon Columbia University 1899 Zeta Cornell University ...1903 Eta Lehigh University 1904 Theta Perdue University 1905 lota Washington University 1905 Kappa Rose Polytechnic Institute 1907 Lambda Pennsylvania State College 1907 Mu Iowa State College 1909 Nu University of California 1910 Xi University of Iowa 1912 Pi Carnegie Technical Institute 1912 Omicron University of Pennsylvania 1912 Rho University of Texas .....1913 Sigma University of Michigan 1914 Tau Leland Stanford, Jr., University 1914 Upsilon University of Washington 1915 phi University of Wisconsin 1917 Chi Ohio State University 1919 p s i University of Minnesota 1921 Omega ... Washington State College 1921 Alpha Alpha Louisiana State University.... 1921 Alpha Beta ...University of Illinois 1923 Alpha Gamma Armour Institute of Technology 1923 290 f -.. ■' , Xip l 0? t:vi 6v Sigma Phi Epsilon PENNSYLVANIA EPSILON CHAPTER 338 Wyandotte Street, Bethlehem In Urbe James Hunter Wily James Alton Seacrest Edward Thevenet William Hurr Waltz In Facultate Fay Conant Bartlett In Universitate Nineteen Twenty-four Charles Mahin Alford John Ralph Milligan Carlos Alberto Fernandez Frederick Deppen Snyder Maynard Sampson Northup John Cassel Swartley, Jr. Nineteen Twenty-five William George Drury Frederick Christian Berg Arthur Carl Palmer ' Frank Janney Stott Stuart Buckler Hutchinson John Boyd Verlenden Edward Henry Ludwig John Wesley Waldron Nineteen Twenty-six Ralph Walter Best Herbert William Rich David Clinttn Buell, Jr. John Benjamin Reinoehl Joseph Palmer Forbes Francis Royden Scholly Richard Morris Kennedy Charles Reed Vennel Robert Caskey Winchester Nineteen Twenty-seven George Edward Furnival Edwin Miller Oswald Frederick Barnett Terry George Frederick Kennedy 293 Roll of Active Chapters Virginia Alpha University of Richmond West Virginia Beta West Virginia University Illinois Alpha University of Illinois Colorado Alpha University of Colorado Pennsylvania Delta..... University of Pennsylvania Virginia Delta College of William and Mary North Carolina Beta North Carolina State College Ohio Alpha.- Ohio Northern University Indiana Alpha Purdue University Neiv York Alpha.... Syracuse University Virginia Epsilon. Washington and Lee University Virginia Zeta Randolph-Macon College Georgia Alpha Georgia School of Technology Delaware Alpha.- University of Delaware Virginia Eta University of Virginia Arkansas Alpha. University of Arkansas Pennsylvania Epsilon Lehigh University Ohio Gamma.. Ohio State University Vermont Alpha Norwich University Alabama Alpha Alabama Polytechnic Institute North Carolina Gamma Trinity College New Hampshire Alpha Dartmouth College District of Columbia Alpha Geo. Washington University Kansas Alpha Baker University California Alpha... University of California Nebraska Alpha ....University of Nebraska Washington Alpha Washington State College Massachusetts Alpha Mass. Agricultural College New York Beta Cornell University Michigan Alpha University of Michigan Iowa Alpha ...Iowa Wesleyan College Colorado Beta Denver University Tennessee Alpha University of Tennessee Missouri Alpha University of Missouri Wisconsin Alpha Lawrence College Pennsylvania Eta .Pennsylvania State College Ohio Epsilon... Ohio Wesleyan University Colorado Gamma Colorado Agricultural College Minnesota Alpha... University of Minnesota Iowa Beta Iowa State College Iowa Gamma Iowa State University Montana Alpha University of Montana Oregon Alpha Oregon State Agricultural College Kansas Beta Kansas Agricultural College Oklahoma Alpha Oklahoma A. and M. College Wisconsin Beta ...University of Wisconsin North Carolina Delta University of North Carolina Washington Beta University of Washington Colorado Delta Colorado School of Mines Kansas Gamma .... University of Kansas 294 Pi Lambda Phi 195 E. Market Street, Bethlehem, Pa. Ninetet n Twenty-four Bertram R. Levy Philip R. Miller Nineteen Twenty-five Milford H. Cohen Nathan Levin Max Levitz Samuel Goldstein Fred Samuels Maurice B. Levy Jerome J. Polatchek Lawrence Rostow Nineteen Twenty-six Edward W. Pollack H. Victor Schwimmer Irving Broads Marcus Cohen Xinetei n Twenty-seven Milton Cohen Stanley Kitzinger Mortimer Eckstein L. David Luria Bernard Weynberg Roll of Active Chapters Alpha Columbia University Gamma New York University Delta Cornell University Gamma Sigma Pittsburgh University Lambda Lehigh University Theta Stevens Institute of Technology Zeta..- University of Pennsylvania Iota Yale University Eta McGill University Kappa University of Toronto Epsilon University of Michigan Omicron.. University of Chicago Mu West Virginia University Alpha Chi Rho PI MU CHAPTER 505 W. Third Street, Bethlehem, Pa. In Urbe William G. Barthold Robert G. Cook Harry B. Thorn Isaac M. Bush Nelson R. Reynolds Ransom Hughes Lee Trolin Allan J. Barthold A. W. Johnson Francis S. Astarita Frederick B. Dorton LeRoy A. Brown Theodore Cooke, 3rd John B. Allen Russell Ball William E. HigginbottomJames Byron Posey 301 In Facultate In Universitate Nineteen Twenty-four J. Arnold Todd Nineteen Twenty- fire James S. Hursh Laurence B. Kingham Hugh B. Rice Nineteen Tweyity-six S. Louis Huyette Paul W. Schmoyer Nineteen Twenty-seven William F. Feuerbach David M. Fulton Stanley A. Thomas Ralph E. Underwood William H. Weston B. Walker Wardell Oliver F. Zurn 3rd George A. Bachman, Jr. Alfred K. Kensing George J. Kuck Joseph J. Moclair Roll of Active Chapters Phi Psi Trinity College Phi Chi Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute Phi Phi University of Pennsylvania Phi Omega Columbia University Phi Alpha Lafayette College Phi Beta Dickinson College Phi Delta.... Yale University Phi Epsilon Syracuse University Phi Zeta University of Virginia Phi Eta Washington and Lee University Phi Theta Cornell University Phi Gamma Wesleyan University Phi Iota Allegheny College Phi Kappa University of Illinois Phi Lambda Pennsylvania State College Phi Ma Lehigh University Phi Nu Dartmouth College Phi Xi University of Michigan Phi Omicron University of Wisconsin Phi Pi Ohio State College Phi Rho University of California 302 J. D. Riley F. A. Hunter F. C. Beck C. E. Ash W. N. Brown J. J. Hartke J. S Clement J. H. Farrell Theta Kappa Phi ALPHA CHAPTER Lehigh University In Facultate A. C. Concilio In Urbe J. L. McBride J. A. Work F. Weiss J. Recapito In Universitate Nineteen Twenty-four J. M. Carol J. A. McBride Nineteen Twenty-five E. J. Garra P. J. Finegan R. J. Lucente Nineteen Twenty-six J. P. Hanlon J. H. Snuhart E. A. Jarvies A. R. Yisintainer S. G. Mastriani F. Esteves Nineteen Twenty-seven R. E. Fear H. J. Jacobs E. W. Kinn T. E. .T. Scott 305 Roll of Active Chapters Alpha Lehigh University Beta Pennsylvania State University Gamma Ohio State University Delta Illinois State University ID nrm Ray Kravitz Sigma Alpha Mu SIGMA KAPPA CHAPTER Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa. Nineteen Twenty-jour Walter Grossman Robert Lewis Nineteen Twenty-five Morris Nehemiah Alfred S. Krellberg Elheim Lang Nineteen Twenty-six George L. Sail Lawrence Timen Nineteen Twenty-seven Leon Weinroth Lewis Long 309 SIGMA ALPHA MU CHAPTERS Alpha College of the City of New York Beta - Cornell University Gamma - Columbia University Delta Long Island Medical College Eta - Syracuse University Theta.. - University of Pennsylvania Iota University of Kentucky Kappa University of Minnesota Lambda .... - Harvard University Nu Buffalo University XL... ....Massachusetts Institute of Technology Omicron... University of Cincinnati Pi Yale University Rho University of Illinois Taa _____ University of Alabama Upsilon - University of Utah Phi Washington University Chi - - McGill University (Canada) Psi .. Pittsburgh University Omega Toronto University (Canada) Sigma Alpha ...- University of Oklahoma Sigma Beta,.... Ohio State University Sigma Gamma Tulane University Sigma Epsilon Armour Institute of Technology Sigma Zeta Indiana University Sigma Eta .. - Purdue University Sigma Theta.... University of Texas Sigma Iota.. - University of Michigan Sigma Kappa Lehigh University Sigma Lambda - University of Kansas 310 TAYLOR HALL AND PRICE HALL m jm Section A H. E. Bonney P. F. Campbell C. C. Ayres J. B. Austin Chief: P. F. Campbell Nineteen Twenty-four G. A. Laux J. E. Ross H. G. Rogers P. E. Schwartz Nineteen Twenty-five A. R. Deck H. W. Palmer J. E. McKee W. C. Trushell L. C. Wurster Nineteen Twenty-six F. G. Rear C. F. Keller D. Maiese A. A. Moliter C. H. Law Nineteen Twenty-seven W. W. Kittleberger C. S. Pennington E. E. Lake A. H. Turnbull J. G. P. Woolley 312 L. L. Cupp, M.E. A. P. Di Giulian, C.E. Section B Taylor Hall Chief: E. L. Kirchner, Ch.E., ' 25 Treasurer: W. R. Drake, C.E., ' 24 Nineteen Twenty-four D. Focht, E.M. G. Hampton, Ch.E. L. Hornbostel, M.E. H. G. Robinson, M.E. R. H. Ewart, Ch.E. Nineteen Twenty-five R. Z. Gondes, Ch.E. C. K. Grieb, E.E. K. C. Wallace, Ch.E. C. S. Comstock, M.E. L. M. Dutt, B.A. Nineteen Twenty-six J. Jackson, Ch.E. E. J. Myers, E.E. J. H. LeVan, C.E. T. E. Robinson, B.A. J. H. Wintermute, E.E. 1 1 G. H. Beggs, E.E. C. W. Bowler, M.E. W. L. Delmotte, E.E. Nineteen Ttventy-seven D. De Mott, E.E. P. L. Weaver, N.E. 0. D. Goodfellow, M.E. E. K. Zimmerman, Ch.E. H. B. Russell, C.E. H. G. McGinniss, M.E C. A. Smith, Speci al Met. 313 sfeVr - - ?: H ■Section C Taylor Hall Chief: Austin S. Halteman Nineteen Twenty-four Leon N. Mandell E. Lehman Binklev Julien E. Fouchaux Edward M. Giles Samuel K. Glass Ira M. Bletz Rudolph M. Bush Arthur M. Canney Jouett A. Chacey Curtis V. Converse Nineteen Twenty-five Kuang Ming Chang A. Buckler Harris Nineteen Twenty-six David E. Griesemer D. Frank Hayes Austin S. Halteman Stephen G. Poliska John S. Harley Frank S. Rush Nineteen Twenty-seven George E. Furnival J. Mitchell Gray John G. Gualco Theodore H. Kemp Herbert T. Rights Charles W. Roberts Charles M. Sandwick Charles E. Sitler Nathan I. Tyler W. Bruce Wenner 314 William P. Canavan Robert S. Emanuel John G. Bowman Hugh T. Day Charles E. Dinky C. B. Flory, Jr. Harold M. Seeley Ralph L. Bloor Section D Taylor Hall Chief: John M. Robinson Nineteen. Twenty-four Rufus D. Feick Elbert T. MacGruder William H. Homemyer Walter S. Skeels John M. Robinson Xim ti n Twenty-five George A. Howland Robert C. Noerr James D. Ranson William A. Reid Karl Volkmar Nineteen Twenty-six Frederick C. Smith Xim ti ( n Tin nty-st V( a Robert L. Longstreet Edward McKenchnie 315 Robert I. Seeley Harvey H. Shock Walter S. Tvler, Jr. Lloyd F. W. Undersood John Shellenberger Blaine A. McCarty Section E Taylor Hall Chief: O. H. Saunders Nineteen Twenty-four L. M. Richards, M.E. R. S. Ritter, E.E. E. H. Strawn, C.E 0. H. Saunders, M.E. S. L. Sattenstein, E.E. Nineteen Twenty-five D. M- Swank, E.M. Nineteen Twenty-six L. C. Elliot, C.E. W. P. Rankin, Ch.E. Nineteen Twenty-seven J. W. DeMoyer, Jr., M.E. J. H. Garrison, M.E. E. B. Keller, Ch.E. J. H. Nichols, M.E. 316 F. X. Ratajczak, E.E. R. A. Broome, Bus. F. G. Anderson, E.E. F. Birley, E.E. C. E. Brown, Ch.E. H. Plauffhauser, M.E. H. H. Rapp, B.A. N. L. Krey, Ch.E. P. M. Liversidge, Bus. G. E. Loomis, E.E. C. E. Alwine W. M. Diener Price Hall H. M. Troland Nineteen Twenty-four W. N. Edson E. H. Richardson C. D. Forney R. C. Swartz J. M. Patterson, Jr. W. R. All sn L. A. Pineda Nineteen TioenUj-fxve C. W. Beggs L. S. Bergen V. M. Purdv W. M. Brown H. J. Henke Nineteen Twenty-six A. L. Henrv R. E. Loebell F. Monteverde I. E. Pierce J. L. Dancy J. W. Maxwell Nineteen Twenty-seven J. W. Brooks J. B. Diener R. M. Roderick J. P. Cox W. A. Gresh E. F. Schwab F. B. Cowan, Jr. H. C. Jones C. F. Walborn G. V. McGurl L. F. Guerrero 317 Leonard Hall Gordon T. Jones Frederick J. Pearson George Lorenzo Grambs Arthur Wood Walter Conrad Klein Harry Ross Greer Clarke R. Trumbore Fred W. Trumbore J. Thurston Travis John W. Watters Edward G. McCance Albert M. Holloway Gene W. Bentz James B. Roe G. H. Toadvin 318 Delta Theta W. D. Ayres J. Stewart Grim Nineteen Twenty-four Louis A. Laux H. A. Ingols Ninetet n Twenty-five H. Kenneth Philips Erwin S. VanNostrand Robert I. Seeley Albert E. Weissenbom Kenneth W. Y. Batz Nin ' eteenTwenty-six William W. Cottman, Jr. Raymond A. Shoup Robert C. Linck Worthington E. Piatt Alden I. McFarlan Harold M. Seeley 319 B ORUNIZATIoNS 1925 Epitome The Year Book Published By The Junior Class RUSSELL W. LEE EDITOR-IN-CHIEF 1925 EPITOME BOARD Russell W. Lee Editor-i n-( ' hie) Leslie C. Wolcott Assistant Editor-in-Chit i L. A. P. Williams Circulation Manager H. V. de P. Dykes Assi itant Art Editoi Associate Editors Allison L. Bayles Andrew H. Campbell 323 Llewellyn P. Cottman Murray W. Metten LESLIE C. WOLCOTT SSISTANT EDITOR-IN-CHIEF n L. A. P. WILLIAMS CIRCULATION MANAGER ♦♦S X Z iSd EPITOME BOARD z a - {K=t; « FRANK J. STOTT ART EDITOR ALLISON L. BAYLES FACULTY AND CLASSES ANDREW H. CAMPBELL  4S iX XX= EPITOME BOARD =XX :K=li+- LLEWELLYN P. COTTMAN FRATERNITIES MURRAY W. METTEN ORGANIZATIONS 325 19 The Lehigh Brown and White A Newspaper Issued Twice a Week During the College Year by Students of Lehigh University Edmund V. Bennett, t 24 Editor-in-Chief Charles M. Alford, ' 24 Managing Editor James S. Hursh, ' 25 Assist a )it Editor Leslie C. Wolcott, ' 25 Assistant Editor John C. Swartley, Jr., ' 24 Busint ss Manager Stanley L. Hauser, ' 24 Circulation Manager EDMUND V. BENNETT EDITOR-IN-CHIEF E. T. Adams, ' 24 J. B. Allen, ' 27 E. B. Ayres, ' 26 G. Bachman. ' 26 C. E. Barba, ' 27 F. C. Berg, ' 25 B. S. Galloway, ' 24 J. A. Covert, ' 27 Associate Editors W. F. Fererbach, ' 27 W. G. Fullard, ' 25 S. L. Huyette, ' 26 J. W. Maxwell, ' 26 W. M. Metten, ' 25 L. B. Miles, ' 27 R. C. Noerr, ' 25 C. H. Porter, ' 25 V. M. Purdy, ' 25 H. W. Rich, ' 26 P. J. Shaheen, ' 26 J. E. Shurtleff, ' 27 P. W. Schmoyer, ' 26 W. B. Wardell, ' 25 O. F. Zurn, ' 26 Assistant Business Managers W. C. Drury, ' 25 C. A. Buenning, ' 26 J. B. Reinoehl, ' 26 W. H. Thomas, ' 25 C. K. Zug, ' 26 327 i .-.. .. ' .•-,■: The Lehigh Burr A Comic Issued Monthly During the College Year by Students of Lehigh University Edgar T. Adams, ' 24 Editor-in-Chief George Hopkins, ' 24 Art Editor Russell W. Lee, ' 25 Secretary Frank T. Bumbaugh, ' 24 Business Manager Harry T. Litke, ' 24 Advertising Manager Taylor Cornelius, ' 24 Circulation Manager John M. Toohy, ' 10 Faculty Advisor EDGAR T. ADAMS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Editorial Staff W. B. Leavens. Jr., ' 24 P. E. Jedlicka, ' 25 C Z. Board, ' 2S A. B. Stover, ' 25 L. P. Cottman, ' 25 J. A. Myers, ' 25 R. C. Schwartz, ' 25 G. W. Bunn, ' 25 J. P. Forbes, ' 26 S. C. Kittenger, ' 25 G. W. Pease, ' 26 A. P. DiGuilian, ' 24 H. B. Chambers, ' 25 Art Staff A. G. Stott, ' 25 H. H. Seaman, ' 26 F. R. Keim, ' 25 B. W. Poor, ' 26 H. V. P. Dykes, ' 25 Business Staff W. F. Wilmurt, ' 27 C. K. Zug, ' 26 J. W. Maxwell, ' 26 A. G. Blake, ' 25 R. L. Trainer, ' 26 O. M. Corson, ' 26 J. J. Unkles, ' 25 P. N. Senior, ' 25 W. R. Smith, ' 25 L. A. P. Williams, ' 25 C. W. Nicholas, ' 26 329 Mustard and Cheese I Kl HE Mustard and Cheese Dramatic Association was or- jvjjgj ganized at Lehigh in 1885. Membership is open to all undergraduates. In former years, the club presented each season, one or two short melodramas, but last season they concentrated all of their efforts upon one musical com- edy, written entirely by Lehigh undergraduates. The per- formance was a notable success, with the result that the Association will no doubt continue this type of performance in the future. 330 Mustard and Cheese Dramatic Association (Founded 1885 by Richard Harding Davis) r. F. 0. DORTON PRESIDENT MURRAY W. METTEN BUSINESS MANAGER OFFICERS Frederick B. Dorton, ' 25 President Frederick H. Villaume Stage Manager Maxwell S. Rorabaugh, ' 25 Electrician Staff Murray W. Metten, ' 25 Business Manager Maxwell Glenn, ' 24 Musical Director Dan P. Hoagland Publicity Manager Prof. P. B. Fraim, ' 09 Graduate Mana i r Faculty Advisers Prof. R. P. More Prof. Sidney M. Brown H. Miller, ' 25 E. Gee, ' 25 B. R. Levy, ' 24 MEMBERS R. E. Underwood, ' 24 L. I. Kline, ' 27 J. M. Piersol, ' 24 R. H. Dagleish, ' 26 H. H. Seaman, ' 27 K. Donaldson, ' 24 331 Arcadia OFFICERS President R. D. Warriner Treasurer G. T. Jones Secretary A. B. Sayre [7£f| HE Arcadia is the student governing body, and its mffA membership consists of one representative who must be an upper classman from each of the living groups of students in the University. This body acts upon ques- tions of campus activities, and serves as a medium between the faculty and students. All recommendations from stu- dents to the faculty are made through this organization. The President of the Arcadia is the recognized leader of the student body, and he presides at all college meetings. 332 REPRESENTATIVES W. II. O ' Brien.. Alpha Tan Omega R. E. Underwood Alpha Chi Rho R. S. Webb Beta Theta Pi W. T. Behr Chi Phi B. S. Galloway Chi Psi R. D. Warriner Delta Phi A. C. DuBois Delta Tau Delea E. T. Werft Delta Upsilon K. T. Stelle .Kappa Alpha L. C. Wolcott Kappa Sigma J. M. Degnan Phi Delta Theta G. A. Haefecher Phi Gamma Delta W. M. Schleicher Phi Sigma Kappa B. R. Levey Pi Lambda Pi C. D. Forsey Price Hall H. G. Rodgers Section A. Taylor Hall G. Hampton Section B, Taylor Hall C. L. Binsley Sectioyi C, Taylor Hall C. E. Dinkey Section D, Taylor Hall F. X. Ratajazck Section E, Taylor Hall G. W. Hopkins Psi Upsilon G. W. Callahan Sigma Chi A .C. DuBois Delta Tau Delta A. B. Sayre Sigma Phi J. C. Swartley Sigma Phi Epsilon C. B. Mitchell Theta Delta Chi H. E. Kiefer Theta Xi R. A. Hawkins Town F. L. Horn Allentown F. A. Hunter Theta Kappa Phi G. T. Jones Leonard Hall A. L. Bayles Sigma Nu A. S. Krellberg Sigma Alpha Mu 333 Interfraternity Council Vice-President R. J. Buck Secretary Frank T. Bumbaugh President J. F. Rogers Treasurer H. T. Litke DELEGATES Alpha Chi Rho... - - A. W. Johnson Alpha Tan Omega E. Gee, Jr. Beta Theta Pi JR. J. Buck Chi Phi _ -E. H. Saxton Chi Psi E. T. Adams Delta Phi S. T. Mackenzie Delta Tau Delta J. M. Piersol Delta Upsilon H. T. Litke Kappa Alpha- H. E. Greene Kappa Sigma R. B. Adams Phi Delta Theta G. 0. Lunberg Phi Gamma Delta M. J. Callow Phi Sigma Kappa A. J. Hottinger Psi Upsilon G. E. W. Cornelius Pi Lambda Phi.. F. H. Samuels Sigma Chi G. Wentz Sigma Phi ...J. F. Rogers Sigma Phi Epsilon J. B. Verlenden Sigma Nu . R. H. Allen Theta Delta Chi F. T. Bumbaugh Theta Xi W. J. Long 334 Sword and Crescent Senior Honorary Society I ' n sidi at Richard J. Buck Secretary Jose M. Carol Treasun r Stanley LeRoy IIalser MEMBERS Edgar T. Adams. Jr. Richard J. Buck Frank T. Bumbaugh Jose M. Carol James M. Degnan, Jr. Stanley LeRoy Hauser Albert C. Mellinger Alwine J. Hottinger Charles F. Lingle Harry T. Litke John Frederick Rogers James L. Sanford William W. Springsteen Ruel Dexter Warriner Cyanide Club Junior and Senior Honorary Society President J. F. Rogers Vice-President J. M. Degnan M. Roth Executive Committee G. E. Cornelius Sergeant-at-Arms R. M. Harper Seer eta ry-Treasurer R. D. Warriner A. Sayre Seniors G. E. Cornelius W. W. Springsteen A. B. Sayre J. F. Rogers R. D. Warriner M. Roth J. M. Degnan R. J. Buck A. J. Hottinger F. T. Bumbaugh E. T. Adams S. T. Mackenzie J. M. Piersol MEMBERS Seniors J. L. Sanford J. M. Carol D. C. Luce D. P. Hoagland H. T. Litke S. L. Hauser W. J. Hoffman G. W. Hopkins Juniors A. C. DuBois W. C. Greer Juniors E. M. Burke H. G. Harmon G. F. Koegler R. B. Adams L. A. P. Williams M. J. Callow J. W. Storer F. P. Spalding J. R. Waltman R. W. Lee J. P. Langfitt 33(3 Scimitar (Sophomore Honorary) President C. W. Nicholas Vice-Presidi nt P. S. Anderson Secretary and Treasurer P. D. L ' HOMMEDIEU MEMBERS E. B. Ayres F. X. Bingle N. L. Bond B. W. Cummings D. A. Heath H. C. Hess C. A. S. McWilliams F. Mercur T. C. Rowley S. Scrivner C. A. Stillman L. A. P. Wiilliams 337 D Phi Club (Sophomore Honorary) President F. J. Stephens Secretary F. Mercur Treasurer C. H. Hess MEMBERS C. M. Prior R. J. Frauenheim J. R. Yeager H. C. Hendershott N. L. Bond E. D. Packenham H. E. Merrill 338 Sophomore Cotillion Club ' ■( suit lit Robert F. Fountain First Vice-Prt sidi ni George W. Pease Secretary Fred J. Stephens Sect ml Vice-President Nelson L. Bond Treasurer Davitt S. Bell MEMBERS Elwood B. Ayres N elson L. Bond Donald C. Brinser Cornelius N. Board Davitt S. Bell Russell Burgess William Burnham Ernest L. Bridge Francis X. Bingle Herbert Cresswell James E. Campbell Leonard H. Couch Clyde Davis R. H. Dalgleish Robert H. Dyson James A. Dyche Merle A. Evans Robert F. Fountain Graeff W. Glenn Harold C. Hendershott Charles H. Hess Gerald B. Henry Murray D. Harris Donald A. Heath John D. Light James R. Frederic Mercur Howard E. Merrill James R. Morris Frank R. McKenzie Louis G. Meurer Richard J. Frauenheim John R. P. Perry Herbert L. Phyfe Charles M. Prior William W. Purcell Edward D. Pakenham George W. Pease Edward F. Rigg Henry B. Rebmann W. Cordes Snyder, Jr. Samuel Scrivener Herbert H. Seamann William Swindell Philip J. Shaheen Fred J. Stephens Charles W. Nicholas Robert L. Trainer Robert B. Wickes Henry T. Williamson William H. Waesche Yeager Combined Musical Clubs President P. H. Stern ' 24 Manager H. T. LlTKE ' 24 Assistant Manager J. F. Leib ' 25 MANDOLIN CLUB J. F. Leib W. S. Tyler A. M. Gruhn P. S. Lum L. Rostow M. O. Cohen J. E. Fouchaux B. A. McKittrich P. H. Stern G. H. Bricher B. H. Reese F. J. Stott J. K. Keim R. L. Bloor F. H. Wilhelm GLEE CLUB P. L. Gerhart E. L. Robinson H. W. Robinson E. J. Kiefer E. B. Keller C. S. Wilkinson W. W. Scott P. G. Strohl Robert H. Dalgleish W. B. Mc Morris M. S. Aykroyd G. L. Grambs R. Neely C. R. Trumbore C. L. Smith G. L. Toadv J. W. DeMoyer R. J. Kasper W. B. Leavens W. H. Thomas C. F. Bridewell A. W. Canney C. S. Snyder F. B. Dorton E. McCance C. P. Fritch D. L. Swank 0. M. Corson 1. N. Sauerbrun A. L. Henry K. L. Hoffman ine 341 Lehigh University Band Musical Instructor Prof. T. Edgar Shields Lt mil r and Manager E. P. Hartmann Drum Major W. BURNHAM hibrarian M. E. Bishop MEMBERS G. J. Abel E. W. Baker J. W. Biglev R. L. Bloor L. B. Bond W. J. Bridegan E. L. Bridge R. A. Broome L. E. Broad J. Chacey C. F. Class M. H. Cohen 0. M. Corson P. K. Cressman J. B. Diener R. S. Emanuel R. E. Fear P. J. Finegan R. W. Fluck J. E. Fouchaux W. 0. Gairns E. M. Giles J. W. Gisreal B. K. Glocker G. J. Haefeker D. F. Hayes K. L. Hoffman E. A. Johnson ( ' . I. Kear C. F. Keller J. H. Knebels V. E. Knouse II. T. Litke G. S. Wood E. Loomis B. A. McCarty G. D. Long J. E. McKee W. B. McMorris C. E. Maier S. G. Mastriani W. H. Mell A. A. Molitor D. M. Mong J. R. Morris G. R. Moritz E. M. Oswald H. W. Palmer N. D. Parker J. C. Price B. H. Reese E. H. Richardson H. G. Rogers J. E. Ross L. Rostow F. S. Rush H. H. Sampson W. M. Schleicher A. N. Schultz C. E. Smith G. R. Smith R. Sparks W. C. Trushel R. E. Underwood W. R. Walck C. S. Wilkinson L. C. Wolcott 343 Y. M. C. A. Cabinet OFFICERS President D. P. HOAGLAND, ' 24 Vice-President M. J. Callow, ' 25 Secretary E. B. Hay, ' 25 Treasurer W. W. York, ' 24 MEMBERS R. D. Warriner R. E. Underwood H. G. Rogers C. M. Alford W. C. Greer R. J. Buck C. B. Mitchell R. C. Dietrick G. T. Jones 344 St. Paul ' s Society President H. Ross Greer Vice-Presidi nt F. S. ASTARITA Secretary and Treasurer J. G. Earle MEMBERS G. H. Toadvine W. deH. Washington R. J. Kasper C. A. Smith R. W. Baker G. R. Smith W. M. Applegate W. B. McMorris 1 1 HE Saint Paul ' s Society is a social organization for the gj0 purpose of uniting the students and faculty who are members of the Episcopal Church. The Society hears prominent speakers at the monthly meetings, and in addi- tion, students are often called upon to give short talks. They usually hold one or two dances during the college year for the entertainment of the members and their friends. 345 Lehigh Maryland President J. S. Thayer Club Vice-President Secretary T. Maxwell Treasurer F. G. Frey L. A. Laux MEMBERS L. P. Cottman F. B. Dorton F. G. Frey J. J. Frey D. M. Fulton A. B. Harris C. D. Holzshur F. E. Jedlieka G. A. Laux L. A. Laux J. F. Leib T. Maxwell W. E. Murray J. R. P. Perry F. C. Seeman J. S. Thayer 346 B. U. X. Founded by Asa Packer Antebellum Freres en La Universite A B r A E . H I K A M N Deutscher Verein P. M. Palmer R. P. More DIE EHRENMITGLIEDER C. D. Fox S. M. Brown J. M. Toohy M. J. Luch W. C. Thayer EHEMALIGE MITGLIEDER IN BETHLEHEM M. P. Solt, ' 08 H. Carroll, ' 22 H. F. Fehr, ' 23 H. A. Zinszer, ' 22 H. L. Weber, ' 22 F. W. Trumbore, ' 23 A. J. Barthold, ' 21 T. A. Lambert, ' 23 W. D. Mushlitz, ' 23 W. G. Barthold, ' 08 ORDENTLICHE MITGLIEDER Erster Vorsitzender W. H. HOMEYER C. F. Hiller P. R. Miller C. A. Fegley B. S. Galloway W. A. Reyer Nineteen Twenty-three Ziveiter Vorsitzender R. C. Swarz Kassenwa rt D. A. Parsons Nineteen Twenty-five G. A. Laux J. A. Maguire M. W. Brown N. J. Cook C. R. Trumbore F. H. Samuels Sell rift wart W. L. KlCHLINE C. B. Gallagher F. S. Lerch W. C. Trushel J. S. Ransom W. S. Roch 348 H. Ross Greer Vict -I ' i sidt at C. D. Q. (Lc Club de Quinzt ) Earl Bishop President W. T. Klein Secretary and Treasurer C. S. Fox J. M. Toohv B. R. Ewing Honorary Members H. M. Barzun G. W. deMonzes W. W. Perkins H. W. Palmer H. T. Dav Walter R. Smith R. S. Taylor Henrv Dvkes F. R. Neely P. J. Finegan Active Members J. H. Davie R. E. Underwood J. M. Tuggey W. W. Kemmerer T. F. Hiller W. F. Colclough F. J. Pierson A. Wood 349 The Chemical Society Vice-President C. W. Beggs OFFICERS President George Hampton Treasurer J. G. Law MEMBERS Secretary J. B. Austin Nineteen Twenty-four N. C. Carter L. N. Mandell J. B. Dietz F. T. Martin E. W. Gorham J. A. Patterson G. Hampton W. A. Rever J. C. Kitchen H. G. Rogers B. C. Light F. D. Snyder E. T. Lord E. L. Stauffer VV. S. Major R. E. Troutman G. Wentz Nineteen Twenty-five J. M. Akialis E. Lang J. B. Austin J. G. Law C. W. Beggs R. W. Lee M. H. Cohen E. H. Ludwig J. H. Craig J. E. McKee N. E. Douglass R. P. MacFate R. Dudley M. A. Nehemiah J. L. Everhart E. S. Nicholls R. H. Ewart H. D. Pharo R. D. Feick R. C. Noerr, Jr. W. 0. Gairns J. D. Ransom C. H. Geho L. Rostow R. Z. Gondos H. H. Schock A. B, Harris H. L. Siegmund G. A. Howland W. S. Tyler, Jr. A. A. Ingols L. K. Underwood H. K. Kerr K. C. Wallace E. L. Kirchner P. C. Wetterau 350 Ninetei n Twenty-six ( ' . N. Allard R. Binai W. M. Brown J. E. Campbell, Jr. L. W. Clemence A. R. Deck F. G. Ellis E. M. Giles J. G. Jackson C. F. Keller E. A. Johnson R. E. Loebell C. H. Nicholson J. C. Olwine F. E. Phillips W. P. Rankin W. V. Rathbone C. E. Smith A. P. Stover J. W. Waldron O. T. Zurn Nineteen Tin uty-seven R W. Baker E. M. Barrow R. L. Bloor C. E. Brown C. W. Brown, Jr. H. A. Brown R. J. Butz F. G. Chiles V. A. Concilio R. J. DeGrav F. M. Fisher H. J. Fister G. W. Hanna P. H. Heaton X. F. Jewell A. T. Nedewiski H. C. Jones E. A. Keller N. L. Keey G. U. McGurl A. A. Molitor W. M. Ortip E. M. Oswald F. W. Palm J. G. Ridsdale R. Roderich S. T. Shultz N. I. Tyler Van Home, R. H. R. W. Walker E. K. Zimmerman M. E. Kanalv SPECIAL J. A. Todd Electrical Engineering Society OFFICERS President E. W. Baker Vice-President Secretary J. S. Grim D. G. Luce Treasurer W. J. BRADEGAN MEMBERS Nineteen Twenty-jour C. M. Alford W. E. Knouse C. E. Alwine B. R. Levy E. W. Baker D. C. Luce W. J. Bridegam T. Maxwell J. M. Degnan W. C. Meyer J. F. Ferry J. M. Rice C. D. Forney R. S. Ritter P. L. Gerhart E. L. Robinson J. S. Grim S. L. Sattenstein A. W. Johnson W. S. Thompson W. Wehrenberg Nineteen Twenty-five W. R. Allen C. K. Grieb C. C. Ayers L. C. Krazinski F. J. Berger W. B. Leavens J. E. Bevan N. D. Parker E. L. Binkey L. G. Pineda W. H. Bokum F. X. Ratajczak E. E. Brown M. S. Rorabaugh L. H. Fister L. C. Wolcott L. C. Wurster 352 Xint teen Twenty-six E. E. Althouse W. M. Applegate J. W. Bigley V. H. Borneman C. A. Beunning J. E. Fouchaux R. Cetina D. F. Hayes F. G. Kear D. Maise R. C. R. March D. M. Mong H. M. Osborn W. E. Perry E. Richman W. W. Scott S. C. Seeman R. A. Shoup J. H. Shuhart C. R. Smith R. Sparks W. D. Washington G. H. Wintermute C. K. Zug Xiin It ( n Ticcnty-seren J. B. L. Alexander J. H. Kemp F. G. Anderson J. H. Metz E. D. Ashcraft I. B. Miles F. A. Birely J. W. Picking C. Britton H. T. Rights F. B. Cowan A. W. Sigafoos J. V. DeMoyer N. S. Spatz J. M. Elliott J. B. Sponsler G. E. Ewertz C. D. Tijerine T. H. Kemp L. D. Warner Mining and Metallurgical Society Vice-President A. J. HOTTINGER 1923-1924 OFFICERS President J. M. PlERSOL Secretary S. C. Hubbard Treasurer R. L. Davis Curators J. V. Danko S. L. Hauser Senior Miners E. T. Adams C. F. Clothier C. A. Fernandez P. Fleck L. D. Flocht R. A. Hawkins F. L. Hendrickson G. F. Jenkins R. Kravitz C. B. Mitchel T. Yuan T. H. Rakestraw P. W. Redline J. L. Remolds E. F. Sheetz W. S. Skeels F. C. Stille S. J. Urban R. D. Warriner E. Werft W. P. Woolridge Junior Miners C. W. Allen L. S. Bergen J. H. Croll C. E. Dinkey H. L. Egolf H. G. Harmon W. J. Jones R. A. Lambert W. J. Laramy P. Lawall H. P. Lyons O. P. Nicola H. Pittenger J. J. Polatchek P. N. Senior H. F. P. Su J. Waltman A. E. Wiesenborn Sophomore Miners J. F. Barnes K. L. Hoffman D. C. Buell S. R. Morris M. A. Evans C. W. Patty J. B. Godschalk S. Scrivener M. D. Harris W. C. Snyder D. A. Heath H. B. White 354 Freshmen Miners J. P. Cox D. Cunningham J. H. Farrel C. P. Fitch W. Gould L. F. Guerrero R. A. Harrier C. E. Humphrey A. C. Lynch E. McKechnie J. H. P. Miller H. 0. Nutting R. W. Richards M. W. Schaeffer J. W. Sinwell F. T. Bumbaugh E. V. Bennett K. M. Chang E. P. Hartman Senior Mets. W. G. Heske J. J. I. Jamison W. J. Long M. S. Northrup F. H. Washer Junior Mets. M. J. Callow G. R. Moritz H. B. Chambers E. H. Orr H. B. Moritz B. L. Rankin J. C. Siebert Sophomore Mets. M. J. McCormick M. E. Randies Freshmen Mets. Theo. Ake Bittrich Brandon P. C. Ely G. L. Fort J. W. Gisriel T. J. Wood W. E. Harvey J. M. Holmes E. P. Kost C. N. Schaub D. N. Uebelhart P. S. Wertman C. E. Willis Graduates C. A. Smith Civil Engineering OFFICERS President Paul F. Campbell Society Vice-President Secretary Andrew H. Campbell Atillo P. DiGiulian Treasurer John M. Coulton Nineteen Twenty-four J. A. Bugbee P. F. Camnbell J. M. Carol A. P. DiGiulian K. Donaldson W. R. Drake R. W. Dennis H. E. Kiefer H. T. Litke E. H. Richardson Nineteen Twenty-five J. E. Ross E. H. Strawn H. Troland A. N. Wiegner B. K. Wimgate J. G. Bow T man E. M. Burke A. H. Campbell F. L. Castleman J. M. Coulton R. H. Kinzie W. B. McMorris A. C. Palmer R. I. Seeley J. H. Shartle Nineteen Tiventy-six T. F. Tavlor H. W. Dietrick W. G. Drury S. B. Hutchinson K. Volkmar G. Bachman, Jr. L. A. Brown H. R. Burgess L. C. Elliot L. M. Fraivillig A. S. Halteman A. D. Harris A. E. Jennings J. H. LeVan R. C. Linck C. D. Long D. F. Manuel J. C. Price S. G. Mastriani H. L. Phyfe I. N. Sauerbrun F. J. Stephens W. R. Stevens Nineteen Twenty-seve) R. L. Trainer W. Swindells R. Weaver F. E. Estevez C. E. Walter V. I. Varga A. L. Visintainer K. A. Wright i L. G. Bennicoff R. M. Bush N. C. Castor C. F. Clase G. B. Grinwell R. L. Miller W. R. Welch 356 J. S. Miller J. G. P. Woollev C. F. Walborn Mechanical Engineering Society OFFICERS 1923-24 President H. G. Robinson Vice-President L. A. Laux Treasurer L. HORNBOSTEL Libra rin it T. C. Smith Secret aril G. W. Hopkins G. J. Abel L. G. Bond C. T. Cornelius T. B. Craig L. L. Cupp W. M. Deiner R. S. Emanuel G. W. Hopkins K. W. Batz A. S. King C. E. Ash D. S. Bell J. A. Bissinger R. B. Case W. C. Dewitt C. E. Barba L. R. Beck C. W. Bowler A. W. Cannev MEMBERS Niru teen Twenty-four L. Hornbostel F. A. Hunter L. A. Laux G. A. Laux R. H. Metzner D. A. Parsons L. M. Richards H. G. Robinson H. A. Roher E. A. Rouch J. S. Thayer O. H. Saunders T. C. Smith R. C. Swartz R. S. Webb E. T. Magruder Nineteen Twenty-five C. H. Porter P. F. Strazinski W. A. Reid E. S. VanNostrand T. C. Weston Nineteen Twenty-six D. E. Griesemer J. S. Harley E. J. Kiefer S. E. Kutz W. E. Murray J. B. Schroeffel Nineteen Twenty-seven M. 0. Cohen J. B. Deiner E. W. Evans O. D. Goodfellow D. B. Werntz E. P. Oswald A. I. McFarlan M. G. Pease W. E. Piatt T. F. Reynolds C. I. Kear W. B. Lair F. H. Lovell A. Ungerleider 357 Arts and Science Club Vice-President H. R. Greer, ' 24 President R. A. Heckert, ' 24 Treasurer M. E. Bishop, ' 24 Secretary W. W. Kem merer, ' 24 MEMBERS C. F. Hiller, ' 24 W. L. Kichline, ' 24 W. C. Kline, ' 24 T. G. Argens, ' 25 M. A. Stofflet, ' 26 C. C. Gorgas, ' 26 L. M. Dutt, ' 26 H. H. Rapp, ' 26 W. J. Laramy, ' 26 K. D. Matheson, ' 27 J. H. Knebels, ' 27 J. G. Wolford, ' 27 C. F. Heil, ' 27 358 The Robert W. Blake Society President Walter C. Klein, ' 24 Vice-President Robert A. Heckert, ' 24 Ralph W. Emerson, ' 24 Beverlv S. Galloway, ' 24 Charles F. Hiller, ' 24 Walter W. Kemmerer, ' 24 Frederick J. Pearson, ' 24 Milton S. Roth, ' 24 Secretary and Treasurer H. Ross Greer, ' 24 Warren W. York, ' 24 David H. Abel, ' 25 Paul J. Finegan, ' 25 Franklin S. Lerch, ' 25 Clarence H. Porter, ' 25 Clark R. Trumbore, ' 25 Prof. Percy Hughes HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. LeGrand R. Drown Mr. Samuel Weinland 359 ED Tau Beta Pi ALPHA OF PENNSYLVANIA OFFICERS President Ellis L. Werft Vice-President Recording Secretary Ruel D. Warriner George Hampton Associate Editor of The Bent Charles B. Mitchell Corresponding Secretary James S. Grim, Jr. Founded 1885 Treasurer Ernest W. Baker Cataloger Sidney L. Sattenstein 360 f D Tau Beta Pi FACULTY MEMBERS V. S. Babasinian, Ph.D. J. L. Beaver, E.E. S. A. Becker, C.E., M.S. H. E. Eckfeldt, B.S., E.M. A. A. Diefenderfer, A.C W. Esty, S.B., M.A. R. J. Fogg, C.E. W. I,. Wilson, C.E. J. A. Mease, M.E. C. R. Richards, M.E., M.M.E., E.D.B J. J. Early, B.S. in Chem. A. W. Klein, M.E. B. L. Miller, Ph.D. S. S. Seyfert, M.S., E.E. S. R. Schealer, E.E. J. L. Stewart, A.B., Ph.D. C. L. Thornburg, C.E., Ph.D. H. M. Ullmann, A.B., Ph.D. UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS E. L. Werft R. D. Warriner G. Hampton E. W. Baker J. S. Grim, Jr. C. B. Mitchell S. L. Sattenstein J. M. Carol L. A. Laux W. M. Schleicher E. V. Bennett A. L. Bayles P. A. DiGiulian G. A. Laux H. G. Rogers H. G. Robinson : ' , . :: ;:; ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Pennsylvania Alpha Lehigh University 1885 Michigan Alpha Michigan Agricultural College ....1892 Indiana Alpha Purdue University 1893 New Jersey Alpha Stevens Institute of Technology.... 1896 Illinois Alpha University of Illinois 1897 Wisconsin Alpha University of Wisconsin 1899 Ohio Alpha- Case School of Applied Science 1900 Kentucky Alpha State College of Kentucky 1902 New York Alpha Columbia University 1902 Missouri Alpha University of Missouri 1902 Michigan Beta Michigan College of Mines ...1904 Colorado Alpha Colorado School of Mines 1905 Colorado Beta University of Colorado ...1905 Illinois Beta Armour Institute of Technology 1906 New York Beta Syracuse University 1906 Michigan Gamma University of Michigan ..1906 Missouri Beta , Missouri School of Mines... 1906 California Alpha University of California 1906 Iowa Alpha ....Iowa State College ....1907 New York Gamma Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.. 1908 Iowa Beta University of Iowa 1909 Minnesota Alpha University of Minnesota 1909 Neio York Delta Cornell University 1910 Massachusetts Alpha Worcester Polytechnic Institute 1910 Pennsylvania Beta Pennsylvania State College ....1911 Maine Alpha University of Maine 1912 Washington Alpha University of Washington 1912 Arkansas Alpha University of Arkansas 1914 Kansas Alpha University of Kansas 1914 Ohio Beta Cincinnati University 1915 Pennsylvania Gamma ..-.Carnegie Institute of Technology 1916 Texas Alpha University of Texas 1916 Ohio Gamma Ohio State University 1921 Alabama Alpha Alabama Polytechnic Institute 1921 Pennsylvania Delta University of Pennsylvania 1921 Pennsylvania Epsilon Lafayette College .....1921 364 Phi Beta Kappa BETA OF PENNSYLVANIA President Natt M. Emery Vic -I ' ri sident MYRON J. LUCH Secretary Philip M. Palmer Treasurer Joseph B. Reynolds Honorary Members Paul de Schweintz George W. Weckersham Henry S. Drinker Raymond W. Walters Paul M. Paine 187 8 1880 1882 F. P. Howe T. H. Hardcastle C. C. Hopkins 1883 J. D. Hoffman P. A. Lambert P. R. Peale 1884 R. G. Cooke L. B. Semple 1885 W. H. Cooke 1886 G. R. Booth M. A. deW. Howe W. P. Taylor 1887 A. K. Leuckel M. H. Fehnel G. B. Linderman C. F. Zimmele 1888 W. L. Neill C. L. Banks A. G. Rau 1889 S. E. Berger E. Campbell 1890 A. H. Van Cleve 1891 F. C. Lauberburn E. A. Schnabel H. A. Porterfield A. P. Smith Harry Toulman G. McC. Wilkens S. E. Lambert C. M. Douglas W. J. Deck F. A. McKenzie 1892 W. N. R. Ashmead 1893 A. E. Spiers 1895 W. A. Lambert 365 George Stern W. S. Topping R. S. Taylor V. J. Bieber D. B. Clark Foster Hewett J. J. Cort H. E. Jordan Lester Bernstein W. L. Estes, Jr. M. R. Bick N. G. Smith J. B. Carlock J. B. Reynolds E. H. Finnie C. H. Jennings J. 0. Knauss C. A. Cause E. A. Aurand W. F. Bailey 1896 R. E. Laramy J. W. Thurston 1898 A. Q. Bailey C. E. Webster, Jr. 1900 Nimson Eckerot 1901 Francis DonaldsonE. B. Wilkinson P. L. Grubb 1902 M. J. Luch 1903 E. C. Pierson N. H. Heck A. J. Diefenderfer A. S. Gilmore 1904 H. J. Hartzog T. A. Morgan O. J. Haller 1905 S. H. Fleming Alan deSchwdeinitzN. N. Merriman 1906 C. F. Gilmore R. J. VanReenen 1907 R. J. Gilmore I. J. Freedman R. W. Kinsey R. L. Charles 1908 R. F. McElfresh 1909 S. R. Schealer W. R. Walters 1910 R. P. More W. J. Robbins 1911 C. W. Hasek 1912 P. A. Lambert, Jr.H. J. Williams H. F. Perry 1913 B. S. Shafer J. F. Beers J. H. Sheppard E. J. Boyer 1914 W. C. Owen Lewis Thornburg George Foster 1915 P. McKee Temple W. F. Roberts C. G. Lord B. B. Van Sickle R. L. Talley T. A. H. Mawhinev F. A. Vockrodt J. F. Hanst Ca.jetan Morsack C. V. Shank J. M. Toohv M. W. Kresge D .,B„, t 1916 J. A. Meredith M. A. Strausburg J. A. Wyler 1917 W. M. Hartman M. B. Messinger J. K. Lees 0. R. Rice 1918 W. G. Barthold J. A. Bishop H. E. O ' Neill W. Penman C. A. Wolbach 1919 H. D. Cinder H. S. Miller R. F. Johnson J. D. Sourber A. C. Haussmann T. C. Zeller 1920 H. S. Bunn R. J. Ott J. Herman J. H Spalding M. B. Tate 1921 C. R. Berner M. C. Schrader 1922 E. P. Gangewere A. S. Thaeler 1923 J. K. Ban-all J. W. Kreisel C. H. Miller C. S. Schifreen W. A. S. Boyer T. W. Schwab, Jr R. S. Pfahler R. H. Tilghman 1924 M. E. Bishop W. H. Homever W. C. Klein R. E. Underwood H. R. Greer W. W. Kemmerer J. C. Kitchen, Jr. A. Wood C. F. Hiller W. L. Kichline F. J. Pearson 367 President H. T. Litre Vice-President E. V. Bennett Secretary and Treasurer E. T. Adams, Jr. MEMBERS Nineteen Twenty-four C. T. Cornelius F. T. Bumbaugh B. S. Galloway J. C. Swartley Scabbard and Blade Joseph Anthony Maguire Ruel Dexter Warriner H COMPANY 3RD REGIMENT OFFICERS George Hampton Edward Werrey Gorham ACTIVE MEMBERS Wilson Gordon Borden Henry Ernest Bonney Murray Duncan Harris Willoughby James Long Clarence Henry Porter James Bliss Austin Allison Lerch Bayles Charles Wendell Beggs Charles Barto Gallagher Arthur Stanley King ASSOCIATE MEMBERS Joseph Dorst Patch, Major Inf. Robert H. Chance, Captain Inf. Marcus B. Bell, Captain Inf. Jessie Ellis Graham, Lieut. Inf. COMPANIES First Regiment A Company University of Wisconsin 1905 B Company University of Minnesota.. 1905 C Company Cornell University 1906 D Company Unive rsity of Iowa 1907 E Company Purdue University 1908 F Company University of Illinois ....1909 G Company University of Missouri 1911 H Company Pennsylvania State College 1912 I Company University of Washington 1914 K Company Michigan Agricultural College 1914 L Company Kansas State Agricultural College 1914 M Company Ohio State University 1915 Second Regiment A Company Iowa State College 1915 B Company University of Arkansas 1916 C Company University of West Virginia 1916 D Company University of Maine.... 1916 E Company State College of Washington 1916 F Company ..Indiana University 1920 G Company Oregon Agricultural College 1920 H Company University of Florida..... .1920 I Company Johns Hopkins University .1920 K Company Oklahoma Agricultural College 1920 L Company University of Georgia 1920 M Company Georgia School of Technology 1921 Third Regiment A Company Coe College 1921 B Company University of North Dakota 1921 C Company University of Nebraska 1921 D Company University of Oklahoma 1922 E Company Gettysburg College -.1922 F Company University of Vermont 1922 G Company .. ...North Carolina State College 1922 H Company Lehigh University .1922 I Company University of Maryland 1922 K Company Northwestern University . .1922 L Company University of Pennsylvania 1922 M Company North Dakota Agricultural College 1922 Fourth Regiment A Company Agricultural College of Utah , 1922 B Company ......... Syracuse University 1922 Football SEASON OF 192; Captain W ' m. V. Springsteen Coacli James Baldwin Manager J. Frederick Roger s Assista id Ma nagers Allen C. Dubois James P. Langfitt THE TEAM Burke— Right End Springsteen (Cant.) -Right Tackle Hoffman — Right Guard Roth — Center Hendershott — Left Guard Merrill— Left Tackle Sanford — Left End Lewin — Quarterback Jacobs — Right Half Back Storer— Left Half Back Greer — Fullback Littell— Tackle McGoldrick— Tackle Harmon — Guard Yeager — Guard Cannon — End Walker— End Lingle — Halfback- Stevens — Halfback Levitz — Fullback Prior — Quarterback COACH BALDWIN | r| OACH BALDWIN has completed his second year as L y head mentor of that big Brown and White Team. In his two short years with us he has shown us that he knows football and the results of this past season were very gratifying to say the least. With Bosey Reiter as a staunch supporter and Pat Pazzetti whose loyal enthusiasm and love for the game has helped the team through many a critical period, our sea- son next vear should attain its highest ambition BEAT LAFAYETTE. 376 CAPT. WM. W. SPRINGSTEEN Tackle n? lILL ' S fight and ability to diag- nose the plays of the opposing coafl team showed that he was entire- ly deserving of the captaincy. A tower of strength in the line and a natural born leader of men opens our eyes to the fact that in losing Bill this year through graduation, we lose a man who has been an invaluable asset to the team. S¥ MANAGER J. FREDERICK ROGERS H ma REDDIE , always an ardent sup- porter of athletics, ran the man- agerial strings without a hitch. His pleasing personality and enthusi- asm always was a source of delight to his associates. He managed the affairs of the team in such a manner as to satisfy all those concerned. 377 JOHN W. STORER Halfback a APTAIN-ELECT of next year ' s football team. Jack is speedy and is also an exponent of power and strength to the team. His punt- ing and brilliant work at the half- back position during the past season has won for him a reputation for being one of the gamest and grittiest of players. His end runs brought forth many a cheer from the side lines, and caused no end of fear in the hearts of the opposing team and their supporters. a WILLIAM C. GREER Fullback MORE steady and consistent player could hardly be found. Poss is one of the cleanest players in the business today. He is fast, and has the ability of picking holes and striking with such velocity that when a couple yards were re- quired to make a first down or a score, the outcome was inevitable. 378 19 MILTON S. ROTH Center fijj] I LT was compelled to drop foot- LpJ ball last season due to a physical disability. However, this sea- son he came back and filled the pivot position with a wonderful tvpe of football. W JAMES L. SANFORD End D IMMY showed up better than ever this year at end. He had a faculty for crashing through on the defense and stopping the runner and breaking things up in general. Smother him — it couldn ' t be done. Many a team has come to grief in trying to do just this because Jim always had his eyes open for any sort of trick formation. 379 § ' I II HAROLD C. HENDERSHOTT Guard H ED played his usual good game at the guard position. He could tear holes in the opposing line at will and also adapt himself to any trick formation an opponent tried to pull, showing that he had a thorough knowledge of the game. ¥¥ FRED J. STEPHENS HglTEVE Halfback also hails from Mercers- burg Academy. A hard worker and always full of that fight and spirit that makes a man do all he can and then a little more. Steve often got away for a good run. He is a second year man and if he continues to progress in the future as he has in the past he will give even a better account of himself. HARVEY J. JACOBS Halfback YEARLING is this man in col- lege but far from, being a yearling on the gridiron. Ja- cobs ' speed and knowledge of the game was a great asset to this year ' s team. With three more years of college foot- ball ahead of him he should develop into a great player. W¥ WILLIAM J. HOFFMAN IfKlHE spirit LbjJ tune sho Guard of Hoffman . Misfor- team when Hoffman was injured the week before the Lafayette game. Bill a component of strength, pow- er, and fight played his last year for the Brown and White. His work at the guard position was always un- faltering and Lehigh loses one of its hardest workers. 381 EDMUND M. BURKE End I j s I ED has played varsity football jjj for two years. The manner in which he held down his end po- sition this year was a source of de- light to all Lehigh supporters. At the kick off or after a punt one knew that Ted was going to be among the first to be near the ball when it land- ed. He still has a year to play and with his past experience he will be a great asset to the team next season. HOWARD E. MERRILL Tackle n OWDY hails from Mercersburg Academy. He is over six feet tall and with this height and 190 pounds of brawn he has been a source of fear to all opposing him. His abil- ity to play the tackle position is not doubted in the least which is shown by the fact that during his two years here he has been awarded the varsity L each year. 382 WILLIAM H. WALKER End 31 HARDER worker than Dixie L could not be found. Undaunted l a by failing to get into all the games, he swallowed his pride and worked all the harder. There is no question but that next season some aspiring end will have to show a lot of ability. W JAMES R. YEAGER Guard a sa EM has had terrible odds to fight against in trying for a varsity berth. The injury to Bill Hoff- man in the Alfred game, however, gave him just the chance he was waiting for. In the Lafayette game Jim held down his position in a manner that would be a credit to a veteran. With his past experience he will be a formidable antagonist to any opponent. 383 L £. v £-r Mb . 5 ?Jso. 5 HUGH F. McGOLDRICK Tackle a TACKLE who was in every play, always hitting his opponent hard. This is Mac ' s second year of football at Lehigh and we expect great things from him next year. ¥¥ HENRY LEWIN Quarterback 5 3 ONEY showed up well this sea- son. The manner in which he ran the team at quarter was a credit to him. He is fast and is known for his drop kicking, scoring the first points against Lafayette by his edu- cated toe. CHARLES F. LINGLE Halfback JpTlUDDY has had a jinx in college igL football, for he always has had more than his share of injuries. His determination and ability make him one of our best backs this sea- A 384 Review of the Season HAT same fight which has placed Lehigh high up in the ranks of foot-ball circles was again shown this year. That indom- itable spirit has won for her a place among the strongest teams of the East. As a basis for comparison of the strength of athletic teams, comparative scores are often used. In many cases they cannot be depended upon as a reliable basis for comparison, but on the other hand, they can be used with a fair degree of accuracy in deter- mining the standing of a team. On this basis, a brief discussion of the comparative strength of the Brown and White Gridiron Teams is as fol- lows : At the beginning of the season, Lehigh conquered the Gettysburg war- riors by the large score of 26 to 6. One week later the Nittany Lions of Penn State succeeded in piling up only 20 points against the battlefield collegians. Since Gettysburg held Lehigh to a scoreless tie in 1922, they were all primed to beat the Brown and White machine this year. On the other hand they went into the Penn State game with the idea of holding Penn State to a low score. These facts would seem to point Lehigh being superior to State since the scores against Gettysburg are comparatively the same and since Gettysburg entered the Lehigh game with a different at- titude than that with which they entered the Penn State game. Now, Penn State decisively defeated the University of Pennsylvania, which in turn defeated Pittsburgh and held Cornell to a 14-7 score, and according to news- papers, which are not printed in Philadelphia, Cornell was lucky to beat Penn. The next achievement of the Lehigh grid men which is favorable for comparison is the 13 to 6 victory over Carnegie. It is history that Car- negte defeated Pittsburgh, who in turn decisively beat Penn State in the annual Thanksgiving struggle between the two rival institutions. This strengthens the above statement of Lehigh ' s superiority over Penn State. On Thanksgiving Lehigh journeyed to the land of cheap turkey and defeated Brown, which means more than the average victory does. Brown had overcome Harvard two weeks previous by the score of 20 to 7, and they fought just as hard in the Lehigh game as in the Harvard game. Har- vard defeated Princeton and held Yale to a 10 to score. Lehigh ' s victory over Brown makes the former three touchdowns better than Harvard and since Harvard was beaten by Yale by only two touchdowns, on paper, Lehigh could at least hold its own with Yale. Although defeated West Virginia probably had one of the strongest teams in the East, but here again Lehigh can compare favorably since the former only tied Penn State and Lehigh was figured to be better than Penn State from one of the foregoing comparisons. Syracuse might also be considered among the most powerful teams in the East. The orange-clad grid men defeated Pittsburgh by a solitary field goal and here again the Lehigh-Carnegie-Pittsburgh comparison would show that Lehigh was su- perior to Syracuse. The superiority of Lehigh over the Army and Navy is evident from the Army-Yale and Navy-Princeton game. From the above figures, it would seem that Lehigh ' s football machine compares favorably with many of the strongest teams in the East. It must be remembered, however, that with football as it is played today, comparison of teams by means of scores is in some cases very misleading, and to assume them authentic would be pure folly. 386 Results of the Season Lehigh 29- -Gettysburg 6 Lehigh 0- -Rutgers 10 Lehigh 7- -Fordham Lehigh 13- -Muhlenburg 3 Lehigh 13- -Carnegie Tech. 6 Lehigh 7- -Bucknell 7 Lehigh 21- -Alfred Lehigh 3- -Lafayette 13 Lehigh 12- —Brown 6 Total 105 51 1924 Schedule October 4- October 11- October 18- October 25- November 1- November 8- November 15- November 22- Gettysburg Princeton Dickinson Rutgers Muhlenberg Open Villanova Lafayette 3S7 ©x@x©x©x©x©x©x@x©x©x© gJMsfe JjjSk Ps ©M©? ?© © ©X©X©X© ©X°©X© © k ©  X © X © Captain John Lees Baseb all SEASON OF 1923 Managi r Harry D. Gihon Assistant Managers E. A. Curtis H. E. Stahl Coac i James Baldwin THE TEAM J. L. Lees Pitcher Y. H. Walker Pitcher A. C. DuBois Pitcher W. Harwi Catcher R. B. Adams... ...First Base A. C. Mellinger Second Base J. O ' Keefe Second Base S. Bessemer ...Third Base C. Prior Short Stop H. S. Hess Left Field H. E. Merrill Right Field J. F. Rogers Center Field H. D. GIHON MANAGER Review of the Season HE baseball season this year was rather a disappointment, Lehigh scoring only two-thirds as many point ' s as her oppo- nents. Nevertheless it should be remembered that several po- sitions were very weak. The veteran Lees had to be relied upon again to do the bulk of the pitching, while the filling of the short stop and second base positions was left up to men who had to sacrifice their usual position in an unselfish manner in order to get the best possible combination. The opening game was played on Taylor Field with Vermont. The strong New England team won by the score of 3 to 2. The next game was played, away from home, with the powerful Prince- ton sluggers. They had already scored three previous wins and added one more to their list. Then came the strong Fordham team with that veteran Coach, Tom Keady at the helm and guiding them throughout the game to a victory by one run. It was a hard fought game and the winner deserved its honor. The Cardinal and Grey team from Allentown next invaded the Taylor Stadium. Lehigh sluggers showed here what they could do by scoring five runs in the first innings. Muhlenberg then tightened up, however, and held Lehigh for the balance of the game. Delaware, Swarthmore, and Seton Hall were next on the schedule, each departing from the lair of the Lehigh team with spirit broken because Le- high had scored three successive wins. West Virginia then came to the Lehigh Stadium with the determina- tion, growing out of a terrible defeat at Georgetown, to take their revenge out on some unsuspecting team and picked on the Brown and White to do it. Lehigh then journeyed to Worcester to meet the strong Holy Cross team and received a terrible wallop. After the dust had died down it was found that the Worcester Collegians had run up a score of fifteen runs to Lehigh ' s 0. Rutgers was then the guest of Lehigh and in a game that was marred by frequent errors, by both teams, the final score showed a tie of 7 to 7. Lafayette then took the first of a series of games by the score of 3 to 2. The game was played in almost a continual shower and finally had to be called. The Jinx still upon us. Lehigh scored an easy victory over Ursinus in the next combat and rolled up a score of 14 runs to Ursinus ' 1. Lehigh ' s heavy hitters coming into their own by amassing five home runs and several three base hits. March Field was the scene of the next struggle and Lafayette again showed her supremacy by a victory of 9 to 3. On the 13th of May Bucknell arrived to cross bats with the Brown and White. The latter team braced up their work, however, and scored a victory. Boston College was the attraction for the Alumni Day classics and furnished a good antagonist for such an occasion. COACH BALDWIN 393 Season Record Lehigh 2 — Vermont 3 Lehigh — Holy Cross 15 Lehigh 5 — Princeton 15 Lehigh 7 — Rutgers . 7 Lehigh 7 — Fordham 8 Lehigh 2 — Lafayette 3 Lehigh 5 — Muhlenberg 2 Lehigh 14 — Ursinus 1 Lehigh 17 — Delaware 11 Lehigh 3 — Lafayette 9 Lehigh 3 — Swarthmore 2 Lehigh 3 — Villanova 4 Lehigh 9— Seton Hall Lehigh 4 — Lafayette 18 Lehigh 4 — West Virginia 13 Lehigh 4 — Bucknell 3 1924 Schedule April 6 April 9 April 12- April 16 April 18 April 18 April 19 April 23- April 26 Apri May May May May May May May May June 1 30— Ursinus Gettysburg Muhlenberg U. of Pennsylvania U. of Maryland U. of Virginia Washington and Lee Dickinson Seton Hall Fordham U. of West Virginia Rutgers U. of Pittsburgh - Lafayette Villanova — Lafayette — Princeton — Lafayette — Bucknell Game away 394 Basketball SEASON OF 1923-24 CAPTAIN LINGLE THE TEAM Forward C. F. Lingle Forward H. C. Hess Center C. B. Gallagher Guard W. W. Springsteen Guard B. Weinstein C. L. Smith W. H. Lister C. M. Roberts J. B. Verlinden N. L. Bond Captain Charles F. Lingle Manager Edwin F. Sheetz Austin B. Sayre Assista7it Managers Michael J. Callow John H. Croll Coach James Baldwin MANAGER SAYRE 397 ■H ' . :i?- Review of the Season HE basketball team, captained by Buddy Lingle, started the season with an easy victory over the Moravian College quin- tet. This proved, however, only to be an indication of what was in store for the Lehigh basketball fans for the rest of the season. Seton Hall, Albright, Stevens, Villanova, Muhlen- burg, Fordham, and Temple falling easy victims to the ex- cellent floor work of the team and veteran generalship of the Captain. Rutgers College five were the next to visit the Taylor gymnasium and in a game that was hard fought by both teams Lehigh emerged by defeating them by the score of 32 to 21. The Lehigh cage men then journeyed to West Point where they suf- fered the first defeat of the season at the hands of the strong Army drib- blers. In the first of a series of games with Lafayette the Brown and White team defeated the down-the-river boys by the score of 33 to 26. Swarthmore and Rutgers were the next two teams to oppose Lehigh. Swarthmore was easily defeated and Rutgers finally nosed out the Lehigh team in the second of a series of games with them. The Brown and White team was then opposed by Gettysburg and, surprising to all concerned, the Battlefield boys furnished very stiff oppo- sition. Lehigh only winning by a margin of one point, and then in the last few seconds of play. The second game with Lafayette was played in the Taylor gym on March 1st and in a fast game Lehigh succeeded in taking the series by the score of 22 to 19. Season Record December 12 December 15 January 5 January 10 January 12 January 16 January 19 January 23 February 9 February 13 February 16 February 20 February 23 February 27 March 1 Lehigh 49 Lehigh 32 Lehigh 17 Lehigh 43 Lehigh 32 Lehigh 27 Lehigh... ......36 Lehigh .....48 Lehigh 32 Lehigh 30 Lehigh ...33 Lehigh 45 Lehigh 30 Lehigh 28 Lehigh... 22 Moravian 19 Seton Hall 23 Stevens 13 Albright 19 Villanova 19 Muhlenburg 22 Fordham 26 Temple 24 Rutgers 21 Army 43 Lafayette 26 Swarthmore 38 Rutgers ....38 Gettysburg 27 Lafayette 19 398 Wrestling CAPTAIN WARRINER THE TEAM 115 Pound Class J. L. Reynolds 125 Pound Class L. M. Washburn 135 Pound Class R. D. Warriner 145 Pound Class J. F. Rogers 158 Pound Class F. C. Beck II. T. Williamson 175 Pun iid (luxs E. M. Burke Heavyweight Class M. Levitz SEASON OF 1924 Captain R. D. Warriner Manager A. J. HOTTINGER Assistant Managers J. R. Waltman W. B. Wardell Coach William Sheridan MANAGER HOTTINGER 401 Review of the Season HIS review, owing to the time of this book gohig to press, must be based on the results of six meets. For the rest we can only prophesy and hope that we are correct in every degree. The Brown and White grapplers opened the season with the Princeton matmen scoring an overwhelming victory over their old rivals. Coach Sheridan ' s men showed the effects of what continuous expert coaching and hard work will do. Billy has instilled into his team that indomitable spirit and fight which is an integral part of every well-coached Lehigh team. As the season record shows Lejiigh emerged with a 20 to victory. The Lehigh wrestlers then journeyed to Annapolis to meet the strong Navy team and were defeated by the score of 16-11. However the results might have very easily been different had it not been for the fact that Levitz tore the muscles in his shoulder and therefore fell to the Navy heavy- weight. On February the 16th the team traveled to New Haven to meet the Yale Bull dogs. Here they succeeded in scoring the second victory of the season by the score of 16-11. The next two meets of the season resulted in losses to Lehigh, first to Cornell 11-9, then to Penn State 12-6. Our team, however, was at a disadvantage due to injuries in the 115-pound class and the heavyweight class. Lehigh ' s matmen then journeyed to Boston and won a decisive victory over M. I. T. by the score of 12-8. 1924 Intercollegiates EHIGH journeyed to Yale this year and came back from the inter- collegiates with fourth place at their belts. Dex Warriner was the only one to capture a championship this year and he did so in his usual manner of quick disposal. Rogers and Washburn, how- ever, took second place in their respective classes, while Reynolds grabbed off third place in the 115-pound class. Penn State won the team championship with a total of 22 points ; Cornell was second with 17 ; Yale third with 15 ; Lehigh 14 ; Pennsylvania 4 ; Princeton 3 ; while Columbia repeated last year ' s performance in fail- ing to score a point. The meet this year was one of the closest and most exciting that has occurred in recent years ; most of the bouts were not decided until the last second of time was up. Next year Lehigh ' s team should eclipse the bril- liant performance of this year because of the excellent material that will be available and with several veterans to build the team around, its suc- cess is almost assured. 402 Season Record January 19 Lehigh, 29 Princeton, January 26 Lehigh, 11 Navy, 16 February 16 Lehigh, 16 Yale, 11 February 23 Lehigh, 9 Cornell, 11 March 1 Lehigh, 6 State, 12 March 8 Lehigh, 12 M. I. T., 8 March 15 Lehigh, 21 Columbia,5 March 21-22 Intercollegiates at Yale Individual Scoring Falls Decisions Points J. E. Reynolds 1 3 14 L. M. Washburn 1 2 11 R. D. Warriner 3 1 18 J. F. Rogers 1 4 17 F. E. Beck 1 3 E. M. Burke 2 3 19 M. Levitz 2 10 403 Results of the 1924 Intercollegiates Class 115 lb. 125 lb. 135 lb. 145 lb. 158 lb. 175 lb. Second Place Carey, Penn State Warriner, Lehigh Naito, Penn State Black, Penn State May, Cornell Russell, Yale Unlimited, Batty, Yale Champion McWilliams, Cornell Chaxin, Cornell Washburn, Lehi gh Rogers, Lehigh Roberts, Yale Rumbaugh, Penn Atfeld, Cornell Third Place Reynolds ' , Lehigh Kilp, Penn Curran, Cornell Winters, Yale Lutz, Penn Platz, Princeton Burdon, Penn State Team Scoring Penn State 22 Pennsylvania 4 Cornell 17 Princeton 3 Yale 15 Columbia Lehigh 14 |f js2 i- ■ktSk W Vy L v L ! 4 «! COACH SHERIDAN 404 mmii Lacrosse COACH ONEILL THE TEAM R. Kutzleb Goal W. Brewer Point W. C. Greer Cover Point W. J. Morgan .... First Defense A. M. Gruhn .Second Defense J. H. Darsie Third Defense W. G. Fullard .... Center R. J. Buck Third Attack G. T. Jones Second Attack J. A. McBride First Attack J. R. Muzdakis Out Home E. D. Packenhan In Home F. Mitman R. MeKenzie Geo. Abel SEASON OF 1923 Captain J. Muzdakis Manager A. W. Hicks, Jr. Assistant Managers J. Boyle G. 0. LUNBERG W. P. WOOLDRIDGE Coach William T. O ' Neil MANAGER HICKS 407 Review of the Season ITH only three old men as a nucleus around which a Lacrosse team was to be built, Coach O ' Neill found that he had a hard task to perform. The season ' s scores do not show the work of a veteran coach but the determination an 5 skill and the fight which comes to a man, when he has his back to the wall, slowly soaked into the players. While only winning a few of their games this season, big things are looked for in the coming season. The opening game was played with the fast University of Maryland twelve. With so much green material the outcome was inevitable ; the Brown and White suffered a bitter defeat. The next game was with the New York Lacrosse Club and the Brown and White lads easily defeated them. Rutgers then visited the Taylor Stadium amid the color and enthusi- asm of the House Party festivities and suffered defeat at the hands of the Brown and White stick men in a very interesting game. Lehigh won the first league game against Stevens by the score of 8 to 0. Swarthmore and the University of Pennsylvania were the next two league teams to be played. But the Brown and White material was still not versed well enough in the tricks and fine points of the game to with- stand the hard playing and experience of two practically veteran teams of championship calibre. However, the game with Swarthmore was very close, Swarthmore winning by a margin of only one point. The University of Pennsylvania, however, scored 4 to Lehigh ' s 0. The undefeated Baltimore squad was the last of the league contenders. The whirlwind attack of the Johns Hopkins veterans demonstrated its su- periority in the second half and they scored a comparatively easy win over the Brown and White team. SEASON RECORD Lehigh, 3 University of Maryland, 9 Lehigh, 4 New York Lacrosse Club, Lehigh, 1 Navy, 10 Lehigh, 7 Rutgers, 3 Lehigh, 2 Swarthmore, 4 Lehigh, 8 Stevens, 1 Lehigh, University of Pennsylvania, Lehigh, 3 Johns Hopkins, 10 Lehigh, 1 University of Toronto, 8 1924 SCHEDULE April 5 — New York Lacrosse Club April 12 — Rutgers April 26 — University of Maryland May 3 — Swarthmore May 7— Stevens May 10 — Mt. Washington Lacrosse Club May 17 — University of Pennsylvania May 24 — Johns Hopkins Alumni Day — Lehigh Alumni. ( ) Indicates games to be played away. 40S s Track SEASON OF 1923 C apt a hi Donald M. Wight Ma nager Jamieson D. Kennedy Assistant Manager Stanley L. Hauser Coach Morris E. Kanaly L MEN Captain D. M. Wight Manager J. D. Kennedy J. C. Alwine C. M. Beggs L. J. Bray J. M. Carol F. H. Leister F. H. Lodge M. W. Roth J. L. Sanford H. L. Siegmund A. W. Springsteen MGR. KENNEDY 411 Review of the Season HE track season at Lehigh was a strenuous one. The indoor meets during the winter months resulted in a few victories. The work of Carol in these meets outshown all his previous trials since he placed first in several events and second in others. A. W. Springsteen and F. H. Leister also placed in several events. The Class of 1925 took second place; 1923, third place; and 1926, fourth 51 men competed. The Class of 1924 came out on top. Carol, one of five men entered in this class, scored 25 of the 52 points marked up for them. The Class of 1925 took second place; 1923, third place; and 1926, fourth place. The Dual meets started with Muhlenberg on April 14th. Lehigh won by the score of 67 to 45. Carol equalled the 100-yard dash mark of 10 seconds flat, made by Sproul of Lehigh in 1913, and broke the 220 low hurdle mark of 27 seconds, made by Aman in 1909, lowering the old record by 4 5 of a second. Rutgers then invaded the Lehigh field and handed the Brown and White team a jolt to the tune of 76 to 36. Lehigh scored heavily in the discus. The Brown and White team then journeyed to the Penn Relays held Friday and Saturday, April 27-28. Carol placed second to Laconey, of Lafayette, in the 100-yard dash. Lehigh defeated Drexel Institute on May 5th by the score of 89 to 28. Carol won the 100-yard dash; Captain Wight the 220-yard dash; while Siegmund and Fulton took second and third places in the two-mile run. One of the most evenly matched meets of the season was with the University of Delaware on May 12, Lehigh winning by the score of 70 5 6 to 55 1 6. The Middle Atlantic States Intercollegiates were held at Muhlenberg. Lehigh showed herself to be on a par with Bucknell, tieing them for eighth place with a total of six points. The next dual meet was with Lafayette at Bethlehem. The Brown and White team suffered defeat to the tune of 32 to 80. 412 Individual Point Scoring in Dual Meets J. M. Carol 64 J. L. Sanford ... 25 M. S. Roth... 21 L. J. Bray. lit J. H. Croll 16 J. C. Alwine 1G C. W. Beggs ....14 H. L. S iegmund 14 F. H. Leister 14 F. H. Lodge 13 A. W. Springsteen 11 D. M. Wight (Capt.) 9 G. M. Burlingame... 10 W. S. Tyler ... ... 9 A. L. Fulton ... ... 9 H. R. Talmage 8 J. R. Yeager 7 L. M. Washburn ... 4 1-3 C. 0. Burgess 4 H. T. Williamson ... . 4 N. Levin 4 R. W. Elmer ... .. 3 Geo. Hampton 3 K. A. Sheppard .. 11 , C. H. Porter 1 SUMMARY OF DUAL MEETS April 14 — Lehigh 67; Muhlenberg 45 April 21— Lehigh 36; Rutgers 76 May 5 — Lehigh 89; Drexel 28 May 12— Lehigh 70 5-6 Delaware 55 1-6 May 23— Lehigh 32; Lafayette 80 ANNUAL AWARD OF CUPS The Phillip L. McGrath Track Trophy, for excellence on the track was awarded to Jose M. Carol. The Theodore H. Meyer Field Trophy for excellence in field events was awarded to James L. Sanford. The large L was awarded Jose M. Carol for setting a new Lehigh record in the 220-yard low hurdles, doing it in 26 1-5 seconds in the dual meet with Muhlenberg. The for- mer mark of 27 seconds was made by Aman, ' 09. e Cross Country ffr jKSj SEASON OF 1923-1924 Captain Harry L. Siegmund Manager Stanley L. Hauser Assistant Managi rs Allison L. Bayles Francis S. Astarita Coach Morris E. Kanaly CAPTAIN SIEGMUND THE TEAM H. L. Siegmund, Capt. C. H. Porter R. N. Raine J. G. Ridsdale C. E. Barba J. E. Maxwell W. E. Piatt J. S. Askin iy r JL r Bl MANAGER HAUSER 415 Summary of the Meets November 3 — Triangle meet at Pittsburgh: Won by Lehigh, 38; Car- negie Institute of Technology, 39 ; University of Cincinnati, 49. November 7 — Dual meet at Bethlehem: Won by Lafayette, 21 ; Lehigh, 34. November 17 — M. A. S. C. A. A. Championship cross country run, Van Courtland Park, New York City: Won by Rutgers, 36; Lafay- ette, 39; Lehigh, 72; New York University, 87; Dickinson, 91. 416 w BL flUNMAK Swimming SEASON OF 1924 C ' apt a hi F. S. ASTARITA Managi r W. W. York Assistant Managers R. L. Davis W. G. FULLARD Coucll James Mahoney CAPTAIN ASTARITA THE TEAM Dashes J. T. Travis R. E. Freeman W. J. Pilat T. H. Reed D. A. Parsons L. M. Richards W. A. Raleigh Plunge W. F. Delong N. D. Dietrick Dives F. S. Astarita J. L. Childs D. P. Hoagland Substitutes E. B. Arnold L. S. Timen R. D. Cheel MANAGER YORK Review of the Season T the beginning of the swimming season it appeared that Lehigh would have a strong swimming team, but Fate stepped in with one of it ' s unheralded pranks and robbed the team of its Captain, H. G. Harmon, who was taken seriously ill with typhoid fever, and later of its coach, Jimmy Mahoney, who suffered a nervous breakdown. It was with the loss of Harmon that the Brown and White natators journeyed to Providence to meet the strong Brown University team on January 12th. The team suffered a stinging defeat by the score of 46 to 16. The next meet was with the West Point Cadets and in a meet that was filled with excitement and thrills, and only won in the last two events, Le- high was defeated by the score of 36 to 26. It was after the Army meet that Coach Mahoney was forced to resign, consequently Lehigh had to face Rutgers, last year ' s intercollegiate cham- pions, in a badly crippled condition. In this meet, however, the dashes and dives were hotly contested. Captain Astarita displaying masterful form against Captain Galbraith, Rutgers ' veteran diver and member of the Olym- pic team. This meet was lost to Rutgers by the score of 49-22. The Lehigh tank men were then opposed by the N. Y. U. swimmers and won an easy victory by the score of 54 to 8. Catholic University, the following week, likewise fell an easy victim to the Lehigh swimmers by the score of 58 to 13. Lehigh then suffered a defeat at the hands of the Johns Hopkins mermen by a margin of 13 points. The Lehigh swimmers then retaliated in the next meet by defeating Swarthmore by the score of 47 to 24. Season Record Lehigh 16; Brown, 46 Lehigh 25; West Point, 37 Lehigh 22; Rutgers, 49 Lehigh 54; New York University, Lehigh 29; Johns Hopkins, 42 Lehigh 58; Catholic University, 13 Lehigh 47; Swarthmore, 24 420 tjttorne Tennis SEASON OF 1923 Captain E. B. Beale Manager E. Sansom Assistant Managers Frank Childs L. C. Wolcott THE TEAM l ll E. B. Beale ■R. D. Beck PL ijLjfl F. Mercur 1 G. F. Koegler .cn r R P. Lawall mA MANAGER SANSOM 423 REVIEW OF THE SEASON The tennis team was one of the few teams to have a successful season. As in the season of 1922, the tennis team met some of the best teams in the country and, as the scores show, covered themselves with glory. TEAM RECORD Lehigh 2 Columbia 4 Lehigh 2 Montclair A. C. 3 Lehigh 6 Dickinson Lehigh 2 Michigan 5 Lehigh 2 Princeton 4 Lehigh 3 P. C. of 0. 3 Lehigh 4 Penn 2 Lehigh 6 Lafayette 1 Lehigh 5 Rutgers, 2 Lehigh 7 Penn State Lehigh 4 Geo. Washingl on 3 Lehigh 6 Lafayette 1 Lehigh 3 Swarthmore 3 INDIVIDUAL SCORING Singles Doubles Won Lost Won Lost Beck 9 4 9 3 Mercur 12 1 11 2 Beale 4 9 8 4 Koegler 6 7 6 7 Lawall 1 3 1 Soccer 9 i SEASON OF 1923 ( ' aptain C. A. Fernandez Manager C. M. Alford Assistant Managers A. C. Palmer C. E. Brooks Coach H. F. Carpenter CAPTAIN FERNANDEZ THE TEAM Goal— S. C. Hubbard Right Fullback— F. W. Trumbore L,it Fullback— C. F. Clothier Right Halfliack—F. Mercur Center — C. B. Grace Left Halfback — F. Huaman Outside Right — S. L. Nevins Inside Right — K. W. Batz ' titer Forward — C. A. Fernandez (Capt.) Inside Left — F. Walters Outside Left — L. G. Pineda D. G. Michelena M. S. Rice MANAGER ALFORD Review of the Season HROUGHOUT last season the Brown and White team, al- though unable to capture the much coveted championship of the Pennsylvania State Intercollegiate Soccer League, had a very successful season, winning second place. Besides the team in the last game of the season easily swamped the Lafayette team by a score of 5 to 1. The team was particularly fortunate in having Harry F. Carpenter for coach, who turned out a championship team for Lehigh last year. The Brown and White booters met and conquered such formidable aggrega- tions as New York University, Lafayette, Haverford (2nd), and Swarth- more ; but tied Navy and lost to the Army, University of Pennsylvania, and Penn State. Three exhibition games with local industrial clubs were played. These games, which were played in the earlier part of the season, gave the team a chance to discover and to remedy a number of weak spots. Throughout the season the team was harrassed by several minor in- juries. During the latter part of the season Captain Fernandez sustained an injury which prevented his playing in the rest of the scheduled games. This weakened the attack of the forward line, noticeable especially in the Penn State game. Before the team had an opportunity to gain much team work the strong Army team beat them 4 to 3. The following week the Haverford team was held absolutely in check, the Brown and White team scoring four tallies. Next the Navy team secured a 4 to 4 tie. Throughout the game Lehigh was in the lead but in the last few minutes of play the Navy managed to push over their last two goals. Early in November the team met University of Pennsylvania, which held them to a 3 to 1 score. Pennsylvania obtained their winning points in the last few minutes of play. The following two games with New York University and Swarthmore were won respectively by scores of 3 to 2 and 1 to 0. Then the Brown and White toe artists met a decided reverse at the hands of Penn State, losing by a score of 7 to 1. However, the next game, with Lafayette, was easily won bv a score of 5 to 1 on the Lehigh field. A decided step forward was taken this year by putting a second team on the field which not only gave increased prestige to the sport but also gave a number of men an opportunity to play who here-to-for have not been able to get in any games. Six games were played by the second team, two of which they lost and one of which they tied, the other three resulting in victories. With such advances it is to be hoped that it will be possible to place a varsity in the Intercollegiate league either next year or the follow- ing year. 428 October October October November November November 17- December 8- December 15- Season Record -Lehigh 3 ; Army 4 -Lehigh 4; Haverford -Lehigh 4; Navy 4 -Lehigh 1 ; U. of Penna. 3 -Lehigh 3 ; New York University 2 -Lehigh 1 ; Swarthmore -Lehigh 1 ; Perm State 7 -Lehigh 5 ; Lafayette 1 Junior Varsity October October November November December December 20— Lehigh 27 — Lehigh 7 — Lehigh 10— Lehigh 6 — Lehigh 8— Lehigh Y. W. L. Wanderers Y. W. L. Beth. Boys ' Club Beth. Prep. Germantown Boys Club 7 COACH CARPENTER 429 Cheer Leaders Head Cheer Leader R. D. Warriner Assistant Cheer Leaders H. T. Litke J. S. Grim Associates H. D. Palmer E. P. Jones, Jr. F. J. Stott E. H. Saxton R. W. Ross 430 Freshman Wrestling Coach Harry D. Gihon THE TEAM 115-pound Class J. T. Reed 125-pound Class L. S. Kent 135-pound Class.... R. B. Lewis 145-pound Class L. Long 158-pound Class... E. A. Keller 115-pound Class E. W. Evans Unlimited H. J. Jacobs RESULTS OF THE SEASON January 19 — Freshman 18 February 16 — Freshman 18 February 23 — Freshman 17 March 1 — Freshman 29 March 8— Freshman 23 March 15 — Freshman 30 Blair Academy, 8 Balto. City College 9 Navy Plebes 8 U. of P. Frosh. Cornell Frosh. 8 Columbia Frosh 3 Freshman Basketball Team Captain E. H. Schaub Forward C. H. Nagle Forward C. M. Schaub Coach F. C. Bartlett Guard J. H. Farrel Center D. M. Fulton Guard E. H. Schaub Substitutes J. G. Gualco W. T. Coombe W. V. Wilson E. M. Oswald C. E. McCombs 432 SPOAL ACTIVITIES June Hop COMMITTEE Frank T. Bumbaugh Chairman James M. Degnan, Jr. Richard J. Buck Robert H. Austin B. Allan Savre 435 University Day June, 1923 ORDER OF EXERCISES Music Prayer Alumni Address William Spencer Murray, E.E., ' 95 PRIZES AWARDED Wilbur Prizes — Freshman Year : Mathematics : First — $15, John Richard Pattison Perry, E.E., Centreville, Md. Second — $10, Walter Mitchell Cree, Bus., Pittsburgh, Pa. English — $15, Thomas Francis Reynolds, M.E., Bethlehem, Pa. German — $15, Paul Kreidler Cressman, B.A., Bethlehem, Pa. French — $15, Benjamin Weinstein, B.A., Philadelphia, Pa. George Davis Long, C.E., Bolivar, Pa.; Kenneth Anthony Sheppard, C.E., Bridgeton, N. J. Jointly $5.00 each. Price Prize in Freshman Composition, $25. No award. Wilbur Scholarship, Sophomore Year, $200, Allison Lerch Bayles, M.E., Charleston, S. C. Wilbur Prizes, Sophomore Year : Mathematics — $10, Lee Harold Fister, E.E., Reading, Pa. English — $10, Franklin Stewart Lerch, B.A., Freemansburg, Pa. Physics — $10, Ralph Arthur Lambert, E.M., Bethlehem, Pa. Alumni Prizes, Junior Year, two of $25 each this year to C.E. and M.E. students : Civil Engineering — Robert William Ennis, C.E., Mt. Penn., Pa. Mechanical Engineering — Louis Albert Laux, M.E., Baltimore, Md. The John B. Carson Prize, $50, best C.E. Thesis: Charles Fletcher Forstall, Rosemont, Pa., and Louis John Jacobson, Washington, D. C. $25 jointly. The William H. Chandler Chemistry Prizes, $25 each : 1. Freshman Year — Joseph Gray Jackson, Ch.E., Bala, Pa. 2. Sophomore Year — JAMES Bliss AUSTIN, Ch.E., Chicago, 111. 3. Junior Year — John C. Kitchen, Jr., Ch.E., Columbia, N. J. 4. Senior Year — Charles Heck Miller, Ch.E., Philadelphia, Pa. The Electrical Engineering Prize, $25, best E.E. Thesis: Clement Solomon Schifreen, E.E., Catasauqua, Pa. Tau Beta Pi Prize, Highest Technical Freshman : Joseph Gray Jackson, Ch.E., Bala, Pa. 436 HONOR MEN S( tlior Honors College of Arts and Science: First — John Kenneth Barrall, Allentown, Pa. Second — John Werner Kreisel, Pen Argyl, Pa. College of Business Administration: First — William Joseph Henry Steiner, New York, N. Y. Second — Charles Abbott Voss, Brooklyn, N. Y. College of Engineering: C.E. Course: First — Charles Raymond Wire, Washington, D. C. Second — John Harold Van Ness, Paterson, N. J. M.E. Course: First — Richard Haughton Tilghman, Overlea, Md. Second — Edwin Alden Ferris, Ridgefield Park, N. J. Met. and E.M. Course: First — Robert Gair Pfahler, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. E.E. Course: First — Clement Solomon Schifreen, Catasauqua, Pa. Second — Edwin Frederick Rieman, Tamaqua, Pa. Chem. and Ch.E. Course: First — Charles Heck Miller, Philadelphia, Pa. Second — Alfred George Hewitt, Washington, D. C. N.E. Course: First — Joseph Coblentz Groff, New York, N. Y. Junior Honors College of Arts and Science: First — Charles Francis Hiller, B.A., Buchanan, Mich. Second — Frederick Joseph Pearson, B.A., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. College of Business Administration: First — Paul Shafter Burt, Bus., Washington, D. C. Second — Warren Webster York, Bus., Scranton, Pa. College of Engineering: C.E. Course: First — Robert William Ennis, Mt. Penn, Pa. Second — William Robert Drake, Reading, Pa. M.E. Course: First — Louis Albert Laux, Baltimore, Md. Second — Laylon Lavern Cupp, Baltimore, Md. Met. and E.M. Course: First — Charles Bayard Mitchell, E.M., Woodburv, N. J. E.E. Course: First — Ernest Wellington Baker, Harrisburg, Pa. Second — James Stewart Grim, Jr., Kutztown. Pa. Chem. and Ch.E. Course: First — John C. Kitchen, Jr.. Columbia, N. J. Second — George Hampton, Bridgeton, N. J. 437 Sophomore Honors Mathematics : First — Lee Harold Fister, E.E., Reading, Pa. Second — Ralph Arthur Lambert, E.M., Bethlehem, Pa. English: First — Franklin Stewart Lerch, B.A., Freemansburg, Pa. Second — Henri Victor DePuis Dykes, B.A., Bethlehem, Pa. Physics : First — Ralph Arthur Lambert, E.M., Bethlehem, Pa. Second — James Bliss Austin, Ch.E., Chicago, 111. Mathematics First- Second- English : First- Second German : First- Second- Freshman Honors John Richard Pattison Perry, E.E., Centreville, Md. — Walter Mitchell Cree, Bus., Pittsburgh, Pa. Thomas Francis Reynolds, M.E., Bethlehem, Pa. —Joseph Peter Bachman, Jr., Bus., Allentown, Pa. Paul Kreidler Cressman, B.A. — Hartland Law, Ch.E., Camden, N. J., and Joseph Gray Jackson, Ch.E., Bala, Pa. French : First- -Benjamin Weinstein, B.A., Philadelphia, Pa. George Davis Long, C.E., Bolivar, Pa. Kenneth Anthony Sheppard, C.E., Bridgeton, N. Tied. Second — Julian Ellis Fouchaux, E.E., Paterson, N. J. Founder ' s Day October 6, 1923 ORDER OF EXERCISES Organ Prelude — Triumphal March..... Costa Hymn Reading of Scriptures — Ecclesiasticus XLIV:1-15 Prayer Music — Serenade Federlein Address — Liberal and Professional Education Dean Charles Maxwell McConn Conferring of Degrees Alma Mater Benediction Organ Postlude — Toccata Bartlett CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES Master of Arts Howard James Yeager, A. P.. Emaus, Pa. Franklin and Marshall Collegt Bach lor of Sci( na Stephen Joseph Bessemer Bethlehem, Pa. Thomas Vincent Ganey Bethlehem, Pa. ( ' ivil Engint t r Friend Horace Lodge Philadelphia, Pa. Electrical Engineer Frank Elliott Ferguson, Jr. Washington, D. C. John Douglas McPherson, 3d Fair Oaks, Cal. Mechanical Engineer Richard Kutzleb, Jr. Baltimore, Md. Engineer of Mim s Everett Judd Decker Mountain Lakes, N. J. Carlos Alphonso Freeman Caracas, Venezuela Frederick Snyder Mitman Bethlehem, Pa, .1 i tallurgical Engineer John Edgar Erb Middletown, Pa. 439 w XJ ! W£a 3£S 3£3t=S=feCSSS=£ ffi Fraternity Dances © HIS year more than ever before the fraternities at Lehigh have reverted to the time-old custom of giv- ing dances throughout the year. As they were al- most evenly distributed, the students at Lehigh have enjoyed one of the most successful social seasons in the history of Lehigh. Most of the dances have been sumptu- ous affairs, no expense being spared in making each dance better than the other. The following fraternities gave dances this year: Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Nu Sigma Chi Theta Delta Alpha Chi Rho Chi Psi Delta Upsilon Kappa Sigma Chi jfiSMHj=8=iSJ=3J=3S=S«WMH3=WJ=S! S=S=3 =S5 S=iPS«W5®i HL 19 D)e dEpttome TICINOWLEDGMENT The Board takes this opportunity to thank The Read-Taylor Press of Baltimore, Md., our printers and en- gravers, for their wonderful co-opera- tion and efficient service. To the Canton Engraving and Electrotype Company of Canton, Ohio, our engravers, is due thanks for their splendid assistance in sup- plying the cuts. To William G. McCaa, our Official photographer, thanks are due for his valuable services in supplying the Board with pictures and photo- graphs. Lehigh University Lehigh University offers the following courses: College of Arts and Science: The Curriculum in Arts and Science. College of Business Administration: The Curriculum in Business Adminis- tiation. College of Engineering: 1. The Curriculum in Civil Engi- neering. 2. The Curriculum in Mechanical Engineering. 3. The Curriculum in Metallurgy. 4. The Curriculum in Mining Engi- neering. 5. The Curriculum in Electrical En- gineering 6. The Curriculum in Chemistry. 7. The Curriculum in Chemical En- gineering. 8. The Curriculum in Marine Engi- neering and Transportation. For further information, address The Dean Originals and Reproductions In Walnut and Mahogany for the Living Room, Hall and Dining Room Kittinger Co. BUFFALO Physical Chemical Apparatus 13 HYS1CAL Chemical Tests are becoming daily more important in the routine laboratory work. We are headquarters for Balances; Spe- cific Gravity Apparatus; Molecular Weight Apparatus , including Boiling Point, Freezing Point, and Drop Weight Apparatus; Pyrometers, Spec- troscopes; Thermostats; Viscosimeters; etc., also for Electrodes; Con- ductivity Cells: various forms of Electrical Testing Apparatus; Special Apparatus, as listed in Findlay and other textbooks, etc. ESTABLISHED 185 1 Eimer Amend FOUNDED 185 1 NEW YORK CITY Third Avenue, 18th to 19th Street PITTSBURGH BRANCH 8085 Jenkins Arcade Bethlehem Steel Company i . I TAPPING A TILTING OPEN HEARTH FURNACE PLANTS AT Bethlehem, Reading, Lebanon, Steelton, Johnstown, and Coatesville, Penna. Sparrow ' s Point and Baltimore, Md. Lackawanna, N. Y. GENERAL OFFICES Bethlehem, Pa. SALES OFFICES New York Boston Philadelphia Baltimore Washington Atlanta Pittsburgh Buffalo Cleveland Cincinnati Detroit Chicago St. Louis San Francisco ESTABLISHED 1618 GnttlemenS Jfurtustjini) Ipbobs, MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Telephone Mum,, Hill SSOO Clothing Ready made or to Measure Evening Clothes, Cutaways, Sack Suits Sporting Clothes, Overcoats, Ulsters English is: Domestic Hats k Furnishings Hoots (Sc Shoes for Dress, Street and Sport Trunks, Hags is: Leather Goods Send for Historic American Bui Jingj BOSTON Tremontcor. Boylston NEWPORT 220 Bellevue Avenue BETHLEHEM FOUNDRY MACHINE COMPANY General Founders and Machinists W. A. WILBUR, President J. GEORGE LEHMAN, 1st Vice-Pres. Gen ' l Mgr. ROB ' T E. WILBUR, 2nd Vice-President I. E. KRAUSE, Secretary Treasurer Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Fort Pitt Bridge Works OF PITTSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA Structural S T E E L BRIDGES BUILDINGS GREY IRON CASTINGS General Offices — 20th Floor , Oliver Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Works — Canonsburg, Pa. New York Office — Park Row Building, New York Chicago Office — Ashland Building, Chicago Cleveland Office Bulkley Building, Cleveland For College Men $35 to $65 y tn. h i ii ■ — 564 Main Street SUN INN BUILDING Lehigh Smoke Shop and Shoe Shine Parlor THE BEST IN TOWN WE HANDLE ALL HIGH GRADE Tobaccos Magazines Sunday Newspapers BROADWAY at FOURTH ST. Bethlehem (S.S.), Pa. For Drugs Medicines and Prescriptions EDWIN H. YOUNG BROADWAY and FOURTH ST. E. P. WILBUR TRUST COMPANY BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA PEOPLES BRANCH— 4th New Streets WEST SIDE OFFICE— 606 W. BROAD ST. WARREN A. WILBUR, Chairman of Board FREDERICK A. HEIM, President ELDREDGE P. WILBUR, Vice-President and Trust Officer DUDLEY C. RYMAN, Secretary and Treasurer CHAS. A. BRAMWELL, Asst. Secretary and Treasurer HERBERT J. HARTZOG, Title Officer and Counsel EDWIN D. MILL, Asst. Title Officer The School of Experience teaches slowly but well. Some things can only be learned through experience. The wise handling of money is one of these. The First National Bank offers you its co-operation in this connection. Our Officers will always be glad to advise you on financial matters, and we invite your checking or 3 ' Savings Accounts in any amounts. The First National Bank BETHLEHEM, PA. R. S. TAYLOR, President R. P. HUTCHINSON, Vic THOS. F. KE1M, Cashier F. !. KL1NKER, Assistant Cashier JESSE M. BODDER, Assistant Cashier M. EDW. FULMER, Trust Officer CAPITAL SURPLUS $800,000 ATTENTION YOU ARE INVITED TO VISIT THIS ESTAE USHMENT AND REVIEW THE CLOTHES AND HABERDASHERY PRESENTED BY FINCHLEY DEVELOPED AND SELECTED TO MEET. PRECISELY. THE DESIRES ND REQUIREMENTS Of COLLEGI HEN KSADY-TO-PUT-ON TAILO tF.n TO HI FORTYFIVE DOLLARS w.w U0X£ LPM€LMiE¥ 5We t 46th. Street NEW YORK 523 Fifth Ave ESTABLISHED 1863 Phillips Mine and Mill Supply Company MANUFACTURERS OF Mine and Coke Works Equipment South 23rd and 24th, Mary and Jane Streets Pittsburgh, Pa.. U. S. A. ONE OF OUR SPECIALTIES IS THE Phillips Automatic Cross Over Dump The most compact and strongest Dump made Guaranteed not to get out of order. Capacity Practically Unlimited The Entire Coal Output of the World could be handled by the Phillips Dumps already installed if run to their capacity LET US SUBMIT PLANS AND ESTIMATES E. Keller Sons Jewelers - Silversmiths - Stationers 711 HAMILTON STREET ALLENTOWN, PA. ■■■FERALUN Jfa1i Stip Treads SAFETY TREADS Lpprnximately 15,000 people are killed In the United States each year by falls. The economic waste from this - ' ce is over $140,000,000 About one third of the Palls are prevenl able bv the use i safety treads. The selection of the type . r safety treads Is ii tant. Treads «iili a series of grooves parallel i the nosing edge, that are porous, that cor- rode readily, that have les falsely giving the Impress! f Bafety feature not possessed hoii lil be avoided. Be sun- the Safety Tread you adopt is SAFE: that it is not a germ Incubator, ab- sorbent, easily stained: that ii lias no eye- confusing and heel-catching grooves; :i ' i that it does not deteriorate on account of FERALUN, AM MAI. IN BRONZALUN tr, American Abrasive Metals Company 50 CHURCH ST. NEW YORK, N. Y. QUALITY SERVICE. TREXLER Allentown, Pa. LUMBER— COAL— MILLWORK The Dravo Contracting Company PITTSBURGH Difficult Foundations, River and Harbor Improvement Bridge Piers and Dams, Mining Plant Construction Shafts, Slopes and Tunnels ASSOCIATED WITH THE COMPANY F. R. Dravo, ' 87 E. T. Gott. 06 E. M. Enslin, ' 22 R. M. Dravo, ' 89 L. C. Zollinger, 09 R. R. Rhoad, ' 11 J. D. Berg, ' 05 V. B. Edwards, - 1 1 Dravo-Doyle Company PITTSBURGH CLEVELAND INDIANAPOLIS PHILADELPHIA Steam and Hydraulic Equipment, Complete Power Plant, Water Works Installations ASSOCIATED WITH THE COMPANY F. R. Dravo, ' 87 R. M. Dravo, ' 89 S. P. Felix, ' 03 J. D. Berg, ' 05 E. W. Estes, ' 20 J. R. Farrington, ' 22 ' •■' - m :-— —,., r vi+ 1 tic Paul B. Huyette Co. j mc. 18th MARKET STS. PHILADELPHIA Reliance Safety Water Columns Manzel Force Feed Oil Pumps Rel.ance Steam Taps Kellogg Radial Brick Chimneys PBH Chain Operated Water Gauges Boiler Firing Tools PBH Chain Operated Weighted Gauge A-Jacks Damper Regulator Cocks A-Jack Control Valves PBH Gauge Glass Protector Engineers Favorite Tube Scrapers PBH Airtite for Bo.ler Furnace Walls Babbitt Adjustable Sprocket Rims Tornado Boiler Flue Blower Spizzerinktum Boiler Metal Treatment Hays Gas Analysis Instruments Hays Automatic Gas Collectors Hays Draft Gauges Hays Automatic CO- ' Draft Recorders Gauge Glasses Sonderglass Sims Oil Filters Pyrometers, Thermometers, Gauges (Indicating and Recording) Okadee Blow Off Valve The BETHLEHEM JOHNNIE ' S NATIONAL BANK BARBER SHOP Third and Adams Streets BETHLEHEM, PA. Adam Brinker President Osman F. Reinhard Vice-Pres. Trust Officer £ Chas. P. Hoffman Vice-President m Phil p J. Byrne Cashier Fred T. Beckel Asst. Cashier Resources Over $7,000,000.00 Capital, Surplus and Profits $650,000.00 Next to Globe Building 1! ■■.• • ' m — McClintic -Marsh all Company PITTSBURGH ENGINEERS, MANUFACTURERS AND ERECTORS OF STEEL STRUCTURES =5® WORKS PITTSBURGH POTTSTOWN CARNEGIE Pennsylvania ANNUAL CAPACITY, 400,000 TONS C. D. Marshall, ' 88, Pres. T. L. Cannon, - 03, Mgr. Rankin Works H. H. McClintic, - 88, Vice-Pres. R. MacM.nn, 07, Engineer R. W. Knight, -94. Mgr. Foreign Dept. F. U. Kennedy, ' 07, Contract. Eng., Phila. G. R. Enscoe, ' 96, Contracting Eng., N. Y. E. F. Gohl, ' 07, Contr. Eng., Baltimore «r= C. M Denise, ' 98, Contracting Mgr. G. A. Caffall, 10, Mgr. of Erection ii m Shafting ZfBJfr Pulleys 4 Hangers Belting Complete Power Transmission Equipment Supplies of Every Description for Textile Industries Mill, Mine, Factory and Engineers ' Supplies Charles Company 617-619 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. AN UP-TO-DATE PLANING MILL TWO LUMBER YARDS One at Third Street and Brodhead Avenue, South Side; the other at Main St. and Lehigh Ave., West Side; both filled with large stocks of every kind of lumber used for build- ing purposes. Good Clean Coal Promptly Delivered Brown-Borhek Co. CITY OF BETHLEHEM Lehigh Valley National Bank BETHLEHEM, PA. Member of Federal Reserve Bank Robt. E. Wilbur, President A. N. Cleaver, Vice-President Frank P. Snyder, Cashier Geo. J. Frantz, Asst. Cashier McCaa Studio PHOTOGRAPHY PORTRAITURE GROUPS ETC. Photographer in Chief to the University Students STUDIO: I 1 I WEST FOURTH STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. Ha berdashery WE SELL ONLY NEWEST THINGS IN MEN ' S FURNISHINGS W. BROAD ST. NEAR NJE1W S T If You See It In Our Windows It Is In Style BRICKER ' S GOLDEN FLAKE BREAD BETHLEHEM BAKING CO. SECOND AVENUE Bethlehem, Pa. Chas. Raeder WILLYS-KNIGHT Agency 9-11 E. BROAD ST. THE BOOK EXCHANGE PETER O. KOCH, Prop. University Text Books, either new or second-hand, Blank Books, Drawing Material, College Stationery, Moore ' s Non-Leakable and Waterman ' s Ideal Fountain Pens always in stock. 12 EAST FOURTH ST. SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. The Boys of Lehigh Believe In America and American Made Merchandise They Smoke American Made Pipes appreciating their superior quality and dependable American workmanship Stop and Have Some Delicious Fruit at the BETHLEHEM FARM FRUIT ORCHARD 5 W. FOURTH ST. tv BROTHERS Fifth Avenue Boot Shop near 48th Street. New York The permanent choice of the well-dressed man for sports and formal wear. The Fraternity of Style and Worth EXHIBIT SHOPS CHICAGO— Peoples Trust and Savings Bank Building. ST. LOUIS— Arcade Building. NEW HAVEN— Hotel Taft. PITTSBURGH JenJcins Arcade. WASHINGTON Woodward Building, op- posite Shoreha Hotel EVENING DRESS CLOTHES AND ACCESSORIES Koch Brothers ALLENTOWN ' S GREATEST CLOTHING STORE FOR THE LARGEST and FINEST SELECTIONS of SMART TAILORED Overcoats and Suits FROM STEIN BLOCH CO. NEWEST IDEAS IN FASHION B. KUPPENHEIMER CO. KNIT NECKWEAR, FOWNES FASHION PARK and GLOVES. SUPERIOR UNDERWEAR ADLER-ROCHESTER. and MANHATTAN SHIRTS. SCOTT ' S BAKERY Sugar Cakes, Cinnamon and Butter Buns, Doughnuts, Crullers Fancy Cake and Bread WEDDiNG AND BIRTHDAY CAKES MADE TO ORDER L ELL PHONE 23 7 11 WEST THIRD STREET BETHLEHEM. PENNSYLVANIA CERTAINLY! GET IT AT SNYDER ' S BETHLEHEM ' S STANDARD DRUG STORE AT LEHIGH ' S DOOR- FOURTH and NEW STREETS BETHLEHEM, PA. TORPEY ' S TWO MUSIC HOUSES VICTOR RECORDS PIANOS SHEET MUSIC 112 EAST THIRD STREET 203 WEST FOURTH STREET BETHLEHEM, PA., SOUTH SIDE ELECTRIC LAUNDRY CO. ENDORSED BY STUDENT ' S SELF-AID BUREAU Bethlehem Ornamental Iron Works ADOLPH DORNBLATT, P.op. BELL PHONE 767 ORNAMENTAL IRON AND LIGHT CONSTRUCTION WORK STEEL STAIRWAYS A SPECIALTY BETHLEHEM, PA. 416 SOUTH NEW STREET KING COAL CO. WE SELL THE BEST COAL MINED BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA LEHIGH TAILOR 319 S. NEW ST. Telephone 1888 For the Man with a Pressing Engage: JOIN OUR PRESSING CLUB 12 SUITS PRESSED FOR $4 HOT WIENERS SMOKES CANDY SOFT DRINK— FRUIT KOSTOS KONTOJIS 335 SOUTH NEW STREET Eelow Snyder ' s Drug Store LEHIGH PRINTING CO. We Maintain a Most Complete Plant for Your Convenience at 436 WYANDOTTE STREET Do Not Hesitate to TELEPHONE 2179 If You Need Printing Quickly Bell Phone 2050 BRONCHO STUDIO 325 NEW STREET PORTRAITURE COPYING ENLARGING AND PICTURE FRAMING Try Our Amateur Developing Printing 24 Hour Service CAMERAS — FILMS ARTCO SILK OIL for use on ARTIFICIAL SILK Prevents Waste, Softens the Thread, Lays the Fibre, Produces Better Finish Manufactured only by Quaker City Chemical Co. 2738 N. BROAD ST. PHILADELPHIA FRED A. KOEHLER 26 E. Third St., Bethlehem, Pa. Victrolas, Victor Records, Pianos, Player Pianos, Sheet Music, Music Rolls Musical Merchandise Piano Tuning and Victrola Repairing a Specialty EELL TELEPHONE FORD LINCOLN FORDSON CARS PARTS SERVICE Best equipped shop for repairs in the Lehigh Valley FOERING MOTOR CO. 1029 LINDEN ST. BETHLEHEM, PA. Hear the Tailors Litany, Flow. ' ng like a river. Men may come and men may go. But clothes go on forever. If you ever are in doubt ' Bout clothes or where to take them, Let Brown the Tailor help you out. He ' s the man to make them. In this Ad the moral lies It ' s very, very plain If the College Tailor makes your clothes, He ' il make them once again. BROWN The Perfect Tailor ALP ' S RESTAURANT 9 ■5 10 MAIN ST. Phone 444-M CITY PROVISION COMPANY 9 1025 W. BROAD ST. Phone 2190 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 1924 COMPLIMENTS OF ABE ROSEN WE MAKE SUITS, TOPCOATS, AND TUXEDOS FOR YCUR MEASURE AT REASONABLE PRICES OF COLLEGIATE STYLES AND FASHIONS WE ALSO DO CLEANING. PRESSING, AND REPAIRING PHONE 2261 -J 416 WYANDOTTE STREE T GET YOUR REAL CONEY ISLAND WE1NERS AT THE HOT WEINER SHOP 335 SOUTH NEW STREET WYANDOTTE DYERS CLEANERS 540 BROADWAY PHONE 1965 West Broad Meat Market 314 WEST BROAD STREET HOME DRESSED MEATS POULTRY Choice Vegetables and Groceries Fraternity Trade Solicited J. L. PORAZZI 301 W. FOURTH ST. QUALITY FIT CLOTHES There ' s a Big Difference Between Quality Fit Clothes and the Other Kind THERE ' S QUALITY IN THESE GOODS AND WE TAILOR THEM TO FIT YOU PERFECTLY Let Us Convince You Veeder PRODUCTS: Cyclometers for bicycles am motorcycles, to record distance traveled; odo meters for motor trucks and horse-drawn ve nicies, to register mileage; counters for re cording the production of machines; speei counters for counting revolutions (per minute of shafts or flywheels; tachometers for indi eating in revolutions-per-minute the si il o motors, prime movers, generators or an; revolving part, also Bne die castings whereii absolute accuracy and uniformity are required Veeder Counters are made for every machlu that should have on — all the models ar shown in the Veeder counter booklet. Specio circulars describe the other Veeder products write for any Or ail of tlienl. The Veeder Mfg. Co. 20 Sargent St. 212 W. FOURTH STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. Bell Phone 252 I -R 8686 Ssas ' V- ' V- ill 13,500 sq. ft. of door area— completely equipped! W7 am 6. Qeao. Pres oent. Char es J? Tay or. tfee Pre s. -Harry J T ead. SecyTreas. 0 G JReacl-Taijlor Company) Price Qu.i , i Service mm Printers and iPublishcrs Com bard and South .Streets J oltimore - Sag 5£8 §§8 3KK S5K $ ; 8 SS ss y P. B. X. CALVERT 1BOO Remember the Producecs of This Annual ! THE READhTAIJLOR PRESS We assume entire responsibility! IPsMt a- Compliments of L. R. and K. A. S. I STAND BEHIND Each Mattress We Deliver H. D. DELMOTTE, President m r i- l United States Mattress Co, Sleep Promoters Harrisburg, Pa.
”
1922
1923
1924
1926
1927
1928
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.