Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA)

 - Class of 1940

Page 1 of 248

 

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1940 volume:

S. StPcKbwk LEHIGH UNIVERSITY AFTER 75 YEARS SIXTY FOURTH VOLUME EPITOME PUBLISHED BY THE CLASS OF 1940 LEHIGH UNIVERSITY BETHLEHEM, PENN SYLVAN I A ROBERT C. GOOD. JR. EDITOR OTTO V. NORVIG ' BUSINESS MANAGER FOREWORD When we entered Lehigh, plans for a new telescope were evolved. It was to be larger than any before and was to search the heavens for worlds yet unseen. New Horizons, New Realms beyond the farthest stars were to be its bent. As this huge instrument nears completion, our brief stay at Lehigh does also. As we studied the arts and sciences this same feeling filtered through us until now we too look out upon new horizons. I his attitude is one so necessary to the advance- ment of science that it is our wish to portray this ideal in this Epitome. DEDICATION Lehigh Alumni -you upon the solid foundation of Asa Pack er have built Lehigh, and now you have watched its development into an outstanding educational institution. It is for your vision. vour planning, and your support that we here render obeisance. To n ew horizons we have come gradually to direct our vision, too. But to your Executive Secretary William A. Cornelius, known to all as Billi Cornelius, for his sincere interest in the welfare of Lehigh, we dedicate this volume of the Epitome as a meagre expression of our gratitude. IN MEMORIAM DR. STANLEY SYLVESTER SEYFERT MARCH 19. 1881-DECEMBER 11, 1959 Heap of the Department of Electrical Engineering PHILIP M. PALMER. Dean ARTS AND SCIENCES mm oi @jw(mw kmm 3M$m ALLEN JENNINGS BARTHOLD, Ph. I ). Romance Languages CLAUDE GILLETTE BEARDSLEE, Ph.D. Moral and Religious Philosophy FRANK CHESTER BECKER. A.B. Philosophy EARL LeVERNE CR1 IM, Ph.D. Greek ADELBERT FORD, Ph.D. Psychology LAWRENCE HENRY GIPSON. Ph.D. History and Government GARTH AHYMAN HOWLAND. M.A. Fine Arts JOSEPH STEPHENS LEONARD, B.S., Col. U S. A. Military Science and Tactics ROBERT METCALF SMITH. Ph.D. English STANLEY THOMAS. Ph.D. Biology BRADFORD WILLARD, Ph.D. Geology HORACE WETHERILL WRIGHT. Ph.D. Latin Pictured elsewhere in the hook TOMLINSON FORT. Ph.D. Mathematics and Astronomy PHILIP MASON PALMER. B.A. German HAROLD PRESCOTT THOMAS, Ph.D. Education IN FACULTATE PROFESSORS ALLEN JENNINGS BARTHOLD. Ph.D. Professor of Re ce Languages CLAUDE GILLETTE BEARDSLEE. PI, D. Professor of Moral and Religious Philosophy SYDNEY MacGILLVARY BROWN. MA Professor of European History WRAY HOLLOWELL CONGDON. Ph.D. Professor of Education ADELBERT FORD, Ph.D. Professor of Psychology TOMLINSON FORT. Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics LAWRENCE HENRY GIPSON, Ph.D. Professor of History and Government ROBERT WILLIAM HALL. Ph.D. Professor of Biology PERCY HUGHES. Ph.D. Clara H. Stewardson Professor of Philosophy JOSEPH STEPHENS LEONARD. B.S.. Col.. U. S. A. Professor of Military Science and Tactics BENJAMIN LeROY MILLER. Ph.D. Professor of Geology JOHN HLTCHESON OGBL ' RN, CE. Professor Emeritus of Mathematics and Astronomy PHILIP MASON PALMER. B.A Profe ' of Ge JOSEPH BENSON REYNOLDS. Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics and Theoretical Mechanics THOMAS EDGAR SHIELDS. Mus.D., A.A.G.O. Professor of Music LLOYD LEROY SMAIL. Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics ROBERT METCALF SMITH, Ph.D. Professor of English HAROLD PRESCOTT THOMAS. Ed D Professor of Education STANLEY THOMAS. Ph.D. Professor of Bacteriology CHARLES LEWIS THORNBURG. Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Mathematics and Astronomy HARRY M. ULLMANN. Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Chemistry BRADFORD WILLARD. Ph.D. Professor of Geology HORACE WETHERILL WRIGHT. Ph.D. Professor of Latin ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS EARL Li: VERNE CRUM. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Classical Languages DONALD McCOY FRASER, Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Geology AUGUSTUS HENRY FRETZ. M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Geology JAMES LARMOUR GRAHAM. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Psychology DALE HARTZLER GRAMLEY. M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Journalism GEORGE DEWEY HARMON. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of American History GARTH AHYMAN HOWLAND, MA. Assoc. Prof, of Fine Arts THEODORE THOMAS LAFFERTY, Ph.D. Macfarlane Assoc. Prof, of Philosophy and Assoc. Prof, c KENNETH WORCESTER LAMSON. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Mathematics ROBERT PATTISON MORE. MA. Assoc Prof, of German GEORGE EMIL RAYNOR. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Mathematics EDGAR HEISLER RILEY. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of English ERNST BERNHARD SCHULZ, Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Government JONATHAN BURKE SEVERS. PhD. Assoc. Prof, of English CLARENCE ALBERT SHOOK. PI, D. Assoc. Prof, of Mathematics LAWRENCE WHITCOMB. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Geology ASSISTANT PROFE SSORS FREDERICK WILLIAM ADAMS. C.E., Major. U. S. A. Assis. Prof, of Military Science and Tactics REGINALD REUBEN BACON. B.S.. Major, U. S. A. Assis. Prof, of Military Science and Tactics FRANK SWAN BEALE. PI, D. Assis. Prof, of Mathematics FRANK CHESTER BECKER. A B Assis. Prof, of Philosophy ADRIAN ROBERT BRIAN. B.A.. Major. U. S. A Assis. Prof, of Military Science and Tactics ROBERT DEXTER BUTLER. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Geology JOSEPH CALVIN CALLAGHAN. M A. Assis. Prof, of English and Speech WILSON LEON GODSHALL. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Diplomatic History and International Rclati WILLIAM LEROY JENKINS. PhD Assis. Prof, of Psychology VORIS V. LATSHAW. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Mathematics DERRICK HENRY LEHMER. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Mathematics BENJAMIN SCHULTZ MESICK. Sc.D.. Captain. U. S. A. Assis. Prof, of Military Science and Tactics ARTHUR EVERETT PITCHER, Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Mathematics FRANCIS MARION RICH. A.B.. Major. U. S. A. Assis. Prof, of Military Science and Tac ' .ics JOHN GRIFFITH ROBERTS. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Romance Languages EUGENE HULSE SLOANE. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of English RAFAEL ARCANGEL SOTO. MA Assis. I rof. or Romance Languages FRANCIS JOHN TREMBLEY, MS Assis. Prof, of Biology JOHN SCHRADER TREMPER. PhD Assis. Prof, of German RAYMOND HARRY WHITE. Ed D Assis. Prof, of Education Ed,, TYPICAL SCENES ARTS CLASSES Comes a student to Lehigh from a prep school in the high rocky mountains. At the drop of a hat lie is willing to defend his state. However, one of the faculty members takes him into hand and slums him that this is a university where the individual is Icing. He is allowed to elect all of the snap courses he cares to and even to eliminate those cursed eight-o ' clocks. Life is glorious and he has not a care in the world. He plays soccer and fills his lungs with the good old Bethlehem air. Before he has had time to think of hooks or professors those grim mid-semesters roll around and when valentines come out. he is on probation for the second h,,ll of the semester. Nothing daunted he lightly troops on. Galloping through the courses he is very much surprised when all the work suddenly comes due at once and he must rack his brains for the answers. Then come exams and needless to say he does miserably. The end ol the tale is obvious and also is it obvious that not everyone can go to an arts college and simply attend classes. Usually both ol the other colleges look upon the arts school as an easy place where there is no studying, hut those who know realize that this school is not the most likely place to have a good time. It is really designed to educate the student thoroughly in the various divisions of the arts and sciences. Beneath Freeman drawing rooms in the musty cellars of Packer Ha! good men are ir.dpd like guinea pigs for the sake of Prof. fenfeins psychology lab. An at- tempt made I correlate !  ■ speed ol gum chewing againsl reading Sunday papers. Placi ' tl conveniently lose (or reference u orfe me li the mysteries o the card lo the trarian italog, card catalog ts s desh Withoi numbering syste l ir sarratton I the oi.l oj n, ond stat KS i i.i (),„. „( the hardest situations for mony people is °l iti en l SW ti e ntU 7, , „™,3 l M P 6 ' « ' ■ ■ ' ' ■  •■ ■ Al Lehigh the ' ' ' - ' ; ' ,; ' ' - desh ' ' ' ' I, class helps the students to c ,uer this fear. o ' omM («• IkiIIIiimi lo many, ' In preparation [or more intensified work llie pre-meds at Lehigh spend much of their time in the hiology lab. Here the examples of Koch and Pastear are studied carefully by those desiring proficiency in microbe hunting. things to be kept in the closet when the guests corner skeletons of cute little animals. Students interested in the why and wherefore o them do not bother about their ghostly properties but study them for their intrinsic values. Dr. Thomas of the bacteriology department works on a specimen. Be if plant or animal, male or female the odds are in favor of the Doctor rather than the object. On the south wall of the Alumni Memorial Building is a plaque with of the nation from this university. Beery Armistice Day thi those men. Here we see them at their posts respectfully watching the flag of the nation and listening to taps names of all who served in the wars men ot this university gather to honor When the math prof gets that gleam in his eye it can mean only one thing, go to the board, a pitfall for the stu- dents when they are caught un- prepared. History seminar classes are just the place for informal class dis- cussions, but be it history or politics still the prof winds up on the winning side of the talk. An arts man uses a slide rule! practically impossible, but here is prool that in the math courses the slide rule is a mighty handy weapon. MAGNOLIA BLOSSOMS AGAINST THE LIBRARY ENTRANCE WILLIAM H. BAKER Bake. Brooklyn, N. Y. POLY PREP COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL Beta Theta Pi Manager ol Lacrosse (I); President of Beta Theta Pi (I): Freshman Union; Ar-ro Club. Treasurer (4) SYLVESTER D. BEERS Demi Mahwah, N. J. FOREST PARK HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Epsilon Fencing (3); Alpha Epsilon Delta (2. 3. I): Robert W. Hall Prc-Medical Society (1.2. 3, 4). BERNARD BERKOWITZ Bemie Elizabeth, N. J. THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL I A-i i or House Wilbur Prize in French; Freshman Honors; Robert W Blake Society; ' lone Society; Physics Society. RALPH T. BUCHSBAI M Buchsy Philadelphia, Pa. SIMON GRATZ HIGH SCHOOL Pi Lambda Phi Baseball (I. 2); Football (3); Brown and White (l, 2). Freshman Union; Sopho- more Vigilante Committee; Interfratemity Council; Dramatic Workshop. JOHN H. COLBAUGH Jack WlLKINSBURG, Pa. WILKINSBURG HIGH SCHOOL Chi Psi Tennis (1. 2. 3. 4). Captain (t): Soccer (I); Brown nnd White (I); Freshman Union, Secretary-Treasurer ( 1 ) ; Robert W. Blake Society. EDWARD N. COMANDO Ed Newark. N. J. WEST SIDE HIGH SCHOOL Pi Lambda Phi Fencing (1. 2); Robert W. Blake Society: Alpha Epsilon Delta; Robert W. Hall Pre- Medical Society. HOWARD M. CONNER How Paterson, N. J. PATERSON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Pi Kappa Alpha Brown and White. News Staff (2). News Editor (3), News Manager (3), Editor-in- Chief (4); Intercollegiate Newspaper As- sociation (3). Vice-President (4): Pi Delta Epsilon (3). President (4); Student Con- cert Lecture Series Committee (4); Board ol Publications (4). JAMES CONST ANTINE. JR. Connie Jamaica, N. Y. IAMAICA HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Swimming (l): Track (I. 2): Spiked Shoe So, ieh LEHIGH UNIVERSITY CARLTON E. CREITZ Carl Pen Argyl, Pa. PEN ARGYL HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Tennis (2, 3); Fresnman Honors; FresK- man German Prize; Lehigh Collegians (3. 4). JOHN S. CROFT Jack Trenton, N. J. TRENTON HIGH SCHOOL Phi Delta Theta Swimming (l); Lacrosse (3. 4). DAVID G. de BEAUCHAMP Dave Freeport, N. Y. STONY BROOK SCHOOL Beta Kappa Foothall (3): Wrestling (I, 2); Review, Assistant Editor (4); Pi Delta Epsilon (-1). MAYNARD L. DIAMOND A aviiorr Bethlehem, Pa. KENT SCHOOL K, appa Alpha Football ( 1 ) ; Arcadia Rally Committee (4): Scabbard and Blade (3. 4): Co- Chairman of Freshman Class; Cheerleader (3). Head Cheerleader (4). MORGAN C. ELMER W iifev Rutherford, N. J. RUTHERFORD HIGH SCHOOL Delta Tau Delta Cross County (1, 2. 3. 4). Captain (l. 4): Track (1, 2, 3. 4); Freshman Honors: Cyanide, Vice-President; Omicron Delta Kappa, Vice-President; Mustard and Cheese; Spiked Shoe Society. JOHN J. FISCHEL Jake Hellertown, Pa. BLAIR ACADEMY 1 iieta Delta Chi Swimming l); Track l); Brown and White, Business Staff (l); Mining and Geological Society. CARL R. FITTKAU Carl Irvington, N. J. [RVINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Price House Foothall (l). Brown and White. Make-up Editor (3), Sports Editor (3), News Man- ager (4); Freshman Handbook, Editorial Manager (4); Dormitory Chief; Jntcrdor- mitory Council. President (4); Arcadia (4); Pi Delta Epsilon (3. 4); Delta Omicron Theta. Secretary-Treasurer (3); Student Concert Lecture Series Committee (4). WILLIAM I. FREEMAN Bill Lansdale, Pa. LANSDALE HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Glee Club (I. 2. 3. I); Delta Omicron Theta (2. 3, 4): Chemical Society (2). EPITOME FOR 19 4 FRED E. GALBRAITH, JR. Freddie Rutherford, N. J. RI ITHERFORD HIGH SCHOOL I x 1 , i.OR [ loTJSE Brown and While Editorial Manager (3. -1). Editor-in-Chiel (-1); President .,1 Ar cadia (4): Delta Omicron Theta; Pi Delta Epsilon (3). Historian (4); Chemical So- , iety (I. 2). DAVID R. GINDER Doc Palmerton. Pa. PALMERTON HIGH SCHOOL Phi Gamma Delta Irnnis (1); Manager of Freshman Basket- ball (l); Review. Board (I), financial Manager (2). Advertising Manager (3); Interfralcrnity Council (3. -1); Alpha Epsi- lon Delta (2. 3). President (4); Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa; Brown Key Society (3); Prc-Medical Society (I. 2. 3). Vice- President (4). NORMAN HAMMER Pupsie Brooklyn, N. Y. JAMES MADISON HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Alpha Mi Assistant Manager ..I Baskettall (I. 2); Interrratemity Council (3); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Mustard and Cheese. Student Director (4), Secretary (4); Phi Beta Kappa. PAUL KARLIK, JR. Doc Hazleton, Pa. HAZLETON HIGH SCHOOL I x 1 . lor House Alpha Epsilon Delta (3, I); Sportsman ' s Club (t). R W Hall Pre-Medical So- ciety (2, 3, I). QUENTIN R. G. KEITH Kt ' itll I IpPER MoNTCLAIR, N. J. TRINITY SCHOOL Cosmopolitan Club Tennis (I. 2); Trark (I); Review. Con- tributing Board (2. 5. 1); Student Concert ! ecture Series Committee (4); Eta Sigma Phi (2, 3. 4). Recording Secretary (3); I one Satiety {2. 3. 4); Srahhard and Blade (II, Dramatic Workshop; Glee Club. Bari- tone Soloist. Double Quartet (2. 3. 4); Bethlehem Bach Choir (I. 2, 3. 4). HERBERT I . KING. JR. Rip Hackettstown, N. J. HACKETTSTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Kappa Sigma Assistant Manager of Freshman Baseball; Band (1,2, 5). RUSSELL KOWALYSHYN Russ Northampton, Pa. NORTHAMPTON HIGH SCHOOL Price House Baseball ( 1 ) ; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Williams Prize in Debating; Wil- liams Sophomore C on i position Prize; Mili- tary Medal ; Alumni Junior Prize; R. . Blake Society (2. 5, i) ; Delta Omicron Theta (I, 2, 5. -4); International Relations CIuL (3. 1); Debating (2. 3, 4); Phi Beta Kappa. HOWARD J. LEWIS Howie QlJAKERTOWN, Pa. QUAKERTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Pi Lambda Phi Review, Board (2), Assistant Fditor (3). Editor-in t hiei ( tl: Secretary of Pi Lamb- da Phil Board ol Publications (4); Pi I )elta Epsilon ( 1 1 LEHIGH UNIVERSITY ANTHONY N. MANONE Tony Hellertown, Pa. ST. MARY ' S INSTITUTE Town Group VICTOR W. MARTON Vi A LLENTOWN, Fa , Pa VALLEY FORGE MILITARY ACADEMY Allentown Group R. W. Hall Prc-Medical Society. HAROLD J. MASEM Mace Brooklyn, N. Y. POLY PREP COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL Be The Wrestling (I. 2. 3. 4). Captain (1. -I). Eastern Intercollegiate Champion: Football (l); Secretary-Treasurer of Junior Class: Cyanide Club: Scabbard and Blade (3, 4). EDWIN H. MILLER Ed Bethlehem. Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Wilbur Prize in English (2): Williams Prize in English Composition (2. 3); Wil- liams Prize in Irishman Debating: Robert Blake Memorial Prize in General Edu- cation (l): Williams Prize in Oral Com- position (I): Delta Omicron Theta (2. 3): Eta Sigma Phi (2). National Treasurer (3. 4): Robert W. Blake Society: Phi Beta Kappa. ROBERT H. MILLER Bob Reading, Pa. READING SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL T, aylor House Brown and White, Board (l). Assistant Sports Editor (2): International Relations Club. JULES L. MOREAU Jule sking Ridge N. J. BERNARDS HIGH SCHOOL Leonard Hall Military Honors (1.3); Eta Sigma Phi (3), Vice-President (4); Robert W. Blake So- ciety (3, 4): Newtonian Society (2): Phi Beta Kappa. ROBERT B. PALMER Bob Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Beta Theta Pi Swimming (l, 2, 3. 4); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Sophomore Latin Prize; Aubertine Woodward Wright Latin Prize (3); Eta Sigma Phi. President (3. 4); Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa: Phi Beta Kappa; R. W. Blake Society; Phi Eta Sigma, Treasurer; Glee Club. CHARLES F. REHMAN W7u ' iey Valley Stream, L. I. VALLEY STREAM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Wilbur Prize in Mathematics (2); Newtonian So- ciety (1, 2); Pi Mu Epsilon (3, 4); Glee Clufc (I. 2. 3, 4): Phi Beta Kappa. I T O M FOR 19 4 '  « :- ROBERT J. REID Bob Clark ' s Summit, Pa. CLARK ' S SUMMIT HIGH SCH( K L Town Group President oi Richards House ()) ; Inter- dormitory Council (3 ) ; Dormitory Section Chiei (3); 1 one Society (5 ) ; Bach Choir (-); Chemical Society (!) GEORGE H. REUSSNER. JR. Georgte Bethlehem. Pa. LIBERTY HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Astronomical Society. Vice-President (5, -I); Camera Club, Secretary (3), Treasurer (I); Chemical Society (1. 2. 3, I). GARI. H. RICHARDSON Carl Newport, R. I. ROGERS HIGH SCHOOL Leonard Hall Cheerleader (3, -1 ) ; President of Leonard Hall (4): Freshman and Sophomore Hon- ors; Williams Prize in English Composi- tion (3); Eta Sigma Phi; Robert W. Blake Society, Secretary-Treasurer (3). President (-!); International Relations Club, Treasur- er (3), Vice-President (4); Glee Club. Assistant Manager (3). Student Leader (t); Manager of the Combined Musical (Tubs (I); PI,, Beta Kappa JAMES M. ROBERTS, JR. Mil Pittsburgh, Pa. BEN AVI ) HIGH SCHOOL Sigma tin Inli-rlralrriiilv ( ounril. Secretary (•(); President or Sigma Chi (1); International Relations Club (-!. 5. -1): Glee Club (I. 2. 3. I) Metallurgical Society ( I. 2. 3. -I). CLAYTON L. ROI.OSON Lyme Atlantic Highlands, N. J. TRENTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL 1 own Group [ lining and Geological Society, Secretary (4). CLIFFORD D. ROOT Clifi I .ARCHMONT, N. Y iMAMARONECK HIGH SCHOOL I ' m Sigma Kappa TERRY SCHIFF Bear-Cat Mt. K.sco. N. Y. HACKLF.Y SCHOOL Phi Gamma Delta I rack (I. 2. t); Lacrosse (3); Cross-Coun- try (3); Scabbard and Blade (3), First Liqutenanl (t); International Relations (Tub (I. 2. 3). Treasurer (4); E. W. Broun Astronomical Society (2). CHARLES STEINER Charlie Newark, N. J. WEST SIDE HIGH SCHOOL Pi Lambda Phi Swimming (I. 2. 3): Wrestling (3, -4): I rai k (2); Vice-President of Pi Lambda Phi (II, Robert W. Blake Society (2. 3. II, R W Hall Pre-Mcdical Society. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY WILLIAM B. TODD Bill Freedom, Me. FREEDOM ACADEMY Town Group illiams Prize in English Composition (2. 5); Eta Sigma Phi; Tone Society; Glee Club (2. 3). Double Quartette (2); Bach Choir (I, 2. 5. 4), JOHN R. TORRENS Jack Trenton, N. J. RIDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Delta Sigma Phi Football (1.2). RANDALL B. TUCKER Randy New York, N. Y. GEORGE WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Psi Upsilon Sophomore Honors; Eta Sigma Phi (3. 4); Robert W. Blake Society (2. 5. 4); Glee Club (2. 3); Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN C. WALKER Johnny Brooklyn, N. Y. POLY PREP COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL Cm Psi Assistant Manager or Freshman Soccer (l); Aero Club (3. 4). Secretary (5). WILLIAM W. WEST, JR. Will Summit, N. J. CLOSTER HIGH SCHOOL Theta Delta Cm Baseball (l); Basketball (2); Athletic Manager of Theta Delta Chi (4); Band (2). RAYMOND R. WHITE Bob B ethlehem Pa. GEORGE WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Intramural Debating (2) ; Secretary of Town Group Section; Band (4). P I T M FOR 9 4 NEIL CAROTHERS, D can BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION ©ccdfe ojf ©pcEFfiMmeimfe FREDERICK ALDEN BRADFORD. Ph.D. • Head of tlie Department of Finance ROY BURFORD COWIN, M.A. Head of tlie Department of Accounting HERBERT MAYNARD DIAMOND. Ph.D. • Head of the Department of Economics and Sociology ! ,,, „„!, Alien lim.lfnr.l. PhD ' ( dsacttuatt PROFESSORS FREDERICK ALDEN BRADFORD. Ph.D. Professor of Economics NEIL CAROTHERS. Ph.D. Macfarlane Professor of Economics ROY BURFORD COWIN. M.A. Professor of Accounting HERBERT MAYNARD DIAMOND. Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Sociology ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS CARL ELMER ALLEN, Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Accounting W RD LESLIE BISHOP. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Economics ELMER CLARK BRATT. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Economics ASSISTANT PROFESSORS THOMAS FREDERICK JONES, M.S. Assist. Prof, of Economic s ROBERT WALLACE MAYER, Ph.D. Assist. Prof, of Economic ' . INSTRUCTORS CLARENCE H. DANHOF, Ph.D. Instructor in Economics HENRY AUGUST KRIEBEL, M.A. Instructor in Accounting JOHNTETTEMER O ' NEIl . M.B.A. Instructor in Economics LOUIS REED TRIPP. A. B. Instructor in Economics Rov B. Cowin, M.A. Herbert M. Diamond. Ph.D. TYPICAL POSES OF BUSINESS STUDENTS Comes a boy from a large high s hool in New 1 ork City. He reg- isters for all of the good courses advised by the Dean of the Col- lege, and then surprised by the [ai k ol afternoon (lasses, he spends the time in the movies. However, with merely lectures in which he diligently lakes notes he marvels al how ha ky he is. The first quizzes come and these true- false statements just will not be- have. Now the worst is over and with a little luck and the proper application he easily passes the subjects with Hying colors. Grad- uation looms in the distance, and he finds that if he had chosen another field his fathers linn would gladly take him in. But ol course, coming from Lehigh he has no trouble so that in no time he is making his own living. Dpiwi Carothers, above, carefully checks the balance sheet of each senior n the college of Business Administration before the end o bis college career. the scenes snown below l work on investments and statistics are more typical of those to be found during the semester in Cnrisfmas $mtcon Holt Tlie best spot on the campus bo pick up the latest dope is the steps by Hyphen Hall , the convening spot of business men between ( lasses. Few business men take life too seriously, and the one pictured here is certainly no exception to the general rule. Xo time for this in the engineering college. The results of hours of labor are recorded on the bulletin board of the business depart- ment after an hour quiz. The worried looks are probably for very good reasons. i, • Sfe ' i - — ADMINISTRATION BUILDING MEANS UNIVERSITY BUSINESS OSCAR C. ASHMAN Oss Bethlehem. Pa. WII.SONBORO HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Wrestling (l. 2, 3): Football (l); Track (2. 5). RICHARD C BAGGOT Bcif) Stroudsburc, Pa. STROLDSBURG HIGH SCHOOL Theta Delta Cm Swimming (l): Dramatics (1. 2); Presi- dent of Theta Delta Cki (4). REGINALD M. BANKS. JR. Reggie Cedarhurst, L. I. LENOX SCHOOL Town Group JOHN C. BARR . C. Jamaica. N. Y. JAMAICA HIGH SCHOOL Richards House Brown and While ( 1 ) . Photography Staff, (3. A); Treasurer of Dormitory Section (3) ; Sportsman ' s Chili (3. A)- FRANK L. BENEDICT. JR. Ben Drexel Hill, Pa. UPPER DARBY HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Kappa I ' i Assistant Manager. Wrestling (l): Wil- liams Prize in Debating; Band (1,2. 3, 4) j Debating Society (3. -t ) . EDWARD BILLSTEIN, JR. Ed Claymont. Del. PERKK All PREP SCflOOL I OWN ( ' ROUP Track (I. 2. 1). Wrestling (3. -t); Glee Club (I. 2. 3. 4). JOHN R. BINGAMAN, JR. Rusty West Reading, Pa. GEORGE SCHOOL Sigma Nu Soccer (I. 2); Track (l): Brown and White (1, 2. 3); Interfraternity Council (2, 3); Cyanide Club (3). ROBERT S. BOTHE Bob Oreland, Pa. ABINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Epsilon Musi. ,t,l and Cheese (3. 4). LEHIGH UNIVERSITY GORDON L. BRANDT Gordy Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Delta Upsilon Football (I. 2. 3. 4); Basketball (I. 2, 5. -I); Track (1.2. I). NATHANIEL J. BRISKER Nat Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Alpha Mu Basketball ( I ) ; President of Sigma Alpha Mu (-1); Interfraternity Council (3. 4): Mustard and Cheese (2, 3). Secretary (4); Dramatic Workshop (2. 3). CHARLES H. BROTHERTON ( harlie Dover, N. J. DOVER HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House JOHN L. BURGHER flu Oiler MoNTCLAIR, N. J. LENOX PREPARATORY SCHOOL Cosmopolitan Club ERNEST R. BUSS Bussy Bethlehem. Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Archery (-1). ROBERT F. COLEMAN Ruby Brooklyn, N. Y. POLY PREP COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL Psi Upsilon Interfrate rnity Council (3. 4), Alpha Kappa Psi (4); Scabbard and Blade (3. 4). ALBERT J. COLLINS Rip Mt. Lebanon, Pa. MT LEBANON HIGH SCHOOL Phi Delta I heta Football (I. 3, 4); Basketball (2, 3); Base- ball (I): President of Phi Delta Theta; lunior Prom Committee. Chairman (3); Senior Ball Committee (4); Alpha Kappa Psi ( ). Vice-President (4); Scabbard and Blade (3. 4). ED. F. DANNEMILLER Colonel Garden City, N. Y. GARDEN CITY HIGH SCHOOL Theta Delta Chi Football ( I ) ; Lacrosse (4) ; Hockey (2. 4): House Manager of Theta Delta Chi (3. 4); Scabbard and Blade (3). Secretary (4). EPITOME FOR 19 4 O. MERRILL DAVID Buck Philadelphia, Pa. GERMAN! OWN FRIENDS SCHOOL Sigma Chi Baseball (I. 2. 4); Brown and White. Business Board (3), Financial Manager (4); Pi Delta Epsilon (4); Mustard and Cheese: Dramatii Workshop; Sportsman ' s Club DONALD G. DENISON, JR. Dinnie Grand Rapids. Mich. GRAND RAPIDS CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Track (2); Tennis (I. 2): Review. Bus, ncss Board (2). Circula I Manager (3), Advertising Manager (3). Business Man- ager (-1); Pi Delta Epsilon (4); Mustard and Cheese (3. 4); Industrial Engineering SocielN (1. 2. 3. I) PAUL R. DUYCKINCK Dike Roselle Park. N. J. ROSELLE PARK HIGH SCHOOL Phi SlGMA Kappa Football (I. 2. 3, I): Alpha Kappa Psi (0 CARY G. EVANS C. G. Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Phi Delta Theta Track (I. 2. 3, 4), Captain (4); Swimming (I. 2. 3, 4); Cross-Country (I, -l); Fresh- man Union: Spiked Shoe. President. HERBERT F. FEUCHT Stony Hewlett, L. I. W lODMERE HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Football (I. 2. 3. 4). Basketball (1. 2. 3. 4): Track (I. 2. 3. 4). RICHARD F. FINCKE Dick New York City, N. Y. DE Will CLINTON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Football (I. 2. 3. 4); Wrestling (I. 2. 3. I); Track (2. 3, 4); Treasurer of [own Section; Dramatic Workshop (3). Luther- an Society. BERTRAM V. FLETCHER Va i Brooklyn. N. McBURNEY PREP SCHOOL Chi Psi Wrestling (I) RICHARD C. FRIES Dick Bethlehem. Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL ] own Gmn P LEHIGH UNIVERSITY . STANLEY E. GILINSKY Gale Trenton, N. J. TRENTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL P. L MBDA I J II Review. Editorial Staff (3. 4); Treasurer of Pi Lambda Phi (2, 3, 4): Fresliman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Beta Kappa. NORMAN D. GLICKMAN Nc COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Alpha Mu Wrestling ( I ). ELLIOTT K. GOODMAN Ekey New Rochelle, N. Y. NEW ROCHELLE HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Alpha Mu Browi I White (I. 2, 3); Band (I, 2. 3, 4). JAMES F. GOODWIN South Orange. N. J. ' II AMDEN, LONN Cc NEW HAVEN HIGH SCHOOL Richards House Sports Manager oi Dormitory Section ( 4). RICHARD S. GOWDY Dick West Hartford. Conn. PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY Alpha Chi Rho Football (I. 2. 3); Track (1); Review. Art Editor (3. 4); Scabbard and Blade (3). treasurer (4); Alpha Kappa Psi (3. 4); Cyanide; Pi Delta Epsilon (4); Omic- ron Delta Kappa (4). CHARLES R. GRIFFITHS Charlie Metuchen. N. J. CRANFORD HIGH SCHOOL Delta Tau Delta I ootball ( . 4); Basketball (2, 5. 4). Cap- lain (4); Baseball (2, 3, 4); Lacrosse (2); Inlerfraternity Council: Alpha Kappa Psi (3), Treasurer (4); Cyanide Club (3); Omicron Delta Kappa (4). CHARLES F. GUILFORD Chuck Detroit, Mich. NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Treasurer of Sigma Phi (4); Scabbard and Blade (3. 4); Rifle Club (t. 2. 3. 4). JACK GUTTAG Guppy New Rochelle, N. Y. NEW ROCHELLE HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Alpha Mu Track (3); Assistant Manager of Soccer (1, 2): Treasurer of Sigma Alpha Mu (4). P I T M E FOR 19 4 WAITER G. G1 IY. JR. ' « Wilmington, Df.l. Dl ' PONT HIGH SCHOOL Lambda Chi Al l|il,.. Kappa Psi (3, I); Phi Beta Kappa NORMAN J. HAAS Norm Belmont, Mass. HUNTINGTON SCHOOL 1 ay i or House Swimming (I. 3. 4): Track ( . I) A F. HAFFENREFFER, JR. Hall Fall River, Mass. GOVERNOR DUMMER ACADEMY Sigma Ni I ootball (I). Wrestling (I. 3, 4); La- crosse (2. 3. I). Scabbard and Blade (3. I) THOMAS B. HAND Tom Patlrson, N. J. ST (OHN ' S PREPARATORY SCHOOL Theta Delta Chi Track (I. 2); Assist. ml Manager o( Fresh- man Basketball; Brown and White (I). Assistant News Editor (2); Treasurer of Theta Delta Chi (-1); Mustard and Cheese Competition ( 1 ) ALBERT B. HARDING Al RlDGEWOOD, N. J. BLAIR ACADEMY Chi Psi Soccer (I. 3); Wrestling (3. 4); Baseball (2); Brown and White. Business Board (I); President of Chi Psi (I): Rifle Club (I. 2); Aero Club (2). Sccretary-Treasurei (3). President (I) JACOB S. HARTZELL Jake Nazareth, Pa. NAZARETH HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Kappa Pi President of Alpha Kappa Pi (I); Inter- Fraternitj Coun.il O). Band (1. 2. 3. I); Symphony Orchestra (2); Dance Orches- tra (3), I eader ( I) WILLIAM W. HEIMBACH Bill Kane, Pa. KANE HIGH SCHOOL Richards Holse Treasurer of Dormitory Section (3). ( hiel (4); Interdormitory Council (4); President ni Richards 1 louse (l). CLIFFORD B. HEISLER Budd Pemberton. N. J. GE )RGE S( HOOL Delta Tau Delta Football (I); Baseball (I. 2. 3. I). Co- Captain (I): Senior Ball Committee (I): Freshman Honors; President ol Delta I an Delta; Newtonian; Cyanide; Sialibard I Blade (5. I); Alpha Kappa Psi (31. Presi dent M); Omicron Delta Kappa; Student Concert Lecture Series C ttee I l): Student Activities Committee (4). LEHIGH UNIVERSITY FRANK H. HEWITT, JR. { ' rank M. u li: y mii , N. J. NEWARK ACADEMY Theta Delta Chi Football (1); Baseball (I). CHARLES R. HONCE, JR. Ch lamp NUTLEY, N. J. NEWARK ACADEMY Chi Psi Baseball (I. 2, 5); Hockey (2, 3); Ath- letic Manager of Clii Psi. JOHN G. HUGHES Andy Wilkes-Barre. Pa. STAUNTON MILITARY ACADEMY Lambda Chi Alpha I. BOYD KELLEY Toby Larksville, Pa. LARKSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Tau Omega Varsity Baseball Manager (4): Brown Key Society (5); Scabbard and Blade; Alpba Kappa Psi. Secretary (4). THOMSON KING. JR. Baltimore, Md. BALTIMORE POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE Alpha Tau Omega Wrestling (I, 2. 3, 4). Eastern Intercol- legiate Champion in 165 Pound Class; Lacrosse (5. 4); Lewis Cup; Secretary- Treasurer of Sophomore Class: Maennercbor Student Committee (4); Vigilante Commit- tee (2); Civil Engineering Society. WILLIAM H. KOHRING Bill Crestwood, N. Y. DE WITT CLINTON HIGH SCH( ( IL I HI I A l RUDOLF KREMER Rudy Paterson. N. J. PEDDIE SCHOOL Fiieta Delta Chi Track (l, 2); Wrestling (l. 2): Inlerfra- lernily Council; Spiked Shoe Society. I.ORING LANE Lori ing Brooklyn, N. Y. POLY PREP COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL Alpha Kappa Pi Rifle Lain (I, 2. 3. 4); Interfraternity Council (5): President of the Rifle Club (0. EPITOME FOR 19 4 HARRY A. LEIDICH, JR. Handy Pottsville, Pa. POTTSV1LLE HIGH SCHOOL Phi Gamma Di i i Wrestling (I. 2); Baseball (1. 2. 3. 4): Football (5); Chairman of Freshman Hand- book Staff (4): Glee Club (I. 2). HARRY W. LYNCH, JR. Line Wilmington, Del. WILMINGTON FRILNDS SCHOOL D ELTA I III Brown and Will. (1. 2); President of I )elta I ' lu ( I) InterFraternitj Council ( . 4); Sportsman ' s Club (4); Chemical So- ciety (I. 2. 5). WILLIAM T. LUCE GEORGE P. MAGINNESS Will Westfield, N. J. AL.c Belleville. N. J. WF.STF1ELD HIGH SCHOOL BELLEVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Pi Kappa Alpi Basketball (0: Lacrosse (5, 4). Town Group BasketUI (1); Baseball (l); Lacro.se (4). JOSEPH L MATTESON Joe Cranford, N. J. CRANFORD HIGH SCHOOL Delta Upsilon Track ( 1 , 2. 4), Captain ( I ) ; [nteriraternity Sports Manager; President of Delta Llpsi- fon (4); Chairman of the Senior Ball Com- mittee (4); Cyanide; Spiked Shoe Society {2. j, 4 ) ; Chairman of the Maennercnor Tea Dancr Committee (0 ARTHUR A. McCAMBRIDGE Art RlDGEWOOD, N. J. RIDGEWOOD I IK .11 SCHOOL Delta Sigma Ph J. JOSEPH McCLUSKEY joe Stroudsburg. Pa. STROUDSBURG HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Assistant Manager of Baseball (I, 2): Brown and White, Sports Staff (I. 2. 4). Sports Editor (5); Scabbard and Blade (5, I)- I ' , Delta Epsilon (3, 4). JOHN J. McFADDEN Mac Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM CATHOLIC HIGH I in i Kappa Phi ing (I). Sophomore Honors: Alpha Kappa Psi (I); Scabbard and Blade (3, LEHIGH UNIVERSITY ROBERT R. MERWIN THOMAS W. MILLET. Ill Bob Allentown. Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL VLLENTOW N Gr Lehigh-AIIentown Club (l, 2), Treasurer (3). President (4); Freshman and Sopho- more Honors; Alpha Kappa Psi Medallion (3); Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Alpha Kappa Psi (4); Phi Beta Kappa. WILLIAM A. MILLER, JR. Bill South Orange, N. J. BLAIR ACADEMY Psi Upsilon Tor Upper Darby, Pa. UPPER DARBY HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Band (1. 2, 5. A); Chemical Society (l). GEORGE B. MOTHER AL. II Bud Pittsburgh, Pa. MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Delta Tau Delta Soccer (I. 2. 4); Wrestling (3. 4); Assis- tant Manager of Fresliman Wrestling; Brown and White (l, 2). Copy Supervisor (3). National Advertising Manager (l); Pi Delta Epsilon (5), Treasurer ())• ANDERS F. MVHR Andy Brooklyn. N. Y. ADELPHl ACADEMY Taylor House Sophomore Honors; Newtonian Society; Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN J. NICOL Nick Brooklyn, N. Y. BROOKLYN TECHNICAL HIGH Rich II,, ARDS rlOLSE Intramural Athletic Cup (2); Manager of the Independent Athletic League ( 1 . 2 ) ; Dormitory Section Chief (3); Interdormi- lory Council (3); Camera Club; Sports- man s Club. ROBERT A. NORDT Bob East Orange. N. J. EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Epsilon Football (I, 2. 3). JOHN R. O ' MEARA Sham Glen Ridge, N. J. GLEN RIDGE HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Tau Omega Swimming (I, 2, 3), Captain (A) ; Track (1. 2. 3. A); Lacrosse (4); Interfraternity Council (3. 4); Cyanide Club (3); Frater- nity Officer (2. 3. 4); Brown and White. Business Staff (2) , Circulation Depart- ment (3, 4). P I T O M FOR 9 4 DOUGLAS C. PAUL Doug Bethlehem, Pa. MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Pin Gamma Dllta Wrcslling (1, 2. 3. 4): Lacrosse (3, 4): Ice Hockey (3. 4); Secretary-Treasurer of Senior Class; Scabbard and Blade (3. 4). RICHARD F. PEARCE Dick Wilmington, Del. FRIENDS SCHOOL Richards House Rifle Team (1): Alpba Kappa Psi (4). ROBERT J. PEARCE Spearhead Marquette, Mich. ASI IVILLE SCHOOL Sigma Nu Soccer (I. 2, -I); Freshman Union: Sopho- more Vigilante Committee. FREDERICK D. PIERCE Fred Brooklyn, N. Y. SHENANDOAH VALLEY ACADEMY Cosmopolitan Club Baseball (3); Eta Sigma Phi; Delta Omic- ron Tbeta ( -1 ) . ALBERT E. PONTER. JR. Al Bocota, N. J. RANDOLPH-MACON ACADEMY Town Group President ■  F I own Group Section (3, 4 ) ; Camera CIuL ( I): Varsity Debating; Delta Omicron Theta (-4). STEWART B. POWERS Stew Red Bank. N. J. RED BANK HIGH SCHOOL Pin Delta 1 in ta S . (I. 2. 1); Treasurer of Phi Delta [ heta (t). Alpha Kappa Psi (4). PETER PRUDDEN, JR. Pete Palm Beach, Fla. CULVER MILITARY ACADEMY Psi Upsilon Swimming (I. 2); Golf (l. 2); Review, Business Board (2); President of Psi Upsi- In,, (I) HARRY M. RANDEL Har A llentown, rA Pa ,OWER MERION HIGH SCHOOL Vl.LENTOWN C ' ROUP Mustard and CKee LEHIGH UNIVERSITY JAMES G. RICHARDSON Jim Walnut Ridge, Ark. PHILLIPS EXETER ACADEMY Alpha Tau Omeca Freshman-Sophomore Dance Committee; Sophomore Vigilante Committee; Brown and White (l); Class Banquet Committee (3. 4). ROBERT H. ROBINSON Bob Dividing Creek, N. J. PEDDIE SCHOOL Theta Xi D ' ARCY W. ROPER, II Cy Petersburg, Va. PETERSBURG HIGH SCHOOL Beta Theta Pi Elected Manager of Football (4); Interfra- ternity Council. Secretary (4); Brown Key (5); Industrial Engineering Society (l). LESTER R. ROSENFELD Rollo Brooklyn, N. Y. BOYS HIGH SCHOOL Pi L AMHI1A till Phi Football (t, 2. 3, 4): Wrestling (3. 4): President of Pi Lambda Plii (4). JOHN B. RUSH Johnnie Naples, Fla. DEERFIELD ACADEMY Sigma Phi International Relations Club (2. 3. 4); Cosmopolitan Club; Camera Club. ISAIAH SCHEELINE. JR. Basil HoLLIDAYSBURG, Pa. SHADY SIDE ACADEMY Sigma Alpha Mu Sportsman ' s Club (4); A. S. M. E. (l). CHARLES T. SCHRADER Charlie Ward. Pa. GEORGE SCHOOL Price House Baseball ( 1 , 2, 3 ) ; Soccer ( 1 ) ; Brown and White; Sportsman ' s Club (3). ALFRED M. SCHUYLER Al M IDDLETOW n, N. Y. MIDDLETOYVN HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Chi Rho P I T M FOR 19 4 PAUL W. SEILER, JR. S( Farmington, Mich. CRANBROOK SCHOOL Alpha Tau Omi . Track (I, 5. -1); Vice-President of Alplia I au Omega (4). ROBERT B. SIEGEL Rob New York, N. Y. WILBRAHAM ACADEMY ALFRED L. SIMON Town Group Al N.J. EAST SIDE HIGH SCHOOL l ' i Lambda Phi Basketball (I); Track (2); Review Board (2). SAMUEL R. SIMON 7 err j. N. J. EAST SIDE HIGH SCHOOL i Lambda Iiii Basketball (1); Sophomore Honors: Inter Fraternity Council (J). GARDNER SLETTE M Slals North Quincy, Mass. NORTH QUINCY HIGH SCHOOL Siom v Phi Epsilon Track (1); Alumni Junior Prize; Alpha Kappa Psi Medallion; Phi Beta Kappa. ROBERT C. SLINGERLAND Sling Mili.burn, N. J. MILLB1 IRN INCH SCHOOL Alpha Chi Rho Manager ol Varsity Tennis ( i); Brown and White (2. 3); Review (3); Broun Ke 5 S Ij . Interfraternity Conn, il (3, I) BERNARD A. SMITH. JR. Bank ' Forest Hills. L. I. HEMPSTEAD HIGH SCHOOL Beta Kappa rYack (I); Inlcrlraternity Council (3. 4); I )elta Omicron TKeta; Alpha Kappa Psi (1): ( amera Club; Brown and White; ( rlee Club: Sportsman s Club. RAYMOND M. SMITH liax Stamford. Gonn. STAMFORD HIGH SCHOOL Prick House Football (I.J. I) LEHIGH UNIVERSITY JAMES R. STEEG Jim Bellaire, N. Y. HEMPSTEAD HIGH SCHOOL 1 heta Kappa Phi Cheerleader (3. 4); Glee Club (l). ROBERT S. TAYLOR Boh Drexel Hill. Pa. UPPER DARBY HIGH SCHOOL Phi Gamma Delta Football (1); Mustard and Clieese Com- petition; Band (I. 2); Assistant Editorial Manager of Freshman Handbook (4); In- dustrial Engineering Society. WILLARD J. THOMAS Reds Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Sophomore Honors; Alpha Kappa Psi (5. 4); Scabbard and Blade (5. 4). Will JAM VALENTINE, JR. Muscle New York City, N. Y. PAWLING PREPARATORY SCHOOL Alpha Tau Omega Football (I, 5, 4). HENRY VAN REED Hank Reading. Pa. READING HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Manager of Dormitory Section Sports. WALLACE P. WATKINS Wally Glen Ridge, N. J. BLAIR ACADEMY Chi Psi Rifle Team (l. 2); Assistant Manager of Freshman Football; Manager of Freshman Swimming (4); Brown and White (1, 2), Advertising Manager (3), Financial Man- ager (3). Business Manager (4); Review. Circulation Manager (3); Epitome. Frater- nity Editor (3), Senior Section Editor (4): President of Omicron Delta Kappa (4); Alpha Kappa Psi (3. 4); Pi Delta Epsilon (3). Vice-President (4); Cyanide. Secre- tary-Treasurer; Brown Key, President: In- ternational Relations Club (l. 2); Mustard and Cheese, Program Manager (3), Vice- President (4); Arcadia (4); Student Ac- tivities Committee (4); Senior Ball and Junior Prom Committees. HAROLD WEINER Harold Paterson, N. J. EAST SIDE HIGH SCHOOL Richards House Brown and White, Business Board (2), Copy Supervisor ( ). National Advertising Manager ( 5 ) . HARRY J. WENCK Hen Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Grolp Basketball (1. Society (2). Chemical Engineering E P I T O M FOR 19 4 WALTER J. WETHERELL Wall Brooklyn. N. . FRANKLIN K LANK HIGH SCHOOL Beta Kappa Tennis (I. 2, 3, 4): Basketball (1. 2. 3. 4); Truck (3); Alpha l J lii Omega: Aero Club; Sportsman ' s Club; Brown anrl White (I. 2). EUDORE J. W1LHELMY Will Marlboro, Mass. WORCESTER ACADEMY Town Group l,.„k (1). FRANK C. WOODSIDE. JR. Woody Caldwell, N. J. PITTSFIFID HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Chi Rho Track (I, 2); Broun and White (I): Mus- tard and Cheese (2, 3). President (4); Arcadia (-0. ROBERT A. WRIGLEY Al Mahaffey, Pa. K1SKI PREPARATORY SCHOOL Phi Gamma Delta KARL H. ZORNIG Karl Aberdeen Prvc. Gd., Md. VALLEY FORGE MILITARY ACADEMY Town Groi ' P Army Ordinance Post (4); Mustard and Cheese Competition; A rican Society of Mechanical Engineers. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY A. COPELAND CALLEN. D ean ENGINEERING ©CfiCBg Oj ©pmw kmm©m m J. I.YNFORD BEAVER, Sc.D. Head of tlie Department of Electrical Engineering CHARLES CLARENCE BIDWELL, Ph.D. Head of the Department ol Physics GILBERT EVERETT DOAN, Ph.D. Head of the Department ol Metallurgical Engineering FRED VIALL LARKIN, ME. Head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering HARVEY ALEXANDER NEVILLE. Ph.D. Head of the Department of Chemistry HALE SUTHERLAND, B.S. Head of the Department of Civil Engineering Pictured elsewhere in the book ALFRED COPELAND CALLEN. M.S. Head of the Department of Mining Engineering . Lynjord Beaver, Sc.D. Gilbert E Doan, I ' l, D Harvey A Neville, Ph.D. Charles C Bidwell, Ph.D. 1 ' red V Larhin, M.E Hale Sutlierland. BS IN FACUUATE PROFESSORS PAUL LEVERNE BAYLEY. Ph.D. Profe of PI,. PhD J. LYNFORD BEAVER. Sc.D. Professor of Electrical Engineering ( I IARLES CLARENCE BIDWELL. Professor of Physics THOMAS EDWARD BUTTER FIELD. C.E., M E. Professor of Heat Power Engineering ALLISON BITTS. B.S. Professor of Electrometallurgy ALFRED COPELAND CALLEN. M.S. Prolessor of Mining Engineering ALPHA ALBERT DIEFENDERFER. MS Professor of Quantitative Analysis and Assaying GILBERT EVERETT DOAN. Ph.D. Professor of Metallurgical Engineering HOWARD ECKFELDT. EM Professor of Mining Engineering WARREN WALTER EWING, PhD Professor of Physical Chemistry ARTHUR WARNER KLEIN. ME Professor of Mechanical Engineering FRED VIALL LARKIN. ME. Professor of Mechanical Engineering HARVEY ALEXANDER NEVILLE. Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry BRADLEY STOUGHTON. B.S. Professor of Metallurgical Engineering MILTON CALEB STUART. ME. Prolessor of Mechanical Engineering HALE SUTHERLAND. B.S. Prolessor of Civil Engineering EDWIN RAYMOND THEIS. Ph.D. Profe of Ch, Engii ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS HAROLD VICTOR ANDERSON. M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Chemistry SYLVANUS A. BECKER, M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Civil Engineering ROBERT DOMINICK BILLINGER. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Chemistry PRESTON BANKS CARWILE. Ph D. Assoc. Prof, of Physics JOHN ROBERT CONNELLY. MA. M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Mechanical Engineering MERTON OTIS FULLER. M.S. Assoc Prof, of Civil Engineering THOMAS HUGER HAZLEHURST. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Chemistry NELSON SHERK HIBSHMAN. M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Electrical Engineering Bl RGESS HILL JENNINGS. M.S.. M.A. Assoc. Prof, of Mechanical Engineering A RIL DEWEY JENSEN. M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Civil Engineering HENRY CARL IVAR KNUTSON. M.E.E. Assoc. Prof of Electrical Engineering CHARLES ROZIER LARKIN. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Pliv-i. s ALEXANDER WALKER LUCE. M.E. Assoc. Prof, of Machine Design ARCHIE ROSCOE MILLER. M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Electrical Engineering MAX PETERSEN. Ph.D. Assoc. Prof, of Physics CHARLES WELLINGTON SIMMONS. M.S. Assoc. Prof, of Chemical Engineering ERIC SPENCER SINKINSON. D.I.C.. F.C.S. Assoc. Prof, of Ore Dressing and Fuel Technology ASSISTANT PROFESSORS GEORGE CARLTON BECK. AC Assis. Prof, of Quantitative Analysis CHARLES EDWARD BERGER. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Physics CLEDO BRUNETTI. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Electrical Engineering WILLIAM IOSEPH ENEY. M S Assis. Prof, of Civil Engineering MAURICE EWING. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Physii - AUSTIN ROGERS FREY. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Physics IK AVARD DIETRICH GRUBER. M.S. gineering Assis. Prof, of Electrical En ARJ HUR THOMAS IPPEN. PhD Assis. Prof, of Civil Engineering BRUCE GILBERT JOHNSTON. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Civil Engineering HARRY GORDON PAYROW. B.S. Assis. Prof, of Sanitary Engineering RAYMOND FREDERICK SCHULTZ. PhD Assis. Prof, of Chemistry FREDERIC ALLEN SCOTT. Ph D Assis. Prof, of Physics HILTON ALBERT SMI TH. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Chemistry JUDSON GRAY SMULL. M.S. Assis. Prof, of Chemistry BENJAMIN LICHTY SNAVELY. Ph.D. Assis. Prof, of Phvsics EUGENE HENRY UHLER. C.E. Assis. Prof, of Civil Engineering INSTRUCTORS EDWARD DELBF.RT AMSTLTZ. PhD Instructor in Organic Chemistry JOEL FL ' RNESS BAILEY. M.S. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering THOMAS TIMINGS HOLME. B.S. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering THOMAS EDGAR JACKSON. M.S. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering IAMES PEYTON McREYNOLDS, Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry JOHN CLEWELL MERTZ, Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry JAMES ALEXANDER PEOPLES, IR . Ph.D. Instructor in Physics EARL JAMES SERFASS. Ph.D. Instructor in Chemistry ROBERT DANIEL STOUT. B.S. Instructor in Metallurgical Engineering RICHARD KENNETH TONER. Ph.D. Instructor in Che hI Eng GERALD ROBERT VAN DUZEE. M.S. Instructor in Metallurgical Engineering TYPICAL SCENES ENGINEERING CLASSES Comes a student from the manufacturing center or Newark imbibed with the ideals of the engineering profes- sion and aspiring to become a great engineer. I.ehigh is the best engineering school and I am going to become a me- chanical engineer, says he. Immediately, he learns that all students in engineering take the same subjects so he im- patiently waits for the first day of classes. Equipped with all of the necessary paraphernalia he attends his first class. All the students are herded into a large classroom where the professor looks over the new crop with that cer- tain glint in his eye. Soon the semester gets rolling and with lesson assignments to prepare time is very valuable, but when he budgets his time, he finds he does not have nearly enough. However, weeks slip by and midsemesters appear upon the horizon. Realizing that he must study harder than ever, he applies himself and skims through. Christmas arrives and he goes home to tell of the wonder- fid advantages of a college education. Home folks are full of enthusiasm, he comes back with renewed vigor, and exams fall by the wayside. With these fundamentals well in hand working becomes easier. The long seige continues until now our young protege is about to be graduated. Then all the kin lolk make a big fuss before he enters this wily world. This facsimile machine is a device for printing pictures as received from the broadcasting station via the radio waves. Every evening ajter the regular broad- cast is over a Philadelphia station presents this service and Lehigh has been quite willing to use if. Pro sor Alpfio . Die ender er, the sophomore Chem ' s only friend, gives his perspiring proteges tfieir dailv lesson in the most elegant methods of quantitative analysis. f)ief long ago established bis repu- tation for being the fastest lecturer in the University. The Student Chemical Society owes much of its sue cess ( ► bis untiring ellorts and interest. Stresses and strains ov the dozen — tensions and com- pressions bv the thousands of pounds, and still they must go to class later to grasjt the fundamentals. It is a rare sight to see two Lehigh men up a tree but in this case reason for it. 1 he men shown are giving a practical clemonstrat cautions for a lecturer. is a good ■n safety pre- The uniformity of the products of chemical industry is insured by careful analy- tical control. At Lehigh the importance of analytical chemistry is fully realized and adequately stressed in the chemistry curriculum by means of classroom thl and actual laboratory practice. heory Long noted for keeping up with the most modern prac- tices in industry. Lehigh recently installed a new course for Freshmen in semi-micro qualitative analysis sh above. Midwinter and sunshine on the Packard Laboratory steps-practicallv an unbeard of thing. At noontime the mechanical engineers step out of the building to bask in the sun while waiting for the photographer. Notice analysis shown the informality of the group once the classes are over. Even ihe professors seem relieved A STUDENT OPENS THE DOOR TO CHEMICAL KNOWLEDGE PACKARD LABORATORY REFLECTS THE MORNING SUNSHINE Tlie testing of commercial building materials is constantly being carried out in tlie Fritz Engineering Laboratory, to show the students their relative value. Here we see a beam un- dergoing a test. Among the varied equipment of Fritz Laboratory is a ma- chine for determining the ten- sile strength of materials. The opportunity to use such mach- inery personally is one of the many advantages of a Lehigh education. I he many aspects of the field of welding are rally taught in Lehigh ' s welding laboratory located in Williams Hall. The machine shown in operation is an electrical butt welder. WARREN W. ACHE Bud Hellertown, Pa. HELLERTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Chi Rt 1ETALLURCICAL DeMolay Clufc (3). President (4); Metal- lurgical Society (1. 2. 3. 4). Vice-Presi- dent (3); Delta Omicron Theta (2, 3, 4); E. W. Brown Astronomical Society (2. 3); Debating (I. 2, 3. 4): American Society for Metals (2, 3. 4). ROBERT A. ACKERMAN, II Ackie Westfield. N. J. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL Kappa Sigma Industrial Football ( I ) ; Industrial Engineering So- ciety: American Society of Mechanical En- gineers. Secretary (3. 4). Treasurer (4). RALSTON G. ADAMSON Scotty CoATESVILLE, Pa. GLEBE COLLEGIATE. OTTAWA Town Group Meta LLURCICAL Fencing (l. 2); Metallurgical Society. CHARLES E. AHL, JR. Chuck Pittsburgh. Pa. UNIVERSITY SCHOOL Phi Gamma Delta Mining Baseball (l); Mining and Geological So- ciety. ROBERT C. ALBERT Bob Trenton, N. J. HAMILTON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group M ECHANICAL Pi Tau Sigma (4): Chess Club (4); Me- chanical Engineering Society (2, 3. 4) BERNARD ALTSHULER Bernie Newark, N. J. WEST SIDE HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Engineering Physics Freshman and Sophomore Honors: Wilbur Prize in Mathematics (2): Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society (l, 2); Robert W. Blake Society (1, 2. 3. 4): Tau Beta Pi (3), Recording Secretary (4); Pi Mu Epsi- Ion (2, 3). President (4); Delta Omicron Theta (2. 3. 4); Chess Club (4): Army Ordnance Association; Physics Society (l. 2. 3. 4): Phi Beta Kappa. CHESTER C. BALDWIN Chet Baltimore, Md. BALTIMORE FRIENDS SCHOOL Sigma Phi Industrial Assistant Manager of Baseball (2); Sopho- more and Junior Honors: Interfraternity Council (3, 4); Pi Tau Sigma (3), Presi- dent (4); Tau Beta Pi (4); Omicron Delta Kappa; International Relations Club (I. 2. 3). President (4); Mustard and Cheese (2, 3), Business Manager (4); Industrial Engineering Society (3). Treasurer (4). ELMER S. BARNES Barney Plantsville, Conn. BRISTOL HIGH SCHOOL Town Group M ETALLURGICAL Wrestling (l. 2. 3. -l); Track (l. 2); Soccer ( 1 ) ; Sports Manager of Town Sec- tion; Metallurgical Society (1, 2. 3. 4). EPITOME FOR 19 4 CHARLES B. BAYLES Barney Port Jefferson, N. Y. PORT JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL Sigm. Nu Mechanical Manager ol Freshman Track (-0; Pi Tan Sigma; Brown Key Society 0); Spiked Shoe Society; A. S. M. E. FRANK G. BINGER Bunny Elizabeth, N. J. RHODES PREPARATORY SCHOOL Kappa Sigma Industrial Swimming (1, 2); Football (2); Treasurer. Kappa Sigma; Band (1, 2); Industrial En- gineering Society (I. 2, 3. 4); A. S. M. E. (4). LESTER R. BITTEL Buster East Orange, N. J. EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Industrial Football (l): Dormitory Section Athletic Manager (4); Debating Society (l); In- dustrial Engineering Society (2, 3). WILLIAM A. BLUM. JR. Bill Bethlehem, Pa. I RANKFORD HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemical Freshman and Sophomore Honors: Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society: Tau Beta Pi; ( hrnii al Society. ALFRED V. BODINE. JR. Al Fairciiild, Conn. ROGER LUDLOWE HIGH SCHOOL Cm Al -AMBDA wlll ALPHA M ' l STRIA1 Baseball (l); President of Freshman Union; President or Sophomore Class; Chairman of Class Banquet (5, 4); Sopho- more Dante Committee; Scabbard and Blade; Arcadia (l, 2); Industrial Engineer- ing Society (3), Vice-President (I). JOHN BRANCH ]ack Nesquehoning, Pa. BLAIR ACADEMY Price House Chemical Freshman Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Ch eal Society. JOHN P. BRANDT jack N EWPORT , Pa. NEWPORT HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemistry President of Town Section (-4); Town Council (4): Alpha Phi Omega (2. 3, 4); Alpha Epsilon Delia (I); Robert W. Hall Pre Medical Society (3, 4): Chemistry So ciety (2, 3. 4). A. H. BRENNESHOLTZ Tiny East Orange, N. J. EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Inl Swimming (I): Pi Em Sigma; Glee Club (I. 2): Cosmopolitan Club ( l). Industrial Engineering Society. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY EDWARD H. BRINDLE Ed North Braddock, Pa. SHARON HIGH SCHOOL Theta Delta Chi Metallurgical Soccer (1); Football (2, 3. 4); Metallurgi- cal Society, Vice-President (4). RICHARD E. BROWN Ick Detroit. Mich. CRANBROOK SCHOOL Kappa Sigma Mechanical Wrestling ( 1 ) ; American Society of Me- chanical Engineers. WILLIAM W. BROWN Bill 1LION HIGH Delta Tau Delta Tennis (t, 2); Wrestling (l. 2. 3); Brown and White (2). Circulation Manager (3); Freshman Honors; Pi Delta Epsilon (3). Secretary (4); Cyanide Club; Newtonian Society; Sportsman ' s Chili (3. 4); Chemi- cal Society. LOUIS J. G. BUEHLER Loui Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Group Pi Tau Sigma (4), In dustrial GILBERT P. CARDWELL Gil Parkesburg, Pa. PARKESBURG HIGH SCHOOL Richards House Electrical Dormitory Section Chief (3). Treasurer (4): Interdormitory Council (3); Alpha Phi Omega; Radio Club (I. 2. 3. 4); Band (l. 2. 5. 4); Electrical Engineering Society (I. 2. 3. 4); A. I. E. E. WILLIAM F. CARSON, JR. Bill Philadelphia, Pa. GERMANTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Theta i Chemical Freshman Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian Society; E. W. Brown Astronomical Society (3): Chemical En- gineering Society. Bridgeport, Conn. Bob ROBERT P. CARTER New Hope, COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Town Group Che Manager of Basketball (4); President of Town Section; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi: Phi Eta Sigma; New- tonian Society; Omicron Delta Kappa; Band. Drum Major (l. 2. 3. 4); Chemical Society (t. 2. 3), President (4). ROBERT A. CARY Bob North Tonavvanda, N. Y. N. TONA WANDA HIGH SCHOOL Rich He rds Hoi si: M ETALLURGICAL Freshman Union; Interdormitory Council Vice-President (4); Metallurgical Society (2, 3). Secretary (4). t v fc£iL EPITOME FOR 19 4 WALTER R. CATCHING. JR. Randy Mountain Lakes, N. J. BOONTON HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Epsilon Civil American Society or Civil Engineers. WILLIAM R. CLARK Bill MlFFLINTOWN, Pa. MIFFLINTOWN HIGH SCHOOL W. J. CONTRERAS ii, VYI-OR HOUSE Cr Fencing (1.2. 3. 4). Manager (2): Brown and White (i): Tau Beta Pi; Alpha Phi Omega (3), Secretary (4); Cut and Thrust (2). Secretary (3). Vice-President (4); E. W. Brown Astronomical Society (2, 3). President {4): Aero Club (3); Symphony Orchestra (2, 5. 4): Civil Engineering Society (2. 3), Treasurer (4)- RICHARD F. CLOCK Dick Kenmore, N. Y. KENMORE HIGH SCHOOL Housi M 1 , II ANICAL Assistant Manager. Football ( I ) ; Basket- I,, ,11 (1, 2); Freshman and Sophomore Honors: Tau Beta Pi (3. 4); Pi Tau Sig- ma (3, 4): A. S. M. E. JOHN COCHRAN Jack Suffield, Conn. SPRINGFIELD TECHNICAL HIGH Cosmopolitan Club Che Swimming (1); Cosmopolitan Club; Chemi- cal Society. We B ethlehem , Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Electrical Electrical Engineering Society (4) . JOHN F. CONWELL Pinky Meriden. Conn. MERIDEN HIGH SCHOOL Kappa Sigma M ETALLUROICAL Secretary or Kappa Sigma (3); American Society of Metals (2, 3. 4); Metallurgical Society (2. 3, 4). ALFRED T. COX Al New York City, N. Y. I)i WITT CLINTON HIGH SCHOOL Delta Sigma Phi Civil Football (!. 2, 3. l). Captain (4); Bas- ketball (1. 2. 3, 4); Baseball (l. 2. 3. 4). Co-Captain (4 ) : Junior Class President; Senior Class President; Arcadia (3), Vice- President (4); Sophomore Representative to Lehigh L ' nion ; Tau Beta Pi Freshman Prize; Wilbur Prize in English : Military Metals; Omicron Delta Kappa; Tau Beta Pi; Cyanide, President; Scabbard ana Blade; Pi Mu Epsilon; Phi Eta Sigma. President; New Ionian Society; Civil En- gineering Society; Phi Beta Kappa. SAMUEL R. COX Sam Baylesford, Pa. KISKI PREP Alpha Chi Rho Chemical Manager of Freshman Tennis (4) ; Brown ana White ( I ) ; Freshman I landUboofc Board (3) ; Review Board (4) ; Interfra- ternity Council, Athletic Manager (3), I reasurer (4 } ; Junior Prom Committee; (_ hemical Society. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY JOSEPH C. COYNE ]oe Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Delta Upsil Industrial Track (2) ; Manager of Varsity Soccer (-l) ; Scabbard and Blade; Brown Key Society; AIIenrown-Lenign Club; Industrial Engi- neering Society (1, 2, 5. -4). BERTRAM J. CROSS. JR. Bert Grandview. N. Y. TAPPAN ZEE HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House M I CHANICAL Tennis (l. 4): Mechanical Engineering Society. WILLIAM R. CSELLAK Bill Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemical Football (1); Basketball (l. 2); Cross- Country (2. 3. -4); Trark (l. 2. 3. 4); Town Section President ( 3 , 4 ) : Town Council, Treasurer (4) ; Freshman and Sophomore Honors ; Tau Beta Pi ; New- tonian Society; Army Ordnance Associa- tion. Secretary-Treasurer of Lehigh -Bethle- hem Post; Chemical Society. CHARLES W. DARBY Charlie Somerville, N. J. SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi M ETALLURGICAL Rifle Team (l. 2, 3, A); International Re- lations Club (2. 5, 4): Metallurgical So- ciety. 1 1 III If W. DAVIS Phil Reading, Mass. TABOR ACADEMY Al piia rvAPPA ri Industrial Soccer (l. 2); Industrial Engineering So- ciety. JOHN E. DECHER Dutch Staten Island. N. Y. PORT RICHMOND HIGH SCHOOL Cosmopolitan Club Chemical Track (2); Cross-Country (2); Boxing and Fencing Clubs: Town Section, President; Tone Society; DeMolay Club; Chemical Society. PHILIP G. DeHUFF, JR. Phil Lebanon. Pa. LEBANON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Ietallurcical Tennis (5), Captain (4); Assistant Man- ager of Tennis (l); Freshman and Sopho- more Honors; Newtonian Society; Tau Beta Pi; Army Ordnance Association; Metal- lurgical Society. A. GRAHAM DELANY Del Brooklyn, N. Y. POLY PREP COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL eta Theta Pi Civi Lacrosse (I, 2. 5). Captain (4). All-Penn- sylvania Team (j); Junior Manager Var- sity Wrestling (3). Manager of Freshman Wrestling (4), Scabbard and Blade: Brown Kov Society (5); Interfraternity Council (5. 4): A. S. C E. (4). E P I T O M FOR 9 4 JOHN H. DEMING Rosebud Meadowbrook, Pa. GEORGE SCHOOL MICHAEL R. DUROCHIk Kappa Sicha INDUSTRIAL Soccer (1, 2. 5. 4): Industrial Engineering Sociely (I. 2. ), ()• LEONARD H. DIEHL. JR. Baa Harrlsburg, Pa. BULLIS NAVAL PREP SCHOOL Sigma Cm Chemical Assistant Manager of Swimming (I, 2); Epitome. Sports Editor ( 3 ) ; DcMolay Club; Sportsman s Cluli; Chrmical So- t ietv. CHARLES H. DORSEY. JR. Chuck Washington, Pa. WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Lambda Cm Alpha Metallurgical Tennis (I. 2. i. 1)-. Basketball (I): Hoc- Key (3); Freshman Union: Sophomore Vigi- lante Committee; Glee Club (-4): Aero Club (4); Metallurgical Society (2. 3. 4). JOHN H. DUFFIN Duffy Easton, Pa. EASTON HIGH SCHOOL I n n Group (mimical Wrestling (l); Camera Club; Chemical N iety. Mike Un lUNTOWN. TA , P NORTH UNION HIGH SCHOOL AVLOR tlOUSE Chemical Society. Chemical WELLINGTON B. ELER Duke Trf j. N. J. TRENTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL 1 HETA Xl INDUSTRIAL Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Pi lau Sigma Prize; Newtonian Sociely; Tau Beta Pi: Pi Mu Epsilon; Pi Tau Sigma; Band (I. 2); Secretary of Theta Xi (3): Indus- trial Engineering Society- FRANK B. ELLIOTT Frank RlVERTON. N. J. EPISCOPAL ACADEMY Chi Phi Chemical I ball ( it: Wrestling ( )); Track (2. 3); Freshman Union; Secretary-Treasurer oi Sophomore Class. HERBERT F. ENGELMANN l il W ILMINGTON. IJEL . De WILMINGTON FRIENDS SCHOOL Richards Housi Engineering Physics Radio Club (I); Physics Society (I) LEHIGH UNIVERSITY JAMES A. ERDLE Jim Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemistry Chemical Society. LESTER C. ERICH Les Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemical Track (I. 2): Robert W. Hall Pre-Medi- cal Society; Glee Club (t, 2, 3); Chemical Society. LOUIS H. A. FEHER Lou BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Electrical E. W. Brown Astronomical Society: Amer- ican Institute of Electrical Engineers. JAMES C. FELDMANN Jim Kingston, Pa. KINGSTON HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Industrial CHARLES H. FETZER Fetz Rutherford, N. J. RUTHERFORD HIGH SCHOOL Kappa Sigma Metallurgical Soccer (I); Rifle Team (l, 2); President of Kappa Sigma (4); Chemical Society (!. 2); Metallurgical Society (3. -I). AARON FINGER ' Willie North Bergen, N. J. UNION HILL HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Alpha Mu Chemical Secretary, Sigma Alpha Mu; Chemical Society (l. 2. 3, 4). WILLIAM S. FISKE Bethlehem, Pa. 3 f Palmerton, Pa. S. S. PALMER HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Chemical Football (I): Band (1, 2. 3. 4); Chemical Engineering Society. FERNAND A. FLORY Fere? Clifton, N. J. CLIFTON HIGH SCHOOL Theta Kappa Phi Metallurgical Newtonian Society (l); Pi Tau Sigma (3, 4); Debating Society (3); Industrial En- gineering S tv (1.2. 3. 4). Metallurgical Engineering Society (2. 3. 4) EPITOME FOR 19 4 RICHARD C. GANGWER Dick Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOVVN HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Group Chemical Basketball ( I ) ; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Chemical Society. JOSEPH M. GARDEN Joe Bethlehem, Pa. HORTON ACADEMY Town Group Mechanical Member ol the Student ' s Council for En- gineering Society. 1030; B.A.. Acadia Uni- versity. 1955. JOHN GIACOBBE ]ohn Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Group Chemical E. V. Brown Astronomical Society, Sec- retary-Treasurer (4) ; Lehigh-AIIentown CI11I. (■!); Symphony Orr lirstra (2, 3, 4). FRANK P. GLUECK F Philadelphia, Pa. NORTHEAST HIGH SCHOOL Chi I j mi Industrial Lacrosse (1. 2, 3, 4); Track (3. 4); Soccer { I ) ; Review, Business Board; Scabbard and Blade (5. 4); Mustard and Cheese ( ompetition; Military Ball Committee : In- dustrial Engineering Society. GEORGE F. GLUECK Navv Philadelphia, Pa. SEVERN SCHOOL Cm P. Industrial Lacrosse (2. 5. 4); Glee Club; Industrial Engineering Society. ROBERT R. GODARD Bob Pittsburgh. Pa. MT LEBANON HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Electrical Fresnman and Sophomore Honors; New- tonian Society ( 1 ) : Pi Mu Epsilon (4) ; Eta Kappa Nu (3), Recording Secretary (4); Radio Club (I. 2. 3); Electrical En- gineering Society (l, 2, 3). Vice-President (■0. ROBERT C. GOOD. JR. Bob Pittsburgh, Pa. EDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Delta Upsilon Engineering Physics Football (1, 2. 5. -i); Editor-in-Chief of Epitome (-4); Freshman and Sopnomnre Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon (5. 4): Tau Beta Pi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Cyanide; Newtonian Society; Physics So- ciety; Phi Beta Kappa. SAMUEL M. GRAFTON Meek Brooklyn, N. Y. BRO KLYN TECHNICAL HIGH Theta Kappa Phi Industrial Trark ( t ) ; Assistant Manager of Track (2); [nterfraternity Council (2. 3); E. W. Brown Astronomical Society (l, 2. 3); Mustard and Cheese (2, 3. 4); Camera Club (5, 4). President and Founder (3); Treasurer ol Theta Kappa Plii; Industrial Engineering Society (1. 2, 3, 4). LEHIGH UNIVERSITY VERNON S. GRAY. JR. GEORGE V. GRIFFITH Ste B . Ai IRMINGHAM, LA RAMSAY HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House M Pean Pittsburgh. Pa. MOUNT LEBANON HIGH SCHOOL Tiieta Xi Civil American Association for Metals; Metal- lurgical Engineering Society. Treasurer (4). Assistant Manager of Fresliman Track: Civil Engineering Society. WILLIAM D. GREEN SPENCER R. GRIFFITH Bill Chester, Pa. Spence Lancaster, Pa CHESTER HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Electrical LANCASTER HIGH SCHOOL Iown Group Mechanical Freshman Honors; Pi Tau Sigma: New- Tennis (-4); Wrestling (4); Electrical En- Ionian Society; American Society of Me- gineering Society (3. 4). chanical Engineers. JOHN C. GREGG John Flushing. N. Y. FLUSHING HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Nu Civil Swimming (t. 2. 3. 4): Lacrosse (2); Soccer (2. 3. 4); Newtonian Society (l): Omicron Delta Kappa (4); President of Sigma Nu (4); Civil Engineering Society. CHARLES A. HAMILTON Chuck WlNNETKA. III. ST. PAUL ACADEMY I met a i Industbia.1 Rifle Team (l); Review. Business Board (I. 2); Industrial Engineering Society (1. 2. 3. 4). PAUL R. GREGORY JOSEPH I. HAMMOND Greg Ceiapman Quarries, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Grocp Chemical Joe Richmond Hill. N. Y. BROOKLYN TECHNICAL HIGH Theta Kappa P Wrestling (1): Track (l); Fresliman Hon- ors: Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Chemical Society. Scabbard and Blade (4). INDUSTRIAL E P I T M F O 9 4 W. M HARBAUGH, JR. Roch LLENTOWN x. Pa All I MOWN I IK .11 SCHOOL I ' m I )i i.i 1 in t v INDUSTRIAL Assistant Manager ol Freshman Basket- ball; Freshman Han.llH.uk, [business Man- ager ( 3 ) : Freshman Honors; Cyanide (5); Pi Tmi Sigma (3); Tau Beta Pi (4); Scabbard and Kladr ( j. I); Industrial En- gineering Society ( ) . President (4), ARTHUR H. HARDING Art East Orange, N. J. I ST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL I ' m Epsii Che Football (1. 4); Brown and White. Busi- m-s Board (l). Assistant Circulation Man- ager (2); Chemical Society (1. 2. 4). FR.W ' K E. HARPER. .JR. Ned Cor. opolis. Pa CORAOPOLIS HIGH SCHOOL Pi Kappa Alpha Civil L. I - Camera Club (2. 3); American So- i irl oi Civil Engineers (2. 5, -I). FAMES R. HARRIS. JR. Jim Glen Ridge. N. I. GLEN RIDGE HIGH SCHOOL Cm P On m Wrestling (  . 1): Scabbard and Blade (3, 1 1 : ( hemii al Society. EDWARD L. HESS Ed Hellertown, Pa. HELLERTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Town roi p Electrical DeMolay Club (5). Vice-President (4); 1 lectrical Engineering Society. RICHARD C. HESS Dick Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Groi p Metallurgical Sports Director of Town Section (3) : Cliess Club; Band (1. 2. 3. -4); Metallurgical Engineering Society. HAROLD C. H1XSON Harold Allentowx. Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL ALLENTOWN GrOL ' P Electrical Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Eta Sigma: Eta Kappa Nu; Electrical En- gineering Society (4). C.EORGE HOLMES. JR. George Bloomfield. N. J. WHITE PLAINS HIGH SCHOOL I iiw N C ' ROL ' P Chemistry Chess Club (4); Chemical Society (1, 3. 4). LEHIGH UNIVERSITY RICHARD P. HOMILLER Dick Lansdowne, Pa. LANSDOWNE HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Epsilon Chemical Track (I. 2. 3, -l); Cross-Country (3); Epitome, Photographic Editor (3. 4); In- terfraternity Council; President of Sigma Phi Epsilon (-(); Freshman Honors: Chem- ical Society. HARRY B. HORNE, JR. Curly Silver Spring, Md. GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Cosmopolitan Club Che Student Concert Lecture Series Committee (4): President of the Cosmopolitan Club (4). BENJAMIN L. HUMMEL Be YORK HIGH SCHOOL Pi Kappa Alpha Mechanical Baskethall (l). PAUL A. HUNTER Pete Williamsport. Pa. WILLIAMSPORT HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Civil President of Town Group Section ((); Town Council (-(): Civil Engineering So- ciety. JOHN J. HURSH, JR. John Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Cosmopolitan Club Metallurgical Freshman ana Sophomore Honors; New- tonian Society; Plii Eta Sigma; American Society for Metals; Metallurgical Society. ROBERT H. IRELAND Bob Lambertville, N. J. LAMBERTVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Lambda Chi Alpha Mechanical Tennis; Band (-1): Glee Club (l); Dance Orchestra (l); Aero Club (2); American Society for Mechanical Engineers (3). AELFRIC JAMES. JR. ]ames Easton, Pa. EASTON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Engineering Physics Freshman Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon (2, 3. 4); Physics Society (2. 3, -1). EDWARD C. JAMES Ed Huntington. V. Va. HUNTINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group 1LECTRICAL Band (I, 2); Electrical Engineerinu So- . iety; A. I E. E. EPITOME FOR 19 4 RICHARD B. JEFFERY P ff BlNGHAMTON, N. Y. B1NGHAMTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Lambda Chi Alpha Mil Wrestling (1. 2); Assistant Manager of Fresl in Football: Interfraternity Council ( ). Treasurer (l); Chemical Society (I. ARTHUR H. JOECKS RICHARD L. JOHNSON Dick WoODSTOWN, N. J. BAY VIEW HIGH SCHOOL Delta Tau Di lta Minino Cross-Country (l); Brown and White (2); Mining and Geological Society (2. 3), President (4); A. I. M. E. (2, 3. 4.) DAVID F. KEIPER Art Bf.rgenfield, N. J. Dave Hkllertown, Pa. DCMONT HIGH SCHOOL HELLERTOW ' N HIGH SCHOOL Metallurgical Phi Sigma Kappa Chemical Town Groi p Lacrosse (3) ; Chemical Society (l. 2. 3. 4). Metallurgical Engineering Society. ERNEST F. JOHNSON. JR. GILBERT M. KELLER Ernie Cheltenham. Pa. Qi Carlisle. Pa. CHELTENHAM HIGH SCHOOL CARLISLE HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Chemical Sw ing (l); Track (3. 4); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Newtonian So- Town Group Mechanical ciety; Phi Eta Sigma: Tau Beta Pi: Tone Society: E. W. Brown Astronomical So- ciety (I. 2); Chemical Society. RALPH G. JOHNSON. JR. Grunch Washington, Pa. SHADY SIDE ACADEMY Delta I Ipsilon Civil Manager oi Varsity Baseball (l): Presi- ,1, nl ol Delta Upsilon (4); Brown Key So- ciety; Fall Sports Manager (3); Civil En- gineering Sui iily- Haines Memorial Scholarship; Alumni Prize (3): Tau Beta Pi; Pi Mu Epsilon: Pi Tau Sigma. Corresponding Secretary (I); A S. M. E. RICHARD C KELLY, JR. Dick Elkins Park. Pa. CHELTENHAM HIGH SCHOOL Delta Upsilon Chemistry Soccer (t. 2. 5); Wrestling (I. 2. 3); Arcadia. Treasurer (4); Phi Eta Sigma; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi: Cyanide: Tone Society; Scabbard and Blade; Omicron Delta Kappa; Alpha Phi Omega, President (l): Robert W. Blake Society (3. 4); Glee Club (l. 2. 3. 4); President ol Combined Musical Clubs (4); Chairman ol the Student Concert Lecture Series Committee (4): Chemical Society. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY FRED W. KERN JOHN W. KREIDLER Freddie Norristown, Pa. John Reading, Pa. EISENI K AVER HIGH SCHOOL READING SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Metallurgical Town Group I Ml MM l Metallurgical Society, President (4). Swimming (4); Chemical Society. ROGER F. KLEINSCHMIDT THEODORE L. LEIN1NGER Kleiny Manh asset, N. Y. MANHASSET HIGH SCHOOL Theta Xi Chemical Soccer (1); Cheerleader (3); Brown and White, Freshman Reporter Cup (l), News Editor (2): Chess Club (4); Glee Clut (1. 2); Chemical Society (l. 2. 3. 4). ROBERT F. KOENIG Bob Brooklyn, N. Y. BROOKLYN TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL Price House Metallurgical Cross-Counlry (l); Pi Mu Epsilon (3). Secretary (4) ; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Delta Omicron Theta (3, 4); Ra- dio Club (l, 2, 3. 4); Newtonian Society; Williams Prize in Debating; Metallurgical Society (l, 2. 3. 4). FRED KORNET, JR. Joe WORTENDYKE, N. J. POMPTON PREPARATORY SCHOOL Lambda Chi Alpha Chemical Manager of Varsity Swimming (4); Presi- dent of Lambda Chi Alpha (4); Brown Key Society (3); Army Ordnance Post (4); Chemical Society (I, 2. 3. 4); Scab- bard and Blade (■(). Ted Pottsville, Pa. POTTSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemical Track (1); Town Council (4); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Tau Beta Pi; Chemical Society. GEORGE C. LENNOX jeorge ittsfield . M ASS. PITTSFIELD HIGH SCHOOL l)i ELTA UPSILON Industrial Football (l); Soccer (2); Cross-Counlry {3, 4 ) ; Assistant Manager of Freshman Baseball; Manager ol Freshman Tennis (4); Epitome, Class Editor (3). Art Editor (4); Pi Delta Epsilon (4); Brown Key Society ; Spiked Shoe Society : Industrial Engineering Society. WARREN G. LEONARD Jug Falmouth Heights, Mass. WHITE PLAINS HIGH SCHOOL Chi Pin Industrial Assistant Manager of Freshman Wrestling; Lacrosse (!. 2); Epitome, Business Board (2. 3). Assistant Business Manager (4); Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Army Ord- nance Post (4); Debating (4); Interna- tional Relations Club (2); Industrial En- gineering Society. EPITOME FOR 19 4 WILLIAM C. LEWIS Bill West Pittston, Pa WEST PI1TSTON HICH SCHOOL I won House Minin Wrestling (l); Mining Society (2, 3) V Pr.si.lcnt (I). JOHN O. LIEBIG, JR. ]ohnny Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL 1 own Group C ivil Track (3. 4); Alpha Phi Omega; E. W. Broun Astronomical Society; Civil Engi- neering Society. GEORGE E. LIEN Sivede Port Washington, N. Y. PORT WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Mechanical Pi Tau Sigma (3, -I ) ; Glee Club (I. 2. 3. 4): Alpha Phi Omega (1. 2); Army Ordnance Post (4); American Society of Mechanical Engineers (I, 2, 3. I). CLIFFORD F. LINCOLN, JR. Cliff Philadelphia, Pa. GEKMANTOWN ERIENDS SCHOOL Phi ( i.WIMA LJl- ' LTA De M ETALLURGICAL Soccer (I. 2. 3, 4); Managei oi Varsity Wrestling (4); Cyanide (3); Brown Key Society; Scabbard and Blade ( 5, 4); Army Ordnance Post (-0; Metallurgical Engi- neering Society (2, 3, 4), Secretary (3). JAMES F. LOBACH. JR. Jim Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN I IK .11 SCHOOL Pi Kappa Alpha Metallurgical Brown and White (4); Band (1. 2. 3. 4); Lehigh-AIIentown Club (I. 2. 3. 4). Sec- retary (3); Sportsman ' s Clul. (4); Metal- lurgical Society (2, 3. 4). GORDON G. LCVELAND Swifty Babylon. N. Y. BALDWIN HIGH SCHOOL Phi Sigma Kappa Ch-emical Boxing (l, 2); Manager of Fresbman Foot- ball (4); Scabbard and Blade (3. 4); Chemical Society (3, 4 ) . DONALD R. LUSTER Duck East Orange, N. I. EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL Chi Psi Mechanical Football (I); Rifle Team (I. 2): Track ( 1 ) ; Manager of Fresbman Soccer (4) ; Intcrfraternity Sports Manager (3. 4) ; Board of Publications (3); Pi Tau Sigma Prize (1); J. R. Wagner Prize (2); Fresb- man, Sopbomore, and Junior Honors; Tau Beta Pi (3. 4); Pi Tau Sigma (3). Treas- urer (4); Plii Eta Sigma, Historian; Pi Mu Epsilon (3, 4) ; Newtonian Society, Vice- President ( t ) ; Brown Key Society, Winter Sports Director (3); Aero Club (2, 3, 4), Pres ident (3); Cyanide; Omicron Delta Kappa (3) , Treasurer (4 ) ; Interrraterniry Council (3. 4); A. S. M. E. ROBERT E. LYON Boo Norwich, N. i . NORWICH HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Mechanical Fresbman Honors; Pi Tau Sigma; New- tonian Society; American Society or Me- chanical Engineers. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY DONALD W. MacFEETERS Mac Glen Ridge, N. J. GLEN RIDGE HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Industrial Swimming ( 1. 3, 4) ; Dormitory Section, Secretary (3), Chief (4) ; Inlerdormitory Council (4) ; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi (3, 4); Pi Tau Sig- ma (3, 4) ; Scabbard and Blade (3. 4) ; Army Ordnance Post (4) : Industrial En- gineering Society (2, 3 ) , Secretary (4 ) ; A. S. M. E. (4). ROYAL V. MACKEY, JR. Roy Summit. N. J. SUMMIT HIGH SCHOOL PRESTON F. MARSHALL B eta Kappa Chi Track (l); Review. Photographic Staff (4): Army Ordnance Post (4); Treasurer of Beta Kappa (4); Camera Club; Chemical Society. LEWIS T. MARKS, JR. Pete Westfield, N. J. WESTF1ELD HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Che Assistant Manager of Freshman Basketball; Sportsman s Club; Chemical Society ( 1, 2. 3. 4). ROBERT D. MARSDEN Bob Chevy Chase, Md. CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Kappa Pi Engineering Physics Track (1,2); Brown and White. Board (2. 3). Editorial Council (4); Freshman Union; Freshman and Sophomore Honors; New- tonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi, Corresponding Sec- retary (4); Physics Society (2, 3), Vice- President (4) ; Phi Beta Kappa. Bl w . D. C. ASHINGTON ROENTORD PREP, SCHOOL Sigma Nl: I.nih ISTRIAL Football (l): Soccer (3. 4); Wrestling (3. 4); Track (l. 2. 3). Captain (4); Chair- man of Engineer ' s Ball (4); Class Banquet Committee (3, 4); Pi Tau Sigma (3), Vice-President ( 4 ) ; Cyanide : President of Spiked Shoe; Scabbard and Blade (3, 4); Industrial Engineering Society. RALPH E. MARTIN Ralph Westfield, N. J. WESTFIELD HIGH SCHOOL Delta Sigma Phi Chemical Manager of Varsitv Track (4): Secretary of Delta Sigma Phi (4); Bantl (1. 2), Student Director (5. 4): Cyanide: Brown Key Society: Alplia Plii Omega (2): Sym- phony Orchestra (I, 2): Chemical Society (I. 2. 5. 4). JEAN F. MASCUCH Scutch South Orange. N. J. EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL Delta Sigma Pi- Industrial IS lechanical Engineering Society ( 1 . 2 ) , JOHN V. McGUIRE Mac Easton. Pa. EASTON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Electrical Sophomore Honors; I au Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; Camera Club; Electrical En- gineering Society. ; i EPITOME FOR 19 4 JOHN F. McQUILLIN iq ger Pittsburgh, Pa. MEKCERSBCRG ACADEMY Kappa Sigma Mechanical WILLIAM N. MILLS Bill Wyoming, Pa. WYOMING HIGH SCHOOL Football (2); Swimming (1. 2, 3, 4); In- rerfratemiry Council (2. 3). Vice-President (I): Army Ordnance Post ( I ) ; Aero Club (I); Mechanical Engineering Society (l. 2). Vice-President (3), President (4); A. S. M. E CLIFTON S. MERKERT Pudge Queens Village, N. . BROOKLYN TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Phi Epsilon Metallurgical Vice-President of Sigma Pki Epsilon; Metallurgical Society. HERMAN E. J. MERZ Bud Maplewood. N. J. ST. BENEDICT ' S PREPARATORY SCHOOL Theta Kappa Phi Metallurgical President of Theta Kappa Phi (I): Metal- lurgical Society. ARTHUR S. MICKLEY Ar( West New Brighton, N. I . CURTIS HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Electrical Track (2. 3. 4): Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi (5. 4): Eta Kappa Nu (3). Treasurer (l): R. W. Blake So- ciety (2, 3. 4): Electrical Engineering So- ciety (I. 2. 3). President (4). Taylor Hoi si Metallurgical Baseball (l): Metallurgical Society. CHARLES F. MONARD Duch Trenton, N. J. TRENTON HIGH SCHOOL Kappa Sigm. Metallurgical Baseball ( I ) ; American Society for Metals. WILLIAM F. MORGAN Bill RlDGEWOOD, N. J. RLDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Lambda Chi Alpha Eng. Physics Lacrosse (l); Football (3): Physics So- ciety. MATTHEW K. MORRIS Mad Bethlehem, Pa. MORAVIAN PREPARATORY SCHOOL Theta Delta Chi ndustrial Band (1.2, 3). Manager (4): Debating Society (3); Industrial Engineering Society (I, 2. 3. 4); American Society for Metals; A. S. M. E. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY LEONARD D. MORRISON Len Great Neck, L. I. GREAT NECK HIGH SCHOOL Richards House Industrial Cross-Counlry (l); Alpha Plii Omega: Industrial Engineering Society - . ANDREW S. MORROW Andy Easton. Pa. EASTON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemical Engineering Society. NORMAN L. MORSE Norm Carlisle, Pa. CARLISLE HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemical Fencing (3); Town Council, Secretary (3). President (-t); Arcadia (4); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; Wil- liams Prizes in English and Oral Compo- sition (l); Chandler Chemistry Prize; Alumni Junior Prize; Tau Beta Pi (3, 4); Pi Mu Epsilon (2. 3. 4); Delta Omicron Theta (2. 3, 4); R. W. Blake Society (3. 4); Debating Society (l, 2. 3), President (4); Chemical Society (1, 2. 3, 4); Phi Beta Kappa. CHARLES G. MYERS Swish Washington, D. C. WESTERN HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Kappa Pi Mechanical Track (I, 2, 4); Pi Tau Sigma (3, 4); Alpha Phi Omega (l. 2. 3. 4); Aero Club (2. 3. 4); American Society o[ Mechanical Engineers (I, 2. 3, 4). OTTO V. NORVIG Otto Easton, Pa. BRONXVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Kappa Alpha Industrial Epitome, Business Stan (2), Advertising Manager (3). Business Manager (4); Scab- bard and Blade (3). Captain (4); Pi Delta Epsilon (4); Industrial Engineering So- ciety (1, 2, 3, 4). JAMES L. OBERG Jim North Warren, Pa. WARREN HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Taylor House M ETALLURGICAL Freshman Honors: Metallurgical Society. HERBERT J. PACKER. JR. Asa East Orange, N. J. EAST ORANGE HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Industrial Soccer (1. 2. 4); Sports Manager of Town Section; Industrial Engineering Society (l, 2. 3. 4). VIVIAN G. PAUL. JR. V. G. Lake Worth, Fla. JACKSON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Civil Newtonian Society; Civil Engineering So- ciety. EPITOME FOR 19 4 £w JOSEPH E. PFAFF e Irvington, N. I. CLEVELAND HEIGHTS HIGH SCHOOL Beta Kappa Metallurgical American Society for Metals; Metallurgi- cal Engineering Society (1, 2. 3, 4). EDWARD P. PHILLIPS Red Berlin. Md. PEDDIE SCHOOL Sigma Phi Epsilon Mechanical Soccer (1. 2. 3, 4), Captain (l), Co-Cap- tain (4); Camera Club. Secretary (2). Vice-President (3); Army Ordnance Post (4); A. S. M. E. ROBERT K. POETTER King Glen Rock. N. J. R1DGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Mechanical Dormitory Sports Manager (3. 4): Camera Club (1. 2): American Society of Me- chanical Engineers (1. 2. 3, 4). WILLIAM B. POHLMAN Bill Little Falls. N. J. MONTCLA1R HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Engineering Physics Freshman and Sophomore Honors; New- Ionian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Ep- silon; Tau Beta Pi; Army Ordnance Post; Physics So. iel : I ' hi Beta Kappa. CHARLES P. PULSFORD Charlie BtRDSBORO, Pa. HARDING HIGH SCHOOL I OWN CiROUP Metallurgical Sophomore Honors; Band (l. 2. 5); Or- chestra ( 1 . 2. 5. 4 ) . String Ensemble : Metallurgical Engineering Society. LEONARD B. RAHN Lenin Allentown. Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Delta Upsilon Electrical Basketball (l. 2); Baseball (1. 3. 4); American Institute of Electrical Engineers. HERBERT E. RASMUSSEN Herb l. ' l I III II II. N. J. FREEHOLD HIGH SCHOOL Taylor Hot se Chemical Dormitory Section, Treasurer (3). Chief (4); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Newtonian Society; Tau Beta Pi; Inter- dormitory Council (4): Chairman of Inter- dormitory Dance Committee (4); Band (I. 2. 3. 4); Chemical Society (I. 2. 3. 4). ROBERT B. RAUER Bob PoUGHKEEPSIE, N. I . P R ' GHKEEPSIE HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House n ' i tallurgical Basketball (1): Track (5); Brown and White. Photography Stall (I. 2); Dormi- tory Section. Treasurer (3). Chief (I); Interdormitorv Council. Secretary (4); Rifle Club (I. 2. 3. I); Camera Club (l. 2. 3. 4); Chemical Society (l); Metallurgical Society (2. 5. 4); American Society for Metals. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY WARREN H. RICHARDS Biff Trenton, N. J. CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Metallurgical Basketball (3); Metallurgical Society (2. 3. -1). THOMAS E. RICKETTS To LA1NFIELD, N. J. PLAINF1FLD HIGH SCHOOL Iown Group Che Town Council, Treasurer (3). Vice-Presi- dent (4); Town Group Section, President (4); Arcadia, Secretary (4): Freshman Honors; Phi Eta Sigma (2); Pi Mu Epsi- Ion. Treasurer (4); Newtonian, Secretary (2): Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Chemical Society (1. 2. 3, 4). HAROLD H. E RINKER Rink Northampton, Pa. NORTHAMPTON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Electrical Electrical Engineering Society (4); A. I. E. E. (4). ELDON M. ROEMMELE Spike Newark, N. J. WEST SIDE HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Industrial DeMolay Club. Vice-President (3). Presi- dent (4); Industrial Engineering Society. ALFRED W. ROWLEY Al CoBLESKILL, N Y, COBLESKILL HIGH SCHOOL Iown Group M echanical Track (t, 2); Cross-Country (2); Ameri- can Society of Mechanical Engineers. WALTER S. RUSSELL Skeets MoORESTOWN, N. J. MOORESTOWN FRIENDS ' SCHOOL Cm Phi Chemical Soccer (I, 2, 5, 4), Co-Captain (4): Presi- dent or Inlerfraternity Council (4); Presi- dent of Chi Phi (4); Arcadia (4); Glee (lull (I, 2); Omkron Delta Kappa (4); Chemical Society (I, 2, 5, 4). JAMES F. RYAN, JR. nil West Hartford. Conn. WILLIAM HALL HIGH SCHOOL T own Group Che Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Wilbur Scholarship (2); Chandler Chemistry Prize (1. 2); Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi (3, 4); Chemical Society (l, 2, 3. 4): Phi Beta Kappa. GEORGE F. SALATHE George Leonia, N. J. LEONIA HIGH SCHOOL Pi Kappa Alpha Che Soccer (2): Fencing (3); Vice-President of Pi Kappa Alpha ( 4 ) ; Fresliman Honors : Alpha Phi Omega, Treasurer (4); Chemi- cal Society. EPITOME FOR 19 4 WARREN E. SAWYER, III Wes Primos. Pa. ft UPPER DARBY HIGH Delta Sigma Phi Chemical JOSEPH B. SCHRADER n Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Grol p Metallurgical Ice Hockey Club (l, 2). President (3. 4): Delta Omicron Theta: Band (1. 2. 3): Wrestling (I. 2. 5. 1): Metallurgical En- Chemical Society (l, 2, 3. 4). ginccring Society. NORMAN C. SCARPULLA Jeep Flushing, N. Y. DWIGHT SCHOOL Kappa Sigma Cm Football ( 1 ) ; Rifle Team ( 1 ) : Secretary of Fresliman Class; Vice-President of Kap- pa Sigma ( 5); American Society of Civil Engineers, Vice-President (-4). HOWARD E. SCHAFFER Si Itafe Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Group Industrial Secretary of the Allentown Group (4) : In- dustrial Engineering Society (5. 4); A. S. M. E. (4). WILBUR F. SCHAFFER. JR. WAITER M. SCHWEDER Wa ( Trenton. N. J. TRENTON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Town- Group Electrical Basketball ( 1 ) ; Intramural Sports Man- ager (2. 3. 4); Town Council (3); Army Ordnance Post (4); Electrical Engineering Society (2. 3). Secretar ( 1) EDWIN H. SCOTT Tea Elizabeth, X. J. THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL Chi Phi NDUSTRIAL Football (3. 4): Ice Hockey (I, 2. 3. 4): Vice-President of Town Section (4); Treas- urer of Hotkey C lult: Industrial Engineer- ing Society (1. 2. 5. 4). WILLIAM O. SELTZER Shaj Allentown, Pa. Bromo Ardmore, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL LOWER MERION HIGH SCHOOL A N Gr llentown Orol ' p Che Theta Xt Che Football (l); Newtonian Society (1, 2); Camera Club (5, 4): Leliigli-Allentnw n Club (1. 2. 3. 4): Chemical Society (2. 3. 4). Assistant Manager of Fresliman Track; Cliemical Society (I- 2. 3. 1). 1 reasurer (3). LEHIGH UNIVERSITY JOSEPH L. SERRILL, JR. Joe Newtown Square. Pa. GEORGE SCHOOL D tl.TA rin ELECTRICAL Soccer ( 1 ) : Brown and White ( I ) ; Presi- dent of Delta Pfii { t) : Interrratemity Coun- cil (j); Mustard and Cheese (2, 5). Tech- nical Director (-4 ) ; Camera Club (4 ) ; Electrical Engineering Society (3. 4). ROBERT J. SEUGLING Bob Little Falls, N. J. PATERSON CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Town Grol ' p 1LLCTRICAL Eta Kappa Nu ; Radio Club; Electrical En- gineering Society. NORMAN A. SHANE Nor BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemical Chemical Society. EDWARD M. SHARP Ed Freeland, Pa. MINING MECHANICAL INSTITUTE Town Group Chemical Intercollegiate Debate Manager (4); Fresh- man ann Sophomore Honors; Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon (2. 3. 4); Tau Beta Pi (3). Vice-Presi- dent (4); Delta Omicron Theta (3). Vice- President (4); Army Ordnance Post (4); Chemical Society (I. 2, 3. 4); Phi Beta Kappa. WILLARD M. SHELLY Shelly Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Group Electrical Swimming (1,2. 3, 4); Electrical Engineer- ing Society. F. GEORGE SHENTON George Waynesboro, Pa. WAYNESBORO HIGH SCHOOL Taylor House Mechanical Symphony Orchestra, Student Leader (4) Pi Tau Sigma (3, 4); Sophomore Honors Tone (I. 2. 3, 4): Camera Club (4) Mechanical Engineering Society (l, 2, 3) A. S. M. E. WILLIAM D. SHIELDS, JR. Bethlehem, Pa. Dick Sewickley, Pa MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Delta Tau Delta Engineering Physics Swimming (l); Physics Society (1, 2, 3. 4). HARRISON N. SIEBOLD Ha nv Carbondale, Pa. CARBONDALE HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Group Industrial Lehigh-Allentown Club; Industrial Engi- neering Society. EPITOME FOR 19 4 LEON SILBERMANN Silhv Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL LESTER L. SPENGLER Les Bath, Pa. M-THI.EIIE.M HIGH school Town Group Industrial Wrestling: Sportsman? Club; Industrial Engineering Society. VERNON N. SIMMONS, JR. Town Group Cnemical Engineering Society. Chemical ROBERT B. SPILMAN Bach Hagerstown, Md. C ) Washington. D. C. ST. JAMES SCHOOL I III TA Al Industrial Fresnman Union; President of Tneta Xi; Industrial Engineering Society. DANIEL E. SMITH CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL Prick House Arts Football (4); Sophomore Honors: Plii Beta Kappa. GEORGE S. SPRAGUE Sid White Plains, N. Y. 0« Harrisburg, Pa. WHITE PLAINS HIGH SCHOOL MAMARONECK HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemistry I hi ta Kappa Phi Chemical ( hemical Engineering Society {2. 5. -t). JOSEF SOFSKY Soccer ( 1 ) ; Freshman and Sophomore Hon- ors; Newtonian Society; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Tau Beta Pi; Chess CIud, President (-4); Mustard and Cheese. Stage Manager (4); Chemistry Society (l. 2, 3. 4): Phi Beta Kappa. WILLIAM W. STEELE. JR. Coaldale, Pa. B ill North Canton, Ohi ( I JALOALE HIGH SCHOOL CULVER MILITARY ACADEMY All I MOWN CiR Electrical Engineering Society. Electrical Phi Gamma Delta Footlall (2). Industrial LEHIGH UNIVERSITY ELMER M. STEFKO Elmer Bethlehem. Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Metallurgical Track (1, 2. 5. 4); Metallurgical Sociely (1.2, 3. 4). R. G. STEINHARDT. JR. Stinhy East Orange, N. J. COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Pi Lambda Phi Chemistry Fencing (1. 2); Brown and Wliitc (2); Freshman LInion; Secretary or Pi Lambda Pki (3); Cliemistry Society (l, 2. 3, 4). ROBERT G. STERN Bob Mt. Carmel, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Sigma Alpha Mu Engineering Physics Freshman Honors; Phi Eta Sigma; New- tonian Society (I, 2); R. W. Blake Society (1. 2. 3. 4); Debating (l, 2. 3, 4): Delta Omicron Tlieta (l. 2, 3, 4); Physics So- ciety (2, 3, 4). EDWARD W. STOEHR Ed Bayside. N. Y. FLUSHING HIGH SCHOOL Beta Kappa Industrial Assistant Track Manager ( 1 ) ; President of Beta Kappa (4); Industrial Engineering Society (I. 2. 3. 4). JOHN W. TEMPLE John PlTTSFIELD, MaSS. PITTSF1ELD HIGH SCHOOL Pi Kappa Alpha Metallurgical Assistant Manager of Football (2); Alpha Phi Omega (2. 3, 4); Army Ordnance Post (4); American Society for Metals; Metallurgical Engineering Society. HULME W. THOMAS Tommy Allentown, Pa. ALLENTOWN HIGH SCHOOL Allentown Group Electrical Football (1. 2, 3. 4); Ice Hockey (4); Tan Beta Pi (4): Army Ordnance Post (4); Electrical Engineering Society. JOHN M. TOMKOVICH Tommy South River, N. J. SOUTH RIVER HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Boxing ( I ) : Chemical Society. Che CHARLES A. TRAGESER C. A. T. ETHLEHEM, I A. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Tau Omega Chem Baseball (1); Glee Club (l): Chemical Society. EPITOME FOR 19 4 BERNARD E. TRIPP, JR. Bemie Rutherford, N. J. RUTHERFORD HIGH SCHOOL iaylor Hous NIH STHIAI. Track (1, 2); Cross-Country (l); Indus- trial Engineering Society. HAROLD F. TRUCHSESS Truck Easton, Pa. EASTON CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL I own- Group Sophomore Honors; Tau Beta Pi; Camera ' lub (3), Secretary (4); Chemical Society. ALFRED L. TRUMPLER At Easton, Pa. EASTON HIGH SCHOOL lows- Group Mechanical Tone Society. Concert Director (4): Pi Tau Sigma (4): Glee Club (2. 5, 4); Symphony Orchestra (l, 2, 3. 4); Band (i. 2. 3. 4); A. S. M. E. (3. 4); Indus- trial Engineering Society (2). W. RODMAN TURNER Rod Detroit, Mich. CRANBROOK SCHOOL Chi Psi Industrial Soccer (!, 2, 3. 4); Manager of Ice Hockey (2. 3, 4); Aero Club: Brown Key Society. Maennerchor Tea Dance Committee; In- dustrial Engineering Society. EDWARD G. UHL Wnitey Elizabeth. N. J. THOMAS JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Engineering Physics Rifle Team (l. 2. 3. 4); Manager of Fresh- man Rifle (3), Varsity Rifle (4); Freshman and Sophomore Honors; Physics Award (3); Mathematics Prize (2); Phi Eta Sig- ma. Secretary; Pi Mu Epsilon; Newtonian Society: Omicron Delta Kappa (4): Tau Beta Pi (3). President (4); Cyanide; Physics Society, Treasurer (5), President (4); Army Ordnance Post, Presidenl (4); Phi Beta Kappa. HUGH G. Van der VEER, JR. Ihigliie Somerville, N. J. SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL Chemical Sigma Phi Industrial Tennis (l); Sportsman ' s Club {3. 4); In- dustrial Engineering Society (1. 2. 3. f). Ill ILR. VanDUYNE. JR. YV eez Newark, N. J. BARRINGER HIGH SCHOOL Kappa Alpha Industrial Lacrosse (3, 4); President of Kappa Alpha (4); Dramatic Workshop. HERBERT VONHOF Herb Brooklyn, N. Y. BROOKLYN TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL Pi Kappa Al NDUSTRIAl. Soccer (2); Archery (3. 4); Photographic Sociely; Archery Club; Glee Club; Rifle (. tub; Industrial Engineering Society. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY ROBERT G. WAITE Bob Hazleton, Pa. HAZLETON HIGH SCHOOL T Hoi WLOR MOUSE Metallurc.ical American Society for Metals (3. 4); A. I. M- E. ( ); Metallurgical Society (2. 3. 4); Robert W. Hall Pro-Medical Society (4); Band (I. 2, 3, 4). H. EDGAR WALTHER. JR. Eel Germantown, Pa. GERMANTOWN FRIENDS SCHOOL Sigma Chi Metallurgical Cheerleader (3); International Relations Club (2, 3, 4): Glee Club (l. 2. 3); Metallurgical Society (2, 3. 4). JAMES M. WALTON Jim Edcevvood, Pa. EDGEWOOD HIGH SCHOOL Delta Upsilon Indl Football ( 1. 2. 3. 4) ; Basketball ( 1 ) : Treas- urer. Delta Upsilon; Industrial Engineering Society. MALCOLM D. WARE Mac Short Hills, N. J. COLUMBIA HIGH SCHOOL Alpha Tali Omega Industrial Baseball (2); Assistant Manager of Bas- ketball (2); Aero Club; Industrial Engi- neering Society. ROBERT L. WARE Bob Hljntington Park, Calif. LANSDOWXF. HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Mechanical Rifle Club (I. 2); Soccer (l); Assistant Manager of Freshman Track; Mechanical Engineering Society (l, 2, 3). CHARLES E. WEST C ie. Nanticoke, Pa. NANTICOKE HIGH SCHOOL I AVLOR I lo Mechanical Baseball (l); Wrestling (4); Pi Tau Sig- ma (4); Mechanical Engineering Society (2. 3. 4); Aero Club (4). A. E. WETHERBEE. JR. Art Wi WHITE PLAINS HIGH SCHOOL Richards House Mechanical Dormitory Section, Treasurer (3), Chief (4); Pi Tau Sigma; Industrial Engineering Society (l); Mechanical Engineering So- ciety ( 4 ) . EDGAR F. WHITMORE. JR. Wiggy Freeport. L. I. FREEPORT high school Delta Upsilon Chemical Swimming ( 1 . 2 ) ; Manager of Cross-Coun- try: Brown Key Society; Spiked Shoe; (. hemical Engineering Soc iety. EPITOME FOR 19 4 HAROLD P. WILSON ROBERT F. WOLFE Bob C VTONSYILLE . P , Mb. Newark, N. J. CATONSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL MOUNT HERMON SCHOOL Pr.ce House Mechanical I OWN Gfi Ci PETER Z. WILSON Pete Huntington, V. Va. HUNTINGTON HIGH SCHOOL I own Group Chemical Fresnman and Sophomore Honors; Phi Eta Sigma: Newtonian Society; Chemical En- gineering Society. JOHN R. WITMEYER Bob Bethlehem, Pa. liETTILEHEM HIGH SCHOOL I OWN Gr Che Mustard and Cheese (3, l); DeMolay Club ( . I); Chemical Society (1.2. 3, -I). C. A. WOLBACH. JR. Charlie Rumson, N. J. RUMSON HIGH SCHOOL Town Group c Wrestling ( ). 4); President of Town Group Section (I); Town Council, Secretary ( t); Delta Omicron Theta (l, 2. 3. 4): Band (I. 2. . I); Chemical Society (I, 2, 3, l). Foottall ( I ) ; Secretary of Price House (4); Mechanical Engineering Society (2. t). JOHN L. WORZEL Lamar Staten Island, N. Y. STATEN ISLAND ACADEMY Town Group Engineering Physics Freshman Honors; Newtonian Society; Pi Mu Epsilon (3); Tau Beta Pi (-1): Physics Society. ROBERT J. WRIGHT. JR. Bob Hawthorne. N. J. HAWTHORNE HIGH SCHOOL Pi Kappa Alpha Mechanical Wrestling (l); Football (3); Swimming (3. 1); President of Pi Kappa Alpha (4): Pi I .in Sigma; American Society of Me- , hanii al Engineers. WILLIAM B. WRIGLEY Bill Germantown, Pa. NEWTON HIGH SCHOOL T own Group Engineering Physics DeMolay Club (3), Chaplain (4); Army Ordnance Post ()); Physics Society (l. 2. 3. 4). LEHIGH UNIVERSITY DONALD C. YOUNG D. C. Bethlehem, Pa. BETHLEHEM HIGH SCHOOL Town Group Chemical Freshman and Sophomore Honors: New- tonian Society: Phi Eta Sigma: Tau Beta Pi: Band (l, 2, 3). Assistant Director (4); DeMolay Club; Chemical Society. E P I T M FOR 19 4 Dong Paul takes it easy while President l Cox explains the evening ' s entertainment M€ The Class of 1940. popularly known as the Roaring 40 s , leaves Lehigh in much the same manner as when it entered four years ago, break- ing records to the right and to the left. The first record to go by the board was that of being the largest class ever to be admitted, and probably our last record as undergraduates will be in the number graduating. In between these records, and in the years to come, we have made and will make many more solid and enduring marks for succeeding classes to shoot at. Our classmates have been outstanding in every phase of collegiate activity. We lead the many and varied clubs and societies, and in athletics we have done even more than our share, both in par- ticipation and in support. Under our leadership the annual class banquet has been revived as a Lehigh tradition. As freshmen we endured Hell Week (it was that to us despite the Dean) , as sophomores and juniors we aided in Heck Week . and finally as seniors we supervised Greek Week. Many other trials have beset us— exams, valentines, com- prehensives, etc. Jbut all have been met in turn and conquered. But far more important and enduring to us are those intangible values which we have gained: the many friendships, the good fellowship of the class as a unit, the associations, with the faculty and classmates, and the advan- tages of a rounded education. May the years to come see us all fulfill the great promise shown by our work and play here, and may we gather together often in the common bond of our class associations. Roar, you 40 s, and Best of Luck! SENIORS IN FOUR YEARS In 1936 came a horde or hungry mongrels — hun- gry for knowledge to Lehigh— with high hopes in their hearts and ladders into the clouds. Some were to be engineers, some to be art majors in fields of science akin to the ancient arts, and others to be hard cruel businessmen. After passing the rigorous examinations both mental and physical in which everybody partici- pated, the class of I 940 settled down to a quiet life as freshmen. Perhaps it was not too quiet, but in ef- fect we were learning that it is sometimes better to be seen than to be heard. The school took its toll from our number through the years, and we who are here to tell the tale can remember former Dean Mc- Conn s very words, ' Look to the left of you and look to the right or you. after four years only one of you will be left. How true he was. Although time goes on and the faculty do their best, still the students drop from the ranks by the droves. When looking back upon the situation, everyone can remember how important we felt upon the com- pletion of the first year. The sophomore year was spent in development and learning with the ultimate goal still as graduation day. Of course, no stones were left unturned by which we could have fun, but still the ways of the world were new to us. Came time for the ladder to reach the junior year, and we proceeded with no misgivings in our hearts. By now the years rolled by with increasing speed as we saw the end drawing near. We began to take a more active part in the affairs of the school and were rewarded in like kind. We began to branch out in the various activities and honoraries. All sorts of re- cords were broken, scholastically, athletically, and numerically. By the end of the junior year we were prepared to take over the reins and run the school from the point at which the class of 1959 had left it. Here we see our three times class president, AI Cox, taking over the symbol of power. Now the class is on the top of the heap and we hope to have produced all that was necessary for the professors and even more if that would have been possible. Our short stay in Lehigh is over, but we leave behind fond memories of the days in which we could walk about the campus without a care in the world. Then one hot day in June our sojourn at Lehigh came to an end with the final notes of the Alma Mater. Everyone runs the gauntlet, but the needle win Notice the firm hold that i ( oa has on that « ( om.mencem.ent taps— men of leisure at last Saturday, the guests talk of the Senior Ball Joe Matteson takes it in his stride Topic of the day was jitterbug Circle ©jwmcrDJP Over 500 couples started the festivities of trie school year by at- tending tfie Senior Ball on October 20, 1959. Two top bands in- sured the dance of being one of the high spots of Lehigh s social life. Al Donahue with Paula Kelly and Phil Brito doing the vocalizing played in the lower ballroom of the Hotel Bethlehem for the amuse- ment of the sweet music lovers but with swing thrown in for variety. Van Alexander tore it down in the upper ballroom with the assistance of Phillis Kinney as the vocalist. Both orchestras presented a fine performance in specialties and straight music which pleased both the ghandi dancers and the jitterbugs. ' At the Senior Ball given by the class of ' 59 the Lehigh banner was stolen from the hotel. The class of ' 59 bought another one for the hotel, and this year an anonymous package appeared in the Brown and White office three days before the dance much to the surprise of the committee. Thus there were two banners displayed in the dance hall. Since then the second banner has been given to the school for subsequent use, but to some honorable man, — our thanks. The committee with J. L. Matteson as chairman, AI Collins. Wallace P. Watkins, and C. Budcl Heisler presented the dance to the class so that with its support the night was a successful one. The chaperones were Dr. and Mrs. C. C. Williams, Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Congdon, and Dr. and Mrs. C. G. Beardslee. In this manner the Roaring Forties bowed out of Lehigh ' s so- cial life by starting the first big weekend with a Bang . Everyone knows that houseparty is the time for cupid to shoot his arrows, but it remains for the hand to bring l iis fo the foreground Before the big night the committee does more work than you can shake a stick at. Even with no hitches at all still they meet often to ensure the hail ' s success. A dreamy crowd on a moonlight night with soft music means romance in any longu The Majority Picks the Winner The Senior Poll, these ten pictures of the outstanding seniors, desig- nates those men who have distinguished themselves among their class- mates. They have been better than the average man in all phases of col- lege activity. These seniors have not stayed home and read Plato, but they have gone out and done more pertaining to those ' good old college days. Not only are they good mixers, but they have also studied on the sly, so to speak. To be brief, they have learned how to apportion their time and take advantage of the opportunities offered. In the 1 939 Epitome were pictured those students and faculty members who were elected to the Who ' s Who of America. This year it was felt that this means of selection was not representative class opinion and as such this disturbing factor was eliminated as much as possible. Since the class started the tradition of a class banquet every year, this seemed to be a good time at which to hold an election. Accordingly, at this banquet a poll was taken in which those present were asked to vote for their fellow classmates. The outstanding men of the class— May you ever be as successful as here at Lehigh. Voting lias not made Al Cox the man who Ditf trie Most lor Lehigh. During four years lie lias done tliat as our leader in sports, politics, and student govern- ment. Although there are many who were a hit more wor- ried ahout Maennerchor It) than is proper, we look up to Jufes Moreau as our Most Conscientious Student. McFadden, heller known as Mac , earned the duhious honor of being the class s Best Talker by it is logical that a Phi Bete should he voted the Most appreciating and developing Christmas-Saucon hull A good man. is Andy ' Mynr, although be does get along with hooks better than the common rabble does. At Lehigh competition is stiff in all fields, but Al Bodine with his personality and aggressiveness has easily become noted as the class of -40 s Best Politician Dance steps c eps come and swing may go. but at all gay occasions we ve seen V n v atkins in the groove as a ladies man and our Outstanding Socialite. Dotty Paul — at Lacrosse. Hockey, and Wrestling easy-going but efficient, at Joe s ' efficient but also verv sociable. Our natural lor Best Personality, Limited by the (act that there are only three sport seasons Hero ' Feue il— our Best Athlete— ' has con- tented himself with Football. Basketball, and Track. Among other things F ' Glueck is blessed with a sense of humor and letters from his girl. These two alone are enough to rank him as Class Wit number Rod Turner was chosen by the class as the Best Dresspa. A good choice even if it was made by a class who will wear anything from overalls to tails to class. THE SENIOR BANQUET The speakers table: Douglas Paul, Dr. Clothier, President o Rutgers, Al Cox, class President, Dr. Williams, President of Lehigh, and Al Bodine. 1 he Senior Banquet was held at the Hotel Bethlehem in March according to an ancient custom revived by the Class of 1 9-fO. This banquet was held for a double purpose: to gather the members of the class for fun and frolic, and to accomplish urgent class business. The main speaker of the evening was Dr. Clothier, President of Rutgers University, who spoke on the subject of the athletic policy among the Middle Three Colleges. Perhaps the most important business confronting the class was the question of the class gift to the school upon graduation. To help the class Okey told the students of the features of the insurance plan in which the members of the class contract for a certain amount of insurance payable to Lehigh. I hey pay certain annual fees for twenty years, and then present some worthwhile gift. Other items upon which the class voted were to shorten the period of graduation exercises, for an outdoor graduation, and the Senior Poll. The chairman of the committee was Alfred Bodine who was sup- ported by Bob Carey, James Richardson, and Al Ponter. €3t 1 1 Under the guidance of Albert E. Lee. Jr. and w ith the assistance of Augustus A. Rie- mondy, the class of 1941 has completed an- other successful year at Lehigh University. On the first night of Spring Houseparty weekend, a brilliant Junior Prom was staged in the new Empire Ballroom, a site which won favor at the Interfraternity Ball. The affair, which was held on April 10. 1040. was fostered by the committee whose chair- man Robert L. Stubbings was ably assisted by Augustus A. Riemondy. in charge of lo- cation, Edward D. Heins, who hired the band, and C. Denis Gilchrist, advertising. The Class of 1941 sponsored a banquet for its members at the Hotel Bethlehem on May 2, 1940. The President of the Junior class. Al Lee, is probably telling Gus Riemonov that lie must wait for the night of the Junior Prom until he can soy that all is well. But on such a moonlight night no doubt all the girls will be just so. On a sunny morning in May the university holds its flag pole exercises. Thev use this opportunity to hold all junctions common to everybody in the school: sports awards are made, prizes and champions are announced, tlie hand plays, and various societies pledge their new members JUNIOR CLASS OF LEHIGH fj mS cd M m ((Hfi nutate Albert Edwards Allgrunn, Town Group. Cli.E Milford. Pa- Martin Altmaier. Delta Upsilon, Cliem Columbus, Oliio James Lee Anderson, Town Group. Bus New York City- George Gordon Andrews. Jr.. Delta Sigma Phi. Bus. . . Plainfield, N. J. Edward Burdett Annett. Jr., Pi Kappa Alpha. E.E Maplcwood. N. J. William Lippiatt Archer, Kappa Alpha, Bus Provinc etown. Mass. John Charles Attwood, Sigma Nu. Arts Lakewood. N. Y. Elmer Percy Bachtall. Jr.. Phi Delta Theta. I.E Hagerstown. Md. Kern Churchill Badger. Alpha Chi Rho. Bus Ridgewood, N. J. Frederick Newhall Bahnson, Town Group. Phys Bethlehem. Pa. Boris Baiko, Richards House. M.E Commack, N. Y. 1 rank Harvey Bailey. Richards House, Ch.E West Hartford, Conn. Craig Warren Baker. Phi Sigma Kappa. Bus Albany. N. Y. Norman Miller Barber. Lambda Chi Alpha. Bus New Rochelle. N. Y. William Howard Barnard, Town Group, E.E North Arlington. N. J. David Barnecott. Chi Phi. Bus New York. N. Y. Kenneth R. Bartholomew. Town Group, Arts Bethlehem, Pa. John Phillip Beal. Jr.. Sigma Phi, Ch.E Monti lair. N. J. Willard Paul Bear. E.E Slatington. Pa. James Mercer Beauchamp, Jr.. Delta Upsilon. I.E Staten Island, N. Y. Donald Warner Bedell. Town Group, Ch.E Allentown. Pa. Thomas Robert Bell. Lambda Chi Alpha. Ch.E Upper Darby. Pa. Donald Austin Bender, Taylor House-, Ch.E New Y ' ork. N. Y. John Beriont. Beta Kappa. Ch.E Linden. N. J. John Drew Betz. Alpha Kappa Pi. Ch.E Meadowbrook. Pa. James Kauffman Binder, Town Group, Arts Bethlehem. Pa. George Binger. Kappa Sigma, I.E Elizabeth, N. J Edwin Samuel Bishop. Town Group. M.E Bethlehem. Pa. Walter Peyton Blamire, Jr.. Richards House. M.E Washington. D. C. William ( harks Bley. Beta Kappa, Bus Hamburg, N. Y. Robert David Board. Richards House. I.E Brooklyn. N. Y. Richard Arthur Bobbe. Pi Lambda Phi. I.E Woodmere. N. Y. George William Bond. Town ( iroup, Bus New York. N. Y, John Bontya. Town Group, M.E Trenton. N. J. Sidney Royal Bowen, Jr.. Town Group. E.E Mason City, Iowa Sidney Breese Bowne. Jr.. Sigma Nu. C.E Glen Cove. N. Y. Warren Franklin Boyer. Town Group. Ch.E Bowmanstown. Pa. Alvin Leonard Breen, Town Group. Chem Portland. Pa. James Harman Bricker. Sigma Phi. Bus Westheld. N. J. Bernard Aloysius Briody. Town Group. Arts Bethlehem. Pa. Carl Frederick Brown, Town Group. Ch.E Bethlehem. Pa. Douglas MacGillvray Brown. Town Group. Arts Bethlehem. Pa. Edwin Augustus Brown, Town Group, Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Herbert Albert Brown. Taylor House. M.E Milford. Conn. Robert Nash Brown. Kappa Sigma. Met.E Elizabeth. N. J. John Flarvey Bryan. Jr.. Lambda Chi Alpha. I.E Westlield. N. J. Ralph Buchsbaum. Pi Lambda Phi. Arts Philadelphia, Pa. Marion Clayton Burgy, Sigma Chi. Ch.E Peoria. Illinois William Joseph Burkavage, Town Group. C.E Scranton. Pa. David Warden Burke, Jr.. Alpha Tau Omega. Arts. Pie nl Ridge. Mich. Richard Alvin Buser, Taylor House. Met.E McKeesport. Pa. Frederick Cadwell Butler. Sigma Phi Epsilon. I.E Honesdale. Pa. Paul Harold Butler. Beta Kappa, M.E Chevy Chase, Md. Robert Caemmerer, Phi Sigma Kappa. M.E Westwood. N. J. Harold Caplan. Arts Allentown, Pa. Anthony Ralph Carcione. Town Group. Arts Bethlehem. Pa. Charles Henry Carter. Jr.. Town Group, Chem Tamaqua, Pa. Robert James Caverly. Delta Upsilon. Bus South Orange, N. J. Harvey Hine Chamberlain. Kappa Alpha. F .F .Maplewood, N. J. Henry Deshons Chandler. Chi Psi. Bus Brooklyn, N. Y. Hazen Park Chase. Kappa Alpha. Bus I lolyoke, Mass. Wilbur Chase. Jr., Price House, Bus Chatham, N. J. Ralph Cheli, Town Group. Phys New Y ' ork. N. Y. ( harles Edward Clain. Richards House, M.E Ridgcwood, N. J. William L. Clark, Lambda Chi Alpha. Met.E. ... Mountain Lakes. N. J. Charles Victor Clarke. Town Group. I.E Staten Island. N. Y. I larrv Colhaugh. Chi Psi, Arts Wilkensburg. Pa. Charles Benjamin Cole, Theta Delta Chi, Ch.E Union. N. J. Lawrence Hamlin Compton. Town Group, I.E Bethlehem, Pa. Barton Conchar. Delta Upsilon, I.E Millburn. N. J. Charles Henry Conover. Phi Delta Theta, Arts Mount Lebanon. Pa. David Earnshaw Cooper. Town Group, E.M Harrington Park, N. J. George Semmer Coopey. Richards House. Met.E Nanticoke. Pa. Maxwell Michaux Corpening. Jr., Theta Xi Chicago. Illinois Martin Harrison Cortwright. Town Group. Bus Meshoppon, Pa. Alexander Malion Craig. Jr.. Kappa Alpha. Bus Soutk Orange. N. J. Samuel Stephen Cross. Jr., Richards House. Met.E Brommill. Pa. Charles Leslie Crouse, Jr.. Delta Phi. Bus Johnstown. Pa. John Frederick Croushore. Town Group, Arts Bethlehem, Pa. John Edgar Culliney. Town Group, Bus Bethlehem. Pa. Thomas P. Cunningham, Theta Kappa Phi. C.E Richmond Hill. N. Y. William Danshaw. Phi Sigma Kappa, E.E Tamaqua. Pa. Hugh Roswell Davidson. Town Group. Phys Rutherford. N. J. Richard Stoliker Davis. Jr.. Sigma Chi. Bus Palisade, N. J. Rohcrt Wagner Deck, Town Group. Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Gene Michael De Giacomo, Jr.. Town Group, C.E Port Chester. N. Y. Warren Edward Deiler. IE Allentown. Pa. John Howard Deming. Kappa Sigma. IE Meadowbrook. Pa. Harry Grover Dennis. Richards House. Bus Southbury, Conn. Jack Redding Dennis. Taylor House. E.E Pen Argyl. Pa. August Descheemaeker. Theta Xi. Ch.E Hanover, Pa. Alton Paige Dieffenbach. Town Group. E.E Duryea. Pa. Hastings Diehl. Jr.. Sigma Chi. Ch.E Harrisburg, Pa. Laurence Fred Dieringer. 1 own Group, Ch.E Dumont, N. J. Richard Milton Dietz. Tau Delta Phi. M.E Newark. N. J. George Lewis Diggles. Town Group. M.E Flushing, N. Y. Robert Carl Dimmich, Town Group, l.E Bethlehem, Pa. Leonard Albert Domleskey, Town Group, C.E Minersville, Pa. Howard Vane Donohoe. Alpha Kappa Pi. Arts Drexel Hill, Pa. John Downs. Theta Xi. Bus Philadelphia. Pa. Thomas Grebe Drustrup. Ch.E Upper Black Eddy. Pa. Alfons Anthony Duffek, Cosmopolitan Club. Arts New York. N. Y. Frank Rothwell Dunn. Jr., Pi Kappa Alpha. Ch.E Philadelphia, Pa. Donald Eadie. Price House. E.E Morristown. N. J. Charles Taylor Edwards, Delta Upsilon, Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Leonard Harden Edwards. Town Group. l.E Bethlehem. Pa. Herbert Paul Elliott. Jr., Sigma Phi Epsilon. Bus...Pelham Manor. N. Y. Robert Cassel Engle. Pi Kappa Alpha, l.E Trenton. N. J. Stevenson Monroe Enterline. Town Group, ME Ashland, Pa. Paul Pugh Estrada. Cosmopolitan Club. Bus Habana, Cuba William Johnson Feigley, Taylor House. Ch.E Quakertown. Pa. Robert Irving Felch, Pi Kappa Alpha. l.E Hyde Park. Mass. Kenneth Lewis Fielder. Town Group, Ch.E New York. N. Y. John Reeve Findorlf. Delta Upsilon. Bus Madison, Wis. Robert Ernest Finn. Sigma Phi Epsilon. l.E Wyncole, Pa. Edward New comb Flail. Alpha Tau Omega. l.E Drexel Hill, Pa. William Francis Foley. Theta Kappa Phi. Bus Bridgeport. Conn. Nathan Thomas Folwell. Delta Upsilon. Bus Allentown. Pa. Albert Canute Foss. Jr.. Town Group. E.E Ramsey. N. J. Philip Gray Foust. Jr., Richards House, Ch.E Wilkes-Barre. Pa. Vincent Alan Frantz. M.E Pleasant Valley, Pa. Mervin James Fry. Town Group. Arts Bethlehem. Pa. William Earl Fry. Pi Kappa Alpha. IE Danville, Pa. George Joseph Gabuzda, Jr., Town Group. Arts Freeland. Pa. Michael Carmine Gallo, Jr.. Theta Kappa Phi, C.E Netcong, N. J. Richard Angle Garling, Town Group, Ch.E. . Shippensburg. Pa. David Sticker Geissinger, Town Group. C.E Macungie, Pa. Charles Allan Gibson, Phi Delta Theta. Bus Jackson Heights. N. Y. Claude Denis Gilchrist, Town Group. l.E Maplewood, N. J. Edward Michael Gilmore. Price House, Ch.E Altoona. Pa. Frederick Richard Gilmore, Taylor House, Arts Bloomsburg. Pa. Louis George Gitzcndanner. Price House. E.E Richmond Hill. N. Y. Arnold Lettelle Godlove. Town Group. C.E Hagerstown. Md. William Eckert Good. Theta Xi, M.E Riverton. N. J. Richardson Gray. Sigma Phi Epsilon. M.E Pittsburgh. Pa. Henry Jacob Griesemer. M.E Schnecksville. Pa. George Leslie Griffith, Jr., Town Group. E.M Cranford. N. J. Harvey Conrad Griffith. Jr.. Phi Gamma Delta. E.E Wayne. Pa. William Vincent Groeger. Town Group. Bus Bethlehem. Pa. Stanley Grossman, Pi Lambda Phi. Arts Providence. R. I. William Dietrich Gruber. Town Group. Bus Bethlehem. Pa. Rolla Harry Gunnison. Delta Tau Delta, Arts Girard. Pa. Clarence Winton Hackney. Jr., Sigma Phi Epsilon, ME. .Pleasantville. N. J. John Howard Hageny. Beta Kappa. Arts Jersey City. N. J. Warren Nethe.rc.ott Hall. Town Group, Met.E Jamestown. N. Y. Robert Rawson Halligan. Taylor House. E.E West Orange. N. J. Inlm I rrdcrit I l.inil.lin. I .1 I I, ill. Nil- Newark. N I Fletcher Hanks. Jr.. Sigma Phi. Bus Oxford, Md. Bellows Hardin . Chi Psi, Bus Ridgewood. N. J. Arthur Harold Harding. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Ch.E East Orange. N. J. Frank James Harrold. Jr.. Richards House. Ch.E Atlantic City. N. J. Carl Hartdegan, III, Taylor House, E.M Maplewood, N. J. William FYancis Hartnctt. Beta Theta Pi. Bus Akron. Ohio Edgar Hebert, Jr.. C.E Orefield. Pa. Edward Daniel Heins. Richards House. M.E Pnilaaelpma. Pa. James Ralston Hendry. Alpha Tau Omega. Bus East Orange, N. J. Claude Elias Hensinger, M.E Allentown. Pa. Frank VerNooy Hcrtzog, Town Group, Arts BetkleRem, Pa. Albert Wesley Hess. Alpha Chi Rho. Met.E Scranton. Pa. Cliailes Wesley Hevner, Town Group. Bus Media, Pa. Edwin Warren ' Hine, II. Psi Upsilon. E.E Short Hills. N. J. William Kenneth Hodson. Town Group. l.E Flushing. N. Y. Robert August Hofstetter, Town Group, Bus Westfield, N. J. John Merrill Hood. Alpha Kappa Pi. IE Washington. D. C. Henry Joseph Horn. Town Group. E.E Ashland. Pa. Philip Roberts Hornbrook, Jr.. Phi Delta Theta. Bus Allentown. Pa. George Houck, Jr.. Town Group. Arts Scranton. Pa. Frederick Henry Housel. Town Group. E.E Audubon. N. J. George William Howland. Jr.. Theta Kappa Phi, C.E. . .Little Silver, N. J. Thomas Reed Hunt, Sigma Chi. Arts Wilmington. Del. Raymond Chester Huntoon, Price House, Ch.E Scranton. Pa. Jason Hyun, Town Group. M.E Delano, Cab AKcr Homer Ives. Jr., Sigma Phi Epsilon. M.E New York City Cove! Thurber Jerauld. Taylor House, M.E Pawtucket. R. I. Robert Andrew Jokler. Town Group, M.E Scranton, Pa. Charles Henry Johnson. Town Group. Ch.E Honesdale. Pa. Richard Barney Johnson. Richards House-. Arts Philadelphia, Pa. Ralph Barkley Johnston, Delta Phi. Ch.E Wilmington, Del. Harry Furlong Jones, Richards House. Bus Scranton. Pa. MacGregor Gibb Jones, Town Group, IE Scranton, Pa. Charles Frederick Kalmbach. Sigma Nu. M.E Lansdowne, Pa. Marvin Daniel Kantrowitz, Sigma Alpha Mu, Bus New ork. N. Y. Morton Fischel Kaplon. Richards House. Phys Brunswick. Md. Anthony Michael Karwacki. Town Group, E.M Chester, Pa. Joseph Kaszycki. Town Group. E.E Pe Ell, Wash. John Augustus Kaufmann. Richards House. Arts Wyomissing. Pa. William Edward Keiser. Town Group. Chem Lyon Station, Pa. David Kemper. Tau Delta Phi. Met.E Baltimore. Md. Aldrich Frederick Kendall. Town Group, Arts Millburn. N. J. Wallace Crane Kendall, Beta Kappa, Met.E Summit. N. J. Charles Raymond Kiefer. Town Group. Arts Easlon. Pa. Harold King. Leonard Hall. Arts Morristown. N. J. Richard Leslie Kirk. Town Group. Ch.E Harrisburg, Pa. Edward Arthur Kister. Delta Upsilon, C.E Brooklyn. N. Y. Donald John Kline. Arts Cementon, Pa. Russel Francis Klinger. Town Group. Arts Louisville. Ohio Frederick Schlosman Klopp. Taylor House. Ck.E Shillington. Pa. Thomas Joseph Kochuba, Town Group. Ch.E Wilkes-Barre. Pa. Arnold Jerome Koller, Town Group. Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Seymour Herman Kott. Tau Delta Phi, Bus New York. N. Y. Francis Andrew Kotulak, Town Group. M.E Nanticoke. Pa. Stephen Kowalyshyn. Jr., Price House, E.E Northampton. Pa. Frederick Franklin Kramer III. Bus Allentown, Pa. Edward William Kraus. Theta Kappa Phi. M.E Maplewood, N. J. John Joseph Kuczynski. Town Group. Bus Albany. N. Y. John Emanuel Lagouros. Town Group. Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Willis Leavens, Theta Delta Chi. Bus Rochester, N. Y. Albert Everett Lee. Jr.. Richards House. Ch.E Moorestown, N. J. William Haller Lehr. Sigma Phi Epsilon, M.E Elkins Park. Pa. George H. M. Le Roy. Richards House. Bus Newburgh. N. Y. John Leschcn, Jr.. Phi Gamma Delta. Bus Webster Groves. Mo. Thomas Jenkins Lewis. Jr.. Price House, Bus McKeesport, Pa. William Charles Lewis. Taylor House. E.M Pittston. Pa. Valentine Lichtenstein. Jr., Pi Lambda Phi, M.E Jersey City, N. J. Willard Andrew Litzenberger. Theta Xi. Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Harold Zelophehad Llewellyn, Town Group, M.E Summit Hill, Pa. Emery Wight Loomis, Jr.. Sigma Nu. Bus Lansdowne. Pa. John Freeman Loose. Taylor House, IE West Orange. N. J. Gordon George Loveland, Phi Sigma Kappa, Ch.E Babylon. N. Y. George Elmer Lowe. Jr.. Town Group, Ch.E Kingston. N. Y. Stephen Tener Lowry. Taylor House. Ch.E East Cleveland. Ohio Andrew Philitus Luse. Lambda Chi Alpha, Bus Newton, N. J. Stephen Gabriel Maco. Town Group. Met.E Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Eugene Malinovvski, Met.E Hellertown. Pa. Edwin Sitgrcaves Malloy. Met.E Easton. Pa. Keron Martin Manion, Theta Kappa Phi, Ch.E Clifton. N. J. Theodore Miller Mantis. Taylor House. IE Reading. Pa. Seymour Margolis. Pi Lambda Phi. Bus New York, N. Y. Edwin Moser Markel. Richards House. Bus Conshohocken, Pa. Richard Oliver Marsten, Town Group, E.M Bethlehem, Pa. James Arthur Marvin. Jr.. Kappa Alpha. Met.E Scarsdale, N. Y. Harold Joseph Masem, Beta Theta Pi. Arts Brooklyn, N. Y. William Angus Matheson. Jr.. Chi Phi. Bus Larrhmont. N. Y. John Hards Mathewson. Alpha Chi Rho. Ch.E Elkins Park. Pa. William Bruce McConnel, Beta Theta Pi, Bus Mt. Lebanon, Pa. William Sadhom M Conner. Richards House. I.E Pittsburgh, Pa. James Gates McGinnis. Theta Xi. S.E Bridgcton, N. J. Leonard John McKinley, Town Group, Ch.E Mt. Vernon. N. Y. Paul Kenneth McNamara. Theta Kappa Phi, Arts Bridgeport, Conn. Roger James McNamara. Town Group. I.E Bethlehem. Pa, George Franklin Messinger, Price House. M.E Talaniy. Pa. John Daniel Mettler, Jr.. Taylor House. Ch.E Crowl, Pa Raymond Chester Miller. Sigma Alpha Mil. Bus ,. v York. N. Y. Robert Donald Miller. Town Group. Ch.E Upper Darby. Pa. Warren Hashrouc k Miller. Lambda Chi Alpha, Bus Bogota. N. J. Charles Froelicher Mitchell. Psi Upsilon, C.E Larchmont. N. Y. James Mitchell, I own Group. Met.E Brooklyn. N. Y. Arthur Edward Moog. Kappa Sigma, I.E Summit. N. J. William Howard Morse, down Group, M.E Pittsburgh. Pa. 1 homas Albert Mostyn, Pi Kappa Alpha, I.E Hamilton Square. N. J. John Henry Mowen, Price House. Bus .Chatham. N. J. Richard Be rliner Mover. Town Group. Phys Wyomissing. Pa. Richard William Mueller, Phi Delta Theta, M.E Pittsburgh. Pa. Robert Condit Muir. Alpha Chi Rho. Bus Greenwich, Conn. Richard I homas Mussehnan. Town Group. Bus Bethlehem. Pa. Raymond Reever Myers, Taylor House. Arts New Oxford. Pa. Frederick Walter Nadig. Ch.E Allentown. Pa. Alexander Bold Neill. Jr., Richards I louse, (hem . I Ipper Montclair. N. J. John James Nicol, Richards House. Bus Brooklyn. N. Y. Frank Norris. Town Group. C.E Brooklyn, N. Y. I rank Novitski. Town Group. Ch.E New York, N. Y. Ernest Rudolf Oberholzer. Ch.E Allentown. Pa. Benjamin Ojserkis, Taylor House. I.E Atlantic City. N. J, Allen Maxwell Paget, Pi Kappa Alpha, Bus Harrisburg. Pa. David Maxwell Parke, Taylor House. Phys West Pittston, Pa. James Pearce. Sigma Nu. Bus Marquette. Mich. John Sandt Pettibone. Town Group. Ch.E Brant Beach. N. J. James Mitchell Phelan, Delta Sigma Phi. Chcm St. Davids. Pa. Leon Henry Plante. Leonard Hall. Arts Fitchburg. Mass. Julius Plucker. 111. Town Group. Ch.E Belvidere. N. J. John Edward Pooler. Alpha Chi Rho. E.M Irvington. N. J. Robert Kingman Poetter. Taylor House. M.E Glen Roek. N. J. Walter Vallentine Prelle, Town Group. Bus Old Greenwich. Conn. John Ward Prinkey. Jr.. Richards House, I.E Yonkers. N. Y. Louis Anthony Priolo. Town Group. Met.E Bethlehem. Pa. Joseph Henry Quinn. Town Group. Bus . . . Baltimore. Md. Parker Randall. Jr.. Theta Xi. E.E Trenton, N. J. George Rasmussen. Town Group. Bus Garden City. N. Y. Robert B. Rauer. Taylor House. Met.E Poughkeepsie. N. Y. Clarence George Reber. Town Group, M.E Reading. Pa. Robert William Reese. Sigma Nu, Arts Winnetka, III. Rudolph Luis Renker, Bus Totowa Boro. N. J. David Richards. Jr., Town Group, Ch.E Scranton. Pa. James Benjamin Ricks. Town Group, Met.E Plandome, N. Y. Augustus Anthony Riemondy, Phi Sigma Kappa. Ch.E Fleetwood. Pa. John 1 raver Riley, Town Group. Bus Bethlehem, Pa. George Moland Ritchie. Jr.. Chi Phi. M.E Abington. Pa. Robert Arthur Ritchings. Phi Sigma Kappa. ( E Overbrook Hills. Pa. I homas I. s Ritter. Arts Allentown. Pa. Philip Baker Robeson. Richards House. I.E Merchantville. N. J. Philip Austin Rodgers. Phi Sigma Kappa, Bus Chester. Pa. John Ramsay Romig. Town Group. I.E Allentown, Pa. Robert William Rosonqucst. Richards I louse. Bus Essex Folk N. J. John Rylc. Jr.. Richards House. Bus Paterson. N. J. John Bell Sanborn, Town Group, Ch.E Bethlehem, Pa. George Henry Schneffer. Jr.. Taylor House, E.E Reading. Pa. Jose! William Schall, faylor lions.-. Ch.E Sellersville, Pa. Fred John Schineller. Theta Kappa Phi, Met.E Bergenfield, N. J. William Rodman Schnell, down Group, I.E Crolon-on-Hudson, N. Y. Donald Robert Si hoen, Arts. Delta Upsilon Mount Vernon, N. Y. Ernest Leonard S( hork. I ' m,- House. Ch.E Maplewood, N. J. Louis Kossuth Schwar . Chi Phi. Bus... ...Newark. N. J. William Elliott Scott, Beta Theta I ' i. Bus Wcstfield. I Charles Bach Seib. Jr., Arts Allentown, Pa. Richard Creighton Seltzer, Chi Phi, Bus Overbrook, Pa Lemuel Ellsworth Sent . Taylor House, Ch.E Felton, Pa. John William Sheibley. Theta Xi. Met.E Florin, Pa. Richard Montgomery Shepherd. Alpha Kappa I ' i. Ch.E... St. Davids. Pa. Samuel Foster Shireman. Town Group, C.E AHenwood, Pa. Robert Brooks Siegal, Town Group. Bus New York. N. Y. Jonas Silverberg. Town Group. Bus Bethlehem. Pa. William Brown Simpson. Phi Gamma Delta. Bus Elizabeth. N. J. lolin Louis I ram is Sipp. I lata K.ippa Phi. Arts Slaten Island. N. Y. Edgar Chester Slack. Taylor House. Arts Toms River. N. J. Richard Edmunds Slee. faylor House, Arts Stroudsburg, Pa. Stanley Edward Sliwka, Cosmopolitan Club. Arts Bayonne, N. J. ( ephas Cornelius Smith, Alpha Chi Rim. Bus Balti re. Md. Burd Edwards Smyth. Phi Gamma Delta. Bus Pottsville. Pa. Ellis Raymond Snovel. Psi Upsilon. M.E Easton, Pa. Clinton Creveling Snyder. Town Group. ' M.E Scranton, Pa. Mathew John Stacom. Jr.. Alpha Tau Omega. Arts Flushing. N. Y. Frank George Steinbrucker. down Group, E.E Brooklyn, N. Y. James Clayton Stephens. I own Group, Bus Hamden. t onii Robert John Stickel. Taylor House. C.E West Orange. N. J. Edward James Stone. Kappa Alpha. I.E New York. N. Y. Ralph Daniel Stoneback, Pi Kappa Alpha. Bus Quakertown. Pa. Carl Clemens Stotz, Price Flouse. E.E. Easton. Pa. Robert Paul Mader Stoudt. Sigma Chi. Bus Riegelsville. Pa. Henry Joseph Strenkofsky. Taylor House, Bus Frackville, Pa. Everett Carlton Strickland. Town Group. E.E Cranbury. N. J. Richard Brinton Strode. Delta Tau Delta, Ch.E West Chester. Pa. Robert Lamb Stubhings, Delta Sigma Phi, Ch.E Dobbs Ferry. N. Y. Bernard Valentine Stuber. Town Group. M.E Buffalo. N. Y. Mills Grove Sturtevant. Delta Phi. Arts New York. N. Y. Edward Anderson Sutherland. Town Group. M.E White Plains. N. Y. Frank Anthony Szabo. Town Group. Bus Bethlehem. Pa. Juluis Edward Tangel. J beta Kappa Phi. E.E Cranford. N. J. Charles Baker Taylor, Jr.. Cosmopolitan Club. C.E Short Hills. N. J. Maurice Eugene Taylor. Town Group, Ch.E Jermyn. Pa. Michael Temoshok. E.E Northampton. Pa. Kenneth Roderick Templeton. Bus Easton. Pa. Alvah Hummer Thomas. Kappa Sigma. Met.E Hackeltstown. N. J. Graham Fellows Thompson. Town Group, Bus New Haven. Conn. lohn Alden Tifft. Jr.. Phi Gamma Delta. Bus Morion. Pa. John Alvin Tilley, Town Group. Bus Avoca, Pa. Robert Lansing Tilton, Richards House, Ch.E Toms River, N. J. John Michael Tomkovich. Town Group, Ch.E South River. N. J. William Joseph Toohey, Town Group. Ch.E Bethlehem. Pa. John Randall Torrens. Delta Sigma Phi, Arts West Trenton. N. J. Waldso Rodman Turner. Chi Psi. I.E Detroit. Mich. Robert Mason Ulmer, Delta Tau Delta. Bus Gibbstown. N. J. Robert John Valleau. Taylor House, Ch.E Teaneck, N. J. Chester Arthur Van Brunt. Town Group, Bus Rumson, N. J. William Albert Vander Clock. Town Group. Bus Ridgewood. N. J. Richard Landis Vockel. Chi Psi. M.E Pittsburgh. Pa. Fred Henry Vogel. Town Group. Ch.E Hoboken. N. J. Waller Herbert Vogelsberg. Delta Tau Delta. E.E Newark. N. J. Harlow Elwood Ward. Jr.. Town Group. I.E Carbondale. Pa. Richard Anderson Ware. Town Group. Arts Staten Island, N. Y. Albert Sc hofield Weigel, Town Group. I.E East Orange, N. J. Martin Avram Weil. Richards House. Arts New York. N. Y. Stephen Weinrib. Pi Lambda Phi, Arts New York, N. Y. Frank Earl Weise. Jr.. Phi Delta Theta, Met.E Bridgeville, Pa. Richard Carter Wells. Pi Kappa Alpha. I.E Baltimore. Md. Harold Hoover Wertt. down Group, E.M Altoona. Pa. I lenry Gabriel Werner. Chi Phi, Phys Philadelphia, Pa. William Wescotl West, Jr.. Theta Delta Chi. Arts Closter. N. J. John While Whiting, Jr.. Phi Delta Theta. Bus Williamsport. Pa. Edward Franklin Williams. Taylor House. Ch.E Ashland. Pa. Roger Williams. Jr., I own Group. Bus Bogota. N. J. Clyde Patrick Williamson, down Group. Arts Hillsdale. Kan. I redri, Woodbridge Wilson, Jr.. Theta Xi. Bus .West Point Pleasant, N. J. Robert Alexander Wilson, Alpha Kappa Pi, M.E Williamsport. Pa. I toward Dell Wilemberg. Alpha Tau Omega. Arts Drexel Hill, Pa. William lames Wise. Delta Upsilon, Bus Bellevue, Pa. George Wilmol Woelfel, Psi Upsilon, C.E Hazleton, Pa. Irwin Damascus Well. Jr.. Pi Lambda Phi. Bus Pittsburgh, Pa. I homas Brooks Woods. I aylor House, E.E lackson Heights. N. Y. John Dukes Woolers. Jr.. Delta Tau Delta. Bus Larchmont, N. Y. Kenneth Clinton Wotring, I.E Catasauqua, Pa. John James ankeviti h, Ir . I own Group. Arts Freeland. Pa. Jacob Forney Young. Jr.. Phi Delta dlieta, I.E Hngerslown. M.I Roy Shackelford Zachary, Sigma Nu, Arts South Orange, N. J. All.n Herbert Zane, Ir., Delia Sigma Phi, I.E Long Island City, N. Y. Frank Andrew Zimmerman. Richards House. Bus Baltimore. Md. easm ejfr Ifll The largest freshman class in the history of the school entered in the fall of 1038. In the spring of 39, after the gradual forma- tion of class unity, this vast group of students heretofore known as the Class of 42 elected its officers and became officially recognized as the Sophomore Class of Lehigh Univer- sity. The spirit of the class was born e out when it revived for the Lehigh undergradu- ates a social affair which had been dormant for several years. The Sophcopation , as we called our dance, was a great success with Henry Busse furnishing the music for more than 300 dancers. We are able to look back upon the first half of our college career with fond memories and are eagerly antici- pating our remaining two years at Lehigh. Art Rich is agreeing with Robert Gusdorff, President of tlte Sophomore class, tliat their Sophcopation was just the high spot of the year. Might it he said tliat judging oy the response it was quite an affair. The junior Varsity team plays the freshmen on Founders Day. (Belotv) FOUNDER ' S DAY Evidentally the Freshman Class threw custom to the wind when they vanquished the sophomores in the traditional Founder s Day Sports. The freshmen got off to an early lead by capturing the foot- ball game, 13-0. Not to be out- done, the sophomore trackmen came back to win the mile relay by a wide margin and thereby tied the series at 1-1. The three re- maining contests went to the Frosh with the exception of the push-ball game which resulted in a tie. Mod- esty caused the class of ' 42 to de- fault the pants-tearing contest, and after the Frosh had successfully outyanked the Sophs in the tug- of-war, the class of 43 wound up with a 3-1 win. •-.. SOPHOMORE CLASS OF LEHIGH v ji ol J9M2 m ( tutm Henry Lawrence Abbott. Sigma Chi. E.E Fairmont, Y. Va. John Marion Adams. C.E Allentown, Pa. Vernon Howard Adams. Theta Delta Cki, I.E Hempstead. N. Y. John Adrian, Jr.. Taylor House. Bus Glenbrook. Conn. Joseph Narciso Ambrogi, Jr.. Alpha Kappa Pi, E.E Lansdowne. Pa. Oscar Elof Anderson, Jr., Sigma Nu. Arts Jamestown, N. Y. Raymond Burr Anderson, Jr., Chi Psi. M.E West Newton. Mass. Charles John Apolenis, Phys Allentown, Pa. Joseph Fredrick Arbogast, Town Group. Ch.E Harrisburg, Pa. George Edward Archbold. Lambda Chi Alpha. Bus Ridgewood, N. J. Joseph Andrew Arnold. Town Group. Ch.E Mcndville. Pa. Robert Edward Ashley, Town Group. I.E Muskegon, Mich. Harry Montgomery Atkins. Price I louse. Arts Kittanning. Pa. Eugene Cone Avery. Town Group, Phys Bethlehem, Pa. Donald Noyes Bachman, Bus Allentown, Pa. Robert Martin Baker. Alpha Tau Omega. Bus York. Pa. Stephen Francis Balshi. Town Group. Ch.E Bethlehem. Pa. Robert Scott Barker. Lambda Chi Alpha. Bus Monti lair. N J. Robert Hopkins Bartholomew, Town Group, Ch.E Palmerlon. Pa. Charles Drummond Bartlett, Jr.. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Bus Bangor. Me. James Henry Bashford, Phi Delta Theta, Ch.E Philadelphia, Pa. Kenneth Coswell Bauder, Town Group, Arts Lansdowne. Pa. Robert William IV, k. Phi Camma Delta, I.E lohnstown, Pa. Jesse Franklin Beers. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Arts Mahwah. . I. John Fullam Belcher. Riiliards House. Bus Mount Vernon. N. Y. George Beverly Benedict. Richards House. Arts Mbanv. N. Y. William Milton Benesch. Sigma Alpha Mu. Arts Baltimore, Mil. Robert Allan Bennett, M.E Northampton. Pa. Richard Joseph Berg, Sigma Alpha Mu. Arts New Roi belle. N. Y. Fred Willard Berger. Richards House. E.E Matamoras, Pa, Jesse Oatman Bettcrton, Jr.. Richards House, Met.E Metuchen, N. J. Edward MacClellan Biggs. Jr.. Richards House. E.E. ..Garden City, N. Y. lames Harry Bleiler, Taylor House, M.E Palmerton, Pa. Welles Royie Bliss. Leonard Hall. Arts Glen Ridge. N. J. Edward Fulper Bodine. Lambda Chi Alpha. M.E Fairfield. Conn. William Filson Boore, Jr., Richards House. Met.E Teaneck. N. J. William Thomas Bostock, Jr., Richards House. Ch.E.. .Roselle Park. N. J. James Henry Boucher. Taylor House, C.E Catasauqua, Pa. Waller Bertolet Bowels, Richards House, E.E Reading. Pa. Robert McCIarey Bowman, Sigma Phi Epsilon, I.E Glenside. Pa. Ralph Bown, Jr.. Theta Delta Chi, Ch.E Maplewood, N. J. Barnet Picking Bowser, Sigma Nu, Bus Johnstown, Pa. Harry Lester Boyer. Jr.. Alphi Kappa Pi. EM Drexel Hill. Pa. William Woodrow Boyer. Psi L ' psilon. Bus Philadelphia. Pa. Horace William Boynton, Alpha Chi Rlio. Arts Roselle. I Ralph Anthony Bozza, Town Group, M.E Newark. N. J. George Alden Brcnker, Town Group. Bus Red Bank. N. J. Richard Henry Brenneman. Beta Theta Pi. E.M Poltsville. Pa. Richard Riescr Bright. Chi Phi. I.E St. Davids, Pa Everett Allan Britton, Delta Tau Delta. Bus Wilmington. Del. William Alexander Brooks. Richards House. C.E Newark. N. J. Samuel Ritchie Brough, 1 beta Delta Chi, I.E Greenwich, Conn. John Brower. Ir . Kappa Alpha. I.E Plainfield. N. J. Alfred Bruce Brown, Town Group. Phys Essex I ells. N. J. George Hongenae Brown, Town Group. Bus New nrk, N. Y James Harvey Bruen. Jr., Richards House. Bus Morristown. N. I. Frank Taylor Brundage. Jr.. Taylor House. M.F Norwalk, Conn. Robert Brune, Beta Theta Pi, Bus Brooklyn, N. Y. Irwin Russell Burkey. I own Group, I.E I l.iinlmrg. Pa. ( barles Robert Bushwaller, I own Group, Bus Honesdale, Pa. Richard Shaw Button, Sigma Chi. Bus Hubbard, Ohio Philip Guernsey Bulls. Town Group. Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Peter Carpenter. Chi Psi, Bus Corning, N. Y. Harry Edward Case, Lambda Chi Alpha, M.E Trenton, N. J. Lewis Jones Caulk, Sigma Phi, Bus Pasadena, Cal. Boyd Daryl Chamberlain, Town Group, E.E Shamokin, Pa. Robert Llmer Chamberlain, Town Group, M.E Lyndhurst, N. J. William ( reveling Christine, 1 own Group, Arts Stroudsburg, Pa. Albert Clark, Jr., Town Group, Chem Nanticoke, Pa. Gordon Manson Clark. Beta Kappa, M.E Hamden, Conn. John Fulmer Clark, Jr., Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phys Wyomissing, Pa. Nelson Raymond Clark. Jr., Richards House, I.E LaGrange. III. Robert Wesley Clark, Sigma Nu. I.E Lakewood, N. Y. William Lee Clark. Phi Sigma Kappa, Bus Garden City, N. V Willard Stanley Clewell, I own Group, Ch.E Bethlehem, Pa. James Stevenson Clinch, Jr., Town Group, Bus Chisholm, Minn. Fenton Rulon Cloud. Richards Mouse. I.E Norristown, Pa. Edward John Coffey. Jr., Town Group, M.E Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Henry Coleman. Price House, I.E Flushing, N. Y. Alan Holding Conklin. Taylor House, Bus Upper Montclair, N. J. Joseph Lawrence Conneen. Chi Phi. Bus South Orange, N. J. Charles Middleton Conrad, Theta Xi, Arts Barnegat, N. J. Leonard Robert Constantino. Richards House, I.E Bronx. N. Y. Oakley Watts Cooke, Jr., Beta Kappa, Bus Caldwell, N. J. Theodore Robert Cortright, Town Group, E.E Berwick, Pa. Samuel Isaac Cory, Jr., Ch.E., Sigma Phi Epsilon Towaco, N. J. Robert Craig. Alpha Tau Omega, Bus Bloomfield Hills, Mich, Carl Creidenberg, Town Group, C.E New York, N. Y. Robert Emmett Cullen, Jr.. Phi Gamma Delta. Ch.E. .Kennelt Square, Pa. John Philip Curran, Theta Delta Chi, Arts Bridgeport. Conn. Frank Peter Cziguth, Bus Allentown, Pa. Charles Parker Davidson. III. Richards House, I.E Clarks Green. Pa. Elwood Charles Davis. Town Group, Ch.E Springfield. Mass. Robert Nation Davis. Kappa Alpha. Bus Scarsdale, N. Y. William Sampson Dawless, Richards House. Bus Hamden, Conn. George Nestor DeCowsky, Town Group, E.E Pennsburg. Pa. Robert Charles Demberg. Sigma Nu. I.E Brigantine, N. J. Ward Arnold Detwifer. II. Psi Upsilon. Bus Grosse Pointe, Mich. John Lake Diamond, Town Group. Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Frank Rodney Dirkes. Jr.. Richards House. M.E Lynbrook, N. Y. James Joseph Donahue. Jr.. Theta Delta Chi. Bus Garden City. N. Y. Jerome Richard Dorkin. Pi Lambda Phi. Arts Camden. N. J. Robert Walper Doster, Town Group. Arts Bethlehem. Pa. Harold Sears Downing. Jr., Town Group, Bus., Pittsburgh. Pa. James Joseph Duane. Theta Kappa Phi. Bus Flushing. N. Y. John Herren Dudley, Town Group. M.E McKeesport. Pa. Roy Leslie Duncan, Richards House. M.E West Hartford. Conn. Willard Wilson Dunham. Jr.. Beta Kappa, Chem Fords, N. J. Charles Bockoven Dutton, Kappa Sigma. I.E Morristown, N. J. Donald Eggleston Eastlake. Phi Delta Theta, Bus Ridley Park, Pa. Albert Mitchell Eastwood. Town Group, Bus Providence. R. I. Charles Albert Eddy. Kappa Sigma, Bus Bay City, Midi William Adolph Eisele. Richards House, E.E West Orange. N. J. Robert Gaylord Eitner, Richards House, E.E Summit. N. J. George Earl Elliott. Jr.. Sigma Nu, Ch.E Washington, D. C. Irvin Correll Elmer. Jr., Town Group. Arts Rutherford. N. J. Somers Harrison Endicott, Jr.. Town Group, Met.E. . . Pleasantville, N. J. Vernon Evans. Jr., Theta Xi. I.E Fort Devens. Mass. Joseph Baker Evaul. Richards House, Ch.E Woodbury Heights, N. J. Robert Douglass Everett. Sigma Nu. Chem McKeesport. Pa. Buchanan Ewing. Phi Delta Theta. Arts Trenton, N. J. Henry Carroll Farrand, Town Group, Bus Bloomfield, N. J. James Barnet Felker, Town Group, Bus Bethlehem. Pa. Clement Roger Ferland. Town Group, Arts Middlebury, Vt. Edmond Crawford Fetter, Town Group, Ch.E Media. Pa. Richard Waid Fidler. Phi Delta Theta. Ch.E Shillington, Pa. Kenneth Edward Fiedler. Phi Delta Theta, Bus Garden City. N. Y. Arthur Louis Fischer, Chi Psi. Arts Plainficld. N. J. John Charles Fisher, Delta Phi, Bus Hammond, Ind. Paul Boris Fitzell, Town Group, C.E New Britain, Conn. Thomas Fleischer. Town Group. M.E Indianapolis, bid Harry William Fleuso. Bus Allentown, Pa. Robert Field Forshay. Beta Theta Pi. Bus Hempstead. N. Y. Robert Henry Forster. Town Group, Bus Elizabeth. N. J. Robert Henry Forsyth. Phi Sigma Kappa. M.E Red Bank, N. J. Albert Wood Foster. Alpha Chi Rho, Bus Philadelphia, Pa. Harold Earl Foster, Richards House. E.E Philadelphia, Pa. Richard MacDonald hosier. I own Group. Ch.E Bethlehem, Pa. John Marion Franks, Beta Theta Pi, C.E Easton, Pa. John Adam Frederick, Jr., Town Group, Bus Catasauqua. Pa. William Rue Fredrick. Chi Phi, Bus Cranford. N. J. Charles William Freed, Pi Kappa Alpha. Bus . Quakertown, Pa. Richard Zern Freeman, Delta Tau Delta. I.E Narberth, Pa. Harry Jerome Friedman, Town Group. Ch.E Throop. Pa. Fihuore Oliver Frye, Town Group. Bus Tower City, Pa. Walter Herman Gaedcke. Kappa Sigma, Bus Roselle Park, N. J. Robert King Gailey, Sigma Chi. Ch.E Niagara Falls, N. Y. James Henry Galli. Richards House. C.E Portland. Me. Ernest Gamble, Jr., Delta Sigma Phi, Ch.E Langhorne, Pa. John Gantner, Richards House. Bus Nutley, N. J. George R. Lawrence Gaughran. Arts Allentown, Pa. Russell Charles Gebert, Jr., Richards House, I.E Elkins Park. Pa. Robert Edwin Gengenbach, Town Group. M.E Bristol, Conn. William Evans Gheen, Taylor House. M.E Jersey Shore. Pa. Louis Tracy Girdler. Jr., Beta Theta Pi, I.E North Muskegon. Mich. Walter William Gleadall, Sigma Nu, Arts ... .Jackson Heights. N. Y. George Zeiber Goetz, Jr.. Taylor House, Bus Reading. Pa. Gilbert Samuel Gold. Sigma Alpha Mu, Arts Trenton, N. J. Sanford David Goldstein, Bus Allentown, Pa. Robert Edward Goodman. Sigma Alpha Mu, Arts. . . .New Rochelle, N. Y. James Allison Gordon. Delta Tau Delta, Bus Short Hills. N. J. Killxmrn Gordon, Jr., Kappa Alpha, Bus Bronxville, N. Y. Richard Cameron Gordon, Richards House, Bus New York. N. Y James Gore, III. Kit hards House, Ch.E Coraopolis. Pa. William Dean Gorman, Beta Theta Pi. Bus Swarthmore, Pa. William Webster Goshorn, Taylor House. Chem Malvern. Pa. Rudolph Edward Gosztonyi, Jr., Town Group, Chem. E. .. Bethlehem. Pa. Gregory Gould, Town Group, I.E North Tarrytown. N. Y. Joseph Albert Gould, Richards House, Met.E Watertown, N. Y. Walter Owen Graham. Kappa Alpha. M.E LJpper Montclair, N. J. Arnold H. Edward Grandage, Town Group. Ch.E Montclair. N. J. John T nomas Green. Phi Delta Theta, Bus Allentown, Pa. John Richard Greiner, Jr.. Town Group, M.E Bethlehem. Pa. Frank Joseph Gress, Town Group, Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Joseph Eugene Gross, Sigma Alpha Mu, Ch.E Philadelphia, Pa. Harold Alexander Grubb, Phi Sigma Kappa. Met.E North Hills, Pa. Michael Guidon. Ill, M.E Freemansburg. Pa. Robert Neuman Gusdorff. Richards House. Bus.. . Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Rudd Moyer Guttshall, Taylor House, E.M Mt. Union, Pa. Norman Hackman, Sigma Alpha Mu. Bus New Rochelle, N. Y. Harold Woodbury Haines, Taylor House, Ch.E Short Hills, N. J. Douglas Mathison Haire, Alpha Chi Rho. Bus Maplewood, N. J. Donald Halbedl, Richards House. Bus New York. N. Y. James Gray Hamilton. Alpha Chi Rho. E.M Duluth. Minn. Robert Arrison Hammond. Ch.E Allentown, Pa. Ralph Letghton Haney. Jr.. Richards House. E.E Norristown, Pa. George Warren Hanson. Richards House. Bus Scarsdale, N. Y. James William Hanson, III. Phi Gamma Delta. I.E Wilmington, Del. Charles Harold Harding. Jr., Pi Kappa Alpha, Bus Rahway, N. J. Milton Willin Harper. I own Group, Chem.E Seaford, Del. Dale Ackley Harris. Town Group, Ch.E Trenton, N. J. William Foley Hauserman, Phi Gamma Delta. I.E.. .Cleveland Heights. O. Paul Lieder Havenstein. Alpha Tau Omega. Met.E. .Wellesley Hills, Mass. Richard Parse Ha zard, Taylor House, Ch.E Morrisville, Pa. Charles English Henderson, Sigma Phi. I.E Gibson Island. Md. Richard Lambert Heyniger, Chi Phi, Bus Waterbury, Conn. John Balmain Hill, Jr.. Beta Kappa. M.E Hamburg. N. Y. Robert Leon Hill, Alpha Chi Rho, Ch.E Scranton. Pa. Louis Joseph Hillenbrand, Jr., Ch.E Allentown. Pa. Warren Alfred Himmelwright, Town Group. Ch.E Bethlehem. Pa. Ralph Craven Hird. Theta Delta Chi. Ch.E Englewood. N. J. William Paige Hitchcock, Psi Upsilon, Arts Syracuse. N. Y. Howard Addison Hoch. Jr., Town Group, Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Chester Adam Hoffman, Ch.E Allentown, Pa. Bernard Earl Hoffner. Town Group. Ch.E Bethlehem, Pa. Thomas S. C. Holberton. Jr., Delta Sigma Phi, Ch.E.. . Hackensack, N. J. George Vernon Holby. Taylor House, Ch.E Riverside. Conn. Seymour Lawrence Hollander, Pi Lambda Phi. Ch.E Maplewood, N. J. Waller Steven Holmes, Jr.. Town Group. Bus Philadelphia, Pa. Caleb William Holyoke. Town Group, M.E Milwaukee, Wis. Alfred Edward Horka. Richards House, Ch.E Passaic. N. J. William Edward Howard, III, Psi Upsilon, Bus Montreal. Canada Donald Clinton Howe, E.M Allentown, Pa. Jeremiah Charles Hubeny. Richards House. I I Elizabeth. N. J. David Lindsay Hume. Sigma Nu. I.E Tulsa. ( kl.i John Ashberry Hunt. Lambda Chi Alpha, Arts ( ' .rrat Neck. N. Y. Charles Barron Innes. Jr., Town Group. M.E Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Marvin Iobst. Town Group. Bus Bethlehem, Pa. I L.vcl hmorson Key. Town Group. Ch.E Bethlehem. Pa. Wilfred George Jabara, Town Group. Bus Brooklyn. V Y. Jacob Thorsten Jacobsen, Town Group, Ch.E Camden. N. J. Joseph Harry Jaeoby. Sigma Chi. Bus I larrisburg. Pa. Charles James, Bus Easton. Pa. William Donald Jardine. Town Group, Ch.E . .Buffalo, N. Y. Austen Erwin lenkin. Town Group. Bus Bellerose. N. Y. Arthur Bowen lohnston. Phi Delta Thela. E.E I Uster, Pa I l.nrv Winner Jones. Pi Kappa Alpha. I.E Harrisburg. Pa. I lenry 1 hoTiias Kalinoski. Taylor House, E.E Scranton, Pa. William Richard Kampfe. Town Group, Bus Morristown. N. J. Joseph Francis Keating, Town Group. Bus Bethlehem, Pa. John MacDonoTigh Keenan, Town Group. Bus Margate Citv. . I. John Kellelt. III. Town Group. Ch.E Springfield. Pa. John Sterrett Kelley, Beta Hieta I ' i. Bus Mercersburg, Pa. lames Henry Kidder. Delia Phi, Arls Germanlown. Pa. John Arthur Kimberley, Taylor House. M.E.. ..Dallon. Mass lolm Floyd Kizer. Ir.. Phi Delta Theta, Arts Towanda, Pa. Ldwin Howard Klem. l J ln Sigma Kappa, Ch.E Paulsboro, N. J. Louis Edward Klein, Richards House. Ch.E Easton. Pa. Donald Henry Kleppinger. Town Group. Met.E Bethleli Pa. Eugene Leonard Kline. Sigma Alpha Mu, Arts Trenton. N. J. Conrad Erwin Kluger. Pi Lambda Phi, Arts Paterson. N. J. Carl George Konoiige. Town Group. Arts Bethlehem. Pa. Fram is Winton Kopyta. Town Group, M.E Somerville, N. J. John Alfred Krawchuk, Town Group. E.E Bridgeport. Pa. Frederick Albert Krone, Town Group, Ch.E Frcoland, Pa. Charles Emil Kroupa. Taylor House, M.E Woodside, N. Y. Stephen John Kucey. Town Group, Bus , . .Bethlehem. Pa. Richard Lincoln Kulp. Town Group. Ch.E Bethlehem, Pa. Donald Wayne Kurtz. Taylor House, E.E Phoenixville. Pa. Herbert 1 heodore Kurz. Town Group. E.E .... Caldwell. N. J. John Carl Lampert, Richards House. Ch.E Carlsladt, N. I. Jack Emmett Lane. Phi Delta Theta, M.E Mount Lebanon. Pa. Elwood D. Latimer, Jr., Town Group. Ch.E Scranton. Pa. Donald William Layton. Richards II CI, I ' ... Brooklyn. N. Y. George Harold Leach, Taylor House. Arts . . Roselle, N. J. Ross Wilburton Leaver. Lambda Chi Alpha, Ch.E Chester. N. J. John Robert Lees, Sigma Nu. I.E Haddonfield. N. J. Jack Kiehl Lehman. Kappa Sigma, Bus Port Huron. Mich. Otto Gay Leichliter. Town Group. Met.E Pittsburgh. Pa. John Donald Leighton, Kappa Sigma. Bus Port Huron, Mich. Quintin Adam Lerch, Jr.. Town Group, E.E Port Jefferson. N. Y. Monroe Levy, Sigma Alpha Mu. Arts Trenton, Y J. John Leyenberger. Town Group, M.E Newark. N. J. Frank Paul Librizzi, Town Group, E.E Newark. N. J. William Henry Lindsay. Jr.. Beta Theta Pi. Ch.E. ... Haddonfield. N. J. William Christ Linge. Town Group. M.E Bethlehem. Pa. Charles James Little. II. Richards House. M.E Youngstown. Ohio Thomas Devercux Lloyd. Theta Kappa Phi, Bus Carteret, N. J. Basil William Logechnik. Town Group. I.E Bethlehem. Pa. Stephen Brooks Longley, Delta Phi. Arts Maplewood. N. J. Robert Jacob Loose, Taylor House. I.E West Orange. N. J. Jesse Brodbeck Loucks, Taylor House. Ch.E . . York. Pa. ( larence Earl Louden. Jr.. Chi Psi, Arls Kittanning, Pa. Henry Cameron Louden, Town Group. Bus Nulley. N. J. ( harles fweeddale Loveless. Town Group. Arls Warren. ( )lii,, I Inward lenrge I uley. Thela Xi. C.E New Kensington, Pa. Philip Lulters. Town Group, M.E Shelton. Conn. George Rufus Lutz. Taylor House-. M.E ..Reading. Pa. Robert Merrill Lynch, Town Croup. Arts Greenwich. Conn. Robert lames Lyons, Delta Upsilon, Ch.I Steubenville. Ohio John Stanley MacDonald. Theta Kappa Phi. E.E ..West Haddonfield. N. J. Stanley Guli, k M,, Nana-,-. Delta T ' au Delta. Bus Princeton, N. J. Robert Russell Maty. Richards House, Ch.E Kensington, Md. Harold Edward Malum, v. Theta Kappa Phi, Bus Pawlucket. R. I. Robert Mercier Maiden. Town Group, Phys I renton, N. J. William Ihomas Mainwaring. Sigma Nu. Met E Pittsburgh, Pa. Brookman Jack March, Taylor House. Ch.E . Shillington, Pa. Sandor Alexander Mark. Tan Delia Phi. C.E New York. N. Y. Paul William Marshall. Taylor House, Phys Pottslown, Pa. Robert Henry Marshall. Delta Tau Delta, I.E Kennett Square. Pa. William K. Martin, Alpha Kappa I ' i. Ml Blnomt ' icld Mills. Mich. Richard Mascuch. Delta Sigma Phi. I.E. South Orange, N. ,1. Daniel Bosworth McAfee. Phi Gamma Delta, Bus Rye. N Y. Wilkes McClave. II, Delta Tau Delia. Bus Maplewood. N. J. lohn Donald McCIay. Taylor House. Bus Tenafly. N. J. William Blake McClenachan. III. Richards House, Arts Chester. Pa. Malcolm Findley McConnell. Jr.. Delta Upsilon, M.E Munhall. Pa illiam Pershing McEIroy. Town Group. Bus. . Bridgehampton, L. I., N. Y. John Leo McGonigle, Jr., C.E IIentown, Pa. Robert John McGregor. Richards House, Ch.E Dunmore, Pa Edwin Alexander McKanna, Jr.. Richards House, Arts South Pasadena, Cal. Frank Shirley McKenna, Delta Upsilon, Met.E Crafton. Pa. Robert Charles McMichael. Richards House, Met.E Chester. Pa. James Hyatt McMillen. II. Psi Upsilon. Bus South Orange. N. J. Raymond Theodore Meckbach, Richards House. Bus Bogota. N. J. William Jackson Meihle, Taylor House, Arts Harrisburg. Pa. Tom Charles Mekeel, Richards House. Arts Reading. Pa. Henry Blackstone Metcalf, Phi Delta Theta. Arts. . . .Water Valley, Miss. Richard Edward Metius. Phi Gamma Delta. Met.E Narberth. Pa. Richard Edward Metzger. Town Group. Ch.E Turtle Creek. Pa. Robert Metzner, Richards House. Bus Albany. N. Y. John Henry Milhank, Alpha Tau Omega, Bus Bloom field. N. J. Albert Marshall Miller. Richards House. Met.E St. Petersburg. Fla. Leonard Hanmer Miller, Town Group, I.E East Orange, N. J. Richard Earl Miller. Ch.E Northampton. Pa. Robert Bruce Miller. Town Group. M.E Bethlehem. Pa William Robert Miller. Jr.. Phi Sigma Kappa, Bus North Bergen, N. J. Robert Francis Mincemoyer. Town Group. Arts Williamsport. Pa. George Francis Minde. Richards House, M.E Summit. N. J. John Francis Miraglia. Town Group, Arts Port Chester. N 1 Luther Albert Mohr, Taylor House. Met.E Reading. Pa. Ralph Franklin Moss, Jr., Phi Gamma Delta, Bus Merion. Pa. John Richard Muehlberg, Phi Gamma Delta. I.E Montclair. N, I Edgar Kirton Muhlhausen. Pi Kappa Alpha, C.E Brooklyn. N. Y. Richard Dallam Munnikhuysen, Taylor House. E.E Bel Air, Md. Stewart Walrath Munroe, Jr., Richards House, Bus.. . Grosse Pointe. Mich. Joseph Fitzroy Musante. Town Group. M.E Bridgeport. Conn. William Behl Musselman. Town Group, Arts Bethlehem. Pa. James Warden Needles, Richards House, Ch.E Cape May, N. J. Paul Lavern Nestleroth, T own Group. Met.E Elm, Pa. Robert Shaw Newcomb, Lambda Chi Alpha. Bus South Orange, N. J. David Kierstead Nichols. Town Group. M.E Nutley. N. J. Robert Alexander Nicrosini. Richards House. Arts Bayside. N. Y. John James Nitti, Taylor House. Bus Brooklyn, N. Y. Jacob Sebastian Nolf, I.E Nazareth. Pa. Frederic Stuart Nolle. Taylor House. M.E Park Ridge. 111. John Hugh Norwood. Delta L psilon. Met.E Hamburg. N. Y. Zenon Edwin Nowicki, Town Group. Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Patrick William O ' Brien. Town Group. E.M Old Westburv. N. Y. John Brangs O Hara, Taylor House. Bus Newark. N. J. Lowell Kenneth Oliphant. Town Group, Bus East Cleveland, Ohio Henry J. Olson, Jr.. Town Group. C.E Oyster Bay. N. Y. David Chittenden Osborn. Richards House. Ch.E. .. Shaker Heights. Ohio Richard Ostheimer, Town Group. Met.E Rockville Center, N. Y. Ri hard Mercer Palmer, Phi Delta Theta. Bus Reading. Pa. George Earl Parsons, Jr., Theta Delta Chi, E.E Marion, Md Preston Wilson Parvis. Jr.. Phi Gamma Delta. Bus. .. Wilmington. Del Charles Anthony Patten. M.E MIentown, Pa. George Morse Patterson. Town Group. M.E Brooklyn, N. 1 . Richard Chadwick Paul. Alpha Tau Omega, Ch.E York. Pa. Harry Vauglian Paynter, Richards House, M.E Philadelphia, Pa. Harry Gordon Payrow, Jr.. I own Group, Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Frack Pegg, Richards House, M.E Coraopolis, Pa. I. -lui Ri.bv Penn, III. Chi Psi. Bus Forth Worth. Tex. Ri hard ( iray Petersen, Taylor I louse. E.M Pittsburgh, Pa. George Welch Peterson. Jr., Delia Sigma Phi, Bus Ridgewood. N I John Louis Peterson. R it J i an Is House. Mit.h Wnud Ridt e. , . I James Fisher Pfeffer, Ir., .Town Group, M.E Upper Darby. Pa. John Ormsln Phillip.. Delta Phi. Bus Pittsburgh. Pa Eugene LeRov Pinto, I Jelta Sigma Phi, Bus Scarsdale, . V. ( . li.uL ■- I mix is Plate. I ' i Kappa Alpha, Bus Mt. Vernon, V V. John Richard Polinsky, Town Group. Arts Mildred, Pa. Philip John Prang. Jr., Ch.E Easton. Pa. Theodore David Propper. Pi Lambda Phi, Ch.E Woodmere. N. Y. John Adams Quincy. Delta UpsiJon, E.E .Briarclill Manor, N. Y. Kenneth Hauser Rahn. Town Group. Met.E Palmerton. Pa. John Thompson Ransom. II. Town Group. Phys Haddonfiold. N. J. Carl Alfred Rassler. Bus Allentown, Pa. John Earl Rau, E.E Allentown. Pa. John Arnold Read. Richards House. M.E Upper Montclair. N. J. Robert Clark Reber. Delta Upsilon, Bus Allentown. Pa. Earl John Reddert. Jr.. Chi Psi. Ch.E Madison, N. J. Sumner Willard Reid. Taylor House, M.E West Lawn. Pa, Irving Baker Remsen. Jr.. Town Group. Ch.E . Trenton, N. J. Henry Thomas Rouwcr. Sigma Chi. Bus ..Harrisburg. Pa. Joseph Benson Reynolds, Town Group. Phvs. . Bethlehem. Pa. William Painter Rhoads. Sigma Chi, M.E. . . . ..Harrisburg. Pa. Arthur Herbert Rich. Sigma Phi. Bus Buffalo. N. Y. Frank Hart Rich, Pi Lambda Phi. Bus Washington, D. C. David Emrys Richards. Leonard Hall, Arts Scranton. Pa. Howard William Riemer. Tau Delta Phi, Bus Maplewood. N. J. Robert Reid Riggle. Town Group, Bus Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Caspar Clyde Ritter. Met.E Mlentown. Pa. John Marvil Roach, Town Group. Arts Mercbantville, N I Frank Frederick Roberts. Town Group. Met.E Bethlehem. Pa. Charles Thompson Robertson. Ill, Town Group. C.E. .. Philadelphia. Pa. Gordon Brown Robertson, Town Group, Bus. ... Cleveland Heights. Ohio Francis Haynes Rockett, Jr.. Town Group. E.E Rockville Center. N. Y. Douglas Hill Rodgers. Town Group, C.E Port Washington. N. Y. Austin William Ruch, Ch.E Schnecksville. Pa. Clyde Charles Ruffle. Taylor House. I.E Queens Village. N. Y. Robert Francis Ryan. Alpha Tau Omega. Bus Schenectady. N. Y. Philip Wales Saitta. Richards House, Bus . .Lebanon. Pa. Rudolf William Samer. Richards House, Phys Elizabeth. N. J. Abram Samuels, Tau Delta Phi, Bus Allentown, Pa. Clarence M. Sanderson. Jr.. Sigma Phi Epsilon. E.E. . .South Orange. N. J. Donald Belshaw Sands, Town Group, Arts Middlebury. Conn. Theophile Saulnier. Jr.. Richards House. Bus Swarthmore. Pa. Charles Henry Savage, Town Group. Met.E Morristown, N. I. John Seltzer Saylor. Jr., Lambda Chi Alpha. Ch.E Reading. Pa Raymond Vernon Schilt. Town Group. Bus Lynbrook. N. Y. Leonard Adolph Schneider. Chi Psi. Arts Clifton. N. J. Howard Oscar Schroeder, Richards House. M.E Bloomfield. N. J. Charles Henry Schumacher. Taylor House. I.E Jackson Heights. N. Y. Forrest Veil Schumacher. Phi Sigma Kappa. Arts Bellevue. Pa. Joseph Doty Scott. Alpha Chi Rho. E.E Millburn, N. J. Theodore Gourdin Scott. Jr.. Kappa Alpha. Met.E.. ..Orange. Va. Murl Wolfe Sears. Town Group. M.E Catonsville. M,l Leslie Earl Sebald. Jr.. Taylor House. E.E Ridgewood, N. J. Grendon Kenneth Sebold. Richards House. E.E Elizabeth. N. J. Henry Albert Seebald. Phys Allentown. Pa. Jaques Segal, II. Tau Delta Phi. I.E Flushing. N. Y. John Clark Sellers, Town Group, Ch.E ArdsIey-on-Hudson. N. Y. Russell Melvin Seward. Jr.. Town Group. Ch.E Altoona. Pa. Joseph Matthew Sexton, Theta Kappa Phi, I.E Newark, N. J. Louis Everett Sliarpe, Town Group, Chem Larchmont. N. Y. William Sydney Shuttleworth. Chi Psi, Bus Scarsdale. N. Y. Robert Niel Simonsen. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Cli.E Pittsburgh. Pa. William James Skinner. Richards House. M.E. . . . Madison. N. J. Andrew Peter Smith. Town Group. Met.E Bethlehem. Pa Augustine Nicholas Smith. Jr.. Town Group. Arts Mahanoy City, Pa. David Rahm Smith, Jr.. Alpha Chi Rho. E.E Towanda. Pa. Eugene Monroe Smith. Town Group. Met.E Bethlehem, Pa. Frank Edgar Smith. Jr.. Chi Psi. Ch.E Clifton. N. J. Jesse Tavenor Smith. Theta Delta Chi. I.E Shaker Heights. Ohio Richard Philip Steere Smith. Alpha Chi Rho. Met.E. .. Philadelphia, Pa. Victor Eugene Smith, Taylor House. Bus Norwalk. Conn. Stephen David Smoke. Phi Gamma Delta. Met.E Versailles. Pa. John Joseph Somers. Ch.E Philadelphia. Pa. Ralph Franklin Sotzing. Town Group. Bus Bethlehem. Pa. Leslie Orman Southgate. Jr.. Town Group, M.E Jamesburg. N. J. William Mclndoe Spears. Jr., Town Group. Arts. . . .Shaker Heights. Ohio Emerson Daniel Spengler, Met E Northampton. Pa. John Case Spooner, Sigma Phi. I.E East Aurora. N. Y. Eugene Roy Springer. Town Group. M.E Larchmont. N. Y. Robert Breckinridge Steele, Jr.. Sigma Nu. Met.E. Great Neck. L. I.. N Y. Charles Stanley Steiner. Town Group, Ch.E Baltimore. Md. Orville James Stephens. Town Group, E.E Cranford, N. J. Kingdon Henry Sterngold. Pi Lambda Phi. Bus Lawrence, L. I., N. Y. Henry Charles Stieglitz. Richards House. M.E Jamaica, N. Y. John Henry Stives. Delta L psilon. I.E Princeton, N. J. Joseph Edward Stopp, Richards House. Arts Philadelphia. Pa. Robert Walter Stowbridge, III. Town Group. Bus Roselle Park, N. J. Robert Samuel Struble. Beta Theta Pi. M.E Ben Avon, Pa. Carl Lindsley Sturgis. Richards House. Bus Morristown, N. J. Glenn Bucher Swope, Town Group. E.E Pittsburgh. Pa. Arthur Tallaksen. Town Group. Bus West Orange, N. J. John Peyton Taylor. Sigma Chi, Bus Wilmington. Del. Ray Orme Taylor. Town Group, Bus Ashland, Pa. Robert Gorman Taylor. Phi Sigma Kappa, M.E North Hills, Pa. Frank Raymond Thaeder. Sigma Nu, I.E Manbasset. N. Y. Albert Leo Thalhamer. Taylor House. Phys Clifton. N. J. Joseph Simon Thomas. Taylor House, Ch.E Flushing, N. I . Charles Garland Thornburgh, Jr., Beta Theta Pi, C.E Carnegie. Pa. Archie De-Witt Tifft. Phi Gamma Delta. Bus Merion. Pa. Frederick Carl Tillberg. Jr.. Town Group. Met.E Philadelphia, Pa. John Henry Tillman. Town Group. M.E Queens Village, N. Y. Florent Joseph Tokarczyk. Town Group. E.M Coaldale. Pa. William Wooster Tolley. Sigma Phi Epsilon. E.M. . .Richmond Hill. N. Y. Arthur Frank Tozer. Phi Sigma Kappa, M.E Springfield. Pa. John Henry Transue. Ch.E Portland. Pa. Albert Robert Tucker. Jr.. Sigma Chi, Ch.E Wilmington. Del. Robert Franklin Turnauer. Bus Allentown, Pa. Eduardo Benavides Valdes. Taylor House. E.E Ciego de Avila. Cuba John Davis VanBIarcom. Taylor House. M.E Aliquippa. Pa. Warren Corbin Van Blarcom. Taylor House. Bus Aliquippa. Pa. Lindsey Dodd Van der Veer. Sigma Phi, I.E Somerville. N. J. William Paul Varner. Richards House. Bus Scranton, Pa. Howard Alton Vaughn. Jr.. Theta Xi, Ch.E Hammonton. N. J. Stuart Henry Vogt. Taylor House. E.E White Plains. N. Y. Edward Paul Vollherbst. Jr., Price House. Met.E Union. N. J. Don Sheeder von der Heyde. Theta Xi. I.E Altoona, Pa. Samuel Robert Walker. Sigma Nu. Bus Riverside. N. J. Thomas A. Wallace. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Ch.E..Kew Gardens. L. I.. N. Y. Everett Frazar Warner. Sigma Phi. Arts Short Hills, N. J. Earl Lewis Weaver. Jr.. M.E Allentown, Pa. Kurt Heinz Weber. Town Group. Chem Tenafly, N. J. David Francis Wells, Theta Kappa Phi, Ch.E Rockville Center. N. Y. Jeffry Steven Wetricb. Psi Upsilon, Bus Hempstead. N. Y ' . Lee Robert White. Town Group. E.E Middletown. Pa. John Robert Whitesell. Chi Psi. M.E Norristown. Pa. James Ellsworth Wigg. Sigma Chi. Bus Upper Montclair. N. J. Alexander King Wiggin. Alpha Tau Omega. I.E East Orange. N. J. LeRoy Asbton Wiley. Taylor House. I.E Morrisville, Pa. Normand Joseph Wilhelmy. Town Group. Bus New 1 ork. N. Y. Raymond Sentman Willard. Jr.. Richards House, E.E. . . Coatesville. Pa. Howard Misson Williams, Delta Upsilon, Bus Allentown, Pa. John Ross Williams, Town Group. E.E Nanticoke. Pa. Kingsley Grant Williams. Theta Xi. Chem Woodbury. N. J. William Godfrey Willmann. Town Group. Chem Bethlehem. Pa. Wallace Richard Wirths, Richards House. Bus Grantwood, N. J. James W. Witherspoon. IV, Sigma Phi Epsilon. M.E Tuckaho, N. Y. Quintis Peter Witte, Jr.. Richards House. I.E Munsey Park. N. Y. Elwyn Wolfe, E.E Easton, Pa. Ahlert Diedrick Wolff. Delta Tau Delta. Bus Easton. Pa. Frederick Raymond Wood, Jr.. Beta Theta Pi, Bus Easton, Pa. Richard Francis Wood, Jr., Sigma Chi, Arts Larchmont, N. Y. Roy Edgar Woodling. Jr.. Town Group. E.M Bethlehem. Pa. Philip Benson Woodroofe. Alpha Tau Omega. Bus Albany. N. Y. William Russell Woodruff. Taylor House. Ch.E Teaneck. N. J. Ralph McCormick Yearick. Town Group. Arts Wilkinsburg. Pa. Robert Rochester Young. Richards House, MF Philadelphia. Pa. Whitney James Young. Town Group. M.E Bethlehem. Pa. Richard John Yurkanin. Town Group. E.E Bethlehem, Pa. Hysler Bernard Zane. Theta Kappa Phi. M.E East Orange. N. J. Alfred Lewis Zanoni, Town Group. I.E Raritan, N. J. George Glenn Zipf. Lambda Chi Alpha. Met.E Bryn Mawr. Pa. FRESHMAN CLASS OF LEHIGH mm or Donald Buxton Adams. Sigma Chi, Eng Monlclair, N. J. John Clark Alberts. Clii Phi, Eng Plainville. Conn. John Purdon Allen. Taylor House. Eng Upper Montclair. N. J. Walter Lesesne Anders. Town Group. Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Harry W ' allis Anderson, Jr., Theta Xi, Eng Altoona. Pa. Robert W ' ylie Appleton. Theta Delta Chi, Bus.. . .Upper Montclair, N. J. John Peter Arbizzani. Town Group. Eng Bethlehem. Pa. Maynard Goodwin Arsove. Taylor House, Eng Rochester, N, Y. Elwood Bruce Backensto, Eng Emmaus. 1 . ■ Robert Dudley Bailey. Phi Gamma Delta. Eng Summit, N. J. Clifford Clarence Baldwin, I own Group. Eng Philadelphia. Pa. Charles Balough. Jr.. Town Group, Eng Canton. Ohio Luther Roth Bartholomew, Eng Quakertown. Pa. Lynn Conant Bartlett. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Arts Bethlehem. Pa. Arthur Kirke Bartley. Theta Kappa Phi. Bus Forest Hills. N. Y Lester Ray Bartron. Eng Easton. Pa. Raymond Irving Bashford. Jr., Phi Delta Theta. Eng Philadelphia. Pa. Burton Eberman Bauder, Town Group. Eng Bethlehem. Pa. Warren Harding Beaumont. Town Group. Eng Summit. N. J. Robert Kingdon Beckwith, 1 own Group. Eng Brooklyn, N. Y. William Edwards Bellinger, Town Group. Bus Fort Plain. N. Y. Charles Surface Bennett. Taylor House, Eng Nazareth. Pa. Richard Turney Berg. Delta Upsilon, Arts Coraopolis Heights, Pa. Charles Richard Bcrgh. Delta Phi. Eng Ebensburg. Pa. Bruce Atkisson Berlin. Phi Delta I hcl.i. Eng Lansdowne. Pa. Fred Francis Berman. Cosmopolitan Club. Eng Cresskill. N. J. Richard Henry Bernasco, Lambda Chi Alpha. Bus Trenton. N. J. John Thomas Bilder. I own Group. Eng Easton, Pa. William Gottlob Binder. Delta Tau Delta. Bus Stcelton. Pa. Taylor Albert Birckhcad, Delia Phi, Eng Baltimore, Md. 1 1 ' ' I Allen Blank. I own Group, I m_- Leuighton, Pa Alexander Hamilton Bolyn, Town Group. Eng Freeland. Pa. Robert Carlton Boston. Phi Gamma Delta. Eng Wilmington. Del. Frank Hugo Bower. Taylor House. Eng Rutherford. N. J. Charles Edwin Boyer. Town Group. Bus Bowmanstown. Pa. Edward George Boyer. Jr., Delta Upsilon, Eng Norristown. Pa. Glenn Winneld Boyer, 1 aylor House, Eng Hershey, Pa. Thomas Paisley Bradford. Beta Kappa. Eng Wheeling. W Va, John Gerard Brahney. Beta Theta Pi, Bus South Orange, N. J. had Albert Brawn, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Eng West ( )range, . J. Ray Edwin Brawn. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Eng West Orange, N. J. Andrew Harrison Brennan. Pi Kappa Alpha. Bus Paterson, N. J. Samuel Breskman. Sigma Alpha Mu, Eng Philadelphia. Pa. Alexander Brkich, Town Group. Eng Bridgeport. Conn. William Conner Brower. Eng Allentown. Pa. Robert Knox Brown. I aylor House. Eng Chester. Pa. John Henry Brubaker. Jr., Eng Easton. Pa. Charles Russell Bucher. Town Group. Eng Reading. Pa. Myron Isaac Buchman, Sigma Alpha Mu. Arts Brooklyn. N. Y. Thomas Mathieu Buck, Kappa Sigma, Eng Philadelphia. Pa. Karl Albert Buehler. Eng Allentown. Pa. William Thomas Buhrig. Beta Kappa, Eng Mount Vernon, N. Y. Herbert Edward Bunning, T beta Kappa Phi, Eng Bronxville, N. Y. Robert Charles Burchill. Bus Allentown. Pa. George Warren Burgers, Town Group, Eng Grantwood, X. J. John Burgio. Town Group, Eng Caldwell, N. J. Robert Forrest Burroughs, Lambda Chi Alpha. Bus Pennington. N. J. John Henry Burrus, II, Alpha Chi Rho. Bus Scranton. Pa. Franklin Davis Bush, Town Group. Bus Maplewood, N. J. [nomas Lee Bushey. Theta Xi. Eng Haddonfield. N. J. James Harvey Buss, II, Richards House, Eng Elmhurst, N. Y. George John Bussmann. Psi Upsilon. Bus New Haven. Conn. Stephen Hart Butler. Theta Delta Chi. Eng Waterbury, Conn. Arthur George Byrne. Theta Kappa Phi. Arts Great Neck, . Y. Solomon Pusey Caldwell, Town Group, Eng West Grove, Pa. Arlington Ward Canizares, Chi Phi. Eng Wayne, Pa. Stanley Caplan, Eng Allentown, Pa. John Daniel Caproni, Theta Delia Cni, Eng New Haven, Conn. Paul Revere Carl, Town Group, Eng Paulsboro, N. J. Gerald Vincent Carroll, Taylor House. Eng Meriden. Conn. Wayne Hanley Carter. Sigma Nu. Arts Plainfield. N. J. Kevin Casey. Kappa Sigma, Bus Waterford, Conn. Edward Jerome Cavanaugh, Town Group. Eng Forty Fort. Pa. Warren Blanchard Chapin. III. Lamhda Chi Alpha. Bus. . Westfield. N. J. Francis Arndt Chidsey, Jr., Chi Phi, Bus Wayne. Pa. William Henry Clark. Jr.. Taylor House, Eng Rutherford, N. J. Harry St. Clair Clarke. Psi Upsilon. Eng Jamestown, R. I. Mahlon Dickenson Clements, Jr., Arts Easton. Pa. John Lewis Clemmey, Jr., Sigma Nu, Bus Fall River, Mass. Allison Walter Clokey, Town Group. Eng Rutherford, N. J. Warren Xavier Collmann. Town Group, Arts Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Julian Heyl Colquitt. Town Group, Eng Washington, D. C. Oakes Maxcy Colwell, Delta Sigma Phi, Eng Caldwell. N. J. Joseph Gordon Compton. Theta Kappa Phi. Eng Flushing, N. Y. Philip Collins Cone, Town Group, Eng Little Falls. N. Y. Jon Conforte, Town Group. Bus Stony Brook, N. Y. Edgar Russell Conover. Jr., Town Group. Eng Fort Washington. Pa. Alfred Harden Coon. Jr., Psi LIpsilon, Eng Kingston, Pa. William Harris Corddry, Richards House. Eng Snow Hill, Md. Robert Lee Cornish. Theta Xi, Eng Roslyn Heights. N. Y. John Hughes Corson, Richards House, Arts Oakmont, Pa. Henry Hobart Corwin. Chi Phi, Eng. Bridgeport, Conn. William C lark Cosfort, Richards House, Eng Quebec, Canada Robert Lloyd Coutts, Delta Tau Delta, Arts Morristown, N. J. Roy Burfort Cowin. Jr., Town Group. Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Bruce Craig, Alpha Tau Omega. Bus Bloomfield Hills. Mich. Lloyd Alexander Croot. Delta Tau Delta, Bus North East, Pa. Niel Stahley Culliney, Town Group, Arts Bethlehem, Pa. John Seaton Curtis. Theta Delta Chi, Eng Youngstown, Ohio Charles Dwight Curtiss. Delta Upsilon. Eng Chevy Chase. Md. Granville Yocum Custer. Alpha Tau Omega. Eng Chevy Chase. Md. William Robert Dabb, Kappa Sigma, Eng Elizabeth. N. J. Edwin Harold Dafter, Jr.. Lambda Chi Alpha, Eng Philadelphia. Pa. Donald Henry Davies, Bus Allentown, Pa. Edward Stowman Davis, Delta Sigma Phi, Eng Philadelphia, Pa. Samuel Jackson Davy. Sigma Phi. Eng New Castle, Pa. Louis Rudolph Daze, Jr., Town Group. Enff Carteret, N. J. Bernard William Deehan. Phi Gamma Delta, Eng Belleville. N. J. John Goodfellow deGrouchy. Chi Phi, Bus Brookline, Pa. Louis Field Dellwig, Richards House, Arts Westmoreland Hills. Md. William T nomas DeLong. Town Group, Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Harold Daniel Deveraux, Town Group, Eng Shamokin, Pa. John Edmund Devitt, Town Group, Arts Mountain Top, Pa. Charles Joseph Dick, 1 own Group, Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Hall Dickson, Town Group, Eng Staten Island, N. Y. Leo Worth Dieffenbaeh, Town Group, Bus Lopez, Pa. Robert Frederick Dieter, Town Group. Eng Port Washington. N. Y. John Rawson Dodge, Richards House. Bus Lake Mahopac. N. Y. Robert Henry Doney. Pi Kappa Alpha. Eng Pen Argyl. Pa. Rosario Roy Dragone. Town Group, Eng Brooklyn, N. Y. Kenneth Dwight Duggan. Town Group. Arts. .Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. James Dunwoody. Jr., Richards House. Eng Erie, Pa. Robert Edward Duval. Delta Upsilon. Bus Jenkintown, Pa. Donald Penfield Dyer, Town Group, Bus Belmont, Mass. Richard Kistler Eberts, Town Group, Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Edward Walter Edwards. Town Group. Eng Batavia, N. Y. Willet Ellsworth Egge, Jr.. Town Group. Eng Allentown, Pa. William Harrison Eichlin, Town Group, Eng Easton. Pa. Luther William Eisenhart, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem. Pa. William Stanley Eisner, Kappa Alpha, Eng South Orange, N. J. Raymond Edwin Ekeblad. Town Group. Bus Bayside. N. Y. Badgley Allen Elmes. Phi Gamma Delta, Eng Ridley Park, Pa. Richard George Engler. Town Group, Eng Catasauqua, Pa. Richard Kauffman Ernst, Richards House, Eng Canton, Ohio Musa Joseph Eways, Town Group, Eng Reading, Pa. Robert Henry Ewing, Town Group, Eng Tulia, Texas Norman Joseph Faber. Pi Lambda Phi. Eng Trenton, N. J. Clarence Pranklin Fehnel, Taylor House, Bus Nazareth. Pa. Edward Adam Fehnel, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem. Pa. George S. Ferris, Jr., Town Group, Eng North Tarrytown, N. Y. Chester Lee Finch, Jr., Chi Phi, Eng Washington, D. C. William Frederick Finney, Chi Psi. Arts Plainfield, N. J. Rowland VanDyke Firth, Jr.. Eng Easton. Pa. Ira Lewis Fisher, Sigma Alpha Mu, Bus Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Joseph Fisher, Taylor House, Eng Oreland, Pa. William Henry Fisher, Sigma Phi Epsilon .Philadelphia, Pa. James Henry Flick, Town Group, Bus Bethlehem, Pa. John Burr Forsyth. Phi Sigma Kappa, Bus Red Bank, N. J. William Carlyle Foster, Sigma Phi Epsilon. Eng Philadelphia, Pa. George Stidworthy Fox. Town Group, Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Robert High Freeman, Town Group, Eng Reading, Pa. Philip Charles Freshwater, Town Group, Eng Reading. Pa. Hugh Bartley Frey. Jr., Richards House, Eng Dunellen. N. J. Lewis Friedman, Town Group, Arts Belmar. N. J. Robert Watson Fuller, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem. Pa. William Whitslar Fuller, Sigma Chi, Eng Cleveland Heights. Ohio Francis Xavier Gabriel, Town Group, Arts New York. N. Y. Joseph Cyril Gabuzda, Town Group, Eng Freeland, Pa. John Wilson Gallagher, Jr.. Town Group, Bus Brooklyn, N. Y. Theodore Charles Gams. Price House, Eng Newark, N. J. Robert Harwood Ganzer, Pi Kappa Alpha. Bus Duluth. Minn. Henry Augustus Gardner, Sigma Nu. Bus Lakewood, N. Y. Henry Watterson Garvin, Jr.. Town Group, Eng Gettysburg, Pa. Quentin George Gasda, Town Group, Bus Bethlehem. Pa. Robert William Gastmeyer. Jr., Alpha Chi Rho. Eng. . . Maplewood, N. J. Gilbert Deniston Gaus. Taylor House. Eng South Orange, N. J. Panos Basil Georgopulo. Richards House, Eng New York, N. Y. Herbert Frederick Gerdes. Town Group, Eng Ridgefield, N. J. Wheeler Gilmore, Jr., Price House, Eng Drexel Hill. Pa. Frederick Embick Gleim, Town Group. Eng Westfield. N. J. Ludwig Edward Godycki, Town Group, Eng Hellertown, Pa. Richard Farrand Goebel, Delta LIpsilon, Bus Scarsdale. N. Y. Thomas Herman Golden III, Phi Gamma Delta, Bus Pottsville, Pa. Ignacio Albert Gonzalez, Town Group. Arts Bethlehem. Pa. Gordon Bennett Goodman, Town Group. Eng Bethlehem. Pa. William Davis Gordon, Jr., Phi Gamma Delta, Eng. .. Philadelphia. Pa. James Frederick Gover, Taylor House, Eng Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Vincent Frank Grasso. Town Group. Bus Kingston, Pa. John Raymond Gray, Theta Kappa Phi, Eng New York, N. Y. Robert Lee Green, Town Group. Eng Titusville, Pa. Leonard Robert Greene, Tau Delta Phi. Eng Brooklyn, N. Y. Carl Lehnert Greener. Chi Psi, Arts Allentown. Pa. David Evans Gregory, Chi Phi, Eng Norwalk. Conn. John Gressitt, Town Group. Arts Evanston. III. Philip Scott Guckes. Town Group. Bus Elkins Park, Pa. Robert Charles Haas, Town Group. Eng Irvington. N. J. Alfred Lewis Haft, Sigma Alpha Mu, Bus New York, N. Y. C. Donald Hagey, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem. Pa. Robert William Hagy. Town Group. Eng Wyomissing Hills. Pa. Robert Mohr Hammer. Eng Allentown, Pa. Charles Richard Hardenbergh. Sigma Phi. Bus Newburgh, N. Y. Robert Edwin Harnisch. Town Group, Eng Maplewood, N. J. Stephen Hart. Town Group, Arts Pelham Manor. N. Y. George Solomon Hartman, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem. Pa. Steward Harding Hartman, Chi Phi, Bus Mechanicsburg, Pa. Richard Milton Haslet, Eng Easton, Pa. John Benjamin Haus, Taylor House, Eng Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Gilbert Pond Haven, Richards House. Eng.. . .Cleveland Heights, Ohio Carson Edmund Hawk, Town Group. Eng Northampton, Pa. William Daniel Hayes, Delta Upsilon. Eng Windber, Pa. Burt Lewis Heimer, Town Group. Bus Binghamton, N. Y. Barton Royal Heinz, Phi Gamma Delta, Bus Westfield, N. J. Walton Francis Heley, Jr., Theta Kappa Phi. Arts. West Hartford. Conn. Albert Weimer Hemphill, Jr., Town Group. Eng. . .LIpper Montclair, N. J. Arthur Christian Hemphill, Town Group, Eng. ..Egg Harbor City. N. J. Paul Clayton Henninger, Town Group, Eng Shamokin, Pa. Frank Lewis Herceg, Town Group, Eng Freemansburg. Pa. Harry Albert Herold, Jr., Town Group. Eng Bristol, Conn. Edwarcl John Hershock. Town Group. Arts Freeland, Pa. Chapin Heumann, Delta Upsilon. Eng Sewickley, Pa. Franklin Himmelberger, Town Group, Arts Coopersburg, Pa. William Bushnell Hinman. Alpha Kappa Pi. Bus East Orange, N. J. Alan Dabney Hinrichs. Sigma Chi, Eng New Rochelle, N. Y. Raymond William Hinterleiter, Eng Allentown, Pa. Walter Russell Hoerner, Town Group. Bus Hummelstown. Pa. Duyane Allan Hoffman. Town Group, Bus Plainfield, N. J. Warren Edward Hoffman. Taylor House, Eng. Union. N. J. John Vincent Hogan, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Arts Forest Hills. N. Y. William Bane Holberton, Delia Sigma Phi. Bus HackensacK, N. J. Robert Holland, Town Group. Eng Bethlehem, Pa. John Rolf Holtvedt, Sigma Nu, Bus Torrington, Conn. Richard Charles Hopkins, Alpha Kappa Pi, ting Narherlh, Pa. Fenwick Peck Horn. Taylor House, Lntf Lansdow n Pa. John Leonard Horn. Sigma Nu, Arts South Orange. N. J. John Houseman. Eng Allentown, Pa. George William Houston. Beta Kappa. Eng Port Washington. N. Y. William Osborne Houston. Delta Phi, Arts Old Greenwich, Conn. John Joseph Hucker, Richards House, Eng Norristown, Pa. Douglas Hammond 1 h mini. 1 own ( too p. Bus Flushing, N. Y. Frank Addison Hunold. Town Group. Eng Port Washington. N. Y. Isaac Mover Hunsberger. Town Group. Eng Quakertown, Pa. Russell Miles Imbt. Jr.. Town Group, Bus East Stroudsburg. Pa. Joseph Phillips Ireland, Lambda Chi Alpha. Arts Lambertville, N. J. William Edward Irvin, Jr.. Town Group. Eng Gary, lnd. Robert Clinton Jackson. Town Group, Eng Pen Argyl, Pa. Gregory Albert Jahn. Town Group. Arts Clifton. N. J. Robert Otto Jensen, Town Group, Eng Freeport, N. Y. Armond Charles Johnson. Chi Psi, Bus Maplewood, N. J. Howard Alexander Johnson. Price House, Eng Niagara Falls. N. Y. Jackson Tipton Jones. Price House, Eng Sweetwater. Tenn. Robert Edward Joslin. Delta Tau Delta. Bus Greenville. Del. John Martin Kasson, Chi Phi, Eng Gloversville. N. Y. Robert Edward Keenan. Bus Allentown, Pa. Theodore Kelcchava, Eng Allentown, Pa. Joseph Francis Kemmer, Lambda Chi Alpha. Eng Larchmont, N. . Rudolph Kerchmar. Town Group, Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Franklin Brooks Kern. Sigma Phi. Eng Cleveland Heights, Ohio LeRoy Ordway King. Jr.. Beta Kappa. Eng Washington, D. C. Chester Lyman Kingsbury, Jr., Sigma Phi Epsilon, Bus.. .Middletown. Ohio William Caspar Kirschner, Sigma Nu. Eng Flushing. N. . David Lyle Kistler, Town Group, Eng Hamburg, Pa. Walter Paul Klinikowski, Town Group, Eng Catasauqua. Pa. Charles Curtis Knight, Town Group, Eng West Warwick, R. I. Peter Koroniitz. Eng Allentown, Pa. Harold Kough, Town Group, Eng Pompton Plains, N. J. Robert Clayton Kramer. Town Group. Eng Duryea. Pa. Donald Eugene Krebs, Town Group, Eng Marietta, Pa. Max Krissiep. Jr.. Town Group, Eng Wyomissing, Pa. Charles Gierman Kucher, Theta Xi, Eng Irvington, N. J. William Anthony Kuhar, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Joseph James Kurtz, Town Group, Eng Northampton, Pa. Arthur Lewis Landesman. Sigma Alpha Mu. Eng Morris Plains, N. J. John Prince Landis, Town Group. Eng Old Greenwich. Conn. Alfred Baer Laponsky. Town Group, Eng Brownsville. Pa. Joseph Peter Larkin. Ill, Beta T beta Pi, Bus Jersey City, N. J. Leonard Dale Larson, Beta Kappa. Eng Cleveland, Ohio Claude Frank Leaman, Alpha Chi Rho, Arts Westfield, N. J. Benjamin Clark LeBlanc. Jr., I own Group. Eng Bogota. N. J. Andrew Frederick Leckie, Jr., Chi Psi. Bus Columbus. Ohio Joseph Luther Lehet, Town Group. Eng Nanticoke. Pa. Arthur Morton Lehrer. Tau Delta Phi, Bus Brooklyn, N. Y. Leonard Jack Leidig. Town Group. Eng York. Pa. Howard Clifford Leifheit, Taylor House. Eng.. .... .Queens Village, N. Y. Nathan George Lesh, Town Group, Eng Wind Gap, Pa. Charles Lowell Liebau, Alpha Kappa Pi, Bus Nutley. N. J. Harry Fendley Littlejohn. Jr., Psi L psilon, Fng Long Island, N. Y. Merion Henry Longenbach, Town Group, Eng Northampton, Pa. John Louis Loughran, Delta I au Delta. Bus .Philadelphia, Pa. Nicholas Joseph Lucarelle. Theta Kappa Phi. Bus Bridgeport. Conn. Gustave Frederick Lueddeke. Jr., Delta Phi, Eng Maplewood. N. J. George Arthur Lutz, Town Group, Eng Mahanoy City. Pa. Thomas Crawford MacAlIister. Jr.. Price House. Eng Milford. Conn. Guillcrmo Vincent Macia. Cosmopolitan Club. Bus Havana, Cuba John Linnaeus MacMinn. Phi Delta Theta. Eng Williamsport, Pa. Hayden Robert Maginnis, Town Group, Eng Bangor. Pa. Norman Lunny Maguire, Richards House, Eng Stamford, Conn. John Edward Malley, Town Group, Eng Minersvillr. Pa. Walla..- War,! Malley. Jr.. Theta Delta ( hi. Bus Hamden. Conn. John Joseph Maloruv. Jr., Psi Upsilon, Eng Forty Fort, Pa. George Mamary, Town Group, Bus Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Arthur Forrest Mann, Town Group, Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Creatore Albert Marchetto, Bus Allentown, Pa. Vincent John Margiotti, Taylor House, Eng Newburgh. N. Y. Roydon Seymour Margolies. Pi Lambda Phi, Arts. . . .Long Beach, N. Y. Dudley Stephens Marsh. Town Group. Bus Cnappaqua, N. Y. Gene A. Marusi, Richards House, Eng New York. N. Y. Matthew Cornelius Maseru, Beta Kappa, Bus Brooklyn, N. . Richard Withington Mason. Sigma Chi. Eng Foxboro. Mass. Bruce I rafton Matluas, Phi Delta T beta, Eng Waynesboro, Pa. Franklin Bliss Mayer, Chi Psi. Arts Eric. Pa. William Bright McArthur. Town Group, Bus West Haven, Conn. Hubert McDonnell. Jr., Psi Lpsilon, Eng Greenwich, Conn. Leon Joseph McGeady, Town Group, Eng Freemansburg. Pa. John Joseph McGee. Eng Allentown, Pa. William McGee. Town Group. Eng Allentown, Pa. (. harles Edward McGrath, Town Group, Bus Scranton. Pa. Robert Michael Mclnerney. Eng Allentown. Pa. William Charles McJames, Sigma Phi Lpsilon. Fng.. South Orange. N. J. Chandler Hayes McKaig, Phi Gamma Delta, Eng Wilmington, Del. Freeman Parke McKay. Jr.. Kappa Alpha, Eng Somervillo. . J. Edward Stroud McKelvy. Sigma Chi. Arts Wilkinsburg. Pa. Charles Andrew McWayne, Taylor House, Bus Honolulu. Hawaii John Joseph Mcehan. Jr., Town Group, Arts Freeland. Pa. Quentin Dewey Mehrkam, Eng Allentown, Pa. Jack Roos Mercer, Richards House, Eng Lynbrook. N. V Charles Franklin Meyer, Town Group, Bus Doylestown. Pa. Donald Mayo Middleton, Delta Upsilon, Eng Pittsburgh, Pa. Philip Horace Miller. Tau Delta Phi. Bus Rahway. N. J. William Russell Miller. Town Group. Eng Wyoming, Pa. Aubrey Milne, Town Group. Eng Boston, Mass. Samuel Russell Mink, Jr.. Town Group, Arts Bristol, Conn. Jackson Froelicher Mitchell. Psi L 7 psilon, Eng Larchmont, N. Y. Joseph Harold Mixner, Beta Kappa, Eng Ithaca, N. I . Harvey Donald Moll. Taylor House. Eng Lansdale, Pa. Stanley Thompson Moodie, Theta Xi. Eng Grove City. Pa. Robert Condit Moore, Kappa Alpha, Eng Maplewood, N. J. Walter Dalhy Moore. Town Group, Arts Brooklyn, N. . I ' on, 1 1. 1 ( him 1 1 . Morehouse, Richards House, Eng Watertown, Franklin Lecron Morgal, Phi Delta Theta, Eng Harrisburg, Pa. Warren King Morgan, Jr., Town Group, Eng Morris Plains, N. J. James Maury Morris, Delta Tau Delta, Eng Pittsburgh, Pa. Bertram Howard Morrow, Bus Easton, Pa. Ewen Montford Mortimer, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Ralph David Mover, Jr., Alpha Kappa Pi, Eng Bogota. N. J. John Haines Mueller, Town Group, Eng York. Pa. James Paul Mulhern, Theta Kappa Phi, Arts Wilkes-Barre, Pa. P. George Mundorf, Price House, Eng ork, Pa. Raffaele Francesco Muraca, Eng Easton, Pa. Harold Russ Nace, Town Group. Eng Haddonfield. N. J. Hans Nelken, Sigma Alpha Mu. Eng New York, N. . William Albert Nelson. Lambda Chi Alpha. Bus New York. N. Y. Carl Neuendorffer, Taylor House, Eng Tarrytown, N. . Howard Leroy Nielsen, Town Group. Eng Chicago. III. Russell C. Niemeier, Jr., Sigma Chi, Eng Pittsburgh, Pa. James Walter Niemoyer, Taylor House. Eng Dunmore. Pa. ( liarles Mat. Mil Ian Norlin, I own ( m ii| . I n«j Sliakei I LmliN. ( )liio Kenneth Harold Norris, Jr., Alpha Chi Rho, Eng Maplewood, N. J. James Barrett Nutting, Taylor House, Arts West Roxbury, Mass. William Harry Olinsky. Sigma Alpha Mir, Bus Trenton. N. J. Harry Lester Olmstead. Phi Sigma Kappa, Eng.. West New Brighton. N. Y. Jay Peter Olwyler, Delta Tau Delta. Arts Mount Vernon, N. Y. Joseph Howard Oswald. Beta Theta Pi, Bus Nutley, N. J. Arthur Mead Over. Delta Phi. Arts Pittsburgh. Pa. Ralph Dominick I alazzo, town Group. Eng Trenton. N. J. Lfhridge illiani Palmer. Town Group. Bus Kingsport, Tenn. Richard Bradbury Palmer. Theta Delta Chi, Arts Bethlehem. Pa. Donald Brut e Parish. T aylor House, Bus Portville, N. Y. Ralph Bruce Parkinson. Phi Sigma Kappa, Eng Glenside, Pa. Preston Parr, Jr., Richards House. Eng Wyncotte, Pa. illiam Creigh Patterson, Taylor House. Eng Royalton, Pa. Mason Pratt Pearsall. Sigma Phi. Eng New Canaan. Conn. illiam Cecil Pearson. Town Group. Eng Bethlehem. Pa. William Jarvis Peck, Delta Tau Delta, Eng Riverside, Conn. Ml. .(I Winslow Pedrick. Theta Xi. Bus Millville. I Leonard Francis Penitsch. Bus Allentown, Pa. George Wesley Phillips. Delta Phi, Bus Edgcworth, Pa. William John Pillar. Town Group. Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Henry Ernst Pohl. Jr., Town Group. Eng Long Island, N. Y. Robert Edward Pollock. Richards House. Bus Allentown. Pa. Kenneth Porter, Jr.. Delta Lpsilon. Bus Rockvilie Centre, N. Y. Henry Christian Postel. T own Group. Eng Brooklyn. N. Y. Robert King Powell, Town Group, Eng Philadelphia. Pa. Philip Henry Powers, Jr., Delta Tau Delta, Eng Pittsburgh, Pa. James Bruce Price, Jr., Town Group. Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Clarence Orland Prinkcy, Theta Xi, Eng Yonkers. N. Y. Robert Willmar Pugh. Town Group. Eng Great Notch, N. J. Arnold Oscar Putnam, Town Group. Eng Springfield, Vt. Robert Joseph Quinn. Lambda Chi Alpha. Arts MinersviUe, Pa. Paul George Rajcok, Town Group. Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Robert Cole Ramsdell, Town Group, Arts Trenton, N. J. Robert Duncan MacGregor Randall, Alpha Kappa Pi. Eng. . Royersford. Pa. Henry Wallace Rappuhn, Theta Xi, Eng Great Neck. N. Y. Everett Dolph Rassiga, Kappa Sigma. Arts Elmhurst, N. Y. John Eberline Raymer, Jr.. Delta Sigma Phi, Eng. . . Arecibo, Puerto Rico Jesse Edward Reed. Town Group. Eng McKeansburg, Pa. John Samuel Reichard. Bus Allcntown. Pa. James Lowther Reiley. Town Group, Eng Clearfield. Pa. Bernard C harles Reilly. I own Group, Arts Hellcrtown, Pa. Leon George Reimer, Town Group, Eng Bath, Pa. George Barton Reineking. Kappa Sigma, Eng Arlington. N. J. William K. Remsen, Town Group. Eng Staten Island. N. Y. Hugh Warren Richards, Taylor House, Eng Union, N. J. Wayne Dixon Riddle, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem, Pa. George Horace Ried, Leonard Hall, Arts New York, N. Y. Arthur Thomas Robb, Town Group, Eng Rockvillc Centre, N. Y. Donald Worthington Robinson, Town Group. Eng Buffalo, N. j . Robert Elliott Rodgers. Eng Allentown. Pa. Charles Montgomery Rogers. Sigma Phi. Eng Dallas, Tex. Benjamin Franklin Rosenberry, Town Group, Bus Palmerton, Pa. Arthur Elfred Roslund. Taylor House. Eng Long Island. N. Y. Richard Charles Roth. Town Group. Eng Buffalo. N. Y. George Albert Rothlisberger, Delta Sigma Phi, Bus. .. East Orange, N. J. Robert Seymour Rumsey. Town Group. Arts Bloomfield, N. J. John Donald Ryan, Town Group, Bus Norristown. Pa. Donald George Sanders, Town Group, Eng Passaic, N. J. Anthony Joseph Santantonro, Town Group. Eng Pen Argyl, Pa. Richard Winfield Sauer, Town Group, Eng Haddon Heights. N. J. James Lewis Sawyer, Town Group. Eng York, Pa. Robert Webster Saylor, Town Group, Eng Harrisburg, Pa. William Dwight Schaeffer, Town Group. Eng Laureldale, Pa. Robert Mack Schantz. Bus Allentown. Pa. David Henry Schaper, Phi Gamma Delta. Eng Erie, Pa. Richard Grey Schenck, Town Group. Eng Rutherford, N. J. William Rudolph Schmoll, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem, Pa. George Joseph Schneider. Phi Sigma Kappa. Arts Demarest, N. J. Wilson Bohnett Schramm. Richards House, Eng Bayside, N. Y. Herbert Owen Schutt, Eng Easton, Pa. Warren Joshua Schwab. Town Group, Eng Freemansburg, Pa. James Alan Shafer, Arts Easton, Pa. Rodney Daniel Shaffer, Eng Allentown, Pa. Robert Rex Shively. Richards House, Eng Washington. Pa. Edwin Irving Shuttleworth, Alpha Chi Rho, Eng Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Elias Sieger, Eng Allentown, Pa. Robert Edwin Siegfried, Eng Allentown. Pa. Kerwin Howard Silfies. Town Group, Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Vian Bertram Silliman. Jr.. Town Group, Eng Catasauqua, Pa. James Robert Simpson. Ill, Beta Theta Pi. Eng.. Ambler. Pa. Earl Dwayne Smith, Delta L ' psilon, Eng Bellflower, Cal. Franklin Harrison Smith, Town Group. Eng Sufheld, Conn. Jared Scott Smith, Town Group, Eng Spring Valley. Pa. Joseph Earle Smith. Jr.. Phi Sigma Kappa, Eng Philadelphia, Pa. Peter Carlton Smith. Alpha Chi RIio, Arts Baltimore. Md. Robert Chadwick Smith, Eng Allentown, Pa. Robert Lee Smith. Jr.. Town Group, Eng Frederick, Md. John Archibald Smyth. Town Group, Eng Merchantville. N. J. Quentin Cletus Soprano. Eng Allentown. Pa. Richard Suggett Spencer, Alpha Kappa Pi, Eng Kenmore. N. Y. John Francis Spirk. Town Group. Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Harry Gordon Spritzler, Town Group. Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Charles Wesley Stahl. Town Group. Eng Bethlehem, Pa. Edward William Starke, Jr., Delta Sigma Phi, Eng Ridgewood, N. J. Clarence Arthur Stearns, Jr.. Chi Phi. Met.E Philadelphia. Pa. John Montague Stockbridge. Chi Psi, Eng Baltimore. Md. Roland Clifford Stoehr. Beta Kappa. Bus Bayside, N. Y. George Chickering Stone. Jr.. Chi Psi. Arts Pawling. N. Y. Edwin Warren Story, Town Group. Eng Long Island. N. Y. Raymond Prancis Stratton. Town Group, Arts New York, N. Y. Carl Arthur Streuli. Town Group, Eng Tuckahoe. N. Y. William Moss Strouse, Pi Lambda Phi, Eng Harrisburg, Pa. Clifton William Stmnk, Alpha Chi Rho, Eng Royersford. Pa. William Lester Stump, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem. Pa. John Phelps Stupp, Kappa Sigma. Eng Clayton, Mo John James Sullivan. Jr.. Town Group. Eng Newport, R. I. William Robb Sultzer. Richards House, Arts Mount Vernon, N. Y. Alexander Sutherland, Town Group. Arts Bethlehem, Pa. Carl Olaf Swanstrom, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Eng Maplewood, N. J. Henry Carpenter Swartz, Jr., Price House, Eng Gwynedd Valley, Pa. Philip Anthony Sweet. Taylor House, Eng Scranton, Pa. Robert Stanley Swoyer, Eng Allentown, Pa. Roderick Ormsby Symmes, Kappa Alpha. Eng Niagara Falls. N. Y. George Carl 1 abor. Town Group, Eng Boyertown, Pa. Roger Alfred Tambella, Beta Kappa, Arts Canadensis, Pa. Rol.crt Linkh-tl.r Taylor. I het.i I Vita ' hi. Arts Short Hills. N. J. William Roberts Taylor. Delta Tau Delta. Bus Bethlehem, Pa. Joseph Piclgeon Thomas. Jr.. Theta Xi. Bus Haddonfield, N. J. Philip Adams Thomas, Alpha Chi Rho. Eng Scranton, Pa. Charles McDowell Thompson. Kappa Sigma, Eng Lakewood, Ohio John Alexander Thurn, Taylor House. Eng Philadelphia. Pa. Lester Edwin Titlow. Eng Allentown. Pa. Walter Stockton Titlow, Jr., Richards House, Eng Norristown, Pa. Walter Scott Tomkinson, Taylor House, Bus Glenside, Pa. John Barnett Tonkin. Psi Upsilon. Eng Pittsburgh, Pa. John Piatt Townsend, Richards House, Eng Glen Ridge. N. J. Ri( hard Miti hell Treco, Town Group. Eng North Quincy. Mass. Townsend Newton Treese. Town Group, Bus Pittsburgh, Pa. Albert George Tromer, Town Group. Bus New York. N. Y. David Irvin Troxel, Town Group, Eng Quakertown, Pa. John Parker Troy. Richards House. Eng Schenectady, N. Y. Peter Boyd Turgeon, Sigma Chi. Arts Hinsdale. III. Ross Peter Vachon, Town Group. Eng Englewood, N. J. John William VanCIeve, Theta Xi. Eng Haddonfield, N. J. Frederick Lincoln Villa, Richards House, Arts Mount Vernon. N. Y. Harold Otto Vollmer, Town Group, Eng Long Island, N. Y. Albert Francis VonBlock. Beta Kappa. Bus Plainfield, N. J. Richard Rolland Waer, Eng Easton. Pa. George Jacob Walborn. Chi Phi, Eng Reading. Pa. William Comstock Walker, Chi Psi. Eng Milwaukee, Wis. Richard Booth Wallace. Alpha Tau Omega. Eng.. .Bloomfield Hills, Mich. Richard Raymond Walling. Pi Kappa Alpha. Eng. .. East Cleveland. Ohio Edward Louis Walter, Town Group, Eng Fort Lee, N. J. Glenn Creasy Wanich, Town Group, Eng Bloomshurg, Pa. Joseph Anthony Wantuck. Town Group. Eng Perth Aniboy, N. J. Parker Vincent Ward, Richards House, Bus Westfield. N. J. Robert Orem Warwick, Price House, Eng Wayne, Pa. Robert Douglas Watt. Theta Kappa Phi. Arts Bridgeport, Conn. Jay Louis Weening. Pi Lambda Phi, Eng New York, N. Y. Peter John Weigel, Richards House, Arts Plainfield, N. J. Robert Weller. Alpha Tau Omega, Eng Maplewood, N. J. William Taylor Wenck. Bus Allentown, Pa. Charles Mark Wetzel. II. Richards House, Eng Wayne, Pa. Robert Parsons Whipple, Delta Tau Delta. Eng Oil City, Pa. Emmet Talmage White, Jr., Alpha Kappa Pi. Eng Hillside. N. J. Philip Charles Whiting. Jr., Kappa Alpha. Bus Holyoke. Mass. Theodore Wielkopolski, Town Group, Eng Arlington. N. J. Maurice William Wiesner. Jr., Town Group. Bus Jamestown, N. Y. John Michael Williams. Kappa Sigma, Eng Maplewood. N. J. William Robert Williams. Leonard Hall. Arts Scranton, Pa. John Davison Williamson. Town Group, Arts Upper Black Eddy, Pa. Charles Dengler Wilson, Town Group, Eng Bethlehem, Pa. John Tracey Wilson. Taylor House, Eng Grand View, N. Y. Nathan Leland Wilson. Jr., Richards House, Eng Downingtown. Pa. Reuben Lee YVimmer. 1 own Group, Eng Riegelsville, Pa. Forwood Cloud Wiser, Jr., Richards House, Eng Chester, Pa. Ralph Bernstine Wittman, Richards House. Eng Philadelphia. Pa. Allan Ehrman Wolf. Sigma Alpha Mu. Arts Memphis. Tenn. George William Wolfsten, Jr., Pi Lambda Phi. Arts Melrose Park. Pa. James William Woods, Town Group, Eng Winnetka. 111. William Stewart Woodside, Jr.. Sigma Phi Epsilon. Eng Baltimore, Md. David Storm Worman. Town Group, Eng Nazareth, Pa. Guy Crawford Worrell. Jr., Psi Upsilon. Eng Westfield. Mass. Frederick Wallis Wright. Jr., Richards House. Arts Boonton, N. J. Stephen Cole Wright, Pi Kappa Alpha, Eng Coatesville. Pa. Joseph Anthony Wyler, II, Richards House, Arts Allentown, Pa. John Carl Yaslrzab, Town Group, Eng Northampton, Pa. Iranklin Haldeman Young, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Bus Phocnixville. Pa. Sheldon Stanley Zalkind, Pi Lambda Phi, Arts New York, N. Y. STUDENT LIFE I N the whiter the campus usually lies beneath a thick blanket of snow which turns it into this weird and yet strangely beautiful scene. With football in the past and spring yet to come, studies become the topic of the day, and one-half of the students make their wav to iheir fraternities for the nightly battle with the books. SEVENTY-FIFTH •-. ANNIVERSARY WRAY H. CONGDON LIVING GROUPS mfeiPriMGfoiPMlftM €emio OFFICERS Walter S. Russell President John F. McQuillen Vice President James M. Roberts Secretary Richard B. Jefferj Treasurer MEMBERS William L. Archer. Chester C. Baldwin, Norman M. Barber, John P. Beal, Jr., James M. Beauchamp, John R. Bingaman, Jr.. Nathaniel J. Brisker. Ralph But hsbaum, Peter Carpenter, William F. Carson. Rob- ert F. Coleman, Joseph L. Conneen. Charles H. Con- over. Alfred T. Cox. Robert Craig, William Dansna w, Ambrose G. Delany, August Descheemaeker, Maynard L. Diamond, Robert I. Pelch, David R. Ginder, Norman Hackman. John H. Hageny. William M. Harbaugh. Jr., Frank E. Harper. Jr., Jacob S. Hartzell. C. Budd Heisler, Richard P. Homiller, Richard B. Jeffery, Ralph B. Johnston, Rudoll Kleiner, Robert W. Leavens. Donald R. Luster. Harry W. Lynch. Sandor A. Mark, John H. Matnewson, Joseph L. Malteson, John F. McQuillen. George W. Peterson, Jr., Frank H. Rich. Augustus A. Riemondy, James M. Roberts. Walter S. Russell. Abram Samuels, William E. Scott. Richard M. Shepherd. William B. Simpson. John L. F. Sipp. Robert C. Slingerland. Bernard A. Smith. John P. Taylor. Alvan H. Thomas. William Valentine, Walter H. Vogelsberg, Thomas A. Wallace, Jr., David F. Wells. George W. Woelfel, Roy S. Zachary. TOP ROW: Samuels. Bealc. Beardslee. FeU. Baldwin: SECOND ROW: Johns,,,,. Mathewson. Slingerland. Smith. Danshaw. Harper: BOTTOM ROW. Riemondy, Craig. Simpson. Russell. Jeffries. Diamond. The Interfraternity Council is the oldest of the three living group organizations on tne campus. It was organized by tne heads or the various fraterni- ties who met and appointed a committee to draw up a constitution for the council. This constitution was Known at Lehigh for his lead- presented to the council and ership Waller Russell was co- captain of Soccer and is now president of Interfraternity Council. He personally spon- sored ihe new publication con- cerning the fraternities at he high that icas given to the freshmen as they entered fresh man week. was adopted on May 28. 191Q. Since that time numer- ous changes have been made to bring the rushing rules up to date and to increase the ef- ficiency of the organization. The purposes of the coun- cil as stated in the constitution are to promote a more intimate friendship between the various fra- ternities and the student body, to develop closer re- lationships among fraternities at Lehigh by means Jim Roberts came from Pitts oi Interfraternity athletics and burgh to become one of the off-campus fraternity leaders. Rather quiet, but like Teddy Roosevelt, lie lias plenty on the ball. As secretary of the council he acts to save time on all occasions and provides the communication to the members. affairs, to lend a wider sup- port to all university func- tions, and to attempt to fur- ther promote the welfare of the University in general. In pursuit of this end, the council assumes numerous re- sponsibilities. It arranges all house parties and pre- sents one of the leading social functions of the school year, the Interfraternity Ball. It encourages and sponsors interfraternity competition in all sports and donates cups to the winners of these contests. The establishment and enforcement of all rushing rules is in the hands of the council for the benefit of both freshmen and fraternities. One of the most beneficial projects which the council put into effect is the Solicitors Authorization Plan estab- lished last year, whereby all salesmen and peddlers must obtain a card of admittance before soliciting fraternity or dormitory trade. This year the council published a rushing booklet lor the benefit of incoming freshmen to familiarize them with the fraternities at Lehigh. The current council pro- ject is that of cooperative coal-buying for the frater- nities. OicK Jeffery does not need to be earmarked for he has done that for us already. Elected treasurer because everyone knew him from the time when we first landed at Bethlehem. A Lambda Chi Alpha yet he still is a friend to each and every other classmate. TYPICAL SCENES FRATERNITY LIFE Ooocl Fellowship is the keynote of fraternity life at Lehigh. It must he when such a large nuiriher of different personalities are thrown together into the close relationship of fraternity brothers. This spirit has resulted in the well knit and congenial groups found all over Lehigh s campus. They have contributed much to the university and will con- tinue to do so. When one looks on the past years, there are a few incidents that stand out in bold relief in our minds: our first house party, hell week and initia- tion, spring with sunbaths and Sunday parades— these are fond memories. But the daily routine of the fraternity house is the most persistent memory of our social life in college. From the moment we awake in the morning, through classes, activities, sports, and the social life of the evening, until we go to bed again, we come in contact with the fra- ternity at every turn. It is our college home for four years of our undergraduate life, and it, with the social contacts it makes possible, becomes, in later life, one of the most cherished memories of our college days. it s dinner time at the house. These men sepm to he enjoying the meal as they discuss their favorite topic women. The evening is young and tliree dates seem to he in order. The blind dale is truly a college institution, out what will the girl back home say? ( atching up on their hack reading— with newspaper and magazine, these fraternity men are relaxing after dinner hefore going upstairs to study for tomorrow ' s mid-semester quiz. Singing is a favorite pastime in (fie average Lehigh fraternity. These men have -fathered around the piano ti practice their pet tunes hefore house party Qitr mascot seems to be misbehaving. Many of the fraternities have dogs that folitnv the fellows to class and keep one eye open all night. ALPHA CHI RHO — — — — has as its birthplace Trinity College at Hartford, Connecticut. The fra- ternity was founded June 4, 1895, hy Rev, Paul Ziegler, William A. Cardley, C. G. Ziegler, and William A. Rouse. Since then it has experienced steady growth. Phi Mu Chapter of Alpha Chi Rho at Lehigh was organized in 1918. Its origin may be traced to the local fraternity, Theta Delta Psi, which had been founded several years before that time. This local fraternity peti- tioned Alpha Chi Rho for a charter, and Phi Mu Chapter was installed. Phi Mu has been well represented in ex- tra-curricular activities. At the present time it numbers among its members varsity letter- men in soccer, swimming, football, and ten- nis. In publications, it has the associate edit- or, assistant editor, and art editor of the Re- view and the business manager of the Brown and White. The managers of the varsity tennis and basketball teams and the manager of the freshman football team are Alpha Chi Rho men. The president of Mustard and Cheese and other members of this dramatic club are also Alpha Chi Rhos. TOP ROW Strunk. D R. Smith. Haire. Boynton. Hamilton. R. P. S. Smith. Leaman; TH RD ROW: Badger. Hess. Huntoon. C. C. Smith, Weiland. Shuttleworth. Foster: SECOND ROW.- Baker, Cross. Slingerland. Poeter, Govvdy. Schuyler. Muir, Woodside: BOTTOM ROW: Haas. Gastmeyer, Burrus. K. Norris. P. C. Smith, Thomas. PHI MU CHAPTER FACULTY Stanley Thomas SENIORS Warren W. Ache Andrew B. Baker Samuel R. Cox Albert J. Cross Richard S. dowdy Robert C. Muir. Jr. John E. Poeter Robert C. Slingerland Russell E. Stevens. Jr. JUNIORS Kern C. Badger Albert W. Hess Raymond C. Huntoon Frederick F. Kramer, III John H. Mathewson Frank Norris Joseph D. Scott Cephas C. Smith, Jr. Walter Wieland SOPHOMORES Horace W. Boynton Albert W. Foster Douglas M. Haire James G. Hamilton Robert L, Hill Edwin I. Shuttleworth David R. Smith Richard P. S. Smith Clifton W. Strunk FRESHMEN John H. Burrus, Jr. Robert W. Gastmeyer, Jr. Robert C. Haas Claude F. Leaman Kenneth H. Norris. Jr. Peter C. Smith Philip A. J homas A X P ALPHA KAPPA PI wmwm- — — ,— ■ , — entered upon its career as a na- tional organization on March 25. 1926, when representatives from Phi Delta Zeta, which had heen founded at the University of Vermont in 1922, and from Alpha Kappa Pi met to combine forces under a common aim and purpose. In 1927, a group of Lehigh students joined together for the purpose of creating a living group which had aims similar to those of Alpha Kappa Pi. This group existed as a local organization until 1929, when, realiz- ing the advantages to he gained by mem- bership in a national organization, the group petitioned Alpha Kappa Pi Fraternity for a charter. As a result, Nu Chapter was found- ed in February 1950, with the initiation of 26 men. Nu Chapter has been well represented in the honoraries and the various clubs of the university. In addition. Alpha Kappa Pis have played important parts in athletics. Jo- seph Amborgi and Emmet White played on the football team and Harry Boyer proved himself a valuable member of Le- high ' s wrestling team. TOP ROW: PFeffer. Boycr. Miller: THIRD ROW: Goodman. Wilson. White. Murphy, Ambrogi, Belz. Hood: SECOND ROW: Sl.epr.ard, MarsrJen. Lane. Hartzcll. Myers. Donahoe, Davis: BOTTOM ROW: Speneer, Mover. Liebau, Hinman, Hopkins. NU CHAPTER FACULTY Robert F. Herrick SENIORS Frank L. Benedict Philip W. Davis Jacob S. Hartzell Loring Lane Robert D. Marsden Charles G. Myers JUNIORS John D. Betz Howard V. Donohoe John M. Hood Ri hard M. Shepherd Robert A. Wilson SOPHOMORES Joseph N. Ambrogi Harry L. Boyer, Jr. William K. Martin Emmet T. White, Jr. FRESHMEN William B. Hinmon Richard C. Hopkins Charles L. Liebau Robert D. MacGregoi -Randal Ralph D. Mover Richard S. Spencer a k n ALPHA TAU OMEGA — n-r -i ,— was founded on September 1 1 , 1865 at Richmond, Virginia. It was the hist fraternity founded after the Civil War and was projected as a national organization, starting in the South. The first northern chap- ter was chartered at the University of Penn- sylvania in 1881. Growth was rapid after this, and the fraternity now has 78 active chapters and more than 56,000 members. Alpha Tau Omega established the Pennsyl- vania Alpha Rho Chapter at Lehigh in 1 882 In 1916 the present chapter house was built in Sayre Park. Many of the ATO ' s are active on the cam- pus. In athletics, they are represented in wrestling by Tommy King, 1959 Eastern Intercollegiate champion, by Captain Jack O Meara in swimming, by Phil Woodroof and Paul Havenstein in lacrosse, and by Bob Craig in soccer. Bob Ryan is on the golf team, Alex Wiggin plays on the hockey team, and in track Paul Seiler and Bob Craig are outstanding. Alpha Tau Omega men are found in such honorary societies as Alpha Kappa Psi, Scabbard and Blade, Brown Key, the Newtonian Society, and Cy- anide of which Craig is secretary. TOP ROW: Wittenberg, Woodruffe. Rvan. MilLank. Paul, Burke. Flail; THIRD ROW. W ' iggin, Havenstein. Siegele. Thompson, King. Stacom. Hendry, R. Craig. Baker; SECOND ROW. War,-. Valentine, Seiler, Kelley, Richardson. O ' Meara. Trageser; BOTTOM ROW: B. Craig. Weller, Wallace, Custer. ALPHA RHO CHAPTER FACULTY Howard Eckfeldt Judson G. Snmll GRADUATE STUDENT Elbert M. Mahla SENIORS Edward N. Flail Joseph B. Kelly Thompson King, Jr. John R. O ' Meara James G Richardson Paul VV. Seiler. Jr. Otis C. Thompson Charles A. Trageser William Valentine. Jr. Malcolm D. Ware Howard D. Wintemberg JUNIORS David W. Burke. Jr. Robert Craig James R. Hendry William A. Siegele Matthew J. Stacom, Jr. SOPHOMORES Robert M. Baker Paul L. Havenstein John H. Milbank Richard C. Paul Robert F. Ryan Alexander K. Wiggin Philip B. Woodroofe FRESHMEN Bruce Craig Granville Y. Custer Richard B. Wallace Robert Weller A T Q BETA KAPPA was founded in February, 1901 , at Hamline University, St. Paul, Min- nesota. Since its foundation. Beta Omicron Sigma Kappa Fraternity has been locally known as Beta Kappa, and as suck it was incorporated in 1912. A committee on ex- pansion was created in 1925. Expansion, starting in tke West, came East in 1925. During its life of 38 years. Beta Kappa bas grown to a total of 48 chapters. The Lehigh University Chapter, originally a local fra- ternity known as Omega Phi Sigma of Beta Kappa, was installed as Alpha Sigma of Beta Kappa in May. 1954. Beta Kappa s present group offers an ex- cellent example of the well-rounded frater- nity. Among its members are an assistant editor of the Review, photographic editors of both the Review and the Brown and White, the circulation manager of Brown and White, and athletes engaged in freshman and varsity football, varsity track, freshman swimming, and varsity basketball. Men from Beta Kappa are to be found in Pi Delta Epsi- lon, Scabbard and Blade, the debating club. Alpha Phi Omega, the Sportsmen ' s Club, and the Camera Club. TOP ROW: Mixner. Von Block. Houston. R. Stoehr. King. Buhrig. TamLella; SECOND ROW. Dunliam. Butler. Smvtlie. Cooke. Kendall Hill. Larson, Bradford. Hageny; THIRD ROW: Beriont. de Beauchamp, Smith. Pfaff, E. Stoehr. W ' etlierell. Bley. ALPHA SIGMA CHAPTER FACULTY Max Petersen SENIORS John Beriont David G. cleBeauchamp Royal V. Mackey, Jr. Joseph E. Pfaff Bernard A. Smith Edward W. Stoehr Walter J. Wetherell JUNIORS William C. Bley Paul H. Butler Willard W. Dunham, Jr. John H. Hageny Wallace C. Kendall Richard L. Kirk SOPHOMORES Gordon M. Clark Oakley W. Cooke. Jr. John B. Hill. Jr. Joseph F. Musante FRESHMEN Thomas P. Bradford William T. Buhrig George W. Houston LeRoy O. King Leonard D. Larson Joseph H. Mixner Roland C. Stoehr Roger A. Tambella Albert F. Von Block B K BETA THETA PI B0TT, _ _ _ ,— the first fraternity to originate west of trie Alleghenies, was founded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. The fra- ternity has increased until there are now over 80 active chapters. The Beta Chi Chap- ter was organized at Lehigh in 1891. Peti- tion for admission to the national society was made in 1 889, but the charter was not grant- ed until two years later. After living in three different houses in town. Beta Theta Pi moved to a campus house finished in 1926. Extra-curricular activities are one of the major assets of the Betas, and, in athletics. they are especially strong. Harold Masem, 1939 Intercollegiate Wrestling Champion, Dick Brenneman, and Joe Quinn are on the varsity wrestling team while other men have made letters in track, football, and swim- ming. The manager of the 19-40 football team is also a Beta. Members of Beta Theta Pi are in such honorary societies as Cyanide, Omi- cron Delta Kappa, Scabbard and Blade, Newtonian Society, and the Brown Key So- ciety. The Brown and White and Lehigh Re- view have Betas on their editorial and busi- ness staffs. TOP ROW- Kcllev. Larkin. Forsliav. Girdler. Stnible, Biunc. Thornberg; THIRD ROW Christine, Lindsay. McConnell, Gorman. Scolt, Franks: SECOiVD ROW: Roper. Palmer. Delaney. Baker. Fisher. Hartnelt. Roberts: BOTTOM ROW: Clark. Simpson. Oswald. Wood. BETA CHI CHAPTER FACULTY John H. Ogburn Paul E. Short E. Kenneth Smiley Charles L. Thornbuigh SENIORS Edwin A. Fisher Frederick Juer D ' Arcy W. Roper. [I JUNIORS William F. Hartnett William B. McConnel, Jr. William E. Scott F. Raymond Wood, Jr. SOPHOMORES Richard H. Brenneman Robert Brune William C. Christine Nelson R. Clark, Jr. Robert F. Forshay Louis T. Girdler, Jr. William D. Gorman John S. Kelly John C. Lampert Joseph P. Larkin William H. Lindsay, Jr. Joseph Quin n Frank F. Roberts Robert S. Struble Charles G. Thornburgh, Jr. FRESHMEN Joseph Oswald J. Robert Simpson Ben CHI PHI _ _ _ traces its origin to Bavaria in the 1 3th century where groups of scholars and clergy who were being oppressed hand- ed together for protection under that name. Traces of these groups in England and America in the 1 7th century have also been found. A constitution was drawn up in 1824 at what is now Princeton University and in 1872 three different societies at Princeton, Hobarl. and North Carolina, all called Chi Phi, joined together to form an entity. Early in the history of Lehigh, a similar group of fellows formed the Calumet Club which believed in those same principles of brotherhood. In 1872 this club became the Psi Chapter of Chi Phi, the first fraternity in the university. Since that time Chi Phis have become prominent campus leaders and now number among their members Walter Rus- sell who is president of the Interfraternity Council, co-captain of the soccer team, and a member of O. D. K., and Warren Leonard, assistant business manager of the Epitome. The house is strong scholastically too, hav- ing attained the highest average of the cam- pus fraternities during the second semester of 1958- ' 59. TOP ROW: Manley, Seltzer. Bright, Barnecott. Uleiner. de Groucliv. Schwartz: THIRD ROW: Hartman. Corwin, Kasson. Heyniger. Frederick. RitcKie. Harris: SECOND ROW. Leonard. Matheson. Elliott. Russell. Conneen, F. Glueck, G. Glueck: BOTTOM ROW: Canizarres. Sterns. Wnlliurn. Gregory, Alberts, Cniase, Finan. PSI CHAPTER SENIORS David Barnecott Frank B. Elliott Franklin P. Glueck George F. Glueck James R. Harris Warren G. Leonard Walter S. Russell JUNIORS Joseph L. Conneen William R. Fredrick H. DeHaven Manley William A. Matheson George M. Ritchie, Jr. Louis K. Schwarz Ri( hard C. Seltzer Henry G. Werner SOPHOMORES Richard R. Bright H. I lohart Corwin Steward H. Hartman Richard L. Heyniger John M. Kasson FRESHMEN John C. Alberts Francis A. Chidsey, Jr. A. Ward deCanizares John G. deGrouchy Chester L. Finch David E. Gregory C. Arthur Stearns George J. Walborn X $ CHI PSI — — — was founded at Union College in 1841. It has grown conservatively to its present size of 25 chapters through the aid of an unusually strong national office. The policy of maintaining a visitor to all the chapters and of printing a quarterly maga- zine for every member has kept Chi Psi a very united group. Alpha Beta Delta was founded at Lehigh in 1894. In 1016 this chapter moved into its new lodge in Sayre Park where it has prospered ever since. Chi Psis were very active on Lehigh s cam- pus this year. The president and treasurer of Omicron Delta Kappa, the business man- ager of the Brown and White, officers in Pi Tau Sigma, Pi Delta Epsilon, Mustard and Cheese, and the Aero Club, and members of Cyanide, Tau Beta Pi, Pi Mu Epsilon, the Glee Club, Arcadia, and the Newtonian So- ciety are Chi Psis. The staffs of the Brown and White. Epitome, and Review have Chi Psi representatives. In the athletic Held, a Chi Psi is captain of the golf team, and others fiold managerships in hockey, swimming, soccer, and golf. Lettermen in a large num- ber of the major and minor sports are mem- bers of the fraternity. TOP ROW: Stone. Stockbridge. Leckie, Finney. Greener. WooJs; THIRD ROW: Anderson. Smith. Reddert. Johnson, Walker. Penn. Shuttle- worth; SECOND ROW: Chandler. Vockel. Carpenter. Whitesell, Fischer. Mayer. Louden. Schneider: BOTTOM ROW.- Luster. Watkins. Colbaugh, Turner. Harding. Honce, Walker. Fletcher. ALPHA BETA DELTA CHAPTER FACULTY E. Robbins Morgan SENIORS John H. Colbaugh Bertram V. W. Fletcher Albert B. Harding Charles R. Honce. Jr. Donald R. Luster W. Rodman Turner John C. Walker Wallace P. Watkins JUNIORS Peter J. Carpenter Henry D. Chandler Richard L. Vockel J. Robert Whitesell SOPHOMORES Raymond B. Anderson, Jr. Arthur L. Fischer Clarence E. Louden. Jr. Franklin B. Mayer John R. Penn. Ill Leonard A. Schneider William S. Shuttle-worth Frank E. Smith, Jr. FRESHMEN William F. Finney, Jr. Carl L. Greener Charles A. Johnson Andrew F. Leckie, Jr. Earl J. Reddert, Jr. John M. Stockbridge Oeorge C Stone. Jr. William C. Walker X V DELTA PHI _ _ — — third oldest of American social fraternities, was founded as one of the orig- inal Union Triad at Union College in 1827 by a group of nine students dissatisfied with existing opportunities for dignified and ele- vated social life. Throughout its growth Del- ta Phi has been conservative in establishing chapters, confining itself largely to repre- sentation in eastern universities and colleges. The Nu Chapter of Delta Phi, Lehigh ' s fourth fraternity, was established in 1884 by six men who believed their group would benefit through affiliation with the national organization. 1 he fraternity is now estab- lished in the house on Warren Square which the chapter occupied in 1920. 1 hough never deficient in scholarship. Delta Phi at Lehigh has always been active in extra-curricular activities. Delta Phis have played important roles in the Mustard and Cheese, Sportsmen s Club, and the Sym- phony Orchestra. Many of the brothers have competed for various sports, two Delta Phis holding positions on the varsity soccer team. TOP ROW: G. Phillips. Longley, Over. Houston; SECOND ROW: BergR, O. Phillips. Kidder, Wrigkt, Johnston; BOTTOM ROW: Sturte- vant, Fisher. Serrill, Lynch, Crouse. NU CHAPTER SENIORS David L H. Holmes Harry W. Lynch, Jr Joseph L. Serrill JUNIORS Charles L. Crouse, Jr. Robert W. Dech Ralph B. Johnston Mills G. Sturtevant, Jr. SOPHOMORES John C. Fisher James H. Kidder Stephen B. Longley John O. Phillips FRESHMEN Taylor A. Birckhead Charles R. Bergh William O. Houston George YV. Phillips Arthur M. Over A P DELTA SIGMA PHI i — — — — was originally lounded De- cember 10, 1899, at the College of the City of New York. In 1905 the fraternity was in- corporated into a national organization with the fulfillment of the desire of serious young college men for fellowship and brotherhood as its purpose. Today the fraternity numbers more than 50 chapters throughout the United States and Canada. The local Beta Theta Chapter began its existence as a society of senior engineers called Sigma Iota. The growth of the society led to a change of name to the Phi Delta Phi Society and to the petitioning to Delta Phi for admission. The charter was granted in 1 93 1 , and the present house located at the corner of Packer Avenue and Adams Street was secured in 1937. Outstanding among the members of the Delta Sigma Phi house is Alfred T. Cox, president of the senior class, captain of the football team, and co-captain of the baseball team, as well as a member of many honorary societies. Ralph E. Martin is the band leader and manager of the track team, while an- other Delta Sigma Phi, Warren E. Sawyer, is the president of the Hockey Club. TOP ROW. Raymar, W. Holberton. Ryan. Starke. Patterson. RotrilisLerg r, Colwell. Davis; SECOND ROW; Sultzer. Zane. Phelan. R. MascucK. Peterson. Andrews. 1. Holberton, Burgio, Gamble. Pinto; BOTTOM ROW 7 . Stubbing, G. Mascucli. McCambridge, Sawyer, Cox, Torrens, Martin, Ferenczi. BETA THETA CHAPTER FACULTY Robert P. More Edwin R. Theis GRADUATE STUDENT Lewis M. Ferenczi SENIORS Alfred T. Cox Ralph E. Martin Gene F. Mascuch Arthur A. McCambridge Warren E. Sawyer John R. Torrens JUNIORS George G. Andrews Richard Mascuch George W. Peterson James M. Phelan Robert L. Stubbings Allen H. Zane SOPHOMORES John Burgio Ernest Gamble J homas S. C. Holberton George M. Patterson Eugene L. Pinto FRESHMEN Oakes M. Colwell Edward S. Davis William B. Holberton John E. Raymer George A. Rothlisberger Edward S. Starke. Jr. A 2 $ DELTA TAU DELTA — — — — was rounded at Bethany Col- lege in I 858, but the final adoption of a mot- to, badge, and constitution did not occur un- til 1850. Beta Lambda Chapter was founded at Lehigh University in 1874. The house oc- cupied two residences in town until 1014 when it moved into its present home which is the second fraternity house to have been built on the Lehigh campus. Delta Tau Delta, since its beginning at Lehigh, has been a leader in extra-curricular activities. The house has had men in all the honorary societies and clubs, and. at the present time, Delts are members of most of these organizations. The number of men in Cyanide and O.D.K. speaks well of the house activities. In football, basketball, base- ball, track, and cross country Delts have re- ceived letters. In intra-mural sports, especial- ly in bow ling, the Delts have been very suc- cessful. Delta Tau Delta has men in two of the three university publications and most of these men are members of Pi Delta Lpsilon, national honorary journalism society. TOP ROW. Marshall. Wolff. McCIave. Freeman. Britlon. Loughran, Courts. Whipple; THIRD ROW: Vogelsterg, Gunnison. Strode. MacNamee. Ulmer. Wooters. Gordon. Weigel: SECOND ROW: Griffiths. Elmer. Matheny. Heisler. Broun. Motheral. Hall; BOTTOM ROW: Perk. Binder. Tavlor. Joslin, Powers. Morris. BETA LAMBDA CHAPTER SENIORS William W. Morgan C. Elmer Charles R. Griffiths Clifford B. Heisler Richard L. Johnson Richard D. Matheny George B. Motheral. Jr. William I). Shields. Jr. JUNIORS R. Harry Gunnison Stanley G. MacNamee Richard B. Strode Robert M. Ulmer Walter H. Vogelsberg J. Dukes Wooters. Jr. SOPHOMORES Everett A. Britton Richard Z. Freeman n James A. Gordon John L. Loughran Robert H. Marshall Wilkes McCIave, Jr. Ahlert D. Wolff FRESHMEN William G. Binder Robert L. Coutts Robert E. Joslin James M. Morris. Jr. Jay P. OKvyler William J. Peck William R. Taylor Robert P. Whipple ATA DELTA UPSILON i — ' i — — r , — the only non-secret national fraternity, originated from an anti-secret so- ciety known as the Social Fraternity rounded at Williams College in 1834. The Lehigh Chapter was installed by Charles Evans Hughes, Brown 81, in 1885. The present home of the Delta Us was the first fraternity house to he built on the Lehigh campus. Delta Upsilon s keen interest in a wide range of activities has won for the group the slogan Delta Upsilon in everything and every D. U. in something . Among the D. U. s this year are lettermen in football, basketball, baseball, swimming, track and cross country; varsity managers of baseball, cross country and soccer; and freshmen who have won numerals in six sports. T he chapter has members in O.D.K., Tau Beta Pi, Pi Delta Epsilon. Cyanide, Arcadia, and the Newtonian Society. Nine brothers are on the Brown and White staff, including advertising and editorial managers; and sev- en, including the Editor-in-Chief, are on the Epitome staff. Other activities include Tone, Musical Clubs. Alpha Phi Omega, Brown Key, and student Concert-Lecture Series. TOP ROW. Curtiss. Porter. Goebel. Rumsey. Smith. Norwood. Boyer. Hayes. Middleton. Berg; FOURTH ROW: Heumann. Iobst. McKenna. McConnell, Williams. Duval. Quincy; THIRD ROW: Payrow. Lyons. Stives. Caverly, Conchar. Altmaier. Schoen; SECOND ROW: Folwell! Wise, Rebcr. Brandt. Kelley. Beaucliamp. Kister, Edwards. Findorff: BOTTOM ROW: Rahn. Lennox, Walton. Wliitmore. Matteson. Johnson, Good, Coyne. LEHIGH CHAPTER FACULTY Wray H. Congdon Gilbert E. Doan John I. Kirkpatrick William S. Lanterman SENIORS Gordon L. Brandt Joseph C. Coyne Robert C. Good. Jr. R. Grant Jobnson. Jr. Richard C. Kelley. Jr. George C. Lennox, II Joseph L. Matteson Leonard B. Rahn James M. Walton Edgar F. Whitmore, Jr JUNIORS John M. Altmaier James M. Beauchamp Robert J. Caverly Barton Conchar Charles T. Edwards Jobn R. Findorff Edwin A. Kister Donald R. Schoen John H. Stives William J. Wise SOPHOMORES Robert E. Duval Chapin Heumann Robert M. Iobst Robert J. Lyons Malcolm F. McConnel Frank S. McKenna Donald M. Middleton John H. Norwood H. Gordon Payrow, Jr. Jobn A. Quincy Howard M. Williams FRESHMEN Richard T. Berg Edward G. Boyer Charles D. Curtiss, Jr. Richard F. Goebel William D. Hayes Kenneth Porter, Jr. Robert S. Rumsey Earl D. Smith A T KAPPA ALPHA — — — — the first secret brotherhood to originate at an American college, was found- ed at Union in 1825 by nine students who desired an organization to promote mutual friendship and brotherhood. Despite the op- position which it faced at first, the fraternity materialized rapidly under the efforts of its founders and newly acquired members. In 1893 three Lehigh students petitioned for a charter for their organization which -was to become the Alpha Chapter of Pennsyl- vania of the Kappa Alpha Society. As the group continued to increase in size and prominence, the fraternity moved, in 1922, from its original house on Cherokee Street to its present location on Seneca Street. Active in every phase of college life, K.A. ' s hold such positions as president of Scabbard and Blade, business manager of the Epitome, and head and junior cheer- leaders. Other activities include Mustard and Cheese, Pi Delta Epsilon, and Lehigh Review. In athletics. Kappa Alpha claims members of the swimming, lacrosse, tennis, and freshman and junior varsity football teams. TOP ROW. Stolt. Davis. Chamberlain. Gordon. Archer. Symmes. J. Diamond: SECOND ROW: Craig, Watts. Norvig. Van Duyne, M. Diamond, Marvin. Chase; BOTTOM ROW: Moore, Eisner, Whiting, Brower. McKay. Graham. ALPHA CHAPTER OF PENNSYLVANIA FACULTY Charles V. Simmons SENIORS Maynard L. Diamond Otto V. Norvig A. George Ueberroth, Jr. Philip R. Van Duyne. Jr. Richard N. Watts JUNIORS William L. Archer Harvey H. Chamberlain Hazen P. Chase Alexander M. Craig, Jr. J. Arthur Marvin, Jr. Edward J. Stone SOPHOMORES John I. Brower. Jr. Robert N. Davis John L. Diamond W. Owen Graham Kilbourn Gordon. Jr. 1 heodore G. Scott. Jr Roderick O. Symmes FRESHMEN William S. Eisner Freeman P. MacKay, Jr. R obert C. Moore Phillip C. Whiting K A was founded at the University of Virginia on December 10, 1869 by five men now known as the five friends and brothers. Expansion of the fraternity fol- lowed until it is now one 01 the largest na- tional organizations, having over 100 chap- ters in the United States. The various chap- ters are grouped into 21 districts with a dis- trict grandmaster at the head of each one. The alumni of the fraternity have organized chapters in all of the principal cities. In 1900 a group of 11 Lehigh undergrad- uates petitioned for entrance into Kappa Sig- ma. They were accepted, and the group was installed November 1 9th of the same year as the Beta Iota Chapter at a conclave of the national fraternity. The chapter was first lo- cated on Delaware Avenue, and in 1926 they moved to their present home which is lo- cated at 24 East Church Street. Kappa Sigma has taken an active part in college activities during the past year especi- ally in intramural sports. Jack McQuillan, vice-president of the Interfraternity Council, and president of the M. E. Society, and of- ficers of three other course societies are mem- bers of the house. TOP ROW. Dable. Dultan. Williams. Runiking. Rassiga. Buck. Thompson. McQuillan: SECOND ROW. Casey, Gaedeke. Moog, Deifer. R. N. Brown, Thomas. R. E. Brown. Lehman; BOTTOM ROW: Scarpulla. King, Felzer, Conwell, Doming. Monard. Binger. Ackerman. BETA IOTA CHAPTER FACULTY Robert B. Adams Harold V. Anderson Neil Carothers Albert A. Rights Ernst B. Schulz SENIORS Robert A. Ackerman. Frank G. Binger Cbarles D. Brown Richard E. Brown John F. Conwell John H. Deming Charles H. Fetzer Herbert L. King, Jr. John F. McQuillin Charles R. Monard Norman C. Scarpulla JUNIORS Robert N. Brown Charles A. Eddy John D. Leighton Arthur E. Moog Alvah P. Thomas SOPHOMORES Charles B. Dutton Walter H. Gaedeke Jack K. Lehman John P. Stupp FRESHMEN Thompson M. Buck- Kevin Casey William R. Dabb Everett D. Rassiga George B. Reineking Charles M. Thompson John M. Williams K 2 LAMBDA CHI ALPHA _- _ _ — was founded at Boston Uni- versity, November 2, 1909. While trie fra- ternity was organized with a view to na- tional expansion, no attempt to establish new chapters, called Zetas, was made until the spring of 1912. At the present time, there are more than 90 chapters. Gamma Psi Zeta, the name of the local chapter of Lambda Chi Alpha, was founded at Lehigh in 1922 as a fraternity known as Delta Theta. In 1925, Delta Theta was given permission to enter their formal petition which was granted one year later in 1926. Thirty members were in- itiated into Lambda Chi Alpha in November ur Avenue. 1 926 in the old house on Montclair The first house was located on Packer Ave nue, while the present house is at 515 Dela- ware Avenue. The members of Lambda Chi Alpha have played an important part in student activities. Dick Jeffery is treasurer of the Interfraternity Council for the current year, and Alfred Bo- dine was appointed chairman of the Senior Class Banquet. In sports Joe Kaszycki and John Hunt played football, while Norm Bar- ber and Ed Archbold followed basketball. Fred Kornet was manager of swimming. TOP ROW A Bodine K Ireland, Merkle, Kernel, Guv. Hugkes, Dorscy: THIRD ROW: Clark. Barter, Bell. Case. Bryan. Luse, Kendal Miller; SECOND ROW. Savior. Archbold. Barker. E. Bodine, Leaver. Newcomb, Felker. ZipF. Hv.nl; BOTTOM ROW: Kemmer. Dattel Nelson, Quinn, Bernasco. Cliapin. Burrouelis, I Ireland. GAMMA PSI ZETA CHAPTER FACULTY Merton O. Fuller Fred V. Larkin GRADUATE STUDENT James T. Bergen SENIORS Alfred V. Bodine, Jr. Charles H. Dorsey Walter G. Guy, Jr. John G. Hughes Robert H. Ireland Richard B. Jerfery Fred Kornet, Jr. Christian R. Merkle William F. Morgan William D. Turner, Jr. JUNIORS Norman M. Barber Thomas R. Bell John H. Bryan William L. Clark Joseph Kaszycki Aldrich F. Kendall A. Philetus Luse Warren H. Miller SOPHOMORES G. Edward Archbold Robert F. Barker Edward F. Bodine Harry E. Case James B. Felker John A. Hunt Ross W. Leaver Robert S. Newcomb John S. Saylor, Jr. George G Zipf FRESHMEN Richard H. Bernasco Robert F. Burroughs Warren B. Cnapin Edwin H. Dafter Joseph P. Ireland Joseph F. Kemmer William A. Nelson Robert J. Quinn A X A PHI DELTA THETA — «— — p— founded at Miami University in 1848, became one or the justly famous Miami Triad. Although hindered in its early development hy anti-fraternity regulations, Phi Delta Theta has grown steadily until it is now represented by 1 07 chapters through- out the United States and Canada, consti- tuting the fourth largest fraternity in the country. In 1887 ten Lehigh students founded the Pennsylvania Eta chapter at this university. Since that time the chapter has occupied three houses; its present membership of 29 now live in the chapter house built on the campus by the alumni in 1917. The members of Phi Delta Theta have be- come prominent on the Lehigh campus through their interest in both honorary and athletic activities. Brothers have recently been elected to Pi Tau Sigma and Alpha Kappa Psi; the fraternity is represented in Cyanide and Scabbard and Blade: and one member is the editor of the freshman hand- book. Phi Delts are on the football, basket- ball, and baseball teams : the house holds the inter-fraternity football championship. TOP ROW- Palmer. Johnson. Green. Ewing, Mueller. Sutherland: THIRD ROW FiJIer, Melralf. Kizer. Lane. Gibson, Whiting. Young: SECOND ROW. Eastlake, Collins. Harbaugh. Baclrtel. Powers, Hornbroofc. J. Bashford; BOTTOM ROW: Morgal. Matluas. R Bashtord, Berlin. MacMinn. PENNSYLVANIA ETA CHAPTER FACULTY Glen Walter Harmeson George Beck SENIORS Elmer Bachtell. Jr. Albert J. Collins John S. Croft William M. Harbaugh, Jr. James R. Park Stewart B. Powers JUNIORS Cbarles H. Conover Donald E. Eastlake Cbarles A. Gibson Philip R. Hornbrook. Jr. Frank E. Weise. Jr. John W. Whiting, Jr. Jacob F. Young, Jr. SOPHOMORES James H. Bashford Buchanan Ewing Richard W. Fidler Kenneth E. Fiedler Arthur B. Johnston John F. Kizer, Jr. Jack E. Lane Henry B. Metcalf Richard M. Palmer FRESHMEN Raymond I. Bashford, Jr. Bruce A. Berlin John L. MacMinn Bruce T. Mathias Franklin L. Morgal J A PHI GAMMA DELTA A — — — — was founded at the old Jeffer- son College in 1848. There have been estab- lished 73 undergraduate chapters, 1 10 grad- uate groups, and clubs in New York and De- troit which provide gathering places for over 27,000 living brothers. Beta Chi of Phi Gam- ma Delta was begun at Lehigh University in December 1885 when the charter members were initiated in the old Sun Inn. Chapter houses were in town until the present campus house was built in 1922. Beta Chi has always been active in student activities. Fijis are to be found in almost every major sport: Hauserman, Smoke, Simpson, and Leschen, in football. Cliff Lincoln in soccer, Harvey Griffith, captain of fencing, Doug Paul in wrestling and la- crosse, Harry Leidich in baseball, and repre- sentation in golf, basketball, tennis, and track. In the honorary societies. Bill Simpson is president of Cyanide, Dave Ginder is in Omicron Delta Kappa, Terry Schiff is in Scabbard and Blade, and Fijis are in the Newtonian Society, Phi Eta Sigma, and many course societies. Doug Paul is senior class secretary-treasurer. TOP ROW Muelberg, A Tifft. Parvis. Cullen, Hanson. Beck. Melius. Johnson; THIRD ROW. Smoke. Hauserman. Simpson. McAfee -J. Tifft. Griffiths. Smyth. Al.l: SECOND ROW: Paul. Lincoln. Taylor. Leidicli. Steele. Ginder. SchiH. Wrigley, Leschen; BOTTOM ROW Llms. Boston. Gordon. Bailey. McKaig, Heinz, Golden, Deehan, Shaper. BETA CHI CHAPTER FACULTY Robert D. Butler James L. Clifford A. Henry Fretz Robert M. Smith SENIORS Charles E. Ahl. Jr. David R. Ginder Harry A. Leidicli. Jr. Harry J. Leschen. Jr. Clifford F. Lincoln. Jr. Douglas C. Paul Terrs- Sch in William W. Steele. Jr. Robert S. Taylor Robert A. Wrigley JUNIORS Harvey C. Griffith. Jr. William F. Hauserman Daniel B. McAfee William B. Simpson Stephen D. Smoke Burd E. Smyth John A. Tifft. Jr. SOPHOMORES Robert W. Beck Robert E. Cullen. Jr. James W. Hanson. Ill Richard E. Metius Ralph F. Moss. Jr. John R. Muehlberg Preston W. Parvis, Jr. Archie DeW. Tifft FRESHMEN Robert D. Bailey Robert C. Boston Bernard W. Deehan Badgley A. Elmes Thomas H. Golden, III William D. Gordan, Jr. Barton R. Heinz Chandler H. McKaig David H. Schaper $ r a PHI SIGMA KAPPA i— «— - i— ' i— i was founded at the Massachu- setts Agricultural College in Amherst, Mass- achusetts on March 15, 1873. The fraternity became national in 1888 with the establish- ment of a chapter at the Albany Medical College, but this chapter was later moved to Union College. From this beginning Phi Sigma Kappa has developed to 46 houses and has taken a prominent place among the important national fraternities. The Mu Chapter was founded at Lehigh in 1901 when the first chapter house was located at 511 Seneca Street. After this the fraternity moved several times and today is situated at 406 Delaware Avenue. The Phi Sigs have been increasingly ac- tive during the past year. Gus Riemondy has won letters in soccer and track ; he is a mem- ber of Cyanide and the secretary-treasurer of the junior class. Paul Duyckinck, Bill Dan- shaw, and Beef Rodgers are varsity foot- ball lettermen and Gordon Loveland is the manager of the freshman team. Several Phi Sigs are regulais on the lacrosse team. TOP ROW: Smith. Forsythe, Schneider. Ousted. Parkinson. Guckes. B. Forsyth: SECOND ROW: McKinley, Grutb, Duycfeinct, Ritchings aemmerer. Klein. Tozer, Clark. Rodgers: BOTTOM ROW: Loveland. Root. Taylor. Dansliaw. Baker. Riemondy, isnumacher. Joecks. NU CHAPTER FACULTY Sylvanus A. Becker Tliomas E. Jackson SENIORS William Dansliaw Paul R. Duyckinck William H. Ellers Arthur H. Joecks Gordon G. Loveland Philip A. Rodgers Clifford D. Root JUNIORS Craig W. Baker Robert Caemmerer William R. Miller, Jr. Augustus A. Riemondy Robert A. Ritchings SOPHOMORES William L. Clark- Robert H. Forsyth Harold A. Grubb Edwin H. Klein Forrest V. Schumacher Robert G. Taylor Arthur F. Tozer FRESHMEN John B. Forsyth Phillip S. Guckes Harry L. Olmstead Ralph B. Parkinson George J. Schneider Joseph E. Sm i tli $ I K PI KAPPA ALPHA i— i — — — was originally founded at the University of Virginia in 1868. Upon the second founding at tke 1869 convention, there started a rapid increase in size, until today there are 79 chapters scattered over the country. The chapter at Lehigh was begun in 1929 as a result of the formation of the Lehigh Seal Club, made up of students dissatisfied with living in the dormitories. Gamma Lambda, the local chapter, was the first Le- high fraternity to institute a deferred rushing plan. Pi Kappa Alpha is represented in a major- ity of the campus activities. Howard Conner is editor-in-chief of the Brown and White, president of Pi Delta Epsilon, and vice-presi- dent of the Intercollegiate Newspaper Asso- ciation. Pi K A is represented in Alpha Phi Omega by four men. Last year Pi Kappa Alpha won its touch football League E championship. It won the Living Group Singing Cup awarded for the first time to the best vocal chorus among the university groups. In athletics Pi K A s are found on the swimming, cross-country, track, and rifle teams. TOP ROW: Engle, Muhlhausen. Mastyn, Holm. Stoneback. Freed; THIRD ROW: Fry, Wells, lones. Padgett. Dunn, Annett. Felch. Flarding; SECOND ROW: Richards. Harper. Conner, Salathe. Wright. VonlioF. Temple. Lobarii. Hummel; BOTTOM ROW; Donney. Ganzer. Wright. Brennan, Walling. GAMMA LAMBDA CHAPTER FACULTY George D. Harmon Bradley Stoughlon GRADUATE STUDENT George F. Derr J. Morgan Thomas SENIORS Howard M. Conner Frank E. Harper Benjamin L. Hummel James Lobach Robert W. Richards George F. Salathe John W. Temple Herbert Vonhof Robert J. Wright, Jr. JUNIORS Edward B. Annett, Jr. Frank R. Dunn Robert C. Engle Robert I. Felch Earl Fry Charles H. Harding. Jr. Thomas A. Mostyn Allen M. Paget Charles F. Plate Ralph D. Stoneback R. Carter Wells SOPHOMORES C. William Freed. Jr. Robert H. Ganzer Walter Holmes Harry W. Jones, Jr. E. Kirkton Muhlhausen Richard Walling FRESHMEN A. Harrison Brennan Robert Doney Stephen Wright n k a PI LAMBDA PHI ,— i — — _i a non-sectarian fraternity, was founded at Yale University in 1805 by Hen- ry M. Fisker, Louis F. Levy, and Frederick M. Werner. In 1909 a group of students formed the Pioneer Club of Bethlehem. The ideals of these Lehigh students were very similar to those of Pi Lambda Phi. and in 1915 the Pioneer Club became the Lambda Chapter of Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity. This chapter has progressed far since 1915. and at present has 27 members. Pi Lambda Phi has won the Phi Sigma Kappa Interfraternity Scholarship Cup three times in succession and now has permanent possession of it. Last year it had the highest scholarship ranking among the fraternities for both semesters and won the Phi Lta Sig- ma Freshman Scholarship Cup. This year Les Rosenfeld, president of the fraternity, and Stan Grossman made their letters in varsity football. Pi Lam was also represented in fencing and other intercollegi- ate sports. The brothers were active on the Brown and White, in Mustard and Cheese, and in several others of the various campus activities. TOP ROW: StemgolJ. Hollander. Dorkin. Bolte, W ' cinrib. Liclitenstein. Propper. Kluger, Margolis; SECOND ROW: A. L. Simon. Rosenfeld. Wolf, Lewis. Grossman. Comando. S. R. Simon. Gilinsky, Ricli; BOTTOM ROW. Zalkind. Faber. Margolies. Strouse, Wolfsten, Weening. LAMBDA CHAPTER SENIORS Ralph Buchsbaum Edward N. Comando Stanley E. Gilinskv Howard J. Lewis Lester R. Rosenfeld Alfred L. Simon Samuel R. Simon Charles Steiner Ralph G. Steinhardt, Jr. Irwin D. Wolf. Jr. JUNIORS Richard A. Bobbe Stanley Grossman Valentine Lichtenstein. Jr Seymour Margolis Stephen Weinrib SOPHOMORES Jerome R. Dorkin S. Lawrence Hollander Conrad E. Kluger Lheodore D. Propper Frank H. Rich Kingdon H. Sterngold FRESHMEN Norman J. Faber Roydon S. Margolies William M. Strouse Jay L. Weening George W. Wolfsten. Jr Sheldon S. Zalkind n a p PSI UPSILON ■ — _ i ,— was founded in November 1 855 at Union College by seven undergrad- uates wbo wanted to form a broader and more liberal fraternal organization tban tbose in existence. Tbrougbout its more man one Kundred years of growtb, tbe fraternity has lost only two of its 29 chapters and tbese were at Yale and Harvard, wbere university conditions made it impossible for active fra- ternity existence. In 1920 tbe membersbin of tbe fraternity in tbe United States was lim- ited, but since tben tbree cbapters bave been establisbed in Canada. In 1880 tbe Eta Cbapter of Pbi Delta Psi, due to tbe interest of two Lebigb faculty members of Psi Upsilon, applied for admis- sion to tbat fraternity. Their petition was granted, and in February. 1884, tbey were installed as tbe Eta Cbapter of Psi Upsilon. Originally located on Market Street, tbe cbapter moved to Brodbead Avenue in 1 900. Tbis year tbe fraternity is particularly well represented in sports, having 15 members either on or competing for positions on vari- ous teams. George Woelfel won bis letter in swimming last year while Ward Detwiler won his in soccer. TOP ROW: Coon. J. Mitchell. Bussman. McDonald; THIRD ROW Clarke. Littlejokn. Hitclicnck. Maloney. McMillan. Morrel. Tonkin; SECOND ROW; Howard, Detwiler, Boyer. W ' oclfel. Snovel. Mallov. Wetrich: BOTTOM ROW: Hearsey. Miller. Prudden. C. F. Mitchell, Hine. Coleman. ETA CHAPTER SENIORS Robert F. Coleman Charles H. Hearsey Edwin W. Hine, II Leslie P. Mahony, Jr. William A. Miller. Jr. Charles F. Mitchell Peter Prudden, Jr. JUNIORS Edward S. Malloy Ellis R. Snovel. Jr. George W. Woellel SOPHOMORES Ward A. Detwiler. II William P. Hitchcock William E. Howard, III Harry F. Littlejohn, Jr James H. McMillen, II Jeffry S. Wetrich FRESHMEN George W. Bussman Harry S. Clarke A. Harden Coon. Jr. John J. Maloney, Jr. Hubert McDonald Jackson F. Mitchell John B. Tonkin Guy C. Worrel W r SIGMA ALPHA MU _ _- ,— _ began its existence at the City College of New York, where the first group of members formed t he Alpha Chapter of this fraternity. Since then, this organization with its basic principle to foster and main- tain among its sons a spirit of loyalty and de- votion for Alma Mater has spread over the country, and 35 chapters in all have been formed. A local Lehigh fraternity known as Eta Alpha Mu was installed as the Sigma Kappa Chapter of Sigma Alpha Mu in the spring of 1923. m. Many university activities have been well supported by Sigma Alpha Mu. In Mustard and Cheese there are four active members. Norman Hammer and Nathaniel Brisker hold offices in the organization and three of the members took prominent parts in the pro- duction, Dead End. Sigma Alpha Mu has maintained a reputation in athletics. Marvin Kantrowitz holds the Middle Atlantic Cham- pionship in tennis, three men are members of the swimming team, two men are on the foo tball squad, and two others play hockey. Fencing, basketball, soccer, and baseball all have Sig Alphs on the teams. TOP ROW: Buckman. Benescli. Nelken. R. Goodman. Olinsky: FOURTH ROW: Breskman. Haft, Landesman. Fisher: THIRD ROW: Stern Miller. Berg. Gross. Kline, Wolf; SECOND ROW: Hammer. Goodman. Hackman, Kantrowitz. Levy; BOTTOM ROW: Glickman. Guttag Brisker, Finger, Sclieeline. SIGMA KAPPA CHAPTER SENIORS Nathaniel J. Brisker Aaron Finger Norman D. Glickman Elliot K. Goodman Jack Guttag Norman Hammer Isaiah Scheeline, Jr. Robert G. Stern JUNIORS Norman Hackman Marvin D. Kantrowitz Raymond C. Miller SOPHOMORES William Benesch Richard J. Berg Gilbert S. Gold Robert E. Goodman Joseph E. Gross Eugene L. Kline Monroe Levy FRESHMEN Samuel Breskman Myron I. Buchman Ira L. Fisher Alfred L. Halt Arthur L. Landesman Hans Nelken Harry Olinsky Allan E. Wolf 2AM SIGMA CHI _ _ ,—, _ was founded on June 28. 1855 at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio where it became a member of the original Miami Triad. With many of the southern universi- ties closed during the Civil war, the Con- stantine chapter was formed to assure the Sigma Chi ' s continuance in the South. In 1887 seven Lehigh students who had formed the Crimson Halberd Society, peti- tioned Sigma Chi for admittance to the fra- ternity and were immediately accepted. The Alpha Rho Chapter was disbanded in 1800 but was reinstated in 1893, and in 190-1 the fraternity moved into its present location at 240 East Broad Street. The activities of the Lehigh Sigma Chis have followed a well rounded pattern, with members participating in a wide variety of sports and organizations. The fraternity is represented in Mustard and Cheese, Sports- men ' s Club, Pi Delta Epsilon, Lehigh Re- view, and Brown and White. Sigma Chi claims members of the football, baseball and fencing teams, and one cheerleader. In inter- fraternity sports, Sigma Chi has won cham- pionships in basketball, football, and base- ball. TOP ROW: Niemieer. Cowin. McKelvv. Wood. Gailey, Tucker, Rboads; THIRD ROW. Butlon. Wigg, Taylor. Jacoby. Stoudt, Abbott, Bowen. Rcuvver; SECOND ROW: Hunt. Burgy. Herre. David. Roberts, Waltber. Ort. Grabmeyer, Davis; BOTTOM ROW: turgeon. Fuller, Hinricbs, Norlin, Adams. ALPHA RHO CHAPTER FACULTY Raymond C. Bull George B. Curtis Howard S. Leach Martin E. Westerman SENIORS O. Merrill David Leonard H. Dielil. Jr. Robert S. Grubmeyer Edward A. Herre. Jr. Frank G. Ort James M. Roberts, Jr. H. Edgar Walther, Jr. JUNIORS Sidney R. Bowen. Jr. M. Clayton Burgy Richard S. Davies, Jr. Thomas R. Hunt Joseph H. Jacoby Robert P. Stoudt John P. Taylor James E. Wigg SOPHOMORES H. Lawrence Abbott Richard S. Button Robert K. Gailey Edward S. McKelvv Henry T. Reuwer William P. Rhoads A. Robert Tucker. Jr. Richard F. Wood, Jr. FRESHMEN Donald B. Adams Roy B. Cowin, Jr. William W. Fuller Alan D. Hinrichs Richard W. Mason Russell Nietneier Charles M. Norlin Peter B. Turgeon X X SIGMA NU — — — — began as a secret society, the Legion of Honor, which was organized in 1868 at the Virginia Military Institute, Lex- ington. Virginia. The fraternity began its expansion in the south, but in 1885 it spread to the east with the inception or the Pi Chap- ter at Lehigh. Originally situated on High Street, the chapter moved to its present house on the campus, which was built through alumni and university cooperation, in 1915. At Lehigh, Sigma Nu has shown great stability since its beginning and today boasts representation in almost all campus activities. Included among the Iettermen or the house are members or the soccer, swimming, root- ball, and baseball teams and the captain or the track team. Members or the Brown and White board, the news manager of that paper, and a junior editor of the Epitome are Sigma Nus. Representatives of the bouse are found in many honorary societies including Tau Beta Pi, Omicron Delta Kappa, Cyan- ide, Scabbard and Blade, Pi 1 au Sigma. Phi Eta Sigma, and Pi Delta Epsilon. TOP ROW: Gardner, Clemmey, Carter. Holtvelld. Demberg. Horn, Kirslmer. Hume. Steele; SECOND ROW: Clarke. Everett. Mainwaring. Bowser. KalmbacK. Bowne. Zartiary. Elliott. Glaedell, Thaeder. Reese: BOTTOM ROW: Attwood. Binganian, Bayles. Marshall. Gregg. Pearce, Hanenrerfer, Looniis. Anderson. PI CHAPTER SENIORS Charles B. Bayles John R. Binganian. Jr. John C. Gregg Adolf F. Haffenreffer, Jr. Preston F. Marshall Robert J. Pearce JUNIORS Oscar E. Anderson, Jr. John C. Attwood Sidney B. Bowne. Jr. Charles F. Kahnbach Emery W. Loomis, Jr. Robert W. Reese Samuel R. Walker Roy S. Zachary SOPHOMORES Barnet P. Bowser Robert W. Clark Robert C. Demberg George E. Elliott, Jr. Robert D. Everett Walter W. Gleadall David L. Hume John R. Lees William T. Mainwaring Robert B. Steele. Jr. Frank R. Thaeder FRESHMEN Wayne H. Carter. Jr. John L. Clemmy, Jr. Henry A. Gardner John R. Holtvedt John L. Horn William C. Kirschner 2 N c : — 13 SIGMA PHI ,—, ,— ,— ,— the second oldest college fra- ternity, was founded in 1827 at Union Col- lege, Scfienectady, New York. It is a national organization limited to ten chapters. Lehigh s Alpha Chapter of Pennsylvania was found- ed in 1887. Just one year later, the fraternity completed the construction of its own house, the first at Lehigh. This was located on Del- aware Avenue and is still being used by the active members after its remodeling. Alpha of Sigma Phi has a record that is praiseworthy. Scholastically, Sigma Phi ranks second among the fraternity living groups. In extra-curricular activities, broth- ers are found in Scabbard and Blade, Pi Delta Epsilon, Omicron Delta Kappa, New- tonian Society, Mustard and Cheese, and on the Review staff. The secretary-treasurer of the sophomore class is a Sigma Phi man. In athletics, the brothers can be seen taking their tumbles on the wrestling mat and also making their bids for varsity positions in ten- nis, track, and rifle competitions, and fresh- man positions in cross-country and football. I his grand old fraternity is staying near the top. TOP ROW: Rusk, Marks, Denison. Baldwin. Guilford. H. VanderVeer, Darby: SECOND ROW: Beal, Bricker. Rich. Caulks, Henderson. Werner. Hanks; BOTTOM ROW: L. VanderVeer. Kern, Pearsall. Hardenberg. Davy, Rogers. Spooner. ALPHA CHAPTER OF PENNSYLVANIA FACULTY Frederic Mercur SENIORS Chester C. Baldwin Charles W. Darby Donald G. Denison, Jr. Charles F. Guilford Lewis T. Marks, Jr. John B. Rush Hugh G. Van der Veer. Jr JUNIORS John P. Beal, Jr. James H. Bricker Fletcher Hanks, Jr. SOPHOMORES Lewis J. Caulk Charles E. Henderson Arthur H. Rich John C. Spooner l.indsley D. Van der Veer Everett F. Warner FRESHMEN Samuel J. Davey Richard C. Hardenhergh F. Brooks Kerns Mason P. Pearsall Charles M. Rogers Z S SIGMA PHI EPSILON i — , — ' i — r , — one or the nation s ten largest national fraternities, was established at the University of Richmond in 1901. Since the parent chapter initiated several theological students and adopted a heart shaped pin. the members for a time were !:nown as the Sacred Hearts. ' In 1907 sixteen members of a local Lehigh fraternity known as Omega Pi Alpha ob- tained a charter from the national organiza- tion and became the Pennsylvania Epsilon Chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon. The present home of the fraternity is located on West Market Street and has been enlarged recent- ly by additions to the dining room and dor- mitory. The activities of the fraternity include the entire extent of campus extra-curricular ac- tivities. S. P. E. members are in Cyanide, Phi Eta Sigma, the Newtonian Society, and Sig Eps hold offices in the R. W. Hall So- ciety and Alpha Epsilon Delta. The frater- nity is represented in all three ol the campus publications. Epitome, Brown and White, and Review. Ever active in athletics, S. P. E. claims the co-captain of soccer, and members of the wrestling and cross-country teams. • 0 TOP ROW Sanderson, Swanstrom, Witlierspoon. C. Bartlett. Tolley. Simonsen, Cory. Clark. McJames, J. Beers; THIRD ROW. Butler. Gray. Ives. Finn. Lelir. Bowman. Elliolt. Wallace: SECOND ROW.- Catching. Harding. Slctten. D. Beers. Homiller, Nordt. Merkert. Botlie. Hackney; BOTTOM ROW: Woodside. R Brawn. Kingsbury, L. Bartlett. Hogan. Young. E. Brawn. Foster. Fisher. PENNSYLVANIA EPSILON CHAPTER FACULTY Fay C. Bartlett Eric S. Sinkinson SENIORS S. Demarest Beers Robert S. Botlie W. Randall Catching Arthur H. Harding Richard P. Homiller Clifton S. Merkert Robert A. Nordt Edward P. Phillips Gardner Sletten JUNIORS Robert M. Bowman Frederick C. Butler John C. Culliney Herbert P. Elliot Robert E. Finn Richardson Gray Clarence W. Hackney, Jr. A. Homer Ives. Jr. William H. Lehr Thomas A. Wallace SOPHOMORES Charles D. Bartlett. Jr. Jesse F. Beers, Jr. John F. Clark, Jr. Samuel I. Cory, Jr. William C. McJames Clarence M. Sanderson, Jr. Robert N. Simonsen William W. ToIIey J. William Witherspoon FRESHMEN Lynn C. Bartlett Earl A. Brawn Ray E. Brawn William H. Fisher William C. Foster John V. Hogan Carl O. Swanstrom William S. Woodside. J Franklin H. Young 2 ! E TAU DELTA PHI — — — — was founded at the City Col- lege of New York in 1910 where it was in- tended to be a local organization. However, in 1914 a chapter was established at New York University, and, in 1916, the two chap- ters decided to adopt a policy of cautious ex- pansion. At the present there are 20 active chapters of Tau Delta Phi throughout the United States. Tau Chapter was organized at Lehigh in 1 926 by a group of ambitious young men who wanted to form an exclusive fraternity with a limited number of men. This policy of limited membership is still in effect in Tau Chapter. Tau Delta Phi is represented in many of the campus activities. There have been men in Scabbard and Blade, Omicron Delta Kappa, Tau Beta Pi. and Phi Beta Kappa. Tau Delts are active in the university publi- cations and have won letters on the various athletic teams. One of the members of the cheerleading squad is a I au Delt. Each year, Tau Delta Phi stands near the top scholas- tically and last year the house won the Pni Sigma Kappa Cup for scholastic honors. TOP ROW Miller, Lehre, Greene; BOTTOM ROW: Segal, Rienier. Mark. Samuels. TAU CHAPTER JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Richard M. Dietz David Kemper. Sandor A. Mark Leonard R. Greene Arthur M. I.ehrer Seymour H. Kott Jacques Segal. Howard Y. Riemer Abram Samuels. II Philip H. Miller T A $ THETA DELTA CHI _i — ,— was founded in 1847 at Union College in Schenectady, New York. It was the 12th national fraternity to he founded and, since its foundation, has heen one of the leaders in the fraternity world. It was the first fraternity to organize a national maga- zine and was the creator of the fraternity flag. Its greatest claim to fame, however, is its building of the first centralized fraternity government. This was the grand lodge form of government which is now universally used by nearly all national fraternities. A con- servative policy and a desire to promote friendship has limited the )f chf friendship has limited tne number ot chap- ters in the United States and Canada to 28. Nu Deuteron Charge of Theta Delta Chi was founded by six undergraduates at Le- high in 1884 to become the fifth national fra- ternity on the campus. The present chapter house located in Sayre Park was built in 1919, and new additions were presented by alumni in 1958. Theta Delta Chi has al- ways been very active in all fields of extra- curricular activities, including athletics, hon- orary societies, and publications, being es- pecially well-known in intra-mural debating circles. TOP ROW: Bovvn, Adams. Brougli. Donahoe. Parsons. Leavens. Duggin. Hird. Cole. SmitK, Curran; SECOND ROW: Morris. Kramer, West. Hand. Baggot, Dannemiller, Hewitt. Fisclicl. Brindle; BOTTOM ROW. Appleton, Taylor, Palmer, Curtis. Caproni. Butler. NU DEUTERON CHAPTER FACULTY Arthur C. Calleii Walter R. Okeson Philip M. Palmer Harry M. Ullman SENIORS Richard C. Baggot Edward H. Brindle Edward F. Dannemiller John J. Fischel Thomas B. Hand Frank H. Hewitt, Jr. Rudolf H. Kremer Matthew K. Morris William W. West. Jr. JUNIORS Charles B. Cole John P. Curran Robert W. Leavens Jesse T. Smith SOPHOMORES Vernon H. Adams Ralph Bown, Jr. Samuel R. Brough James J. Donahue, Jr. Kenneth D. Duggan Ralph C. Hird George E. Parsons, Jr. FRESHMEN Robert W. Appleton Stephen H. Butler John D. Caproni John S. Curtis Wallace W. Malley. Jr. Richard B. Palmer Robert L. Taylor e a x THETA KAPPA PHI — — .— — had its beginning in 1916 when a congenial group of Lehigh students desired to perpetuate a lasting bond among themselves through the organization or a fraternity. Although the World War rut short the group s activities, its members re- turned to found the fraternity under the present name on October 1. 1919. It was in- corporated with a similar local fraternity at Penn State College in 1922. Since then a cautious policy of expansion has been pursued by the fraternity, and at present there are fifteen chapters in the East. Middle West, and South. Following the desires of its founders, Theta Kappa Phi has above all tried to promote harmony, unity, and genuine fraternity. The fraternity has been continually active in athletics, its members being on the foot- ball, baseball, wrestling, track, and soccer teams. In the honorary societies, brothers are active in Tau Beta Pi, Alpha Kappa Psi, Scabbard and Blade, and Eta Kappa Nu; while some participate in the Brown and White, the Lehigh Review, Mustard and Cheese, and the Band. VV II R ? W: l ' ' c ; ° n r a - Ma F Dona ■ Gallo Kraus Lloyd. Tange!. Schineller. Mahoney. McGratk, Mulhem. Gray; THIRD ROW Duane ncl. Si eeg. Flory, Comazzi; BOTTOM ROW: Heley. Compton. Bunning. Watt. Lucarelle. Byrne. Bartl ALPHA CHAPTER FACULTY Morris E. Kanaly SENIORS Joseph J. Comazzi Fernand A. Flory Samuel M. Grafton Josepli I. Hammond George W. Howland. Jr. John J. McFadden Herman E. Merz Daniel E. Smith James R. Steeg Julius E. Tangel JUNIORS Thomas P. Cunningham James J. Duane, Jr. William F. Foley Michael C. Gallo Edward W. Kraus I homas D. Floyd Keron M. Man ion W. Pershing McEIroy Fred J. Schineller John L. Sipp David F. Wells Hysler B. Zane SOPHOMORES J. Stanley Macdonald Harold E. Mahoney Paul W. Marshall Charles E. McGrath Joseph M. Sexton Orville J. Stephens FRESHMEN Herbert E. Bunning Gerald V. Carroll Edward J. Cavanaugh J. Gordon Compton Frank X. Gabriel John R. Gray Walton F. Heley Gregory A. Jahn Nicholas J. Lucarelle James P. Mulhern Robert D. Watt B K i— i was founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in April, 1864. Origin- ally known as tire Sigma Delta Fraternity, a split occurred and eight of the dissenters founded a new society called Theta Xi which now has 56 active chapters. The Eta Chapter was founded at Lehigh in Decemter 1905. when 14 charter members were initiated. Last year, in addition to celebrating the 75th anniversary of the fraternity, the chapter also celebrated the 55th anniversary of the founding of the Eta Chapter. Theta Xi members won several scholastic honors, and the house average of 2.001 moved the chapter ' s scholastic rank from 26th to 11th place among the fraternities. However, the scholastic activities did not overshadow the extra-curricular achieve- ments. In sports, members appeared both as managers and participants on many varsity and freshman teams. Great success was en- joyed in intramural boxing. In the honorary societies, Theta Xi has representatives in Tau Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma, and other na- tional and local groups. TOP ROW: Litzenberger. Luley. Vauglin. Wilson. Pedrick, Downs. Hertzog. Williams. Griffiths; THIRD ROW: Seltzer. Heins. ScKafer. Kleinscrimidt, Robinson. McGinnis. Randall. Corpening; SECOND ROW: Kohring, Evans, Good. Deischcmaker, Conrad Sheibley Ransom Eler. Hamilton: BOTTOM ROW: Kuclier. Rappuhn, Van Cleve. Thomas. Bushey. Prinkey. Hoffman. ETA CHAPTER FACULTY Jacob L. Beaver William H. Formhals Donald M. Fraser Alexander YV. Luce John C. Mertz GRADUATE STUDENT Earl Heins SENIORS William F. Carson. Jr. Wellington B. Eler George V. Griffith Charles A. Hamilton Roger F. Kleinschmidt William H. Kohring James G. McGinnis Robert H. Robinson William O. Seltzer Vernon N. Simmons JUNIORS John A. Chapman Maxwell M. Corpening. Jr. August Descheemaeker John V. Downs William E. Good Frank V. Hertzog Willard A. Litzenberger Howard G Luley Lewis P. Randall, Jr. John W. Sheibley Kenneth W. Trone Fredric W. Wilson, Jr. SOPHOMORES Charles M. Conrad Vernon Evans, Jr. John T. Ransom. II Robert F. Turnauer H. Alton Vaughn, Jr. Don Sheeder von der Hyde Kingslev G. Williams FRESHMEN Lhomas L. Bushey Robert L. Cornish Duyane A. Hoffman Charles G Kucher Stanley T. Moodie Alfred W. Pedrick Clarence O. Prinkey Henry W. Rappuhn Joseph P. Thomas. Jr. John W. Van Cleve e m K wmdDfpmmM w o o oMMicrai OFFICERS Carl R. Fittkau Robert A. Cary Robert B. Rauer Albert E. Lee, Jr. President Vice-President Secretary reasurer The Interdormilory Council was Founded in tlie Spring of 1939 and is now in its first full year of activity. Each dor mitory section Was a representative on the council. The mem- bers of the council are as follows: Carl R. Fittkau, Fred E. Galbraith. Jr., Maynard H. Patterson. Robert B. Rauer, Her- bert E. Rasmussen, Donald V. MacFeeters. Robert F. Pegg. William Heimbach, Robert A. Cary, Edward Stopp, Arthur E. Weatherbee, Elwood Webster, and Albert E. Lee. Carl Fittkau, President o the Interdormilory Council, pauses on llie steps to have his picture taken with Robert Cary and Al Lee. TOP ROW. Heimbach; SECOND ROW: Rasmussen. MacFeeters, Galbraitk. Patterson; BOTTOM ROW Webster. Wetnerbee, Fittkau. Cary, Lee. TOP ROW: Gabuzda. Carter, Sanborn: SECOND ROW: Hunter, Brenker, Templeton, Brandt; BOTTOM ROW: Cscllak. Ricketts. Morse. WolbacR. Ponter. OWM! c OMMOI OFFICERS Norman L. Morse Thomas E. Ricketts Charles A. Wolbach William R. Csellak Claude G. Beardslee President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer hacidtv Adviser The Town Council was organized in February 1039. to promote the interests of the town group. It has been able, by dividing the city into I I sections, to initiate a successful in- tramural sports program, which has meant greater athletic opportunity lot many town men. The members are John P. Brandt, George A. Brenker. Robert P. Carter, William R. Csellak. George J. Gabuzda. Paul A. Hunter, Theodore L. Leininger, Norman L. Morse. Albert E. Ponter, Thomas E. Ricketts. Kenneth R. Templeton. and Charles A. Wolbach. William Csellak. Thomas Ricketts, and Charles Wolbach gather around Norman Morse. President o the Town Council, or a pow wow . LEHIGH DORMITORIES SI sior Taylor House, Lehigh ' s first dormitory, was donated to the University in 1907 by Andrew Carnegie. Mr. Carnegie insisted before he made the donation that the new building be named for his friend and associate, Charles Taylor, a graduate, trustee, and long time friend of Lehigh. Charles Taylor accepted the gift in order to fulfill the urgent need for better student living facili- ties on the campus. Taylor Hall, as it was then known, is unique in that it was one of the first large all concrete buildings to be erected in this section of the country, but it has withstood the ravages of time and today remains as a fitting memorial to its two founders. In 1922 Dr. Charles Russ Richards came to Lehigh as her fourth president. Always full of hopes and ideals for a Greater Lehigh, ' ' Dr. Richards made many contributions to the Univer- ity, not the least of which was a plan to foster dormitory expan- and building. The new system of which Richards House and Drinker House are the modern standing tributes was part of this plan, but for lack of funds the realization of these hopes was left to his successor, President Williams. Richards House, standing on the hill below the Lookout, was started in 1937 and opened for student occupation in 1938. Drinker House today is still a skeleton framework, but the latest addition to the new dormitory group will be completed in the very near future. Dormitory men at Lehigh have proved themselves worthy of the University ' s interest. The various houses have been organized into sections and the Interdormitoiy Council has been formed to act as a governing body for these men. The main purpose of this group is to develop a more cohesive and cooperative relationship among dormitory men. In attaining this end the Council has met admirable success during its two short years of life. It can point with pride to the large number of social and intramural func- tions it has sponsored and to the ever growing list of campus leaders among its members. Still one more addition was needed to make living condition provements all inclusive. Lehigh has many foreign students id these under the leadership of George Tabet founded the Cosmopolitan Club in 1938. This year the club has its own house. It is a necessary addition to Lehigh campus life and was started in the same spirit of betterment that has marked the steady rise of all the other living groups. im ar Dorm life carries the advantages and dis- advantages of impersonality, the joys and sorrows of almost perfect freedom. We live as we please, we study when we feel like it (which must happen sometimes, since dorm averages are always above the University s), and we throw the bull far into the night, as shown by the pictures on the right which well personify dormitory life. Bull sessions like the one in the Richards House room occur frequently and give students a chance to think and voice opinions in a group. They are a custom of university life and Lehigh is no exception. In I heir spare time, dorm men are found shining shoes and clipping nails— just before house party perhaps. Ping-pong has caught the Fancy of several students, and speedy games like the one in progress when the pic- lure was snapped are constantly being played in the dormitory game room. Often on Sunday afternoons girls from town walk up the mountain— for the air! Could it be that the fellows in the window are whistling? An occasional soda in ihe Drown Hall cafeteria is often a preliminary to a long session of cramming back at the dorm, but you can see its not all studying! 111 fpn (s GDMm© FACULTY Nelson P. Yeardley. GRADUATE STUDENTS Ralph W. Helvvig, Josepf A. Keller. Jr.. Eric Weiss. SENIORS Arnold M. BIoss, John Branch, Richard F. Clock. Carl F. Fittkau, Robert F. Koenig. Russell Kowalyshyn, Charles T. Schrader. Raymond M. Smith, Rohert B. Spilman, Robert F. Wolfe. JUNIORS Wilbur Chase, Jr., Donald Eadie. Edward M. Gilmore, Louis G. Gitzendanner, Raymond C. Huntoon. Steplien Kowalyshyn. Jr.. Thomas J. Lewis, Jr.. George F. Messinger. John H. Mowen, Earnest L. Schork. Carl C. Stotz. SOPHOMORES Harry M. Atkins, Robert H. Coleman. Edward P. Yollherbst. Jr. FRESHMEN Robert H. Freeman. Theodore C. Gams, Wheeler Gilmore. Jr.. Stephen Hart, III. Howard A. Johnson, Jackson T. Jones, Thomas C. MacAIIister, Jr.. P. George Mundorf. Henry C. Swartz. Jr., Robert O. Warwick. TOP ROW: Mundorf. Yeardley. Jones. Freeman, Gems; FOURTH ROW: W. Gilmore, Malley. Johnson. MacCallisler. Warwick. Dyer. Shwartz; TH RD ROW: S. Kowalyshyn. Brand). Vollmrbst. Atkins, Helwig. Chase; SECOND ROW: Eadie. Lewis. F. Gilmore. Messinger. Gitzendanner, Stotz, Mowen; BOTTOM ROW: Shraeder. Smith. R. Kowalyshyn. Fittkau. Wolfe. Spillman. Cloek, Koenig. o u e§Mi0)peIiieM Wim GRADUATE STUDENTS William H. Brodnitz, Jerome Ganz, Rene H. Lambert, Otaker Ondra, Frederick C. Strong, George E. Tabet, Boris Tesmenitsky. SENIORS Aaron H. Brennesholtz, John L. Burgher. John Cockran, John E. Decher. Jr., Harry B. Home, John J. Hursh. Jr., Quentin R. G. Keith. JUNIORS Edwin S. Bishop, David E. Cooper, Allons A. Duffek, Paul P. Estrada, Stanley E. Sliwka, Charles B. Taylor. SOPHOMORES Thomas Fleischer, Allen H. Okamoto. Charles T. Robertson. HI, Louis E. Sharpe, Eduardo B. Valdes, Kurt H. Weber. FRESHMEN Fred F. Berman, Musa J. Eways, Panos B. Georgopulo, Hans Nelken. TOP ROW: Hursh. Burman, Burgher. Taylor: FOURTH ROW: Sharpe, Cochran. Nelken, Ganz; THIRD ROW: Decker. Sliwka. Duffek. Ondra. Weber. Tabbot; SECOND ROW: Brodnitz, Eways. Georgopulo. Okamoto. Strong, Keith; BOTTOM ROW: Cooper. Tesmeniski, Estrada, Lambert. Robertson. Fleischer. o o u LI O cflpiLoiF (Werner© SECTION A SENIORS Charles F. Barton. Jr.. Bertram J. Cross, Fred E. GalbraitK, Jr., Vernon S. ia . Jr., Norman J. Haas. John J. McCIuskey, Robert H. Miller, Bernard E. Tripp. Jr. JUNIORS Herbert A. Brown, John F. Loose. George H. Schaeffer. Jr.. Robert J. Stickel, Robert J. Valleau. SOPHOMORES George Z. Goetz. Jr.. Robert J. Loose, Luther A. Mohr, John J. Nilti, John B. O ' Hara, Leslie E. Sebald. Jr., Josepli S. Thomas. FRESHMEN Fenwick P. Horn, James W. Niemeyer, Philip A. Sweet, John A. Thurn. TOP ROW: Sweet. Haas. Miller. Niemeyer, Getz: THIRD ROW. Thomas, Domlesky, O ' Hara. Vallmi. Nitty: SECOND ROW J. Loose. Wotring, R. Loose, Thurn, Horn; BOTTOM ROW. Brown. Gross, McCluskev, Galbraith. Mohr. Sehaffer. o O SECTION B GRADUATE STUDENTS Theodore S. DuBose, Robert L. Scott. SENIORS Charles H. Brotherton, Paul Karlik. Jr., Robert B. Kurtz, Anders F. Myhr, James L. Oberg, Maynard H. Patterson, Henry Van Reed, Francis G. Shenton, Robert G. Waite, Charles E. West. JUNIORS Frederick S. Klopp, William C. Lewis, Benjamin Ojserkis, David M. Parke, Henry J. Strenkofsky. SOPHOMORES Frank T. Brundage. William E. Gheen, William W. Goshorn, Harold W. Haines, Charles E. Kroupa, John D. McClay, Victor E. Smith, Stuart H. Vogt, LeRoy A. Wiley. Ill FRESHMEN John P. Allen. Glen W. Boyer, Paul R. Carl. Gerald V. Carroll. Donald P. Dyer. George T. Lutz, Carl Neuenclorffer. William C. Patterson. TOP ROW.- Lewis. Gheen. Carl; FOURTH ROW Patterson, Nenendorfer. McClay, Osteimen THIRD ROW: Vogt, Strenkofsky, Boyer; SECOND ROW Smith, Allen. Brundage. Wiley, Klopp, Ojserkis. Haigucs: BOTTOM ROW: Moosman, Kurtz, KorliL. Myre, Patterson, Ohcrg. West, Waife. Li O o U SECTION C SENIORS William R. Clark. Carlton E. Creitz, Michael R. Durochik, Robert R. Codarcl, William D. Green, Ernest F. Johnson. William . Mills. Harold E. Moosmann, R. Kingman Poetter, Robert 15. Rauer. a: o JUNIORS Jack R. Dennis. Raymond R. Myers, Richard E. Sit SOPHOMORES James H. Boucher, Rudd M. Guttshall, John B. Haus, Richard P. Hazard. George H. Leach, Jesse B. Loucks, William J. Meikle, Albert I.. Thalhamer. Eduardo B. Valdes, John D. YanBIarcom. FRESHMEN Maynard G Arsove. Robert J. Fisher, James F. Cover. Charles A. Mc Wayne. incent J. Margiotti. James B. Nutting. TOP ROW Hazard, Hause, Gutskall, Nulling. Margiotli; THIRD ROW: MacWayne. Dennis. Cover, Meickle, Valdes; SECOND ROW: VanBIarcom. Fisher. Boucher. Loucks. Thalhammer. Durociiik; BOTTOM ROW: Clark. Poller. Green. Rauer. M.lls. Johnson, Creitz. o o SECTION D SENIORS Lester R. Bittel. James C. Feldmann. William S. Fiske. Herbert E. R asmussen. JUNIORS William J. Feigley. Frederick R. Gilmore, Robert R. Halligan, Carl Hartdegen. Ill, Stephen T. Lowry. Theodore M. Mantis, Lemuel E. Sentz, Edgar C. Slack. Edward F. Williams. Thomas B. Woods. o SOPHOMORES James H. Bleiler. Henry T. Kalinoski. John A. Kimberley. Paul W. Marshall. Richard D. Munnikhuysen. F. Stuart Nolte. Richard G Petersen. Warren C. YanBIarcom. William R. Woodruff. Ill FRESHMEN William H. Clark. Jr., Gilbert D. Gaus. Warren E. Hoffman, Donald B. Parish. Hugh W. Richards. Arthur E. Roslund. Walter S. Tomkinson, John T. Wilson. TOP ROW: Clark. Wilson. Fiegley. Halligan: FOURTH ROW Richards, Roslynd. Williams. Wood ruff. Hoffman. Lallimer: THIRD ROW: Parish. Tompkinson. .,lle. Marshall. Manlis. Munikysen: SECOND ROW Bleiler, Lowry, Slack. Kind erley. VanBIarcom. Sentz; BOTTOM ROW: Hardigan, Owen. Fiske, Rasmussen. Feldman, Bittel, Oil re. bl O o O u UJ SECTION E SENIORS Bernard Allsliuler, Bernard Berkowitz. William I. Freeman, George E. Lien, Donald Y. MacFeeters, Eldon M. Roemmele. a: o JUNIORS Donald A. Bender, Covel T. Jerauld, John D. Mettler, Jr., Josef Y. S( li.d SOPHOMORES Jolin Adrian, Jr., Alan H. Conklin, Robert E. Gengenbach, George V. Holby, Donald V. Kurtz. Brookman J. March, Sumner W. Reid. Clyde C. Ruffle, Charles H. Schumacher. s o D FRESHMEN Charles S. Bennett. Frank H. Bower, Clarence F. Fehnel. Robert O. Jensen. Howard C. Leifheit, Harvey D. Moll. TOP ROW.- Bower; FOURTH ROW: Kurtz. Bennett. Fehnel. Jensen, Leifheit, Moll; THIRD ROW: Gengenbach. Reid. Conklin. Shumacher, Ruffle, Holby; SECOND ROW: Berkowitz, Bender. Marsh. Mettler. Jerauld; FRONT ROW: Freeman. Lien. Schall. MarFeeters. Roemelle. Allsliuler. tglm MW m (WOM © SECTION I SENIORS William W. Heimbach. Harold Weiner. o z U JUNIORS Frank H. Bailey. Fred V. Berger, Harry G. Dennis, Donald Halbedl, Morton F. Kaplon. SOPHOMORES Walter B. Bowers, William C. Cosford. Roy L. Duncan, Jr., James Dunwoody, Jr., Richard C. Gordon, Louis E. Klein, Donald W. I.ayton, Tom C. Mekeel. David C. Osborn. John A. Read, William P. Varner. FRESHMEN lolm I I. C orson. Ronert K. Pollack. TOP ROW: Halbedal, Varner; THIRD ROW: Bowers. Pollack. Kaplan, Corson; SECOND ROW: Dunwoodie. Osborne, Reed. Berger, Mekeel; BOTTOM ROW. Dennis. Kline. Bailey, Heimback, Gordon, Duncan. O H O O o u SECTION HA JUNIORS Boris Baiko, Pliili[ G. Foust, Jr., Richard B. Johnson, George H. M. I.eRoy. William S. McConnor, Jolin Ryle, Jr. SOPHOMORES Nelson R. Clark. Fenton R. Cloud. William A. Eisele, Joseph B. Evaul. James Gore. Ill, Robert N. Gusdorff, Ralph L. Haney, Jr.. Jeremiah C. Huheny, Norman L. Maguire, Stewart W. Munroe. Jr.. Robert F. Pegg, Tlieophile Saulnier. Jr.. Quintus P. Witte, Jr. O o FRESHMEN Richard K. Ernst, Burt L. Heimer, Donald Q. Morehouse, William ' R. Sultzer. TOP ROW. Cloud. Gusdorff, Haney, Eisling. Seltzer; SECOND ROW: Ernst. Johnson, McConnor. Witte, Heimer, Rile. McGuire; BOTTOM ROW: Foust. Leroy. Hubeny. Clark. Morehouse. SECTION II B SENIORS John C. Barr. Robert A. Cary. C5 JUNIORS Edward D. Hems. John A. Kaufmann, Edwin M. Market. Edwin A. McKanna, Jr.. Philip B. Robeson, Roberl W. Rosenquest, Howard O. Schroeder, Frank A. Zimmermann. SOPHOMORES Jesse O. Betterton, Jr., Alfred E. Horka, John C. Lampert, R. Russell Macy, Albert M. Miller. John L. Peterson. Wallace R. WirlLs. lil FRESHMEN Louis F. Dellwig, H. Bartley Frey. Jr.. Robert R. Shively, Parker V. Ward. TOP ROW. Frey, Macy. Dellwig. Horffa. Ward; THIRD ROW. Miller. Betterton, Robeson, Wirtks, SECOND ROW IVlcrson. McKanna. Lampcrl. Markel; BOTTOM ROW: Zimmerman, Rosenquest. Barr. Cary, Heins, Kaufmann, Shroeder. DC O © o u UJ SECTION III A SENIORS Herbert F. Engelmann, James F. Goodwin, Richard C. Pearce. J. Edward Stopp. 0£ O JUNIORS Harrv F. Jones. SOPHOMORES William T. Bostock. Jr., James H. Bruen. Jr., James H. Buss, James H. Galli, Panos B. Georgopulo. Charles J. Little. II, Raymond T. Meckbach, Philip W. Saitta. W. James Skinner, Henry C. Stieglitz, Carl L. Sturgis, John P. Troy, Frederick W. Wright. Jr., Robert R. Young. s o Q FRESHMEN Robert K. Brown, Preston Parr, Jr., John P. Townsend, Peter J. Weigel. TOP ROW: Bruen. Broen, Boston. Weigel; THIRD ROW: Young. Paynter. Goodwin. Buss. Townsend; SECOND ROW: Parr. Meckback. Steiglitz. Troy, Engleman, Sturgis: BOTTOM ROW: Little. Galley. Pearce, Jones. Saitta, Skinner. Georgopulo. SECTION IIIB SENIORS Charles E. Clain. Leonard D. Morrison. John J. Xicol. Arthur E. Wetherbee. Jr. JUNIORS Robert D. Board. John Gantner. o SOPHOMORES John F. Belcher, William F. Boore, Jr.. Leonard R. Constantine. William S. Dawless. Robert G. Eitner. George W. Hanson. Gene A. Marusi. James W Needles. Rudolph W. Samer, Grendon K. Sebold. William M. Spears. Jr.. Raymond S. Willard. Jr.. Joseph A. Wvler. II. U FRESHMEN Frederick I .. ilia. TOP ROW Villa; THIRD ROW: Eitner. Spears, Wvler. Nicol, Hansen, Coldman; SECOND ROW Saniar, Boorc, Belcher, Gantner, Constantine, SeKoIri; BO TOM ROW . Marusi, Willard, Boarrl, Morri son, Needles, etnerbee, Clain. u o 2 fie o o Ul Id SECTION IV A SENIORS Elwood Webster. o JUNIORS Samuel S. Cross, Jr., Alexander B. Neill. Jr., Robert L. Tilton, Martin A. Weil. SOPHOMORES Charles P. Davidson, McMichael. Russell C. Gebert, Jr., Gilbert P. Haven, Robert C. FRESHMEN William H. Corddry. Arthur C. Hemphill. John J. Hucker. Jack R. Mercer, Wilson B. Schramm, Walter S. Titlow. Jr., Charles M. Wetzel, II. Forwood C. Wiser, Jr., Ralph B. Wittman. Stephen C. Wright. TOP ROW: Wetzell. MacMichael. Cross; THIRD ROW. Corddrv. Wilson. W ' itman, Mercer; SECOND ROW: Tilton. Neill, Davidson, Titlow, Wiser; BOTTOM ROW: Wright. Haven, Webster, Gebert. Weil. Schramm, Hucker. o SECTION IV B SENIORS Gilbert P. Cardwell. JUNIORS Walter P. Blamire, Jr., George S. Coopey, Frank J. Harrold, Jr., Albert E. Lee, Jr., John W. Prinkev, Jr. o SOPHOMORES George B. Benedict. Edward M. Biggs, Jr., William A. Brooks, Charles P. David- son. Ill, Frank R. Dirkes, Jr., Harold E. Foster. Robert J. McGregor. Robert Met- zner, George F. Minde, Robert A. Nicrosini. bl FRESHMEN Nathan L. Wilson, Jr. TOP ROW: Malley, Durkis. Brooks. Prink. -v; SECOND ROW: Blaemire. Nicrosini. McGregor, Biggs; BOTTOM ROW: Harrold, Minde. Lee. Cardwell, Foster. S o o u DALE H. GRAMLEY ACTIVITIES J u w tce b The controlling organization of the student body needs a redressing so the officers {Fred Galbrailh, president, Al Cox, his vice-president, Thomas Ricketis, and Rich- ard Kelley, the treasurer), gather to deter- mine the policies of Arcadia. Already they tire talking of changing the class elections to eliminate some more of the politics. ARCADIA Arcadia ol Lehigh University, student governing body, represents in its present state the final devel- opment oi undergraduate control at Lehigh. The original Arcadia founded in the 80 ' s by Richard Harding Davis as a society opposing Greek Letter fraternities became in turn a political group, a proc- tor group, an honor society, and finally the official governing body. I he growth and increase in power of the Lehigh Union soon relegated Arcadia to a position of little importance. In the spring of 1958 Arcadia was merged with the Lehigh Union. The new body received the name Arcadia as a result of popular vote. Having approximately the form of the original Lehigh Union, the body was reorganized as regards membership in the spring of 1 959. This reorganization was made possible by the completion of the system whereby all men were represented in the three living group councils. The members at the present time are not delegates from their organizations but are campus leaders selected for the most part ex officio. The officers and members during the past year together with their outside offices are: Fred E. Galbraith, Jr., president, and representative chosen by Pi Delta Epsilon; Alfred T. Cox, vice-president, and president of the senior class; Thomas E. Ricfcetts, secretary, and student member at large; Richard C. Kelly. Jr., treasurer, and president of the Combined Musical Clubs; Claude G. Beaidslee. faculty adviser; Wallace P. Watkins, the president of Omicron Delta Kappa; Albert E. Lee, Jr., president of the junior class; Robert N. Gusdorff, president of the sophomore class; Walter S. Russell, president of the Interfraternity Council; Norman L. Morse, presi- dent of the Town Council; Carl R. Fittkau, president of the Interdormitory Council; William R. Simp son. president of Cyanide; and Frank C. Woodside, Jr.. president of Mustard and Ch leese. TOP ROW Beardslee, Rus Fittkau, Gusdorff. Lee; BOTTOM ROW: Watkins. Cox. Galbraith. Woodside. Kelley The present set-up for student government at Lehigh thus consists of a council for each of the three living groups. All of the councils are repre- sented in Arcadia, the hody which has final author- ity over undergraduate activities. The duties of Arcadia include the organization of Freshman Week activities, football smokers and pep rallies, and the traditional Flag Pole Day. In addition, money from the student activities fee is used to support student groups, organizations and teams which would otherwise he unable to func- tion. Among its other activities are included the op- eration of the Campus Community Chest, which was organized this year for making contributions to local charities, supervision of the yearly elections, publication of the Freshman Handbook, and the ap- pointment of student members to various university committees. Or. Beardslee is the mainstay of Arcadia. This is so firmly established thai his telephone is answered, Arcadia Office , rather than the usual Hello ' . ABOVE. The Lehigh Bund is a massive unit IxKilli ■ 7 he drum major is prepared. I lie Lehigh University Band was founded thirty-two years ago hut did not become important until 1926. That year there was a major change. Dr. T.Edgar Shields, the faculty director, obtained the music, instruments, and uniforms of the disbanded Bethlehem Steel Band. With this new equipment the band began a steady climb until it has now reached a total membership of approximately 1 50 men. In the past few years the band has improved rapidly and is now in a class with the largest bands of the eastern universities. It ranks near the top of the college bands in the East. The developments which have aided its progress include the use of intricate marching formations and the introduction of popular music. The band will always be remembered by the students for its performances at the football games on house party weekends. Here, before the house party crowds, it invariably produces its best formations and arrangements. Among other things for which the band is noted are playing at basketball games and concerts becoming an integral part of the Lehigh R. O. T. C. unit. ts and OFFICERS Ralph E. Martin Robert P. Carter Donald C. Young Matthew K. Morris Mervin J. Fry T. Edgar Shields Student Director Drum Major Assistant Student Director Manager Librarian Pacultv Director MEMBERS CORNETS: Elwood B. Bachensto, Robert W. Beck, Robert A. Bennett, George H. Brown. William T. Buhrig, Gilbert P. Cardvvell. Harry E. Case. Carlton E. Creitz, William S. Dawless, John R. Dennis, Wil- liam S. risKe. Thomas Fleischer. Richard Z. Freeman. Michael C. Gallo, Floyd E. Ivey, Edwin H. Hine, Robert C. Kramer, Donald E. Krebs, Frederick A. Krone, Howard G. Luley, George A. Lutz, Hayden R. Maginnis, Paul W. Marshall. Robert C. Moore, Jacob S. Noir, William C. Patterson, Mason P. Pearsall, Lewis P. Randall. Robert R. Riggle, Rudolf V. Samer, Louis E. Sharpe, William J. Skinner. Robert S. Swoyer, James C. Stephens, Robert G. Waite. Gl enn C. Wanich, LeRoy A. Wiley. Harold P. Wilson. Donald C. Young. A. George Ueberroth. CLARINETS: Luther R. Bartholemew, Frank L. Benedict, William M. Benesch. James H. Bleiler, Harry L. Boyer. Frank H. Bower, Earl A. Brawn, Ray E. Brawn. Irwin R. Burkey, M. Clayton Burgy, Ernest R. Buss, Frederick C. Butler, Warren X. Colhnan. Robert D. Everett, Hugh B. Fry, Elliott K. Goodman, Walter O. Graham, Michael Guidon, James G Hamilton, Charles R. Hardenbergh. Jacob S. Hartzell, Richard C. Hess, Charles R. Kiefer, James F. Labach, Ward W. Malley. John D. McCIay. Richard E. Metius. James P. Mulhern, Raymond R. Myers. Thomas E. Ricketts, Rodney D. Schaf- fer. Victor E. Smith. John H. Transue. David I. Troxel. John F. Urschitz. Kingsley G. Williams. Jeffrey S. Wetrich, Charles M. Wetzel. Earl L. Weaver, Charles A. Wohlback, Whitney J. Young. BARITONES: Robert H. Doney, Frederick R. Gihnore, Joseph P. Ireland, Robert H. Ireland. Alfred B. Laponsky, Quentin D. Mehrkam. Ru- dolf W. Samer. George G. Zipf. FRENCH HORNS: Edward M. Biggs. Welles R. Bliss, Charles E. Boyer, James J. Donahue, Kenneth D. Duggan, Mervin J. Fry, Robert A. Hofstetter, Merion H. Longenbach, Harvey D. Moll. BASSES: Alvin L. Breen. Robert L. Courts, Richard A. darling. Richard P. Hazard, Matthew K. Morrison. FLUTES: Maynard G Arsove, Frederick N. Bahnson, Robert H. Bartholemew. Robert K. Beckwith. Richard O. Marsden, Thomas W. Millet, William D. Schaeffer, Franklin H. Young. SAXOPHONES: Robert W. Appleton. John F. Clark. Edward S. Davis, Robert H. Forster. Walter H. Gaedcke, Arthur C. Hemphill, Howard H. Hoch. Richard F. Wood. GLOCKENSPIEL: Alfred L. Trumpler, Wal- ter P. Klinikowski. DRUMS: John J. Adrian, Richard T. Berg. Alexander H. Bolyn, Samuel Breskman. Hugh R. Davidson, James B. Felker, Joseph C. Gabuzda. Alfred L. Haft, Donald W. Kurtz. David E. Richards. Irving B. Remsen. Robert F. Turnauer, Carl L. Sturgis. TROMBONES: Edward B. Annett. Warren F. Boyer, Warren E. Diefer. R. Harry Gunnison. Sanfoid D. Goldstein, Ralph C. Hird, Francis W. Kopyta. Charles D. Kucher, Andrew P. Luse, Alfred W. Pedrick, Kenneth H. Rahn. Leon G Reimer, Richard G. Schenk, Emerson D. Speng- ler, William R. Sultzer. William P. Varner. THE EPITOME I he art editor. George Lennox, and the senior section chief. (illace Watkins, listen to the advice of their historian. K. K. Kost. The Epitome, the yearbook of Lehigh, appears for a short time on the campus only to he sent to the library there to keep penned up within itself a record of that school year. The purpose of the book is to preserve for the members of the class the events that will lead to reminiscences of the times in college. For this reason the book is as complete as the covers will permit. It contains as many pictures as are appro- priate and reading matter to complete the details so necessary to a full recollection. These stories may be the type that one can read purely for enjoyment, but in truth they were written to contain facts with little other interest. This year the Epitome presents a his- tory of Lehigh s 75 years to heighten this interest. Many different students write these stories, and as such the book is a composite of ideas gleaned from many different sources. In other words, unless a theme is clearly carried through, the book becomes terribly jumbled. The editor fights it out with a hnotty problem, the business manager wonders il it will he solved Looking into the Future is a phrase that is used without thinking of its real meaning. To he philosophical it is the aim of every student while here at Lehigh to learn the essentials that will en- able him to carry on for himself later in life. We learn every day and think nothing of it. All our plans are based upon the future and what the morrow will bring, some action may alter our whole life, but still we look only upon the silver lining of that cloud in the sky. When we came here four years ago, our ambition was to be grad- uated from this university a wiser man, having passed in mid-air the fellow who was not quite so lucky as we. As the years passed we studied diligently with that burning desire of finally walk- ing down the aisle with a diploma in our hand. Although the theme of the 1940 Epitome is Looking into the Future , still the real thought is that with t he correct attitude we can be spurred on to higher and higher achievements as our goal. Thus with this issue we are trying to show to the seniors the road ahead and make it as pleasant as possible so that they may be disillusioned a little while longer. Sail onl OFFICERS Robert C. Good, Jr. Editor-in-chief Otto V. Norvig Business Manager George C. Lennox Art Editor Wallace P. W ' atkins Senior Section Chief Richard P. Homiller Photographic Editor Warren G. Leonard Assistant Business Manager Kenneth K. Kost Eaculty Adviser JUNIOR MEMBERS: William L. Archer, Henry D. Chandler. Hazen P. Chase, Herbert P. Elliott. Jr., Charles F. Kalmbach, Allen M. Paget, Donald R. Schoen. Richard L. Vockel. SOPHOMORE COMPETITORS: Jesse F. Beers, William F. Boore, Sidney R. Bowen. Wil- liam A. Brooks, John Brower, A. Bruce Brown, Leonard R. Constantine, Samuel I. Cory, Jerome R. Dorkin, George E. Elliott, Robert D. Everett, James W. Hanson, Robert M. Iobst. William T. Mainwaring, Malcolm F. McConnell, Frank S. McKenna, William J. Meikle. Richard E. Met- ius, John B. O Hara, John R. Penn, Theodore G. Scott, William S. Shuttleworth, Robert N. Sim- onsen, Frank E. Smith, Robert B. Steele. Albert L. Thalhamer, Wallace R. Wirths, Howard M. Williams. TOP ROW: Elliott, Kalmback, Schoen. Vockel. Chandler; BOTTOM ROW: Hommiler, Lennos. Good, Norvig. Watkins. IPOTOM OTM( TKe Brown and White has maintained during the 46th year of its existence its policy of presenting All the Lehigh News -First. Originating on January 16, 1894 as an issue only four columns wide and 18 inches high, the paper has risen to its present size with an oc- casional six or eight page special issue. Although associated with the journalism department of the University, it is managed and edited entirely by the students. The editorial columns of the Brown and White have been organized with student interests uppermost in the minds of the editors. As a result they have been influential in bringing about improvements for the university and the student body. The Brown and White is strictly a newspaper of the students, being open to anyone who enrolls in the prescribed courses. These courses, as well as affording instruction in news- paper work, give the students ample opportunity to do actual work on the paper. All ol- fices on the paper are filled by practical and written competitive examinations. During the Brown and White ' s membership in the Intercollegiate Newspaper Associa- tion of the Atlantic States, it has been awarded more cups for supremacy in news, editorials, and advertising than any other member of the Association. It is the only member to have gained permanent possession of any of these cups. Of the Brown and White it might be said that after 46 years of experimentation and ac- quiring a journalistic tradition, it has finally emerged known for its progressive editorials, comprehensive news coverage, and ever-expanding pictorial display. TOP ROW Baker. Klein. Schoen. Kost; THIRD ROW: Seife. Caverly. Kendall. deBeauchamp; SECOND ROW: Kalmt Thalhamer, David. Chandler. Brown: BOTTOM ROW: McCluskey, Motherall. Galbraith, Conner, Watkins, Carcione. STAFF HOWARD M. CONNER Editor in Chief. First Semester FRED E. GALBRAITH Editor in Chief, Second Semester DONALD R. SCHOEN Editorial Manager, Second Semester JOHN C. ATTWOOD Member. Editorial Council EDWIN H. KLEIN Member, Editorial Council ROBERT D. MARSDEN Member, Editorial Council CARL R. FITTKAU Sports Editor, Second Semester CHARLES F. KALMBACH News Manager, Second Semester CHARLES B. SEIB Makeup Editor. Second Semester ANTHONY R. CARCIONE Tuesday News Editor, First Semes ter JOHN M. ROACH Tuesday News Editor, Second Semester ALBERT L. THALHAMER Friday News Editor. Second Semester The business board meets round the table to discuss the ways and means of the next issue. The Libertas staff takes over the Brown and White for one issue to show them the better way. Hot off the press comes the news as the ink dries and the stack grows higher. JOHN B. O ' HARA Sports Editor. First Semester PAUL H. BUTLER Photographic Editor. First Semester JOHN H. MATHEWSON Business Manager, First Semester WALLACE P. W ATKINS Business Manager, Second Semester ROBERT J. CAVERLY Advertising Manager. First Semester HENRY D. CHANDLER Advertising Manager, Second Semester O. MERRILL DAVID Financial Manager, First Semester HOWARD M. WILLIAMS Financial Manager, Second Semester WALLACE C. KENDALL Circulation Manager DALE H. GRAMLEY faculty Adviser KENNETH K. KOST Faculty Adviser CHARLES J. MORAVEC Faculty Adviser THE REVIEW Tjook ut this one, would you! ki( an issue! The Lehigh Review has seen an editor a year since it was born in May, 1927. The problem child or 1940 certainly would not recognize its Neanderthal ancestor of 27. Everything that was to be changed has been changed. In its relatively short life each editor has contributed something to make his magazine a little livelier, has tried a little harder to satisfy those who never will be satisfied. We left the dignified and philosophic ramblings of our progenitor to the more capable hands in the faculty. For the heavy diet we substituted a lighter fare of short stories, light features, cartoons, and tne inevitable exchange joke. We feel now that the student is more at home in the pages of tne new Re- view. It has become a medium of student expression in almost all fields, from poetry to photography and back again. Not the least of the Review ' s efforts to wear modern clothes is its unhesitating effort to keep barking at the heels of education in its herd-like movement. And if our barking is only a pitifully small part ol the drive that is required, we can gain some satisfaction from the fact that we have been both censored and censured. We have been accused of being complainers, never satisfied. We feel that s all right too, be- cause we ' d still be paying taxes to the King of England if somebody hadn t started to complain about The Lehigh Review is certainly unique in one respect. It is absolutely the only magazine of its kind in the country. There is no other campus publication that so resolutely tries to combine the literary forms of the short story and the essay with that singular instrument known as college humor. We have been trying that almost non-miscible mixture for a number of years, with varying degrees of success. Experi- ence has shown that when the humorous side is predominant the magazine climbs in popularity. Each editor of the Review has to decide for himself how much humor is necessary to carry the burden of the more serious side of the magazine s personality. TOP ROW: Marusi. Gilinsky. Miller. Turgeon. Klein; SECOND ROW: Goldberg. Smith. Rick. Gordon; BOTTOM ROW- Cox Ulmer Lewis, Denison. Vogelsburg; TOP RIGHT: Lewis. Editor; BOTTOM RIGHT: Denison. Bus. Mgr. But we have all felt that the Review would drop its banner if it denied its task of making the real become beautiful and the beautiful become real. The Review has a monopoly on almost every communal form of student self-expression, and feels the responsibility of that monopoly. So long as we are in that position, the pages of the Re- view will remain open to all serious attempts of the student. Although the Review boasts of its contribu- tions to the students, it can be prouder still of its service to the men who work for it. For the Review is run wholly by the students. There are no faculty advisers and we bear full responsibility for all ma- terial that appears in the Review plus full re- sponsibility to see that the Review remains a pay- ing proposition. It is the sort of training usually found outside of colleges and not inside. Although the staff is concerned mostly with problems that are rather petty, they get a taste of rough reality that helps a long way when we are so surrounded. EDITORIAL BOARD Howard J. Lewis D avid G. deBeauchamp Robert C. Muir Walter H. Vogelsberg Frank Norris Richard S. Gowdy BUSINESS BOARD Donald G. Denison Robert M. Ulmer Frank E. Smith Arthur H. Rich Editor Assistant Editor Assistant Editor Assistant Editor Associate Editor Art Editor Business Manager Advertising Manager Einancial Manager Circulation Manager James A. Gordon National Advertising Manager Leonard H. Miller Member, Business Board Gene A. Marusi Member, Business Board CONTRIBUTING STAFF Carl R. Fittkau Edwin H. Klein Stanley E. Gilinsky Royal V. Mackey Quentin R. G. Keith Norman L. Morse John R. Polinsky GMMlmM(g wmmn wm The Combined Musical Clubs consist of a Glee Club, a Dance Orchestra, a Double Quartet, and a Symphony Orchestra. The organization developed from the old Chapel Choir and the later organized Glee Club and Mandolin Socie ty. Each semester the three units combine their efforts to give a home concert and dance. In the spring home concert, the Lehigh organization usually gives a combined p.o- gram with one or more of the other schools in the vicinity—Moravian College for Women, Cedar Crest College, and Lafayette College. Last year all four schools participated. This year the major out-of-town concert by the combined group was given at Beaver College in Jenkintown. The Glee Club gave sev- eral other concerts and broadcasts over the major radio networks. The Dance Orchestra played every Saturday evening during the second semester. The Symphony Orchestra gave several concerts during the year and was represented on the programs of the combined clubs by an ensemble. STUDENT MEMBERS OFFICERS Richard C. Kelly President Carl H. Richardson Manager, Glee Club Francis G. Shenton Manager, Symphony Orchestra Jacob S. Hartzell Manager. Collegians Frederick R. Gilmore Assistant Manager, Glee Club Willard A. Litzenberger Assistant Manager, Glee Club T. Edgar Shields Faculty Director GLEE CLUB FIRST TENORS: R. Scott Barker, Robert W. Clark, Charles H. Dorsey, Harry F. Jones, Harold King, Elwood D. Latimer, James M. Phelan, George H. Ried, Frank E. Smith, William R. Williams. SECOND TENORS: Edward B. Annett, Richard T. Berg, Alvin L. Breen, Albert Clark, Edgar R. Con- R GHT: Professor Shields sets the stage. FOURTH ROW: Kinfi. Annett. Plante, Elder. Johnson. Lien, MacGregor. Trumpler, Bliss. Riggle; THIRD ROW: key. King. Beck- with, Woods, Ireland. Bolvn. Marshall. Woodling. Bell. Marsten. Karwacki. SECOND ROW: Williams Harding. Kucher. Sm.tr.. Kochuha. Smith. Slee. Glueck. Lutters. Freeman. Jerauld; FRONT ROW: Phelan, Samuels, Breen. Gilmore, R.chardson, Sh.elds, Kelley. Diamond. Bedell, Weill. Rehman. over, James J. Donahue, Philip G. Foust. Anthony M. Karwacki. Thomas J. Kochuba. Charles G. Kucher, George E. Lien, Leon H. Plante, Abram Samuels. FIRST BASSES: Robert K. Beckwith. Donald W. Bedell, John F. Croushore. William T. DeLong, James B. Felker. Frederick R. Gilmore, George F. Glueck, Charles H. Harding, Howard A. Hoch, Robert H. Ireland, Floyd E. Ivey, Richard C. Kelley, George H. Leach, Philip Lutters. Norman L. Maguire, Robert J. McGregor, Wayne F. O Neil], Robert B. Palmer, Charles F. Rehman, Carl LI. Richardson, Robert W. Saylor, Richard E. Slee, Wal- ter S. I itlow, Charles G. Thornburgh, Richard B. Wal- lace. J. Robert Whitesell. SECOND BASSES: Thomas R. Bell, Welles R. Bliss, Alexander H. Bolyn, Arlington W. Canizares, Oakley W. Cooke, Robert L. Coutts, Robert G. Eitner. William I. Freeman, Joseph P. Ireland, Covel T. Jerauld, Quentin R. G. Keith. Wallace C. Kendall, LeRoy O. King, WiL Iard A. Litzenberger, Paul W. Marshall, Richard O Marsten. Warren K. Morgan, Robert R. Riggle, Bernard A. Smith, Warren C. VanBlarcom, Walter H. Vogels- berg, Roy E. Woodling, James W. Woods, Frank A. Zimmerman. PIANIST: John L. Diamond. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA VIOLINS: Donald A. Bender, Fred F. Berman. Alton P. Dieffenbach. John Giacobbe, Michael Guidon. Thomas J. Kochuba, Alfred B. Laponsky, Charles P. Pulsford, Rudolf W. Samer, Alfred L. Trumpler. CELLOS: Kern C. Badger. Arthur F. Mann, Carl Neuendorffer. David Richards, Edward A. Sutherland. STRING BASS: Richard S. Button. OBOE: M. Clayton Burgy. FLUTES: Maynard G. Arsove. Robert H. Bartholo- mew, Richard O. Marsten, William D. Schaeffer. TROMBONE: Edward B. Annett. CORNETS: William T. Buhrig, Robert C. Kramer, Lewis P. Randall. Louis E. Sharpe. LeRoy A. Wiley, Donald C. Young. FRENCH HORN: Mervin J. Fry. TYMPANI: H. Roswell Davidson. CLARINETS: William R. Clark, Charles R. Kiefer, Raymond R. Myers. PIANO: Donald R. Schoen. COLLEGIANS John F. Belcher. Warren F. Boyer. Carlton E. Creitz, William S. Dawless, Jacob S. Hartzell. Richard L. Kirk. James P. Mulhern. L. Ellsworth Sentz, Edgar C. Slack, Richard P. S. Smith. LeRoy A. Wiley. DOUBLE QUARTET James M. Phelan, 1st Tenor; Harry F. Jones. 1st Tenor; Philip G. Foust. 2nd Tenor; Edward B. Annett, Jr.. 2nd Tenor; Robert B. Palmer, 1st Bass; Willard A. Litzen- berger, 1st Bass; James W. Woods, 2nd Bass; Quentin R. G. Keith, 2nd Bass. BOARD OF PUBLICATIONS An Epitome editor fell in love, and his business manager flunked out of school; so, in the early twenties, one edition of the Epitome had a deficit of nearly $5,000. Irked by this insolvency, C. Max McConn, then dean, started the move which led to the establishment of the Board of Publications. I he Board is composed of the dean, the head ol the courses in journalism, one other f aculty mem- ber, and three student members selected by Arca- dia. The Board, therefore, has power to act for the administration, faculty, and the student govern- ing body. 1 hough founded primarily to assure solvency to student publications, the board has added dut- ies and functions, today, it elects the major of- ficers of the Epitome and the Brown and White, passes upon the validity of all publication elec- tions, approves contracts, orders audits, and serves as a court of appeal to which all publication prob- lems are referred. FACULTY MEMBERS STUDENT MEMBERS W ' ray H. Congdon Dale H. Gramley Kenneth K. Kost Adelbert Ford C hairman Secretary Howard M. Conner Robert C. Good. Jr. Fred E. Galbraith, Jr. Howard J. Lewis STANDING: Lewis. Good. Galhraith. Conner; SEATED: Congdon, Ford. Gramley, Kost. STUDENT ACTIVITIES STUDENT CONCERT LECTURE SERIES The Student Concert Lecture Series was insti- tuted in the 1936-37 school year as the result of a petition of a committee from Tau Beta Pi which was headed by Bernard Weiss. Its purpose is to provide a source of cultural entertainment for the students of Lehigh. Every student is assessed for the funds on which the series is run. The artists are selected and bookings are ar- ranged during the preceding school year by a committee of six students and five faculty mem- bers. Selections are based on student interests as were evidenced by a poll taken in 1938 and by attendance figures. The 1939-40 series consisted of four excellent programs which included mono- logues by Cornelia Otis Skinner, a debate be- tween Hamilton Fish and Upton Close, Argen- tinita and her dance group, and a lecture by Wil- liam Lyons Phelps. The student committee members are chosen fro m the Junior class by the Senior members. STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES Richard C. Kelley, Jr. Howard M. Conner Carl R. Fittkau C. Budd Heisler Harry B. Home Quentin R. G. Keith ( hair FACULTY REPRESENTATIVES George B. Curtis Charles J. Moravec James L. Shearer T. Edgar Shields Clarence A. Shook Faculty Adviser STANDING: Shook Keith, Moravec; SEATED: Shields, Curtis. Kelley. Conner. Hor STUDENT ACTIVITIES SPORTSMAN ' S CLUB The Sportsman s Club of Lehigh, a recent ad- dition to the University, was started in October 1958. A group or students interested in outdoor sports combined with the old Outing Club for trie purpose of furthering those sports which are gen- erally neglected by a college. The club met with success among students and faculty. 1 he Sportsman s Club is one of the most active g roups in the University with its numerous activ- ities: trap and target shooting, hunting, fishing, hiking, camping, archery, skating, sleighing, ski- ing, and conservation work. Seven deer were caught at one of its camping and hunting trips in the Poconos. A barn dance sponsored by the or- ganization proved so successful that it promises to become a semi-annual affair. President Vice President Treasurer Recording Secretary C orresponding Secretary OFFICERS Robert P. Stoudt William P. Vamer Ralph D. Stoneback Frank A. Szabo H. Lawrence Abbott MEMBERS FACULTY: Major Frederick W. Adams, Frederick R. Ashbaugli, Major Reginald R. Bacon, Fay C. Bart- Iett, Claude G. Beardslee, Major Adrian R. Brian, Dr. Raymond C. Bull. Robert D. Butler, Neil Carotbers, Wray H. Congdon. Morris E. Kanaly, Robert P. More, Francis J. Trembley, Lawrence Wbitcomb. HONORARY: William A. Stauth, James Vamer. STUDENT: Lawrence Abbott. John P. Allen, Lynn Bartlett. riiomas Braceford. Frederick Brenan, Andrew H. Brennan. William Brown. John Brubaker. Richard Button, Oakey Cooke. Roy Covvin, Cbarles Crouse. John Culliney, Harry S. Dennis. Lawrence Diehl. Wil- lard Dunhamn. Richard Eberts. Franklin C. Fehnel, Richard Fries. William W. Goshorn, Fletcher Hanks. Charles H. Harding, Charles E. Henderson. Wallace Kendall. Chester L. Kingsbury, Paul Korlick, Jr., Leon- ard D. Larson. James Loback. Harry Lynch, Lewis Marks, Edward McKelvy. Charles McWayne. Arthur Miller. Edgar K. Muhlhausen, John J. Nicol, David Nichols. Charles M. Norlin. Henry Reuer, Donald Sands. David Smith, Earl Smith, Ralph Stoneback. Robert P. Stoudt, Frank Szabo. Townsend Treese, Gas- ton Van der Veer, William Vamer, William Walker. Richard Walling, Wallace R. Wirths, Joseph A. Wyler, Frank Young. TOP ROW: Varncr; THIRD ROW. Trembley. Cowin, Craosc. Stonebach, Wirths. Musselman; SECOND ROW McWayne, Adams. Ash- baugh, Congdon. Bartlett. Culliney; BOTTOM ROW: Karlili. Dennis. Szabo. Stoudt. Nicol, Lynch. Duncan. STUDENT ACTIVITIES MUSTARD AND CHEESE Mustard and Cheese, the University dramatic club, was founded in 1885 by Richard Harding Davis. Some students met in the parlor of Charlie Rennig s saloon and ate cheese sandwiches spread with mustard. The dramatic club was so formed and their bill of fare was used for its name. Recently Albert A. Rights created the Drama- tic Workshop to train the aspiring undergradu- ates in staging, acting, directing, and writing. In the Fall the club presented the famous stage and screen hit, Dead End. Particularly out- standing in the cast were the two veterans, Nath- aniel Brisker as Baby Face Martin and R. Harry Gunnison as Spit. In the Spring the Dramatic Workshop pre- sented Our Town with Robert Gusdorff and Richard J. Berg in the lead roles. The final play of the year was Robert Sherwood s Idiots De- light with Nathaniel Brisker and Rita Schafer in the leading parts. OFFICERS Frank C. Woodside, h. President ; Wallace P. Wat- kins— ' Vice-President ; Chester C. Baldwin— Business Manager; Norman Hammer — Secretary ; Joseph L. Ser- rill,— Technical Director; J. Dukes Wooters, Jr.— Pro gram Manager; George S. Sprague— Stage Manager; Hazen P. Chase— Ticket Manager; William A. Mathe- son— Property Manager; John R. Whitemeyer— Cos- tume Manager; Walter H. Vogelsberg— Electrical Ef- fects; Robert S. Bathe— Script Manager; Roy S. Zach- ary Publicity Manager; Norman Hammer— Student Director. MEMBERS Chester C. Baldwin, William H. Barnard. Robert S. Bathe, Hazen P. Chase. Olin M. David. Donald G. Denison, Morgan C. Elmer, Richard S. Gowdy. Samuel M. Grafton, R. Harry Gunnison, Norman Hammer, Edwin H. Hine, William A. Matheson, John H. Math- ewson. Wilkes McClave, Edwin H. Miller, Joseph L. Serrill. George S. Sprague. Mills G. Sturtevant, Walter H. Vogelsberg, Wallace P. Watkins, John R. White- meyer, Frank C. Woodside. Jr., J. Dukes Wooters. Jr., Roy S. Zachary. TOP ROW. Zacliary. Wooters. Matliewson. Gunnison. Watkins: SECOND ROW. Witmeyer, David. Cliasc. Sprague. Brisker; BOTTOM ROW: Gowdy. Hammer, Woodside. Serrill. Vogelsburg. Rights. STUDENT ACTIVITIES RIFLE CLUB Paced by Dave Smith, a leading candidate for the mythical All-American Rifle Team, the Le- high rifle team concluded its most successful sea- son in these 1 1 years. The team ' s sole defeat came at the hands of the U. S. Naval Academy. 1050 champions, in a hotly contested match. One high- light of the season was trouncing ' the University of Maryland who were in third place last year. Excellent support was given to the team by Ed Uhl, who was selected on the 1050 All-American Second Team, lop honors in the off hand scores go to Ted Scott, who has the knack of coming through in the pinches. At all times, positions were closely contested by the other expert ri He- men. Current scores indicate that the team will take its share of honors in the remaining R. O. T. C. matches and in the N. R. A. Intercollegiate match. 1040 SEASONS RESULTS Philadelphia IN lai ines 1344 Lehigh Drexel 1 52r Lehigh Maryland 1569 Lehigh Navy III 1 Lehigh Lafayette 1298 Lehigh Rutgers 1308 Lehigh S. M. C. Basic School 1338 Lehigh 1388 1599 1384 1397 1384 1384 1378 OFFICERS Loring Lane — President; John A. Dallen — Captain; Edward G. Uhl— A lanager; Charles H. Carter—Junior Manager; Major A. R. Brian — Coach; Sergeant G. F. Gasda— Assistant Cocic i. VARSITY John A. Dallen, Charles YV. Darby. Loring Lane, Edward G Uhl, Charles H. Carter, George V. Holby, William A. Siegele. Theodore G. Scott. David R. Smith. Richard P. S. Smith. TOP ROW: Scott. Olson. Holby. Varner. Darty, Smith. Foss: SECOND ROW: Sergeant Gasda. Needles. Lane. Dallen. Uhl, Major Brian- BOTTOM ROW: Carter, Belcher, Siegele, Q. Gasda. Kimterly. STUDENT ACTIVITIES DE MOLAY CLUB The DeMolay Club was founded in the fall of 1958 to bring together Lehigh students who were or had been DeMolays. Started primarily as a service organization, it attempts to unite the spirit of college with the working principles of the order. Since its inception, the club lias been successful in both endeavors. The restrictive nature of the organization has not hindered its purpose or spirit. Since the first meeting of this group, there lias been a steady and solidlv founded increase in membership and activities. Aside from the pro- gram of events within the club, there has been organized a team to install the officers of DeMo- lay chapters in this vicinity. This team has, through its numerous trips to chapters in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, endeavored to spread the name of the school as well as that of the club. 1 hat the future of the club will be as successful as its past is the sincere hope of its founding mem- bers. OFFICERS War ren W. Ache Edward L. Hess Robert D. Everett Alfred E. Horka William B. Wrigley MEMBERS President vice-President Secretary Treasurer C ifip riin Warren W. Ache, Walter L. Anders. Joseph F. Arbogast. William T. Buhrig, Warren E. Deifer. Somers H. Endkott. Joseph B. Evaul, Robert D. Everett, Robert E. Gengenbach. Edward L. Hess. Al- fred E. Horka, Raymond C. Huntoon. William B. McArthur. William J. Meikle. William C. Pearson. Irving B. Remsen, Eldon M. Roemmele, Donald G. Sanders, LeRoy A. Wiley. John R. Witmeyer, Wil- liam B. Wrigley. Donald C. Young. TOP ROW. Rcnisen, Endicolt; SECOND ROW: Wiley. Everett. Meikle, Horka: BOTTOM ROW: Hess, Witmeyer. Roemmele. Wrigley, l oung. [ • « J r w M . 1 r .«• ,. JB9 W Mr ■ ■ k ■ 1 - ¥ a K Hr ■■ t 5yi ' wF h h L •♦ ■ 1 J 1 i l- Bil k -- JHr ■.i p arf L r . 1 . m , jaa| p fi Wm • 7 1 r -21 tTHPT k t Itw Ht; w 1 ?sK  H H B m b i K ' iijk Vm - ■ Jfl hhI 2 99$ ImI I HI ft S3 t yp AT 1 r J ■ csr - J? V ' Bj i f A k ; 1 1 Vfll V- HY 1 «jV i ■w H f LI • jB k. P MH 1 ' k $t ■ i STUDENT ACTIVITIES INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB I lie Lehigh International Relations Club was formed with the purpose of furthering interest in and promoting the study of international prob- lems and politics among the students of the uni- versity. Besides regular monthly meetings, the ac- tivities of the club during the year included part- icipation in the International Relations Club con- vention at New Brunswick ' , New Jersey, and in the Model League Assembly at Geneva, New York, and sponsoring, along with the Foreign Pol- icy Association, a Round Table of International Affairs at Lehigh. I he regular monthly meetings this year fol- lowed a different program from those of past years. At several of the meetings members of the club, instead of the customary outside speakers, presented papers or talks, which were followed by discussion. The year was concluded with the in- duction of several new members, followed by a banquet. OFFICERS Chester C. Baldwin Carl H. Richardson John F. Hamblin Terry Scliitf Wilson L. Godshall President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Faculty Adviser MEMBERS Chester C. Baldwin. Welles R. Bliss, Charles W. Darhy, John F. Hamblin, Charles E. Henderson, Harold King, Russell Kowalyshyn, Robert Miller, Leon H. Plante, Arthur H. Rich, Frank H. Rich. Carl H. Richardson. John B. Rush, Terry Schiff. Richard A. Ware. TOP ROW: Plante. Kowalyshyn. Miller. Ware. Bliss; BOTTOM ROW: Rich, Hamblin, Baldwin. Richardson, Shift. STUDENT ACTIVITIES CIVIL ENGINEERING SOCIETY The Lehigh University Chapter of the Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers is an outgrowth of the Civil Engineering Society, which was founded as a local group in 1875. The society was reorgan- ized in 1901 and again in 1922, when it became a student branch of the national society. At present there are 1 1 3 chapters, all of which maintain close relations with the senior body. The object of the society is to bring the students into closer contact with professional engineers and to create interest in civil engineering. This is ac- complished by presenting guest speakers at the monthly meetings at which the topic is one of the specialized fields of civil engineering: hydraulics, structures, sanitary engineering, railroads, and highways. For social meetings, the society has an annual Christmas banquet and spring picnic. Last year delegates were sent from the Lehigh Chapter to the national convention of the Ameri- can Society of Civil Engineers. OFFICERS James G. McGinnis Norman C. Scarpulla William R. Clark Sidney B. Bowne Stephen T. Lowry Harry G. Pavrovv President Vice President Treasurer Secretary (First Semester) Secretary (Second Semester) Faculty Adviser MEMBERS John M. Adams, Andrew B. Baker. James H. Boucfier, Sidney B. Bowne, William A. Brooks, John H. Brubaker. Walter R. Catching. William R. Clark, Alfred F. Cox, Carl Creidenherg, Thomas P. Cunningham. Robert J. Fisher, David S. Geissinger, Arnold L. Godlove, John C. Gregg, George V. Griffith, Frank E. Harper, Ralph G Johnson, John O. Liebig, Stephen T. Lowry, Howard G Luley, Robert C. Lynch. James G McGinnis. Charles F. Mitchell, Ralph D. Palazzo. Vivian G. Paul, William C. Pearson, Norman C. Scarpulla. William R. Schmoll. STUDENT ACTIVITIES CHEMICAL SOCIETY I he Chemical Society, in its early clays, was a secret society which elected its members from all departments by a secret ballot. In 1873 the society sent letters to many eminent scientists offering them honorary memberships. Over one hundred acceptances were received many of which were accompanied by photographs. These scientists were from all parts of the United States, and from France, Germany, England, Ireland. Rus- sia, and Switzerland. In 1 875 the society broadened out and changed its name to the Chemical and Natural History Society. It sponsored lectures on scientific sub- jects and gave financial assistance to three trips to Brazil and Texas. The purpose of these expedi- tions was to obtain zoological specimens for the society. Many were obtained and it became neces- sary to store them in the auditorium on the third floor of Packer Hall. At the next election, one fraternity managed to get control of every office in the society and dissen- sion followed. Here the society dropped into ob- scurity. OFFICERS Robert P. Carter Andrew S. Morrow AILert E. Lee John D. Mettler President Vice-President Secretary 7 reasurer In the same year that the elections were carried out with such disastrous results to the society, the present Chemistry Building was erected. Interest again rose in the society with renewed vigor and out of this interest came the foundation of the present Chemical Society. Today the society is com- posed of about one-sixth of the student body and at the regular monthly meetings prominent men from various fields in the scientific world are presented to the members of the society. These speakers include industrial- ists, professors from other universities, and occasionally graduate students in Chemistry from Lehigh. In lieu of its December meeting, the Chemical Society holds its annual Christmas banquet at the Masonic Temple. There is entertainment by the students and a talk by some man prominent in a non-scientific field. This event is the society s high-light of the year. Fne Chemical Society also sponsors the Student Chemistry Foundation Fund, the interest from which is used to maintain a graduate fellowship here at Lehigh in the Chemistry Department. Contributions to this fund consist almost entirely of unused portions of laboratory deposits which are turned over to the fund by the students. STUDENT ACTIVITIES ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY The American Institute of Electrical Engineers first student branch was founded at Lehigh Uni- versity, October 12, 1902, by President Emeritus Charles F. Scott. Thus the Lehigh branch be- came the first in a movement that has now grown to 120 branches in colleges of all parts of the country. An open meeting is held each month, with lectures being given by men prominent in the fields of electrical engineering. Many student pa- pers are also presented. These meeting ' s are de- signed to bring students of electrical engineering- closer together, and to give first-hand knowledge of the current problems of the profession. Along with the regular meetings, an annual banquet followed by a party is held which has tradition- ally been a Christmas party, but the date was changed this year to St. Valentine ' s. The branch this year suffered a great loss in the death of Dr. Stanley S. Seyfert, head of the de partment of electrical engineering. Dr. Seyfert had been an active member of the branch since its founding. OFFICERS Arthur S. MicHey Robert R. Godard John V. McGuire Walter M. Schweder William H. Formhals President Vice-President Treasurer Secretory Faculty Adviser MEMBERS FACULTY: J. Lynford Beaver, Cledo Brunetti, Howard D. Gruber, Nelson S. Hibshman. Henry C. I. Knutson, Archie R. Miller. Edward S. Tinley. STUDENT:Henry L. Abbott. Maynard G. Arsove, William H. Barnard. Lu- ther R. Bartholomew, Warren H. Beaumont, Charles S. Bennett, Frank H. Bower. Stanley Caplan, Gilbert P. Cardwell, Harvey H. Chamberlain, William H. Clark. Wenceslao J. Contreras. Theodore R. Cortright. William Danshaw, Alton P. Dieffenbach, Donald Eadie, William A. Eisele, Joseph B. Evaul, Louis H. A. Feher, Albert C. Foss, Roy H. Frederickson, Joseph C. Gabuzda. Theodore C. Gams, Louis G. Gitzendanner. Robert R. Godard. William D. Green, Robert R. Halligan, Richard M. Haslet, Edward L. Hess. Edwin W. Hine. Harold C. Hix- son. Warren E. Hoffman. Henry J. Horn, Frederick H. Housel. Edward C. James. Joseph Kaszycki, Rudolph Kerchmar, Stephen Kowalyshyn. Max Krissiep. Wil- liam A. Kuhar, Donald W. Kurtz. Robert B. Kurtz, Quintin A. Lerch, Nathan G. Lesh. Frank P. Librizzi. Thomas C. MacAHister. Norman L. Maguire, John V. McGuire, Arthur S. Mickley, Harold E. Mooseman. Warren K. Morgan, Richard D. Munnikhuysen, Hans Nelken, Leonard B. Rahn. James L. Reiley, Harold H. L. Rinker. Walter M. Schweder, Joseph L. Serrill. Robert J. Seug- ling, Willard M. Shelly. Josef Sofsky, Frank G. Steinbrucker, Carl C. Stotz, Hulme W. Thomas. Watler H. Vogelsberg, Stuart H. Vogt, Richard R. Waer. Raymond S. Willard, Ehvvn Wolfe, David S. Worman. STUDENT ACTIVITIES INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY 1 he Industrial Engineering Society was found- ed twelve years ago because a need was felt for an organization with the purpose of improving stu- dent relations in the Industrial Engineering cur- riculum. The result was the creation of the Indus- trial Engineering Society. The society strives to attain two goals: to at- tempt to make available to the students practical industrial material, the knowledge of plant lay- out, maintenance, production, and general engi- neering ability; to promote closer relationships among the student classes. I he society fulfills its mission by maintaining a varied program throughout the school year. Meetings are held regularly and speakers prom- inent in the industrial world give informal lec- tures to the members of the society. These men give talks dealing with all phases of industry and do not dwell upon the aspect of engineering alone. 1 he society s program also includes student parties and picnics in the Spring. OFFICERS William M. Harbaugh Alfred V. Bodine Donald W. MacFeeters Chester C. Baldwin Fred V. Larkin John R. Connelly President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Honorary Chairman Faculty Adviser MEMBERS Robert A. Ackerman, Robert E. Ashley, Charles Balough, Frank G. Binger, Robert D. Board. Aaron H. Brennesholtz, Louis J. G. Buehler, Irwin R. Burkey, Robert W. Clark. Charles V. Clarke. Fenton R. Cloud. Robert H. Coleman. Leonard R. Constantine, William C. Cosford. Joseph C. Coyne, John A. Dallen, Philip W. Davis, Warren E. Deifer, John H. Deming. Donald G. Denison, Robert C. Dimmich, Charles B. Dutton, Wellington B. Eler. Robert C. Engle, Robert I. Felch. Richard Z. Freemann. William E. Fry, Russell C. Gebert. Panos B. Georgo- pulo. Claude D. Gilchrist, Louis T. Girdler, Gregory Gould, Charles A. Hamilton, James W. Hanson. William F. Hauserman, John B. Haus, Charles E. Henderson, William K. Hodson. John M. Hood, David L. Hume. Harry W. Jones, John M. Kasson, Fred V. Larkin, George C. Lennox. Basil W. Logechnik, John F. Loose. Robert J. Loose. Preston F. Marshall. William S. McConnor, Roger J. McNamara. Matthew K. Morris. Leonard D. Morrison, Thomas A. Mostyn. Jacob S. Nolf, Benjamin Ojserkis, Herbert J. Packer. John W. Prinkey. Philip B. Robeson, Eldon M. Roemmele, John R. Romig, Richard C. Roth, Clyde C. Ruffle, I toward L. Schaffer, Howard ( ). Schroeder. Charles H. Schumacher, Edwin H. Scott, Jacques Segal, Harrison N. Siebold, Leon Silbermann. Vernon II Simmons, Edward H. Stoehr. Charles M. Thompson, Bernard E. Trip]). W.ildso R. Turner, Hugh G. Van der Veer, Lindsley D. Van der Veer, James M. Walton, Richard C. Wells, LeRoy A. Wiley, Kenneth C. Wotring, Allen H. Zane. STUDENT ACTIVITIES MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY The American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers rounded its student branch at Lehigh in 191 1. This chapter is one or 1 17 chapters which are to be round in every important technical school in the United States and Canada. 1 lie student branch permits the members to join after graduation the senior society, the American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers. Here they are admitted as junior members. In Keeping with the object of the society to maintain a connection between the practicing en- gineer and the student, monthly meetings are held when prominent speakers are presented to the students and discussions are held after the speeches are finished. In this way the students be- come acquainted with prominent men and are kept abreast of the practical advancements of the profession. In addition to the monthly meetings, otlier events are sponsored by the society. These are the Christmas party presented by the society in De- cember and the Senior farewell picnic in May. OFFICERS John F. McQuillin Robert Caemmerer Ellis R. Snovel Robert A. Ackerman Thomas E. Jackson President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Facultv Adviser MEMBERS Robert A. Ackerman, Robert C. Albert. John C. Alberts. Boris Baiko. Charles B. Bayles, Frank G. Binger, Walter P. Blamire, James H. Bleiler. John Bontya, Aaron H. Brennescholtz. Richard E. Brown. Thomas M. Buck. Paul H. Butler. Gordon M. Clark, Edward J. Coffey, Bertram J. Cross, Allen R. Deschere, Frank R. Dirkes, Theodore S. Du Bose. John H. Dudley. Stevenson M. Enterline. Vin- cent A. Frantz, Joseph M. Garden, Robert E. Gengenbach, William E. Gheen. William E. Good. Samuel M. Grafton, Richardson Gray, Spencer R. Griffith, Clarence W. Hackney. Edward D. Heins, Robert H. Ireland. Alver H. Ives. Rob- ert A. Johler. Charles F. Kalmbach. Gilbert M. Keller. William Ft. Lehr. Valen- tine Lichtenstein, George E. Lien. Harold Z. Llewellyn, Donald R. Luster. Philip Lutters, Robert E. Lyon, Donald W. MacFeeters. John E. Malley. John F. Mc- Quillin. George F. Minde, Matthew K. Morris, Charles G. Myers, Edward P. Phillips. Robert K. Poetter. John A. Read. Clarence G. Reber. George B. Reine- king. Howard E. Schaffer, Robert L. Scotl. Murl W. Sears, Francis G. Shenton. Harrison N. Siebold, Robert S. Struble, Alfred L. Trumpler. John D. Van Blarrom. Richard L. Vockel. Arthur E. Weatherbee. Charles E. West. John M. Williams, Robert F. Wolfe. Guy C. Worrell. Robert J. Wright. Allen H. Zane. STUDENT ACTIVITIES CLAUDE G. BEARDSLEE HONORARIES TAU BETA PI Tau Beta Pi was founded at Lehigh in 1885 by Professor Edward Williams, then head of the Mining Department at Lehigh. Tau Beta Pi has expanded so that there are now 70 active chapters with a total membership of 52,000 men. The so- ciety is now recognized as one of the vital factors in the life of the engineering schools of America. 1 o be eligible lor membership, a junior must be in the upper eighth of his class, a senior in the upper quarter. Eligible men are elected to mem- bership on the basis of the various qualities which are attributed to an ideal engineer. President Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer Cataloguer OFFICERS Edward G. Uhl Edward M. Sharp Robert D. Marsden Bernard Altshuler Robert C. Good. Jr. William R. Csellak MEMBERS STUDENT MEMBERS: Bernard Altshuler. Wil- liam A. Blum, Jr., Robert P. Carter, William R. Clark, Richard F. Clock. Alfred T. Cox. William R. Csellak, Philip G. DeHuff, Jr.. Wellington B. Eler, Richard C. Gangwer. Robert C. Good, Jr.. William M. Harbaugh, Jr., Ernest F. Johnson, Jr.. Charles F. Kalmbach, Gil- bert M. Keller, Richard C. Kelley. Jr., Albert E. Lee, Jr.. Theodore L. Leininger. Donald R. Luster. Donald W. MacFeeters. Robert D. Marsden, John V. McGuire, Arthur S. Mickley, Norman L. Morse, William B. Pohlman, Herbert E. Rasmussen, George M. Ritchie. Jr., James F. Ryan, Edward M. Sharp, George S. Sprague, Hulme W. Thomas, Harold F. J. Truchsess, Edward G Uhl, John L. Worzel. Donald C. Young, FACULTY MEMBERS: Frank S. Beale. Lynford Beaver. Sylvanus A. Becker, Cledo Brunnetti, Robert D. Billinger. A. Copeland Callen, Llovd T. Chenev. James L. Clifford, Allen R. Deschere. Alpha A. Dief- enderler. Theodore S. Dubose. Howard E( kfeldt, How aid J. Godfrey, Earl Heins, Nelson S. Hibshman. Thomas T. Holme. Cyril D. Jensen, Bruce G Johnston, Arthur W. Klein, Fred V. Larkin, Alexander W. Luce, John C. Mertz, Benjamin L. Miller, E. Robins Morgan, Harvey A. Neville, Ernst B. Schulz, Charles W. Sim- mons, Bradley Stoughton, Milton C. Stuart, Hale Suth- erland, Edwin R. Theis, Charles L. Thomburg, Harry M. Ullman, Clement C. Williams. TOP ROW. Truchsess. Thomas. Carter, Beaver, McGuire. Kelley, Keller; THIRD ROW. Clark. Young. Gangwer. Sprague. Johnson. Dehuff. Cox: SF.COND ROW: Kalmbach. MacFeeters. Harbaugh. Rasmussen. Pohlman, Lee, Morse; BOTTOM ROW: Csellack, Good. Altshuler. 1 1,1. Worzel, Blum. ANBPQnON fl I A N E X Y II N A TA 8 H N NEWTONIAN The Newtonian Society was founded at Lehigh University in 1927 as a freshman honorary mathe- matical society. Its purposes are to promote inter- est in mathematics among the members of the Freshman class, to promote friendships among students and faculty members, and to provide op- portunity for intellectual activity outside the classroom. Talks at the monthly meetings are delivered by faculty or club members, and this year included discussions of mathematics as pertaining to deter- minants, biological growth, astronomy, and the history of mathematics. President Vice-President — Treasurer Secretary Faculty Adviser OFFICERS Edward F. Bodine Robert E. Cullen Raymond B. Anderson Voris V. Latshaw MEMBERS Raymond B. Anderson, Donald N. Bachman, Jesse O. Betterton, Edward F. Bodine, James H. Boucher, George A. Brenker. A. Bruce Brown, Eewis J Caulk. John F. Clark, Nelson R. Clark. William H. Corddry, Robert E. Cullen, William A. Eisele, George E. El- liott, Robert H. Forster, Harry J. Friedman, Ernest Gamble, Harold A. Grubb, Harold W. Haines, James G. Hamilton, Robert A. Hammond, Caleb W. Holy- oke, Frank P. Librizzi. Philip Lutters, Robert M. Maiden, Paul W. Marshall, Frank S. McKenna, Richard E. Metius. John H. Milbank Albert M. Miller. Leonard H. Miller. Richard D. Munnikhuysen, Jacob S. Nolf, Lowell K. Oliphant, Preston W. Parvis, John T. Ransom, John A. Reed, Howard W. Riemer, Gor- don B. Robertson, Clarence M. Sanderson, John S. Saylor. Charles H. Schumacher, Henry A. Seebald. Louis E. Sharpe. Robert N. Simonsen. William J. Skinner, Frank E. Smith. John J. Somers, Robert S. Struble, Albert L. Thalhamer, Kurt H. Weber, Robert R. I oung. BACK ROW: Houslen. Kreisser. Stump, Porter. Clark. Titlow, Nielsen, Latshaw. Bodine: THIRD ROW: Kaplan. Richards. Pew Prinkey Eichlii SECOND ROW: Landesman. Waller. Young. Tompkinson. Powers. Bi.-khead. Ossenberger; BOTTOM ROW: Arsove. Parrish. Bower. Sch mat her, Bennett, Boucher. Meikle. A N 8 P Q N A I A N E X Y II N A TA 8 H N PI TAU SIGMA Pi Tau Sigma was founded at the University of Illinois as an honorary fraternity for mechanical engineers. Its principles are ' fostering the high ideals of the engineering profession, stimulating interest in departmental activities, and promoting the welfare of its members. On December 5, 1927, the Lehigh Theta Chapter was installed. It was realized in 1935 that the Lehigh Industrial Engineering course was included in mechanical engineering as under- stood by the society. Therefore industrial as well as mechanical engineers are now eligible for membership at Lehigh. President Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer Faculfv Adviser OFFICERS Chester C. Baldwin Preston F. Marshall Gilbert M. Keller Richard F. Clock Donald R. Luster John R. Connelly MEMBERS FACULTY: Joel F. Bailey. Thomas E. Butterfield. A. Copeland Callen, John R. Connelly, Thomas T. Holme, Thomas E. Jackson, Burgess Ft. Jennings. Fred V. Larkin, Alexander W. Luce, Robert L. Scott, Milton C. Stuart, Clement C. Williams. Cecil F. Warner. STUDENTS: Robert C. Albert, Chester C. Bald- win, Charles B. Bayles, Aaron H. Brennesholtz, Louis J. G. Buehler, Robert Caemmerer, Richard F. Clock, Wellington B. Eler. Robert I. Felch. James C. Feld- mann, Claude D. Gilchrist, Spencer R. Griffith, Wil- liam M. Harbaugh, Charles F. Kalmbach, Gilbert M. Keller, George E. Lien. Donald R. Luster, Robert E. Lyon. Donald W. MacFeeters, Preston F. Marshall, Charles G Myers, Benjamin Ojserkis, Clarence G. Reber, George M. Ritchie, Francis G. Shenton, Alfred L. Trumpler. Richard L. Vockel. Charles E. West, Arthur E. Wetherbee, Robert J. Wright. Allen H. Zane. TOP ROW- Holmes, Luce. Bailey. Brcnnesholtz. Stuart: FOURTH ROW: Conneley, Ritchie, Gilckrist, Lien; THIRD ROW. Vockel. Felch MacFeeters. Trumpler. Wright. Ojserkis. Shenton: SECOND ROW: Kalmbach. Lyon. Myers. Alberts. West. Caemmerer. Larkin: BOTTOM ROW: Wetherbee. Griffiths. Keller, Marshall. Baldwin. Luster, Bayles, Jones. A N P n N A I A N E X Y II N A TA 8 H N PI MU EPSILON Pi Mu Epsilon, honorary mathematics society, was inaugurated at Lehigh in 1929 when the Le- high LJniversity Mathematics Club was awarded a charter as the Pennsylvania Gamma Chapter. The membership is open to men who have ex- celled in at least two years of mathematics and have shown an inclination to further study in the field of mathematics. Students from all branches of the University are eligible. The society aims to supplant the formal instruc- tion in stimulating an interest in the various phases of mathematics. Toward this end, meet- ings are held each month with a lecture and dis- cussion. OFFICERS Bernard Altshuler Robert F. Koenig Thomas E. Ricketts John L. Vanclerslice President Secretary Treasurer Faculty Adviser MEMBERS FACULTY MEMBERS: Robert A. Buerschaper, Edward H. Cutler, Tomlinson Fort, Burgess H. Jenn- ings, Kenneth YV. Lamson. Henry L. Langhaar, John C. Mertz, George E. Raynor, Joseph B. Reynolds, Clar- ence A. Shook, Lloyd L. Smail, William R. Transue. John L. Vanderslice, Nelson P. Yeardley. STUDENT MEMBERS: Bernard Altshuler, Rob- ert N. Brown, Richard A. Buser, William F. Carson, Jr.. Alfred T. Cox, Samuel S. Cross, Wellington B. Eler, Philip G. Foust. Louis G. Gitzendanner. Robert R. Godard. Robert C. Good, Jr., Earl D. Heins, Frede- rick H. Housel, Aelfric James, Jr., Charles F. Kalm- bach, Gilbert M. Keller, Richard C. Kelley. Jr.. Robert F. Koenig, Donald R. Luster, Robert D. Marsden, William B. Pohlman. Charles F. Rehrnan, Thomas E. Ricketts, George M. Ritchie. Jr., James F. Ryan, Edward M. Sharp. George S. Sprague. Carl C. Stotz, Edward G. Uhl, John L. Worzel. TOP ROW: Raynor. Pohlman, Lamson: FOURTH ROW: Yeardley, Kalmbach. Shook. Fort, Foust. Lee; TH RD ROW: Mettler, Housel. Hess. Heins. Stotz: SECOND ROW: Marsden, Cross. Worzel, Kelley, Keller. Gitzendanner; BOTTOM ROW: Good. Sprague. Koenig. Altshuler, Ricketts, Uhj, Rehmer. ANBPnnON A I A N E X Y l N A f A 9 H N ETA KAPPA NU Eta Kappa Nu. the honorary electrical engi- neering society, was founded October 28, 1004, at the University of Illinois. Chi Chapter was in- stalled at Lehigh in April 1026 when, largely through the efforts of Professor Nelson S. Hibsn- man, a chapter was organized and a charter ob- tained from the fraternity headquarters. The aim oi the society is to provide closer cooperation with mutual benefits to students and members of the electrical engineering profession. Chi Chapter sponsors inspection trips every Saturday in the Spring as one of its chief activi- ties. OFFICERS MEMBERS John V. Mi Guire Arthur S. Mickley Ro bert R. Godard Harold C. Hixson Robert J. Seugling Dr. J. Lvnford Beaver President Alton P. Dieffenbach. Albert C. Foss, Jr.. Louis G. Treasurer Gitzendanner, Robert R. Godard. Harold C. Hixson. Recording Secretary Frederick H. Housel. Stephen Kowalyshyn, Jr.. John Corresponding Secretary V. McGuire, Arthur S. Mickley. Robert J. Seugling. Bridge Editor Facidtv Adviser Carl C. Stotz, Walter H. Vogelsberg. Michael Tem- osnok. TOP ROW: Gitaendanner. Beaver. Kowalyshyn; SECOND ROW. Foss. Housel. Dieffenbach. VogelsLurg, Temoshok; BOTTOM ROW: Miclcley. Seugling, McGuire, Goaarcl, Hixson. ANGPnnnN a o z a n e x o y i i n a r a b h n ALPHA KAPPA PSI Alpha Kappa Psi. honorary professional rra- ternity of commerce, was rounded at Lehigh in 192-4 when largely through the efforts of Regis- trar George B. Curtis and Dea n Neil Carothers the Lehigh Business Administration Club was granted a charter as the Alpha Sigma Chapter. At the bi-monthly meetings prominent speakers are presented and informal discussions on current business topics are held. The members are chosen from men of the upper two classes in the College of Business Administration who have been high in scholarship and extra-curricular activities. OFFICERS C. Budd Heisler Albert J. Collins Joseph B. Kelley Charles R. Griffiths Rov B. Cowin Presic pnf Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Faculty Adviser MEMBERS Henry D. Chandler. Robert F. Coleman, Albert J. Collins. Paul R. Duyckinck, Richard S. dowdy. Chailes R. Griffiths. Walter G. Guy. C. Budd Heisler, James R. Hendry, Joseph B. Kelley. Emery V. Loomis. Jr., John J. McCIuskey, John J. McFadden. Robert R. Merwin, Richard F. Pearce, Stuart B. Powers, Willard J. Thomas. Robert M. Ulmer, Wallace P. Watkins, John W. Whiting. Jr. TOP ROW; Loomis. Coleman. Thomas. Bishop. Mayer: THIRD ROW, Whiting. Chandler. Ulmer. Merwin. MacFadden: SECOND ROW: Carothers. Watkins. Gowdy. Hendry. Pearce. Duyckinck; BOTTOM ROW: Powers. Collins. Griffiths. Heisler. Kelley. Smith. Guy. A N 8 P fl n (1 N A I A N E X Y I I N A f A 8 H N OMICRON DELTA KAPPA Omicron Delta Kappa is a national senior hon- orary fraternity for men. Students eligible for membership are judged on the basis of points ac- cumulated during the four years in college through leadership in athletics, scholarship, and social and cultural activities. I he threefold purpose of Omicron Delta Kap- pa is to recognize men who have attained high standards of leadership, to create an organization which can discuss thoroughly all local and inter- collegiate problems, and to bring together faculty and student body members on a basis of mutual interest. OFFICERS Wallace P, Watkins Morgan C. Elmer Donald R. Luster Claude G. Beardslee President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary and Adviser THE ACTIVE CIRCLE STUDENT MEMBERS: Chester C. Baldwin, Robert P. Carter, Alferd T. Cox, Morgan C. Elmer, David R. Cinder, Robert C. Good. Jr.. Ricbard S. Gowdy, John C. Gregg, Charles R. Griffiths, C. Budd Heisler, Charles F. Kahnbach. Ricbard C. Kelley, Jr., Donald R. Luster, Robert B. Palmer. Walter S. Rus- sell, Donald R. Schoen, William E. Scott, Edward G. Uhl, Wallace P. Watkins. ALUMNI MEMBERS: John I. Kirkpatrick. Wal- ter R. Okeson. FACULTY and ADMINISTRATIVE MEM- BERS: Claude G. Beardslee, Gilbert E. Doan, Fred V. Larkin. Philip M. Palmer. THE INACTIVE CIRCLE RESIDENT FORMER UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS: Donald C. Barnum, Franc H. Burnett. Jr.. John K. Conneen, Warren P. Fairbanks. John W. Maxwell. Howell A. Scobey. Jr.. Paul E. Short. Charles K. Zug. FACULTY and ADMINISTRATIVE MEM- BERS: Neil Carothers, Wray H. Congdon, Howard Eckfeldt. Augustus H. Fretz, Howard R. Reiter. Charles A. Seidle. Bradley Stoughton, Clement C. Williams. TOP ROW Scott, Kalmbach, KcIIey, Beardslee, Uhl: THIRD ROW: Okeson. Schoen. Carter. Kirkpatrick. Heisler: SECOXD ROW: Cox. Congdon. Baldwin, Gregg. Ginder, Reiter: BOTTOM ROW: Good, Luster, Watkins. Elmer. Russell. A N B P n (1 N A I A N E X Y I I N A TA 8 H N PHI ETA SIGMA Plii Eta Sigma, national freshman scholastic honorary fraternity, was begun in 1 925 at the Uni- versity of Illinois. Since the Lehigh University Chapter was chartered in 1930, it has followed the twofold program of recognizing freshmen who have made high scholastic achievements and of stimulating scholastic activity on the campus. Membership is open to students who make a 5.5 average or better either semester of their freshman year. Among the activities of this year was a meeting open to Freshmen, at which Nelson J. Leonard, 57. Rhodes scholar, told of his experiences at Oxford. OFFICERS A. Bruce Brown Jesse F. Beers Grendon K. Sebold Welles R. Bliss Pips input vice-President ana Treasurer Secretary Historian MEMBERS STUDENT MEMBERS: Maynard G. Arsove. Lynn C. Bartlett. Jesse F. Beers, Welles R. Bliss, Edward F. Bodine, Frank H. Bower, William C. Brower, A. Bruce Brown, Stanley Caplan. John F. Clark, Jerome R. Dorkin, Edward A. Fehnel. Edmond C. Fetter, Harry J. Friedman, Ernest Gamble, Jr., Wheeler Gilmore, Ludwig E. Godyeki. Walter R. Hoerner, Isaac N. Hunsberger, Frederick A. Krone. Robert M. Maiden, Tom C. Mekeel, Richard E. Metius, Robert Metzner. Frederic S. Nolte, John T. Ransom, John M. Roach, Clarence M. Sanderson, Charles H. Schumacher, Gren- don K. Sebold, Louis E. Sharpe, Robert N. Simonsen, Albert L. lhalhamer, Walter S. Titlow, Kurt H. Weber. L. Robert White, Allen H. Zane, Jr. FACULTY MEMBERS: Harold V. Anderson, Wray H. Congdon, E. Kenneth Smiley, Clement C. Williams. TOP ROW: Kaplan. Brower. Godicki. Gilmore. Titlow: THIRD ROW: Gamtle, While, Melius. Weber. Barllell. Nitli: SECOND ROW: Congdon. Thalhamer, Sharpe. Clarke. Fehnel. Smiley; BOTTOM ROW: Zane. Setold. Brown. Beers. Arsove. Bower. a n e p o n o n a o : a n e x o y i i n a r a e h n CYANIDE Cyanide, the junior honorary activities society, has a three-fold purpose at Lehigh: it recognizes those members of the Junior class who have been outstanding in scholarship and extra-curricular activities, it acts as a discussion group on the policies of the University, and it carries out such activities as are deemed advisable by both the faculty and the society. 1 his year Cyanide took charge of the enforce- ment of freshman regulations. It sponsored the smoker which preceded the Delaware game, and it supplied guides for the visitors on Sub-Fresh- man Day. OFFICERS William B. Simpson J. Dukes Wooters, Jr. Robert Craig President Vice-President Secre tary- Trea s u rer Finery W. Loomis, Jr.. Robert E. Malinowski, Augus- tus A. Riemondy. William E. Scott. William B. Simp- son. Stephen D. Smoke, Robert D. Ulmer, Richard L. Vockel, Walter H. Vogelsberg. J. Dukes Wooters, Jr.. Roy S. Zachary. MEMBERS John C. Attwoocl, Henry D. Chandler, Robert Craig, Herbert B. Elliott. Harvey C. Griffith. Jr., R. Harry Gunnison. Charles F. Kalmbach, Albert E. Lee, Jr., FACULTY ADVISERS Claude G. Beardslee, Thomas F. Jones, Captain Benjamin S. Mesick, Walter R. Okeson. TOP ROW: Vockel, Malinowski, Chandler, Riemondy, Gunnison. Craig; SECOND ROW. Schoen, Ulmer, Lee. Zachary, Smoke; BOTTOM ROW: Elliott, Wooters. Simpson, Scott, Kalmbach. A N 8 P Q n (1 N A Z A N E X Y I I N A f A 8 H N PI DELTA EPSILON Pi Delta Epsilon s membership is made up of men who are participating in all phases ol publi- cation activity at Lehigh. This national honorary journalism fraternity seeks cooperation between publications and strives to better them individual ly. Among its accomplishments in past years is included the reorganization of the various cam- pus publications. I he chapter at Lehigh has been instrumental in sponsoring new chapters in other colleges. As a result of its efforts the first women s chapter, at Moravian College for Women, was admitted into the fraternity. OFFICERS Howard M. Conner Wallace P. Watkins George B. Motneral William W. Brown Fred E. Galbraith, Jr. President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary Historian MEMBERS FACULTY MEMBERS: Dale H. Gramley, Robert F. Herrick, Kenneth K. Kost, John W. Maxwell, Charles J. Moravec. STUDENT MEMBERS: William W. Brown, Howard M. Conner, Henry D. Chandler, O. Merrill David, David G. deBeauchamp, Donald G. Denison, Carl R. Fittkau. Fred E. Galbraith, Jr., Richard S. Govvdy. Charles F. Kalmbach. George C. Lennox. Howard J. Lewis. John H. Mathewson, J. Joseph Mc- Cluskey, George B. Motheral, Robert C. Muir, Otto V. Norvig, Donald R. Schoen, Robert M. Ulmer, Wallace P. Watkins. TOP ROW: Denison. Kost; SECOND ROW: Kalmbach. David. Scho en. Chandler. deBeauchamp; BOTTOM ROW: McClushey. Watkins. Galbrailh. Conner. Motheral, Brown ANBPnnnN a o : a n e x o y i i n a r a e h n SCABBARD AND BLADE Scabbard and Blade, the national honorary military society, was founded in 1904 at the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. There are now 85 active companies in the country with a total member- ship of 25,000 men. The purpose of the society is to spread interest in the R.O.T.C., to develop American traditions, to aid in the training of our future officers, and to spread intelligent material concerning the military requirements of the United States. This year the society organized a special unit of picked men in the Lehigh R. O. 1 . C. Regi- ment to be known as the Reeves Rines. OFFICERS Otto V. Norvig Terry Sen iff Richard S. Gowdy Edward F. Dannemiller Captain Benjamin S. Mesick Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant First Sergeant Facultv Adviser MEMBERS STUDENT MEMBERS: William L. Archer, Norman M. Barber. Alfred V. Bodine, Jr.. James H. Brkker, Robert Caemmerer, Robert F. Coleman, Albeit J. Collins, Alfred T. Cox, Joseph C. Coyne, Edward F. Dannemiller, Ambrose G. Deiany, Maynard L. Diamond. George F. Glueck. Richard S. Gowdy, Charles F. Guilford. Adolf F. Haffenreffer, Joseph I. Hammond, William M. Harbaugh, Jr., James R. Har- ris. C. Budd Heisler. James R. Hendry, Charles F. Kalmbach, Quentin R. G. Keith, Joseph B. Kelley, Richard C. Kelley, Jr.. Fred Kornet. Jr., Warren G. Leonard, Clifford F. Lincoln, Gordon G. Loveland, Donald W. MacFeeters, Preston F. Marshall. Harold J. Masem. John J. McCIuskey. John J. McFadden. Otto V. Norvig, Douglas C. Paul, Terry Schiff, Wil- liam A. Siegele. Willard J. Thomas, John A. Tifft, Jr. ASSOCIATE MEMBERS: Major Frederick W. Adams. Major Reginald R. Bacon, Major Adrian R. Brian, Colonel Joseph S. Leonard, Captain Benjamin S. Mesick, Major Francis M. Rich. TOP ROW: Leonard. Marshall. Kalmbach, R. Kelley. Mesick. Coyne. Cox; THIRD ROW: Bricker. Caemmerer, Coleman. Keith. McFadden; SECOND ROW: Kornet. Siegele, McCIuskey. J. Kelley. Guilford. MacFeeters; BOTTOM ROW: Cluck. Bodine. Hammond, Norvig, Srhiff. Harris, Loveland. A N P (1 (1 N A I A N E X Y II N A TA 8 H N R. W. HALL PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY The R. W. Hall Pre-Medical Society has rap- idly expanded since its founding 20 years ago by Dr. Hall, former head of the department of biology. Up to 1 927 the name of the group was the Lehigh Pre-Medical Society. The purpose of the society is to stimulate interest in the med- ical field and to weld the pre-medical students at Lehigh into an organized group. ' Anyone at Le- high who is majoring in biology is eligible for membership. The society holds monthly meetings, two ban- quets a year, frequent inspection trips, and week- ly clinics at neighboring hospitals. President Vice President Secretary 7 reasurer OFFICERS S. Demarest Beers David R. Ginder Frederick R. Gilmore Willard A. Litzenberger Frederick R. Gilmore. Acting Chairman First Semester Frank V. Hertzog, Acting Chairman Second Semester MEMBERS Walter L. Anders. S. Demarest Beers, John P. Brandt. Bernard A. Briody. Myron I. Buchman, War- ren X. CoIImann, Edward N. Comando. Charles M. Conrad, Albert J. Cross. Jerome R. Dorkin. Frank B. Elliott, Mervin J. Fry, George J. Gahuzda. George R. L. Gaughran, Frederick R. Gilmore, David R. Ginder, Ignacio A. Gonzalez, Frank J. Gress, Edward J. Her- shock. Frank V. Hertzog, Paul Karlik, Aldrich F. Ken- dall, C. Raymond Kiefer, John F. Kizer, Willard A. Litzenberger. Stephen B. Longley, Arthur F. Mann, Victor W. Mai ton. Samuel R. Mink. Robert A. Nicro- sini, Robert J. Quinn, Everett D. Rassiga, Thomas J. Ritter, Forrest V. Schumacher, James A. Shafer, John L. F. Sipp, Richard E. Slee, Elmer G Smith, William M. Spears, Charles Steiner, Raymond F. Stratton. Mills G Sturtevant. George A. H. Tice, Robert D. Watt. Peter J. Weigel, Howard D. Wintemberg, Frederick W. Wright. John J. Yankevitch, Sheldon S. Zalkind. TOP ROW: Thomas, Trembley; THIRD ROW. Longley, Martin. Gabuzda, Ritlcr Sic Yankovitch, Korlik; BOTTOM ROW. Brandt, Beers. Gilmore. Ginder. Litzenberger. Gress; SECOND ROW: Gonzales. Hertzog. KieFe ANBPOnnN A I A N E X Y II N A TA 8 H N TONE Tone, honorary musical society, was founded in trie Spring of 1957 from the Student Concert Group which was started a year earlier. The pur- poses of the society are to foster the interpreta- tion, appreciation, and composition of music on the campus. It also provides a chance for students interested in music to listen to outside speakers OFFICERS Donald R. Schoen Frederick R. Gilmore David E. Richards Alfred L. Trumpler Roy S. Zachary T. Edgar Shields MEMBERS William L. Archer. Robert K. Beckwith, Robert G. Beers, Richard T. Berg, Bernard Berhowitz, Marion C. Burgy, William C. Christine, Albert Clark. Jr., Robert President Vice-President Secretary Concert Director Treasurer Faculty Adviser and to take part in discussions. I here are meet- ings twice a month at which time the members hold discussions and listen to records or the student artists. It also sponsors monthly concerts and takes an annual trip to the Metropolitan Opera or a similar performance. L. Coutts, John E. Decher, Jr., John L. Diamond, Jerome Dorkin, Marvin J. Fry, Frederick R. Gilmore, Frank V. Hertzog, Ernest F. Johnson, Jr., Charles F. Kalmbach, Quentin R. G. Keith, Richard C. Kelley, Jr.. Thomas J. Kochuba. Willard A. Litzenberger, El- bert M. Mahla, A. Forrest Mann. James A. Marvin, Jr., Raymond Myers, Lewis P. Randall. Jr., David E. Richards, John M. Roach, Donald R. Schoen, Francis G. Shenton, Frank E. Smith. Jr., George C. Stone, William B. Todd, Alfred L. Trumpler. Walter H. Vogelsberg, Kingsley G. Williams, James W. Woods, Donald C. Young, Roy S. Zachary. TOP ROW. Beckwith, Berkowitz. Hertzog; SECOND ROW: Decker, Marshal. Smith, Stone. Litzenberger; BOTTOM ROW: Keith. Schoen. Todd, Johnson, Gilmore. ANBPnnnN a o : a n e x o y i i n a r a 8 h n DELTA OMICRON THETA Delta Omicron Tlieta, honorary debating so- ciety, was founded by members of tbe class of 1928 who recognized the need for an honorary society which would honor the men who partic- ipated in debating. I This year there was extensive and diversified debating activity. This included a series of radio debates, luncheon club debates, a convention with the debaters of Penn State, several inter- collegiate debates, and a regular intra-mural de- bating schedule. A large majority of the members were engaged in this last group and prizes were awarded to the outstanding competitors. I President Vice President Secretary -treasurer Faculty Adviser OFFICERS Norman L. Morse Edward M. Sharp Frederick N. Bahnson J. Calvin Callaghan MEMBERS Warren W. Ache. Bernard Altshuler, Harry M. Atkins, Frederick N. Bahnson, Frank L. Benedict, William F. Boore. Waller B. Bowers. George A. Brenker. Richard R. Bright. Edwin H. Dafter, Charles J. Dick, Howard V. Donohoe, Robert G. Eitner, Nor- man J. Faber, Albert W. Foster. William I. Freeman, Fred E. Galbraith, Jr., Edward E. Herre, Seymour L. Hollander, William O. Houston. Thomas R. Hunt, William E. Reiser, C. Raymond Kiefer. Robert F. Koenig, Stephen Kowalyshyn, Robert W. Leavens, Warren G. Leonard. Stephen T. Lowry, Franklin B. Mayer. John V. McGuire, Christian R. E. Merkle, Charles F. Meyer, Norman L. Morse, Richard M. Pal- mer. John R. Penn. Albert E. Ponter. Philip J. Prang, Arnold O. Putnam. James L. Sawyer, Donald R. Schoen. Edward M. Sharp, Richard M Shepherd, William S. Shuttleworth, Bernard A. Smith, George S. Sprague, Robert G. Stern, Henry G. Werner, Rob- ert P. Whipple, Charles A. Wolbach. J. Dukes Woof- ers, Elwyn Wolfe. TOP ROW: Meyer .Woolen. Whipple Foster . Donahoe Shephard: FOURTH ROW: Schoen, Kiefer, Sawyer. Boore. Ache. Callaghan. Musselman; I H1RD ROW: Bowers, Kowalyshyn. Wolbach, Brenker, Pollack, Eitner. Benedict; SECOND ROW Altshuler Myers Freeman erner. Lowry. Sprague. Ponter: BOTTOM ROW: Leonard. Bahnson. Morse, Sharp. Koenig. Smith. A N 8 P fl n fl N A I A N E X Y I I N A T A 8 H N ALPHA PHI OMEGA r Alpha Phi Omega, national honorary service fraternity, is composed of men who have had pre- vious active service in scouting. 1 heir services during the past year on the campus and in the community have been many. They gave weekly swimming instruction at the Jewish Community Center; they sponsored the decoration of a cam- pus Christmas tree: and at the mid-year registra- tion they conducted finger printing for the F. B. I. civilian identification files. An extensive program is under way for lur- thering the chapter s aid to tin- Bethlehem scout council, and for continuing its services in the lu- ture. OFFICERS Charles G. Myers Gilbert P. Cardxvell Ri( hard A. Ware Richard M. Shepherd John O. Liebig George F. Messinger Thomas J. Lewis Claude G. Beardslee Fay C. Bartlett Paul R. Calvert Jay J. Wilcox Herman Hawke President Vice President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Historian Alumni Secretary Faculty Advisers Scouting Advisers MEMBERS Joseph A. Arnold. John P. Brandt, Ri hard R. Brigl. v Gilbert C Cardwell, William R. Clark. Robert I. Felch, Ernest Gamble, Frederick R. Gilmore. Milton W. Har- per. Floyd E. Key. Harry W. Jones. Richard C. Kelley. Donald W. Kurtz. Thomas J. Lewis. John O. Liebig. Philip Lutters, George F. Messinger, Charles G. Myers, George F. Salathe. Theodore G. Scott. Richard M. Shepherd. John W. Temple, Richard A. Ware. Wal- ter J. Wetherell. George G. Zipr. TOP ROW. Clark. Arnold, Bdrllclt. Brandt, Felch, Kelley. Beardsle e: SECOND ROW. Kurtz, T. Scott, Ivey. Harper, tones, Lutters: BOTTOM ROW Lewis, Shepherd, Cardwell, Myers. Ware. Liebig. Messinger. A N 8 P n N A Z A N E X Y I I N A T A 8 H N ROBERT W. BLAKE SOCIETY The Robert W. Blake Society, which was named in honor of a former head of the College of Arts and Sciences, is Lehigh ' s honorary phil- ' sophical society. Founded in 1925 by seven Le- igh students, the club now has a limited mem- bership of 20 men who have both a high scholastic ability and an interest in philosophical and cul- ! tural subjects. OFFICERS Carl H. Richardson Norman L. Morse Frank V. Hertzog Percy Hughes MEMBERS President Vice President Secretary -treasurer Faculty Adviser Bernard Altshuler, Bernard Berkowitz, Edward N. Regular meetings are held on the first Friday of every month with lectures by speakers from both on and off the campus. After the lectures, student discussions are held by the members. This year, professors of philosophy from Colum- bia and Princeton were presented. A picnic was held and a pilgrimage made to the Philadelphia Divinity School. Comando, Hugh R. Davidson, Frank V. Hertzog. Richard C. Kelley, C. Raymond Kiefer, Harold King, Russell Kowalyshyn, Arthur S. Mickley, Edwin H. Miller. Jules L. Moreau, Norman L. Morse, Robert B. Palmer, David E. Richards, Carl H. Richardson, Don- ald R. Schoen, Charles Steiner, Randall B. Tucker, Richard A. Ware. MINING ANO GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OFFICERS Richard L. Johnson William C. Lewis Clayton L. Roloson George L. Griffitli President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer The Mining and Geological Society was organized to give its members an insight into the mining industry and the fields open to geologists and mining engineers. For that purpose, the society resumed this year the practice of holding monthly meetings. At the first two meetings, Dean A. Copeland Callen and Dr. Bradford Willard, the new heads of the two departments, gave introductory talks on their respective fields. The year ' s high spot was a talk on me- teorites by Dr. H. H. Nininger, director of the American Meteorite Laboratory, before a joint meeting of the E. W. Brown Astro- nomical Society, the Physics Society, and the Mining and Geological Society. MEMBERS Charles E. Ahl, Alexander H. Bolyn, Harry L. Boyer, Thomas P. Bradford. Richard H. Brenneman, Edwin A. Brown, Gerald V. Carroll, Joseph G. Compton, David E. Cooper, Roy B. Cowin, Robert H. Dickson, John J. Fischel, Edwin A. Fisher, George L. Griffith, Rudd M. Guttshall, James G. Hamilton. Carl Hartdegen, Donald C. Howe. Richard B. Jeffery, Richard L. Johnson, An- thony M. Karwacki, James H. Kidder, Russell F. Klinger, William C. Lewis, Clarence E. Louden, Richard O. Marsten, Wayne F. O ' Neill, Richard B. Palmer, Richard G. Petersen, John E. Poeter. Robert C. Ramsdell, Edwin W. Roedder, Clayton L. Roloson, Gam A. Rynearson, Roderick O. Symmes, Florent J. Tokarczyk, William W. ToIIey, Frederick L. Villa, John H. Weitz, Harold H. Werft, Roy E. Woodling. ANBPOnnN fl I A N E X Y I I N A r A 6 H N ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The 1940 Epitome staff wishes to thank those who were behind the scenes when this volume was planned, laid out, and made into its present form. Mr. Charles C. Johnson of the Horan Engraving Co. Mr. Charles H. Esser of the Kutztown Publishing Co. Mr. David McCaa of the McCaa Photographic Studio. Mr. Kenneth K. Kost as the faculty adviser. Mr. Jacob R. Esser of the Kutztown Publishing Co. Mr. Robert C. Pettingell, Jr. as the artist for the book. Mr. Jack Sherman for the page layout assistance. Mr. E. Hawley Twiss of the National Publishing Co. Mr. John Peter for his artistic help. Mr. Fred E. Galbraith, Lehigh 11, for his historical pictures. Mr. Philip M. Palmer, for historical pictures of Lehigh. Mr. William A. Cornelius, for pictures from the Alumni files. LEHIGH UNIVERSITY Lehigh University is non-sectarian and has adhered to high standards in the education of youth from the beginning. Its alumni have been markedly successful in nearly all walks of life, and particularly in the industrial and professional world. Lehigh is fortunate in the picturesque beauty of its situation on the breast of old South Mountain and in its central location with respect to centers of population (5U miles from Philadelphia, 90 miles from New York) and of industry (steel, cement, coal, silk and manufactures). Its graduates, therefore, are advantageously circumstanced in finding positions. Living expenses at Lehigh are reasonable, and with two other colleges in the city, Bethlehem affords a good educational en- vironment. COLLLGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCE The College of Arts and Science, while maintaining courses in languages and the humanities which constitute the traditional cultural arts college, at the same time, offers optional group- ings which lead to professional and graduate schools and to vocations, such as Actuarial Practice Government Service Bacteriological Investigations and Controls Journalism Economic Geology Optics Education Personnel Psychology Graduates have achieved distinction in the country ' s leading schools of Law, Dentistry and Medicine. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION The developments of the past century have made the business organization and the economic structures of the country of paramount importance. The College of Business Administration at Lehigh has attained wide recognition for its teachings and writings in this field. The under- graduate courses offered in this college lead to careers in such fields as Mercantile Establishments Banking Investment Banking Accounting Public Utilities Business Statistics Investment Houses Marketing COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING The laboratories and other facilities for engineering education provide for thoroughly scien- tific professional training in the various branches of engineering and technology. Separate cur- ricula are offered in Chemistry Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Physics and Engineering Physics Industrial Engineering Mechanical Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Mining Engineering GRADUATE SCHOOL Graduate study leading to the master ' s degree is offered in most departments of the University, and for the Ph.D. in chemistry, geology, history, mathematics, mechanical engineering, metal- lurgical engineering, physics, and structural engineering. For information write E. KENNETH SMILEY, Director of Admissions Sales and Service THE ELECTRIC FURNACE-MAN (Automatic Coal Stoker) CAMPUS INSTALLATIONS : Delta Tau Delta Fraternity Delta Upsilon Fraternity Taylor Hall Richards House Lehigh Field House Prof. Robt. M. Smith Drinker House Exclusive Dealers in Old Company ' s Lehigh Anthracite Coal Furnished to L. U since 1908 by KING COAL CO. WILLIAM F. RUHE CO. INSURANCE Dial 2-3341 534 HAMILTON STREET ALLENTOWN, PA. Golden Guernsey Milk for J dulls MOWRER ' S DAIRY Golden Grade A Milk for Babies Phone 4-236 Asa Packer mural by George Gray in the Pioneer Tap Room Asa Packer, founder of Lehigh University and transportation pio neer, is depicted in the above mural visualizing the growth of Lehigh University which today stands as a monument to the ideals of a one time lowly breakerboy and canal boatman. Hotel Bethlehem BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA BETHLEHEM STEEL COMPANY Plants STEEL AND MANUFACTURING PLANTS Bethlehem Plant Bethlehem, Pa. Cambria Plant Johnstown, Pa. Coatesville Plant Coatesville, Pa. Danville Division Danville, Pa. Harlan Division Wilmington, Del. Lackawanna Plant Lackawanna, N. Y. Lebanon Plant Lebanon, Pa. Los Angeles Plant Vernon, Los Angeles, Cal. Maryland Plant Sparrows Point, Md. Seattle Plant Seattle, Wash. South San Francisco Plant So. San Francisco, Cal. Steelton Plant Steelton, Pa. Williamsport Division Williamsport, Pa. FABRICATING WORKS Alameda Works Alameda, Cal. Bethlehem Works Bethlehem, Pa. Buffalo Works Buffalo, N. Y. Carnegie Works Carnegie, Pa. Chicago and Kenwood Works Chicago, III. Leetsdale Works Leetsdale, Pa. Los Angeles Works Los Angeles, Cal. Pottstown Works Pottstown, Pa. Rankin Works Braddock, Pa. Steelton Works Steelton, Pa. Shipbuilding Division SHIPBUILDING YARDS Fore River Yard Quincy, Mass. Sparrows Point Yard Sparrows Point, Md. Staten Island Yard New York, N. Y. Union Yard San Francisco, Cal. SHIP REPAIR YARDS Alameda Yard Alameda, Cal. Atlantic Yard Boston, Mass. Baltimore Yard Baltimore, Md. Brooklyn 27th St. Yard Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn 56th St. Yard Brooklyn, N. Y. Hoboken Yard Hoboken, N. J. Hunter ' s Point Yard San Francisco, Cal. San Pedro Yard Terminal Island, San Pedro, Cal. Simpson Yard Boston, Mass. Staten Island Yard Staten Island, N. Y. Union Yard San Francisco, Cal. BRICKER ' S BREAD BETHLEHEM BAKING CO. 535 SECOND AVENUE BETHLEHEM, PA. FIVE POINTS MEAT MARKET AND FIVE POINTS FRUIT MARKET Phones 1869—2710 5 Points 353 Broadway BETHLEHEM, PA. HOWARD R. LAUFER Hardware, Glass Stoves, Furnaces Roofing, etc. Paints, Oils tarnishes 411 WYANDOTTE STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. KEYS CUT Bell Phone 990 SANITARY FRUIT MARKET Early and Late Vegetables and Fruits ORANGES - LEMONS - NUTS Phone 2978 Terms Cash tic Deliver 558 BROADWAY BETHLEHEM, PA. LEHIGH VALLEY Golden Glow Coal A premium coal at the price ol ordinary coal CALYPSO COAL ICE CO. INCORPORATED STANLEY K. WEAVER, Secretary-Treasurer Phone 1670 Mennegraving for Your Announcements Professional and Social Stationery MENNE PRINTERY Letterheads and Envelopes a Specialty Phone 3431 207 V. FOURTH STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. REBER-KORN CO. General E ectric Oil Furnaces Heating Engineers and Contractors Link Bell — Coal Stokers 817-19 CUMBERLAND STREET ALLENTOWN, PA. WHAT HAPPENED TO THE EQUITABLE PREMIUM DOLLAR IN 1939 To each $1 of premium income There was added 28 cents as earnings from the Society ' s investments making a total in- come for the year of $1 .28. This $1.28 was used as follows: BENEFIT PAYMENTS to widows and children, to educate sons and daughters, to provide carefree old age, etc. took 53 cents — 45 cents were set aside as reserve funds to meet fu- ture benefit payments — Thus in 1939, 98 cents went for present and future benefit pay- ments to policyholders and beneficiaries — Taxes required 2 cents — Operating expenses of the Society required 1 cents and 4 cents was added to contingency reserves and surplus. As this is a mutual society, the remaining 14 cents was paid out as dividends to policyhold- ers. Making a total of $1 . 1 2 which went for the direct benefit of policyholders and bene- ficiaries. FREDERIC MERCUR LIFE INSURANCE 102 DODSON BUILDING THE HORSTMANN UNIFORM COMPANY PHILADELPHIA ARMY OFFICERS Uniforms and Equipment of Superior Quality Philadelphia SIXTH and CHERRY STS. Annapolis, Md. 74 MARYLAND AVENUE M. EWING FOX CO. INC. 136th ST. RIDER AVE. NEW YORK CITY Manufacturers of WATER PAINTS Calcimine Casein Paint Cement Paint BRUCE MORRISON, ' 29, Sales Mgr. Thanks, ' 40 You helped us have four of the best years of our history. Be sure to drop in whenever you ' re back on the campus. The Supply Bureau MORRIS BLACK Builders ' Supplies and Machinery Paints 215 Vineyard Street Bethlehem, Pa. Phone 2746 Third and Union Streets Allentown, Pa. Phone 7201 Here Since 1867 WM. H. TAYLOR COMPANY, INC. Distributors of MILL SUPPLIES INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT ELECTRICAL MACHINERY REFRACTORIES G. F. R. BAHNSON, ' 10 250-256 Hamilton St. President ALLENTOWN, PA. EARL H. GIER JEWELER 129 WEST FOURTH STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. Next to Post Office SUPEE A Home Favorite Beer SOUTH BETHLEHEM BREWING COMPANY BETHLEHEM, PA. GENERAL ELECTRIC Oil Furnace and Air Conditioner now Sold Exclusively in This Territory BROWN, BORHEK COMPANY BETHLEHEM PURITY FOOD MARKET 25-27 EAST FOURTH STREET Best of M eats Special Prices to Fraternities We Offer Our Congratulations . . . May the successful termination of your college career be the beginning of an outstanding business success. We wish to thank you for your patronage in the past and hope your successors at Lehigh will carry on the Electric Laundry tra- dition which you established. ELECTRIC LAUNDRY CO., Inc. WATER WORKS ROAD Phone 36 or 79 HAJOCA CORPORATION PLUMBING . HEATING . ROOFING . MILL SUPPLIES PIPE . FITTINGS . VALVES . STEAM SPECIALTIES VISIT OUR SHOWROOMS 1736 E. 4th STREET BETHLEHEM, PA. Drink eca Delicious and Refreshing Compliments of M. S. WALZER Compliments of Bethlehem Coal Ice Co. Dealers in FAMOUS READING ANTHRACITE AND PURE SCORED ICE R. C. and C. B. SWEIGARD 1438 Newton Ave. Phone 3825-J Thanks 1940 Good Luck JOE KINNEY Say It With Flowers D. M. GOLDBERG FLORIST Flowers for Every Occasion We Telegraph Flowers 17 WEST BROAD STREET PHONE 2054-J A. HARCHAR The Ever Dependable Tailor 318 WEST 4TH STREET Phone 218S-J BETHLEHEM, PA. Dry Cleaning, Pressing, Altering and Restyling of Your Clothes R.O. T.C. Work a Specialty HARTER ' S FOODS Institutions, Clubs, Hotels, etc., Supplied Phones 2707-2708 ®nm Hasa CUSTOM CLOTHES 518 MAIN STREET Catering to Lehigh Men Since 1918 Old Sun Inn 564 Main Street BETHLEHEM, PA. Rooms at Reasonable Rates PRIVATE BANQUET ROOMS Colonial Atmosphere COFFEE SHOP Fraternities and Societies Special Attention Menus submitted on request FOULSHAM THE FLORIST ■3 3 230 CHEROKEE ST. PHONE 576 FRANK PIFF SON Bottlers of Carbonated Beverages and Distributors of Your Favorite Beer 318-320 EAST FIFTH ST. (Rear) PHONE 83 J n dealing -th 1S p0S ,ble thatgivesaieelmgofcomp , to create such an unp ? Ur field, as xpenence has been . J, W e have been is Ae case with th 1S Co-P for m ore printing pub ons anc than 65 years. 1 { the craftsmanship, w -:;:rr:X ' .=::;:-- erable addition., - ' M d -«. effi «■ V , or ious task as this 243 MAIN STREET . K ZTOWKPE SYLVANIA EPITOME photographs by . . McCAA STUDIO 113 West Fourth Street Bethlehem, Pa. ' k (9ur jgth RJear as the epitome ' s Official photographers ' ADVERTISERS TOM BASS, Tailor BETHLEHEM BAKING CO. BETHLEHEM COAL ICE CO. BETHLEHEM STEEL CO. BROWN BORHEK CO. CALYPSO COAL ICE CO., INC. COCA-COLA ELECTRIC LAUNDRY CO., INC. FIVE POINTS MEAT MARKET FOULSHAM THE FLORIST GIER, Jeweler GOLDBERG, Florist HAJOCA CORPORATION HARCHAR, Tailor HARTERS FOODS HORAN ENGRAVING CO. HORSTMAN UNIFORM CO. HOTEL BETHLEHEM KING COAL CO. JOE KINNEY KUTZTOWN PUBLISHING CO. LAUFER. Hardware LEHIGH UNIVERSITY M. EWING FOX CO., INC. McCAA STUDIOS MENNE PRINTER Y MERCUR, Insurance MORRIS BLACK, Builders MOWRERS DAIRY OLD SUN INN PIFF, Bottlers Distributors PURITY FOOD MARKET REBER-KORN CO. RLIHE, Insurance SANITARY FRUIT MARKET SOUTH BETHLEHEM BREWING CO. SUPPLY BUREAU M. S. WALZER WM. H. TAYLOR CO., INC. Printed and Serviced by The Kutztown Publishing Company Kutztown, Pennsylvania


Suggestions in the Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) collection:

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943


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