Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME)

 - Class of 1937

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Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 185 of the 1937 volume:

Copyright, May 1936 John Ii. Chandler Editor-in-chief Laton W. Tarbell Business Manager BUGLE ISSUED BY THE CLASS OF 1937 IN ITS JUNIOR YEAR AT BOWDOIN COLLEGE BRUNSWICK MAINE IN ADMIRATION FOR HIS ERUDITION AS A TION FOR HIS UNTIRING INTEREST IN THE SHIP WITH THE STUDENT BODY, AND WITH GENIAL PERSONALITY AND HIGH STANDARDS DUCT, WE, THE CLASS OF 1937, DEDICATE THIS 81st TO DANIEL CALDWELL STANWOOD, A.M., NATIONAL LAW, IN THIS, HIS EIGHTEENTH AND riON TEACHER, IN APPRECIA- COLLEGE AND FRIEND- AFFECTION FOR HIS OF GENTLEMANLY CON- VOLUME OF THE BUGLE PROFESSOR OF INTER- LAST YEAR AT BOWDOIN. F OREWORD Tlie Editors of the Eighty-!1 irst Volume of the BUGLE h ave had the honor of chronicling a brilliant year in the College history, one which has been marked by many outstanding events, and one which has been significant of a new step forward after the period of depression. W e present this hook in behalf of the Class of Nineteen Hundred an d Th irty-Seven in order to suitably preserve the memory of these achievements. CONTENTS ADMINISTRATION CLASSES @ ATHLETICS ® ACTIVITIES ® FRATERNITIES © LAGNIAPPE ADVERTISEMENTS DMINIS TRATION PRESIDENT AND TRUSTEES Kenneth Chari.es Morton Siles, I.L.D., President Hon. William Titcomb Cobb, LI..IX, Pice-President Henry Hill Pierce, LL.D. William Witherlf. Lawrence, Ph.D., Litt.D. Alfred Benson White. A.B.. LL.B. Harvey Dow Gibson, LL.D. Rev. Daniel Evans, D.D. Philip Dana, A.M., Treasurer Frank Herbert Swan, A.B., LL.B. Frederick William Pickard, LL.D. Hon. John Andrew Peters, LL.D. Hoyt Aucustus Moore, A.B., LL.B. Ripley Lyman Dana, A.B., LL.B. Brunswick Rockland New York, N. Y. New York. N. Y. Boston, Mass. New York, N. Y. Belmont, Mass. Westbrook Providence, R. I. Wilmington. Del. Portland New York. N. Y. Boston, Mass. John Wincheli. Riley, A.B., Secretary Brunswick OVERSEERS Charles Taylor Hawes, LL.D., President Bangor Clement Franklin Robinson, A.B.. LL.B., Pice-President Portland Rev. Charles Herrick Cutler, D.D. Waban, Mass. Charles Cutler Torrey, Ph.D., D.D., L.H.D., Litt.D. New Haven, Conn. George Foster Cary, A.M. Portland Hon. Frederic Alvan Fisher. A.M. Lowell, Mass. Hon. Alpheus Sanford, A.M. Boston, Mass. Wilbert Grant Mallett, A.M. Farmington John Clair Minot, Litt.D. Dover, Mass. William Morrell Emery, A.M. New Bedford, Mass. Philip Greely Clifford, A.B. Portland Henry Smith Chapman, A.M. Winchester. Mass. John Anderson Waterman, A.M. Gorham George Rowland Walker, A.M., LL.B. New York, N. Y. John William Manson. A.M., LL.B. Pittsfield William Widcery Thomas, A.B. Portland Harold Lee Berry, A.M. Portland Edward Farrington Abbott, A.B. Auburn Arthur Gi.f.nwood Staples, LL.D.. Litt.D. Auburn Harrison King McCann, A.B. New York, N. Y. Ellis Spear. Jr., A.B., LL.B. Boston, Mass. Rev. Chester Burge Emerson, D.D. Cleveland, 0. Leonard Augustus Pierce, A.M., LL.B. Portland Edward Nathan Coding, A.B. Luther Dana, A.B. John Fessenden Dana, A.B., LL.B. Sherman Nelson Shumway, A.M. Hon. Wallace Humphrey White, LL.D. Walter Vinton Wentworth, A.M. John William Frost, A.B., LL.B. William Dunning Ireland, A.M. Hon. William Moulton Ingraham, A.M. Willard Streeter Bass, A.M. Robert Hale, A.M. Leon Brooks Leavitt, A.B., LL.B. Albert Trowbridge Goui.d, A.B.. LL.B. Austin Harbutt MacCormick, Sc.D. Lyman Abbott Cousens, A.M. Boston, Mass. Westbrook Portland Bangor Washington, D. C. Old Town New York. N. Y. Boston, Mass. Portland Wilton Portland New York. N. Y. Boston, Mass. New York. N. Y. Portland Melvin Thomas Copeland, Ph.D., Sc.D. Harry Lane Palmer, A.B. Cambridge, Mass. New York. N. Y. Harry Oakes, A.B. Nassau, Bahamas Kenneth Charles Morton Sills, LL.D., President of the College, ex officio Brunswick John Wincheli. Riley, A.B., Secretary of the President and Trustees, ex officio Brunswick Lawrence Willey Smith, A.B., Secretary Portland OTHER OFFICERS Philip Dana, A.M., Treasurer Glenn Ronello McIntire. A.B., Bursar William Kf.i.sey Hall, A.B.. Assistant to Bursar Don 1 heron Potter. B.S., Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings Hugh McLellan Lewis. B.C.E., Reference Librarian F.dith Ellen Lyon, Cataloguer Mrs. Barbara Sessions, A.B., Curator of the Art Collections Mrs. Clara Downs Hayes, Secretary of the College IO . I III', n U V U J 1 IN O KJ V;J JL IV KENNETH CHARLES MORTON SILLS, LL.D. President, fVinkley Professor of the Latin Language and Literature Born at Halifax, Nova Scotia, December 5, 1S79. Fitted at Portland High School. A.B., Bowdoin, 1901; A.M., Harvard, 1903; LL.D., University of Maine, 1916; Dartmouth, 1918; Bates, 1918; Colby, 1920; Williams, 1927; Bowdoin, 1934; Graduate Student and Assistant in English, Harvard, 1901 03; Instructor in English and Classics, Bowdoin, 1903 04; Tutor in English, Columbia, 1904 05. Studied at Columbia in Department of Comparative Literature, 1905-06; Adjunct Professor at Bowdoin, 1906-07, Winkley Professor of the Latin Lan- guage and Literature, 1907; Dean, 1910 18; Acting President, 1917-18; President, May 4, 1918- Traveled and studied in Egypt, Greece and Italy, 1913; in Europe, July, 1924 January, 1925; President of General Alumni Association, Bowdoin College, 1915-1S; Chairman, Brunswick Red Cross, 191718; Board of Visitors, Naval Academy, Annapolis, 1917-21, 1934, President of the Board, 1921; under the Carnegie Corporation, investigated higher educa- tion in Canadian Maritime Provinces, 1921; President, Maine Historical Society, 1922 24; President, New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, 1925-26; Trustee, Wellesley College, 1927 ; Trustee, Athens College, Greece, 1927-; Trustee of Carnegie Foundation, 1933- Member of American Philological Association, the Modern Language Association and the Dante Society. Delta Kappa Epsilon (Honorary National President of Delta Kappa Epsilon, 1929) and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. FORMER PRESIDENTS OF BOWDOIN COLLEGE Joseph McKeen, D.D.—1802-1807 Leonard Woods, D.D., LL.D.—1839-1866 Jesse Appleton, D.D.—1807-1819 Samuel Harris, D.D., LL.D.—1866-1871 William Allen, D.D.—1819-1839 Gen. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, LL.D.—1871 1883 William DeWitt Hyde, D.D., LL.D. 1883-1917 11 William Albion Moody, Sc.D. IPing Professor of Mathematics. Emeritus Graduated from Bowdoin, 1882; Harvard Graduate School. 1891. Instructor in Mathematics at Bow- doin. 18S4-S7; Professor. 1888 1926. Alpha Delta Phi and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Charles Clifford Hutchins, Sc.D. Professor of Physics. Emeritus Graduated from Bowdoin. 1883; Studied at Harvard, 1886-87; Studied at Leipzig. 1000-01. Instructor in Physics at Bowdoin, 1885-88; Professor, 1888-1927. Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. Gerald Gardner Wilder. A.M. Librarian Graduated from Bowdoin. 1904. Assistant Librarian at Bowdoin, 1906-1$; Librarian, 191 $-; Clerk of the College Faculty, 1912-. Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. Roscoe James Ham. A.M. George Taylor Files Professor of Modern Languages Graduated from Harvard. 1896. Instructor in Mod- ern Languages at Bowdoin, 1901-03, Assistant Professor, 1903-07; Professor of German at Bow- doin. 1909-18; Professor of Modern Languages. 1918-. Wii.MOT Brookings Mitchell, Lirr.D. Edward Little Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory Graduated from Bowdoin, 1S83; Studied at Harvard. 1895-96. Instructor in Rhetoric and Oratory at Bowdoin. 1893-97: Professor. 1S97 ; Honorary Degree of Litt.D. by Grincll College, 1920. Theta Delta Chi Fraternity. Charles Theodore Burnett, Ph.D.. L.H.D. Professor of Psychology Graduated from Amherst. 189$; Ph.D. from Har- vard. 1903; L.H.D. from Amherst, 1930. Instructor in Psychology at Bowdoin, 1904-06; Assistant Pro- fessor. 1906-09; Professor. 1909-. Psi Upsilon and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. William Benjamin Catlin. Ph.D. Daniel II. Fayertceather Professor of Economies and Sociology Graduated from the University of Nebraska. 1903. Assistant Professor of Kconomics and Sociology at Bowdoin. 1910-12; Professor, 1912-. Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. Frederic Willis Brown, Pii.D. Longfellow Professor of Modern Languages Graduated from Harvard. 1897; Ph.D. from Har- vard. 1906. Professor of Modern Languages at Bowdoin, 1907-. Delta Upsilon Fraternity. Paul Nixon, L.H.D. Dean, Professor of Latin Graduated from Wesleyan University, 1904: L.H.D.. Wesleyan University. 1927. Assistant Professor of Classics and History at Bowdoin, 1909-11; Professor of Latin. 1911 ; Assistant Dean of Bowdoin. 1917 18: Dean, 191s-. Phi N11 Theta and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Manton Copeland, Ph.D. Professor of Biology Graduated from Harvard, 1904; Ph.D. from Har- vard. 1908. Instructor in Biology at Bowdoin, 1908-09: Assistant Professor, 1909-10; Professor, 1910-. Chi Psi Fraternity. 12 T II K BOW DO IX BUGLE Orren Chalmer Hormell. Ph.D. DcAlca Stantaood Alexander Professor of Government Graduated from Indiana University, 1904; A.M. from Harvard, 1909; I’h.I). from Harvard. 1921. Assistant Professor of History at Bowdoin, 1911 13; Professor of Government, 19J 5-. Sigma Nu Fra- ternity. Alfred Oito Gross. I’h.I). Professor of Biology Graduated from the University of Illinois. 190S; Ph.I), from Harvard. 1912. Instructor at Bowdoin. 1912-13; Assistant Professor of Biology, him bry- ology and Histology at Bowdoin, 1913- 22; Professor of Biology, 1922-. Sigma Xi, Gamma Alpha and Alpha Tau Omega Fraternities. Henry Edwin Andrews. A.M. Professor of Art anti Director of the Museum of Fine Arts Graduated from Bowdoin. 1S94; A.M. from Har- vard, 1895. Instructor in bine Arts. Bowdoin, February-June. 1918; Professor of Art and Director of the Museum of Fine Arts, 1918-. Psi Upsilon Fraternity. Thomas Curtis Van Ci.bvb, I’h.D. Thomas Brackett Recti Professor of History and Political Science Graduated from the University of Missouri. 1911; Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. 1921; Instructor in History at Bowdoin. 1915-16; Associ- ate Professor. 1916 19; Professor. 1919-. Philip Weston Meskrvk, A.M. Professor of Chemistry Graduated from Bowdoin, 1911. Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Bowdoin. 1916-27; Associate Pro- fessor. 1927 2S; Professor. 192S-. Psi Upsilon Fraternity. Daniel Caldwell Stanwood. A.M. Professor of Internationa! Latv Graduated from Oxford University, 185)7; A.M. from Oxford. 1899. Lecturer on International Law at Bowdoin, 1918-19; Professor. 1919-. Noel Charlton Little, Ph.D. Professor of Physics Graduated from Bowdoin, 1917; Ph.D. in Physics from Harvard, 1923. Instructor in Physics at Bowdoin, 1919-22; Assistant Professor, 1922-25; Professor, 1926-. Delta Kappa F.psilon and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Charles Harold Livingston, Ph.D. Professor of Romance Languages Graduated from Harvard, 1910; A.M. from Har- vard. 1916; Ph.D. from Harvard, 1916. Professor of Romance Languages. Bowdoin, 1921-. Delta Upsilon and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Thomas Means. A.M. Joseph F. Merrill Professor of the Greek Language and Literature Graduated from Yale. 1910; A.M. from Yale, 1915: A.M. from Harvard, 1926. Assistant Professor of Greek and Latin at Bowdoin. 1921 26; Joseph Merrill Professor of the Greek Language and Litera- ture. 1929-. Sigma Delta Psi Fraternity. Mortimer Phillips Mason, Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy Graduated from Harvard, 1899; A.M. from Har- vard, 1900; Ph.D. from Harvard, 1904; Professor of Philosophy at Bowdoin, 1920-. 3 Edward Sanford Hammond. I’m.I). If'ing Professor of Mathematics, Director o; Admissions Graduated from Vale, 1913. A.B.; A.M. from Yale, 1915; Ph.D. from Princeton, 1920. Assistant Pro- fessor of Mathematics at Bowdoin, 1921 25; Profes- sor, 1025-. Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, and Alpha Tau Omega Fraternities. Stanley Perkins Chase, Ph.D. Henry Leland Chapman Professor of English Literature Graduated from Bowdoin, 1905; A.M. fromJHar- vard, 1906; Ph.D. from Harvard, 1911. Lecturer on English Literature at Bowdoin. second semester, 1925; Professor at Bowdoin, 1925-26; Henry Leland Chapman Professor of English Literature, 1926-. Delta Kappa Epsilon and Phi Beta Kappa Fra- ternities. Stanley Barney Smith, Ph.D. Professor of the Classics Graduated from Harvard, 1916; A.M. from Har- vard. 1917; Ph.D. from Harvard. 1921. Associate Professor of the Classics at Bowdoin. 1927-31; Professor, 1931-. Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. On leave of absence. Second semester. Boyd Wheeler Bartlett, Ph.D. Professor of Physics Graduated from Bowdoin, i9i7;Graduate, U.S.M.A., 1919; B.S. in Civil Engineering from M.I.T., 1921; A.M. in Physics from Columbia University, 1925; Ph.D. from Columbia, 1933. Assistant Professor of Physics at Bowdoin, 1927-29; Associate Professor, 1929-31; Professor. 1931 Delta Kappa Epsilon and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Henry Lincoln Johnson. M.D. College Physician Pre-medical course at Bowdoin, 1903-04; M.D. from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University. 1908-12; College Physician at Bowdoin. 1927-. Zeta Psi Fraternity. Edward Chase Kirkland, Ph.D. Frank Munsey Professor of History Graduated from Dartmouth, 1916; A.M. from Har- vard, 1917; Ph.D. from Harvard, 1924. Associate Professor of History at Bowdoin. 1930-31; Frank Munsey Professor of History, 1931 . Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. Robert Peter Tristram Coffin, Litt.D. Pierce Professor of English (iraduated from Bowdoin, 1915; Henry W. Long- fellow Scholar at Bowdoin, 1915-16; A.M. from Princeton, 1916; Rhodes Scholar from Maine to Trinity College. Oxford. 1916-17 and 1919-21; B.A. from Oxford, 1920; B. Litt. from Oxford, 1921; Honorary Litt.D. from Bowdoin, 1930. Zeta Psi and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Herbert Ross Brown. A.M. Associate Professor of English Graduated from Lafayette. 1924: Traveling Fellow in Great Britain, 1924. Instructor in English and Argumentation. Bowdoin, 1925-27; On leave of absence. 1927 29; A.M. from Harvard, 1928; Assistant Professor of English, Bowdoin. 1929-33; Associate Professor of English, 1933-. Zeta Psi and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. On leave o( absence, 193S-36. Morgan Bicknell Cushing, A.M. Associate Professor of Economics Graduated from Yale, 1917; A.M. from the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 1922. Assistant Professor of Economics, Bowdoin, 1922-27; Associate Pro- fessor, 1927-. Zeta Psi and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Arthur Haas, Ph.D. Fisiting Professor of Physics on the Tollman Foundation Studied at the Universities of Vienna and Goettin- gen. 1902-06; Degree of Ph.D. from University of Vienna. 1906; Assistant Professor at University of Vienna, 1912; Professor at University of Leipzig, i ) 13: Professor at University of Vienna, 1923-; Visiting Professor at Bowdoin, 1935-36. M Arthur Chew Gilucan, A.M. A nodate Professor of Romance Languages Graduated from Harvard, 1918; A.M. from Har- vard, 1924; Sheldon Traveling Fellow in France, 1924-25: Instructor in Romance Languages, Bow- doin, 1925-26; Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, 1926-29; Associate Professor of Ro- mance Languages. 1929-. Phi Beta Kappa Fra- ternity. Nathaniel Cooper Kendrick. Ph.D. Associate Professor of History Graduated from the University of Rochester, 1921; A.M. from Harvard. (923; Traveling Fellow abroad from Harvard, 1925-26; Ph.D. from Harvard, 1931; Instructor in History at Bowdoin, 1926-28; Assistant Professor of History. 1928-32; Associate Professor, 1932-. Psi Upsilon Fraternity. Ki.nnlth James Boyer, A.B., B.L.S. Graduated from the University of Rochester. 1923; B.L.S. from New York State Library School, 1925; Assistant Librarian at Bowdoin, 1927-. Psi Upsilon Fraternity. Malcolm Elmer Morrell, B.S. Director of Athletics and Assistant Professor of Physical Education Graduated from Bowdoin. 1924; Assistant Football Coach, Bowdoin. 1925 27: Instructor in Physical Education. 1926-27; Assistant Professor, 1927-; Acting Athletic Director and Football Coach. 1927-29; Athletic Director, 1928 . Sigma Nu Fraternity. Cecil Thomas Holmes, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Mathematics Graduated from Bates. 1919; A.M. from Harvard, 1925; Ph.D. from Harvard, 1931; Assistant Pro- fessor of Mathematics at Bowdoin. 1925-27. 1929- ?i; Associate Professor. 1931 . Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. Philip Sawyer Wilder, B.S., Ed.M. Alumni Secretary and Assistant Professor of Education Graduated from Bowdoin, 1923; F.d.M. from Har- vard, 1930. Acting Alumni Secretary at Bowdoin, 1927-28; Alumni Secretary and Instructor in Edu- cation from November 1. 1928-; Assistant Professor, 1932. Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. Albert Abrahamson, A.M. Assistant Professor of Economies Graduated from Bowdoin, 1926; Charles Carroll Everett Fellowship from Bowdoin at Columbia, 1927- 28; Instructor in F'conomics at Bowdoin. 1928- 30; Assistant Professor. 1930-. Zcta Psi and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. On leave of absence, 1934-36. Newton Phelps Stallknbckt, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Philosophy Graduated from Princeton. 1927; A.M. from Prince- ton. 1928; Ph.D. from Princeton, 1930; Instructor in Philosophy at Bowdoin. 1930-32; Assistant Professor, 1932-. Fritz Kari. August Kolln, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of German Fitted at the Oberrcalschulc of Altona-Ottcnscn. Hamburg University, 1919-1927; Ph.D. from the University of Hamburg, 1927; Assistant Professor of German at Bowdoin. 1929-. Herbert Weidlek Hartman, Jr.. Ph.D. Associate Professor of English Graduated from Yale, 1923; Yale Graduate School. 1925-28; Ph.D. from Yale, 1929. Instructor in (English at Bowdoin. 192S-30; Assistant Professor, 1930-. Psi Upsilon Fraternity. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Athkrn Park Daggett, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English and Government Graduated from Bowdoin. 192;; A.M. from Har- vard. 1928: Ph.D. from Harvard. 1951. Instructor in Knglish and Government at Bowdoin, 1930-33; Assistant Professor. 1934-. Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. Krnst Christian Hel.mrkich. Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History and Government Graduated from the University of Illinois. 1924; A.M.. 1925; A.M. from Harvard. 1927; Ph.D. from Harvard. 1952; Sheldon Traveling Fellow from Harvard, 1929-30. Instructor in History and Government at Howdoin. 1931-32; Assistant Pro- fessor. 1932-. Kappa Phi Sigma and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Samuel Howard Kamerling, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Graduated from New York University, 1926; Sc.M from New York University, 1927: Ph.D. from Princeton. 1932. Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Bowdoin. 1934 . Phi Kappa Tau and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. William Camreei.i. Root. Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Graduated from the University of California, 1923: Ph.D. from Harvard. 1952. Instructor in Chemistry at Bowdoin. 1932-33; Assistant Professor, :95.{-. Alpha Chi Sigma. Sigma Xi, and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Klbridce Sibley, Pii.D. Assistant Professor of Sociology Graduated from Amherst. 1924; M.A. from Colum- bia. 1925; Ph.D. from Columbia, 1930. Assistant Professor in Sociology at Bowdoin, 1932-. Theta Delt Chi and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. John Charles Schroeder, J.itt.D., D.D. Lecturer in Biblical Literature Graduated from the College of City of New York; Graduated from Union Theological Seminary, 1921; D.D. from Bowdoin. 1933; Uitt.D. from University of Maine, 1034. Minister of State Street Church. Portland. Maine. Lecturer in Biblical Literature at Bowdoin, 1934-. Delta Kappa Kpsilon Fra- ternity. Charles Vynf.r Brooke. A.M. Instructor in Romance Languages Graduated from Queen’s University, Canada, 1925; A.M. from Harvard, 1928. Instructor in Romance Languages at Bowdoin, 1930-. Donovan Dean Lancaster, A.B. Manager of the Moulton Union and Assistant Coach of Football Graduated from Bowdoin. 1927. Instructor in Physical Kducation at Bowdoin. 1927- ; Instructor in Government, 1928-32: Manager of the Moulton Union, 1926-. Kappa Sigma Fraternity. James Fellows White, A.B. Instructor in German Graduated from Bowdoin, 1929; Graduate Study at the Universities of Munich and Kiel in Germany. 1929-30. Instructor in German at Bowdoin, 1930-. Delta Kappa Kpsilon Fraternity. Robert Bartlett Miller Instructor in Physical Education ar.d Coach of Su imming Graduated from Springfield College; University of Manchester, Fngland. 1918; Instructor in Physical Kducation and Coach of Swimming at Bowdoin. 1928-. 16 = I 111 , l)U UU 1 A 15 I U lv n Rbinhardt Lunds Korcen, A.M. Instructor in Mathematics Graduated from Carleton College. 1950; University Fellow, Harvard. 1950-31: A.M. from Harvard, 1931. Instructor in Mathematics at Bowdoin, 1931-. Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. Arthur Bif.rs Lech Turner. Ph.D. Instructor in Economics A.B. from Harvard. '30, M.A., '33. Ph.D., ‘35. Instructor in Fconomics at Bowdoin, 1935-. Vernon Lemont Miller, Pii.D. Instructor in Psychology Graduated from Ohio State University. 1925. A.M.. 1926. Ph.D., 1931; Payne Fund Research Fellow in Psychology, 1930-31. Instructor in Psychology at Bowdoin, 1932 -. Sigma Xi Fraternity. Philip Meader Brown. Pii.D. Instructor t i Economics Graduated from Brown University, 1922; A.M. from Stanford, 1925; Ph.D. from Harvard, 1931. In- structor in Fconomics at Bowdoin. 1934-. Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. Georoe Hunnewell Qlinhv, A.B. Instructor in English Graduated from Bowdoin. 1923: Graduate Student in Yale Department of Drama for two years. In- structor in English. Bowdoin. 1954-. Psi Upsilon Fraternity. John Joseph Macbe Director of Track and Field Athletics Came to Bowdoin as Director of Track in 1914; Several times Coach of U. S. Olympic Track Team; Coach of American Track Team in Japan. 1934. George Baker Welch Teaching Fellow in Mathematics Graduated from Bowdoin. 1922; Graduate Student at Cornell. 1925-28; Ph.D. from Cornell, 192S; Teaching Fellow in Physics at Bowdoin, 1933-35; Teaching Fellow in Mathematics. 1955- Alpha Tau Omega, Pi Delta Epsilon, and Phi Beta Kappa Fraternities. Linn Scott Wells Coach of Baseball and Hockey, and Assistant Coach of Football Graduated from Springfield. 1922; Coach of Base- ball and Hockey, and Assistant Coach of Football. 1931-. Maurice Tii.i.ier, Lie. ES Lettres Fellow in French Studied at College Communalc d'Arran. two years: Ph.B. from Lyccc Faidherbe at Lille, 1934; Lie. cs Lettres from Faculte Universitc at Lille, 1935. Fellow in French at Bowdoin, 1935 . Adam Walsh, B.S. in M.F. Coach of Football B.S. in M.F. from Notre Dame. '25; Line Coach at Yale. 1929-32; Line Coach at Harvard. 1934; Coach of Football at Bowdoin, 1934-. 17 =4 Joseph Milton Odiorne. Ph.D. Teaching Fellow in Biology Graduated from Bowdoin, 1925; Jeffries Wyman Scholar. Harvard, 1925-26; Ph.D. from Harvard, 1954. Teaching Fellow in Biology at Bowdoin, 1934-. Kappa Sigma, Gamma Alpha, and Sigma At r rater nines. Marshall Stanley Barbour, A.B. Teaching Fellow in Chemistry Graduated from Bowdoin. 1935, A.B. Teaching Fellow in Chemistry at Bowdoin, First Semester ,93S 36- Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. VanCourtlandt Ki.liott, Ph.D. Teaching Fellow in the Classics Graduated from Bowdoin. 1928; M.A. from the University of North Carolina, 1929; Ph.D., 1929. Teaching Fellow in the Classics at Bowdoin, 1935 -. Gerhard Oskar Redder. A.M. Teaching Fellow in History Graduated from Bowdoin. 1931; M.A. from Har- vard, 1932. Teaching Fellow in History, 1935-. Kappa Sigma Fraternity. James Parker Pettegrove. AM. Teaching Fellow in English and Philosophy A.B. from Bowdoin. '30; A.M. from Harvard, ’32. Teaching Fellow in English and Philosophy at Bow- doin, 193 5-. 1$ 31 n Jfflemortam Edward Hames Wass, Mus. D. 874-1935 On November 12, 1935, Edward Hames Wass died of a heart disorder following upon a long period of failing health. For twenty-three years he was a member of this Faculty. He was the first to conduct at Bowdoin courses in the history, theory, and appreciation of music. His advent was Fart of an administrative plan to enlarge the opportunities of Bowdoin students for aesthetic insight, t was nearly coincident with the introduction of similar courses in the Fine Arts. In the years of his strength Professor Wass threw himself with zeal and beautiful development into his work both theoretical and practical. I le was tireless in working with student groups and conducting rehearsals. In choir and choral enterprises of the town he played an important part in maintaining a standard of fine musical taste. Summer after summer he would spend a considerable part of bis vacation in work with the organ as in other parts of his wide field. Always most modest, even to shyness, he depreciated his own substantial merits; and thereby, perhaps, as well as by his constant, friendly efforts on their behalf, endeared himself to a long succession of Bowdoin students. By them he was better known than by his colleagues. To these students of the less recent past the news of his death has brought vividly to mind pleasant hours spent under his tutelage in college days. For them he is a part of the Bowdoin to which they turn with happy regard. Mindful of all these things, the Faculty of Bowdoin College desires thus to record its recognition of faithful service done by an earnest and gentle colleague. By Professor Charles T. Burnett, from the minutes of the College faculty. '9 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Philip Given Good.....................................President Rodney Clayton Larcom, Jr........................Pice-President Hubert Seely Shaw...........................Secretary-Treasurer CLASS DAY PARTS Josiah Hayden Drummond..................................... Marshal Edwin Gilpatric Walker.......................................Orator John Vanderlyn Shute......................................Historian John Finzer Presnell, Jr..................................... Odist Richard Osgood Jordan..........................................Poet CANE COMMITTEE William Preston Sawyer, Chairman Philip Arnold Christie Wilbur Berry Manter COM M ENCEM ENT COM MITTEE Thomas Hop pin Mack, Chairman Robert Russell Hagy, Jr. William Byron Flynn, Jr. Maxwell Mowbray Small Winthrop Brooks Holt Walker 22 SENIOR HONORS Abraham Benjamin Abramovitz Ulsion, Massachusetts Dean's List (2, 3,4); Classical Club (4). Prepared at Revere High School. Major in Psychology. Abraham Albert Abramson Portland, Maine Prepared at Portland High School. Major in Biology. Samuel Abramson Brighton, Massachusetts Freshman Football Squad; Freshman Track Squad; Glee Club (t, 2). Prepared at Boston Public Latin School. Major in German. Albert Salisbury Allen, ‘FT tuburndale, Massachusetts Assistant Manager of Track (2). Manager (1); Growler (i. 2, 3. 4); Nominating Committee of h. I. C. A. A. (3). Prepared at Newton High School. Major in Economics. Hilton Holmes Applin Belfast, Maine Prepared at Crosby High School. Major in Biology. Robert Paul Ashley, Jr.. ZT • Waban, Massachusetts Varsity I enrtis learn (1. 2. 3, 4), Manager (3), Captain (4); Maine Intercollegiate Tennis Tourna- ment (1. 2. 3). Doubles runner-up (2), Winner of Singles and Doubles G); Dean’s List (2. 3. 4); Orient (1.2, 3, 4), Editor-in-chief (4); Ibis (4); Member L'ndergraduate Committee to Investigate Athletic Situation (3); Chairman of Football Rally Committee (4); Student Council (4). Pre- pared at Newton High School. Major in English. Thompson Chester Baxter, ATQ Belmont, Massachusetts Assistant Manager of Swimming (2), Manager (3); Dean’s List (4); Glee Club (1); Chapel Choir a; Executive Committee of N. K. L S. A. (3). Prepared at Belmont High School. Major in vernment. Richard Currie Bechtel, XN Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Junior Varsity Tennis Team (i), Varsity (2. 3. 4); Interfraternity Athletics (1, 2); Dean’s List (5); Mathematics Club (3, 4); College Ping-Pong Champion (3); Chief Operator of College Radio Station. Prepared at Germantown High School. Major in Mathematics. James Lucius Belden, ‘IT Bradstreet, Massachusetts Freshman Football Squad; Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1). Varsity (2. 3); Track Squad (2); Glee Club (1, 2, 3. 4); Chapel Choir (2, 3. 4). Prepared at Smith Academy and Vermont Academy. Major in Biology. Stanton Bblinkoee Bayonne, New Jersey Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1); Interfraternity Baseball (2); Interfraternity Basketball (2, 3); Band (1, 2). Prepared at Bayonne High School. Major in Chemistry. Francis Seymour Benjamin, Jr., AA4 Portland, Maine Classical Club (1. 2. 3, 4); Masque and Gown Board (2. 3. 4); Junior Varsity Swimming Squad (1). Prepared at Dcering High School. Major in History. Austin West Berkeley. AT Newton Center, Massachusetts Assistant Manager of Football (2); Dean’s List (4); L’Ours Blanc (1. 2, 3). Prepared at Newton High School. Major in French. Norman Kenneth Brock, ATQ If'aterboro. Maine Junior Varsity Football Squad (2); Interfraternity Baseball and Basketball (1. 2. 3). Prepared at Waterboro High School. Major in Economics. Francis Harold Brown, AT Winchester, Massachusetts Baseball Squad (i. 2, 3); Freshman Football Squad; Freshman Swimming Squad; Interfraternity Touch-F'ootball (2, 3); Band (1). Prepared at Winchester High School. Major in Biology. Robert Miles Burns Portland, Maine Prepared at Deering High School. Transferred from University of Maine. Major in Chemistry. Edward Lewis Campbell. AA 1 Newtonville, Massachusetts Gym Team (2. 3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3. a). Leader (4); Chapel Choir (r, 2, 3, 4). Prepared at Newton High School. Major in Psychology. William Frederick Carnes _ Portland. Maine Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1, 2), Varsity (3, 4); State of Maine Scholarship; Brown Memo- rial Scholarship (1. 2. 3); Phi Beta Kappa (3); Classical Club (1, 2. 3, 4); Mathematics Club (3. 4); Glee Club (1); Chapel Choir (1); Orient (1). Prepared at Portland High School. Major in Latin and Greek. John Phillips Chapman, 0AX Suampscott, Massachusetts Freshman Track Team; Junior Class Poet; Dean's List (3); Assistant in English; Ibis (4); Orient (1), Sub-Editor (2), Contributing Editor (3), Associate Editor (4); Alumnus L'ndergraduate Editor (4); S. C. D. C. (4); Board of Proctors. Prepared at Swampscott High School. Major in English. Richard Harold Charles Framingham, Massachusetts Freshman-Sophomore Debate (1. 2); Debating Council, Assistant Manager (1). Prepared at Framingham High School. Major in History. r THK liOWDOIN BUG LB George Frederick Chisholm, AY ll'aban, Massachusetts Freshman Cross-Country Team; Freshman Track Team; Swimming Squad (4); Cross-Country Squad (2!; Or it it t Staff (1); Editor of Handbook (2); Growler Board (3). Prepared at The Browne and Nichols School. Major in Biology. Philip Arnold Christie, X'N Presque Isle, Maine Assistant Manager of Football (2. 3). Manager of Varsity Football (4); Freshman Track Squad; Junior Varsity Baseball (1); Interfraternity Football, Basketball and Baseball (2. 3. 4); Inde- pendent Basketball Team (4); Political Forum (3); Interfraternity Athletic Council (3). Pre- pared at Presque Isle High School. Major in Government. Harry Bant , Clark, Jr.. B0TI Worcester; Massachusetts Prepared at North High School. Major in History. Carleton Sheffield Connor, ©AX Stone ham. Massachusetts Freshman Football Team; Sophomore Team; Varsity Football Team (2. 3); Assistant Freshman Football Coach (4);'Track Squad (1); Varsity Baseball Squad (1, 2); Interfraternity Basketball ' i, 2); Independent Basketball Team (2. 3. 4); Interfraternity Baseball (3); Masque and Gown (1) ; Growler Staff (3. 4). Prepared at Stonebam High School. Major in Government. Nathan Cope Portland. Maine Freshman Track Squad; Junior Varsity Cross-Country Squad (1); Junior Varsity Track Squad (2) ; Brown Memorial Pri .e (2); Abraxas Cup; Dean’s List (2). Prepared at Portland High School. Major in History. Caspar Frank Cowan, AT Portland, Maine Freshman Cross-Country Team; Freshman 'Track Team; Junior Varsity Track Team (1); Varsity Cross-Country Team (2. 3. 4); Varsity Track Team (2, 3, 4); Dean’s List (3. 4). Prepared at Deering High School. Major in Economics. Howard Hinklry Dana, ©AX Cape Elizabeth, Maine Freshman Football Team; Junior Varsity Hockey Team (1. 2); Junior Varsity Tennis Team (1), Varsity (2, 3); Cheerleader (3, 4); Varsity Football Squad (2); Phi Chi (2). Prepared at Deering High School and Phillips Exeter Academy. Major in History. Harold Charles Dickf.rman Revere. Massachusetts Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Squad (1, 2, 3); Varsity Cross-Country Squad (2, 3); Band (1.2. 3); Assistant Secretary M. A. A. U. Prepared at Lincoln Preparatory School. Major in Biology. William Plummer Drake, 'FY Rath. Maine Freshman Football Team; Sophomore Football Team; Junior Varsity Football Team (3), Varsity (2, 4); Glee Club (2. 4); Chapel Choir (2, 3, 4); Interfraternity Athletic Council (4). Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Major in Economics. Josiah Hayden Drummond, AKE Portland, Maine Freshman Football Team; Sophomore Football Team; Varsity Football Team (2, 3, 4); Junior Varsity Baseball Team (1); Interfraternity Basketball (1); Class President (1); Abraxas Cup; Mathematics Club (3. 4); Student Council (3J, Vice-President (4)3. Athletic Council (3); Com- mittee on Physical Education (4); Christmas Dance Committee (3), Chairman (4); Ivy Dance Committee, Chairman (3). Prepared at Portland High School. Major in Mathematics. Isaac Watson Dyer, 2nd, AKK Portland, Maine Varsity Swimming Squad (2); Freshman Football Squad; Track Squad (1. 2); Classical Club (2, 3, 4); Bowdoin Christian Association (2), Cabinet (3); Bugle Staff (1), Assistant Editor (2), Editor-in-chief (3). Prepared at Phillips Andover Academy and Holderness School. Major in History. J. Donald Dyer, AT Lawrence, Massachusetts Junior Varsity Football (2); Dean’s List (2); Assistant in Economics. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Transferred from North Carolina State College. Major in Economics. John Nichols Estabrook, Z'F _ Brunswick, Maine Freshman Track Squad: Junior Varsity Track Squad (2); Varsity Track Squad (3); Dean’s List (3) . Prepared at Avon School. Major in Economics. Paul Gordon Favour, Jr., B©II Ocean Park, Maine Freshman Football Squad; Freshman Track Team; Sophomore Track l earn; Varsity Track Squad (1, 3); Junior Varsity Track Team (2); Rifle Team (3. 4); Rifle Club. Secretary (3. 4); Union Committee (2, 3. 4); Kent's Island Ornithological Expedition (2); Board of Proctors (4); S. C. I). C. (4). Prepared at New Rochelle High School. Major in Biology. Harold Roy Fearon, 'FT Saco, Maine Freshman Football Team; Library Stall' (2, 3, 4). Prepared at Thornton Academy. Major in Economics. William Byron Flynn, Jr., XV Portland, Maine Assistant Manager of Football (2); Swimming Squad (1, 2); Ivy Dance Committee (3). Prepared at Lincoln High School, New York City. Major in Psychology. Elmer Arthur Fortier, Jr„ 2N Dexter. Maine Freshman Track Team; Freshman Football Team; Varsity Track Squad (1, 2); Varsity Football Squad (2); Interfraternity Football, Baseball, and Basketball (2, 3, 4); Political Forum (3); interfraternity Athletic Council (a); State of Maine Scholarship. Prepared at N. H. Fay High School and Wassookcag School. Major in Government. 24 THE BOW DO IN BUG LI- Bernard Nathan Freedman Haverhill. Massachusetts Freshman Track Squad; Interfratemity Basketball (i, 2, 3, 4); Classical Club (3, 4); Phi Beta Kappa (3); Dean’s l.isr (1, 2, 3. 4); Assistant in History (4). Prepared at Haverhill High School. Major in History. Thomas Robinson Pirib Gibb. Jr.. ATQ Rockp ort. Massachusetts Mathematics Club (3. 4); Dean’s List (3. ); Rifle Club (5); Assistant in Physics (4). Prepared at Belmont High School. Major in Chemistry. Philip Given Good, Z F South Portland. Maine Varsity Track Team (1,2.3.4.). Captain (4); Captain Freshman Track Team; Class Vice-President (2); Class President (4); Dean's List (3); State of Maine Scholarship; Student Council (3, 4), President (4); Athletic Council (2. 3); Committee on Physical Education (4); S. C. I). C. (4). Prepared at South Portland High School. Major in Chemistry. Arnold Leonard Goodman Portland, Maine Prepared at Portland High School. Major in Economics. Alfred Brook Gordon Dexter, Maine International Relations Commit tee (3). Prepared at N. H. Fay High School. Major in Philosophy. Richard Lowe Grey. AT Woburn, Massachusetts Track Team (1. 2. 3); Freshman Cross-Country Team- Prepared at Woburn High School- Major in Biology. Warren Arnold Hagar Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Prepared at Boston English High School. Major in Philosophy. Robert Russell Hacy, Jr.. AA I Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania Ivy Day Committee. Chairman (3); Ibis (4); Quill, Co-Editor (4); Grottier Board (4); Orient (4). Prepared at Edge-wood High School. Major in English. Lawrence Sargent Hall. XT Haverhill, Massachusetts Freshman Football Squad: Freshman Track Souad; Gym Squad (2. 3); Class Odist (3); David Scwall Premium (1); Stanley Plummer Prize Speaking (3): Hawthorne Short Story Prize (3); (ilee Club (2. 3); Ibis (4); Masque and Gown (2); Quill Board (2. 3. 4); Chapel Choir (1. 2. 3. 4); Assistant in English (4). Prepared at Haverhill High School. Major in English. Franklin Grant Hamlin, ATQ Sanford, Maine Junior Varsity Football (2); Interfraternity Athletics (1. 2.3. 4); Phi Chi (2); Band (1, 2): Inter- fraternity Athletic Council (3, 4). Prepared at Sanford High School. Major in French. Mark Edson Hamlin. AKE Milan, A 'cut Hampshire Junior Varsity Baseball Team (1. 2); Freshman Track Squad; Interfraternity Basketball (2); Dean’s List (?, 4); Mathematics Club (3. 4). Prepared at Gould Academy, Bethel, Maine. Major in Mathematics. William Brewster Hanson. 2N Bridgetcatcr. Massachusetts Assistant Manager of Baseball (2). Intramural Manager (3); Interfraternity Athletic Council. Treasurer (3). Prepared at Bridgewater High School and New Hampton Prep. Major in Psychology. Robert Bosworth Hatch. Jk. ..... . . Bath, Maine Assistant Manager of Baseball (3); Junior Varsity Swimming Squad (1. 2); Political horum (5); Band (1. 2. 3. 4); B-J 1.” Prepared at Morse High School. Major in Biology. Cuyler Jacobs Hawkes. ATQ % .... Windham, Maine Freshman Cross-Country Squad; Freshman Track Squad; Junior Varsity Football l earn; Sopho- more Football Team; Interfraternity Basketball; Assistant in Physics (2, 3. 4); Dean’s List (3. 4); Mathematics Club (3. 4), Vice-President (4). Prepared at Windham High School. Major in Physics. Willis Hay. Jr.. 0AX . . Cape Elizabeth, Maine Junior Varsity Football (2); Class Marshal (3); Bowdoin Publishing Company (2. 3). Assjstant Manager (3). Prepared at Portland Country Day School and Hebron Academy. Major in History. Laurence Gii.nack Hill, K2 Quincy. Massachusetts Freshman Track Squad; Varsity Swimming Team (2, 3). Prepared at I hayer Academy. Major in Philosophy. David Russell Hirth, AY „ , x Rockville Connecticut Gym Team (2); Dean’s List (3. 4); Assistant in hrcnch (4); Alliance hrancaisc; hrcncli Club. Prepared at Sykes Memorial School. Major in hrcnch. William Roy Hooke. ‘IT Swimming Squad (3). Maplewood. A 'etc Jersey Prepared at St. Paul's School. Garden City. N. Y. Major in History. Albert Leroy Ingalls. XT’ Track Squad (1, 2. 3. 4); Chapel Bell Ringer (4). Economics. Bath, Maine Prepared at Morse High School. Major in Arnold Hastings Jenks, KS Wollaston. Massachuse Prepared at Thayer Academy. Major in Mathematics. 25 T Ii K BOWDOIN BUGLI-: Richard Osgood Jordan. XT Gym Squad (2. 3); Ibis (4); Orient Staff ft); Quill (3). in Philosophy. Portland, Maine Prepared at Dccring High School. Major Hartwell Vaughan Kknerson, XT Prepared at Kimball Union Academy. Major in English. A 'export, New Hampshire Abraham Km-ell Kern Bangor. Maine Dean's List (2, 3); Instrumental Club (2. 3); Glee Club Accompanist (1); Masque and Gown (1, 2); Band (1, 2). Prepared at Bangor High School. Major in Biology. William Fowlie Kierstf.ad, KX Bucksport. Maine Hockey Squad (1. 2. 3); Dean’s List (3); Instrumental Club (1, 2); Polar Bears (2, 3, 4), Manager (4); Band (1. 2. 3. 4). Prepared at Coburn Classical Institute. Major in Biology. Asa Burbank Kimball, AT IPest Baldwin, Maine Masque and Gown (1. 2), Business Manager (3), Executive Board (3, 4), Publicity Manager (4); Freshman Track Team; Junior Varsity Baseball (2, 3. 4). Prepared at Fryeburg Academy. Major in Philosophy. John Lewis Knight, XX South Berwick, Maine Swimming Squad (2); Hockey Squad (1, 3. 4); Band (1, 2, 3). Prepared at Berwick Academy. Major in Sociology. Paul Laidi.EY, Jr., TT Brunswick, Maine Assistant Manager of Hockey (1, 2), Manager (3); Freshman Football Squad (1); Masque and Gown (1, 2, 3, 4), Production Manager (3), Executive Committee (3, 4); Growler Business Board (3); Assistant in Archeology (2). Prepared at Brunswick High School. Major in Economics. Andrew Warren Lane, XT Glen Ridge, New Jersey Freshman Football Team; Junior Varsity Hockey (1); Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Squad (2. 3); Varsity Football Team (3). Prepared at Tabor Academy. Major in Economics. Harold Bickford Lang, AA4 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Lucien Howe Scholarship; Glee Club (2, 3, 4), Manager (4); Chapel Choir (2. 3, 4); Assistant in Zoology (3, 4); Cheerleader (3, 4). Prepared at Aspinwall High School. Transferred from Harvard College. Major in Biology. Rodney Clayton Larcom, Jr.. XT Dedham, Massachusetts Freshman Football Team; Varsity Football Team (2, 3. 4); Track Squad (2, 3, 4); Class Vice- President (3, 4); Assistant in Botany (4); Phi Chi (2); Undergraduate Committee on Athletics (3); Interfraternity Athletic Council (4); S. C. I). C. (4); Student Council (4). Prepared at Dedham High School. Major in Biology. Gustave Omer LeClair Freshman Track Squad; Freshman Swimming Squad. Major in Chemistry. , Brunswick, Maine Prepared at Brunswick High School. Frederick Richmond Leonard Stoughton, Massachusetts Dean’s List (3, 4); Bowdoin Christian Association (1, 2); Political Forum (3). Prepared at Stoughton High School. Major in Economics. Donald Eastman Lewis Prepared at Brunswick High School. Mus. B. from Yale, 1928. Weston Lewis. TT L’Ours Blanc (3); Orient Staff (1, 2, 3); Growler Board (3. 4). Major in French. Brunswick, Maine Major in Psychology. Portland, Maine Prepared at St. Mark's School. Hartley Lord, Jr., XN Rifle Team (3. 4); President of Rifle Club (3, 4). Major in Chemistry. luburn, Maine Prepared at Edward Little High School. Portland, Maine Lawrence Gregory Michael Lydon Prepared at Cheverus Classical High School. Major in Biology. Stephen Howard Lyons, AKE Scarboro, Maine Freshman Football Team; Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2. 3, 4); Interfraternity Athletic Council (3). Prepared at Scarboro High .School. Major in Chemistry. Sidney Raymond McCleary Maynard, Massachusetts Dean’s List (3. 4); Bowdoin Political Forum (4); Phi Beta Kappa (4). Prepared at Maynard High School. Major in History. Samuel Finley McCoy. TT Prepared at St. Paul's School, Garden City, N. Y. Thomas Bernard McCusker, Jr., BBII Phi Chi (2). Prepared at Hebron Academy. Major in English. Major in Economics. Brooklyn. New York Braintree. Massachusetts Charles Dearborn McDonald, Jr., XT Prepared at Brookline High School. Major in German. Edward Atkinson McFarland. ATfl Hockey Squad (1, 2); Rifle Club (3); L'Ours Blanc (1); Orient Staff (1); Masque and Gown (1). Prepared at Maine Central Institute. Major in Zoology. Brookline, Mas achusetts Lisbon Falls. Maine 26 John Henry McGill, TV IFinchester, Massachusetts Assistant Manager of Football (2, 3); Manager of Junior Varsity ami Freshman Football (4); Junior Varsity Hockey (1). Varsity Hockey Team (3, 4); Business Manager of Growler (2, 3, 4). Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Major in Chemistry. Joseph McKeen, Jr.. 2£N Brunswick, Maine Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1). Varsity Swimming; Team (2. 4); Mathematics Club (3, 4); Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4). Prepared at Brunswick High School. Major in Mathematics. Thomas Hoppin Mack. K— Framingham, Massachusetts Freshman Cross-Country Team; Instrumental Club (1, 2); Band (1, 2. 3. 4); Polar Bears (1. 2, 3. 4). Leader (3. 4); Assistant in French (4). Prepared at Framingham High School. Major in French. Frederic Sherborne Mann, XT Needham, Massachusetts Freshman Cross-Country Team; Freshman Track Team; Sophomore Track Team; Varsity Track Squad (1.2. 3); Varsity Cross-Country Squad (2. 3); Cross-Country Team (4); Relay Squad (2. 3); Class Vice-President (1); Ivy Day Committee (3); Glee Club (1, 3, 4): Chapel Choir (1. 2. 3. 4); Political Forum (3); Board of Proctors. Prepared at Roxbury Latin School. Major in Economics. Wilbur Berry Manter. AKE Fassalboro, Maine Freshman Football; Varsity Football Squad (2); Varsity Football Team (3. 4); Interfraternity Basketball (1); Varsity Baseball Squad (1); Varsity Baseball Team (2. 3); Student Council (4); Mathematics Club (3, 4). Prepared at Moses Brown School. Major in Chemistry. Vale Goldthwaite Marvin, ZT Dorchester. Massachusetts Freshman Track Team; Freshman Relay Team; Varsity Track Team (2. 3. 4); Varsity Relay Team (2. 3. 4). Captain (3). Prepared at Boston English High School. Major in History. Gardiner Josiaii Maxcy. AKK Portland, Maine Freshman Track Team; Freshman Relay Team (N. E. I. C. A. A.); Sophomore Track Team; Sophomore Relay Team; Varsity Track Squad (1), Varsity Track Team (2. 3. 4); Varsity Relay Team (2. 3. 4); Portland Cup (2); Augusta Cup (3): Interfraternity Track Team (1. 2. 3. 4); Business Manager of Bugle (3). Prepared at Deering High School and Governor Dummer Acad- emy. Major in Government. Owen Henry Mei.augh. 0AX Portland, Maine Freshman Football Squad; Junior Varsity Football Team (2); Freshman Track Squad; Ivy Day Committee (3); Dean’s List ($); Abraxas Cup; Bowdoin Publishing Company (2). Assistant Manager (3). Manager (4); Quill (2). Assistant Manager (3); Growler Business Board (3). Pre- pared at Portland High School. Major in Economics. Burroughs Mitchell, TV New York, New York Junior Class President; Bertram Louis Smith. Jr. Scholarship; President Phi Chi (2); Ibis (4); Orient (2. 3); Co-editor Quill (4); Editor of Growler (3, 4). Prepared at Loomis School. Major in English. Georce Christie Monrll, A AT Concord. New Hampshire Tennis Team (1. 2. 3); Assistant Manager of Swimming (2); Polar Bears (1). Prepared at Con- cord High School. Major in Psychology. F.rwin Emerson Morse Fayoille, Massachusetts Mathematics Club (3); Assistant in Chemistry (3. 4). Prepared at Newton High School. Major in Chemistry. Robert Stuart Morse. ZT Brunswick. Maine Freshman Football and Track Teams; Varsity Football Squad (3). Prepared at Brunswick High School and Wassookeag School. Major in Government. Raymond Pack . New York. New York Varsity Swimming Team (1, 2); Varsity Tennis Squad; Alexander Prize Speaking; Plummer Prize Speaking: French Club; Masque and Gown. Prepared at Ficldston School and Chateau dc Bures. Major in German. Thomas Lawrence Motley Park, 2N , Groton. Massachusetts junior Varsity Hockey Team (2). Varsity Hockey Team (4); Assistant Manager ot Baseball (2); Intramural Manager of Athletics (3); Interfraternity Athletic Council (3). Prepared at Kent School. Major in Psychology. Walter Winfield Peacock, Jr., ZT I.ongmeadow, Massachusetts Junior Varsity Hockey Team (3); Varsitv Hockey ’Team (4); Mathematics Club (3. 4). Prepared at Classical High School. Springfield. Massachusetts. Major in Chemistry. Robert Dearinc Peakes, B0n _ . ‘V4”” Freshman Football Squad; Junior Varsity Football Squad (2); arsity Football Squad (3. 4): Varsity Track Squad (3);Gvm Squad (1); Band (1. 2.3. 4); Instrumental Club (2. 3); Commence- ment Play (3); Interfraternity Basketball (1. 2. 4); Religious Forum Committee (2); Bowdoin Christian Association (1. 2); Interfraternity Track Meet (3). Prepared at Newton High School and Good Will High School. Major in English. Lawrence Lee Pelletier. ATQ % n Sprinkle, Maine Dean's List (3, 4); Political Forum (3, 4): Assistant in Government (3. 4). Prepared at Sanford High School. Major in Government. 27 r Till-: LOW DOIX BUGLE Thurman Everett Phi loon. KX Newton Center, Massachusetts Assistant Football Manager (i. z); Tennis Manager (4); Almon Goodwin Prize (5); Hannibal Hamlin Emery Prize (3); Phi Beta Kappa (3); Dean's List (2. 3.4); Rhodes Scholarship Candidate from Bowdoin (4). Classical Club (z. 3); Vice-President (4); Political Forum (3); Masque and Gown (2. 3. 4). Prepared at Newton High School. Major in Classics. Richard Henry Powers, Jr., KS Rockaway Beach, New York Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1); Varsity Swimming Team (2. 3. 4); Phi Chi (2). Prepared at St. John's Preparatory School, Brooklyn, New York. Major in Economics. John F'iNZER PresNELl, Jr. Portland, Maine Junior Varsity Track Team (2); Goodwin French Prize (1); Abraxas Cup; Smyth Mathematical Prize (2); Phi Beta Kappa (4); Mathematics Club (3, 4), President (4); Assistant in Mathematics (3, 4); Assistant in Chemistry (3. 4). Prepared at Portland High School. Major in Mathematics. Albert Pearce Putnam, AKE 11 out ton. Maine Freshman Football Team, Captain; Varsity Football Team (2. 3. 4). Captain (4); Class President (2); Student Council (4). Prepared at fJoulton High School and Ricker Classical Institute. Major in Government. Norman Samuel Quint Laurence. Massachusetts Junior Varsity Swimming Squad (1); Interfraternity Baseball (1, 2, 3). Prepared at Hebron Academy. Major in Chemistry. SrENCKR BaldaUP Reynolds, B0II Terrysille, Connecticut Glee Club (1, 2); Chapel Choir (1,2). Prepared at Terry ville High School. Major in Ficonomics. John Dexter Rice. B0II B'ortester. Massachusetts Prepared at North High School. Transferred from Clark University. Major in Chemistry. John Bi.ake Roberts, Jr., YM’ Cambridge, Massachusetts Freshman F'ootball Squad; Varsity Football Squad (2, 3), Varsity F'ootball Team (4); Freshman Track Team; Varsity 1’rack Squad (2, 3). Prepared at Caribou High School. Major in History. John Andrew Rodick. 0AX Bar Harbor. Maine Swimming Squad (1); Manager of Band (3). Prepared at Bar Harbor High School. Major in History. Maurice Ross Biddejord, Maine Assistant Baseball Manager (1); State of Maine Scholar; Freshman Debating Team; Freshman- Sophomore Debate (2); Mathematics Club (3); Assistant in Mathematics (3); Phi Beta Kappa (4). Prepared at Biddcford High School. Major in Mathematics. Gaynor Kbllocc Rutherford, AT Belmont. Massachusetts Junior Varsity Hockey (1. 2); Varsity Hockey (3). Captain (4); Junior Varsity Baseball (1. 2); Varsity Baseball (3); Interfratcrnity Football (1, 2); Dean's List (3, 4); Classical Club (2, 3, 4). Prepared at Belmont High School. Major in Government. Thompson Sawyer Sampson, Jr., AA4 Boston. Massachusetts Swimming Team (3. 4); Student Council (3. 4), Secretary-Treasurer (3); Ibis (4). Prepared at Loomis School. Major in Psychology. Douglas Mills Sands, AT Worcester. Massachusetts Assistant Manager of Freshman Track; Assistant Manager of Sophomore Track; Manager of Varsity Cross-Country; Manager of Freshman Track (3). Prepared at North High School. Major in French. William Preston Sawyer. AA 1 Winchester, Massachusetts Freshman F'ootball Team; Junior Varsity F'ootball Team (2); Freshman Hockey Team; Glee Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Chapel Choir (2); Cheerleader (3, 4); Gym Squad (2, 3); Ivy Dance Com- mittee. Prepared at Noble and Grcenough School. Major in History. Harry Barnum Scholefield. AKK Hinckley, Maine Alternate Manager Varsity F'ootball (4). Prepared at Good Will High School. Major in Mathe- matics. Orville Bryan Seacravf., OAX Fall Riser, Massachusetts Junior Varsity Swimming Team (i); Varsity Swimming Team (2. 3); Junior Varsity Baseball Team (1, 2, 3); Freshman F'ootball; Rifle Team (4). Prepared at Moses Brown School. Major in Biology. Hubert Seely Shaw, £N Presque Isle, Maine Varsity Baseball Team (1.2, 3). Captain (4); Varsity Football Team (3. 4); Assistant Hockey Manager (2); State of Maine Scholar; Band (1); Board of Proctors (4); Student Council (4); Christmas Dance Committee (4); S. C. D. C. (4); Class Secretary (4). Prepared at Presque Isle- High School. Major in Biology. Walter Sf.ely Shaw, 2N Presque Isle. Maine Freshman Football; Varsity F'ootball Squad (3); Varsity Baseball (1. 2. 3); Interfratcrnity Basket- ball (1); Phi Chi; Band (1, 2). Prepared at Presque Isle High School. Major in Government. John Vandf.ri.yn Shute, AKK Il'ortendyke. New Jersey Freshman Football Squad; Freshman Track Team; Sophomore Track Team; Varsity Track Team (1, 2, 3. 4); Varsity Cross-Country Team (2, 3). Captain (4); Phi Beta Kappa (3); Rhodes Scholar Nominee from Maine (4); Glee Club (1.2, 4). Manager (3); Political Forum (3, 4); Board of Proctors; Secretary-Treasurer of Student Council (4). Prepared at Paterson Central High School. Major in History. 2S THE BOW DO IN BOGLE Clarence Arlowe Small, AKK Mackiasport. Maine Freshman Track Squad; Freshman Baseball; Junior Varsity Baseball; Intcrfratcrnity Basketball (l, 2, 3). Prepared at Washington Academy. Major in Chemistry. Maxwell Mowbray Small, AY Beverly, Massachusetts Ivy Dance Committee (3); Phi Chi; Ibis; French Club (l, 2); Commencement Play (3). Prepared at Beverly High School. Major in Philosophy. Randall Woodbury Snow, ATQ Bcverh, Massachusetts Track Squad (2); Mathematics Club (3, 4); Glee Club (1); Choir (1); Orient (1); Assistant Photo- graphic Kditor of Bugle (2); Assistant in Chemistry (4). Prepared at Beverly High School and Tabor Academy. Major in Chemistry. Louis Frank Solari, ATQ Fryeburg, Maine Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Squad (2); Freshman Football Squad. Prepared at Frye- burg Academy. Major in Chemistry. William Hilton Soule, ZV Augusta. Maine Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2, 3); Varsity Football Team (2. 3. 4); Student Council (4); Board of Proctors; Student Council Disciplinary Committee (4); Christmas Dance Committee (4). Prepared at Cony High School. Major in History. Frank Elwyn Southard, Jr., zjS _ Augusta, Maine Manager of Baseball (3); Fencing Squad (3); Dean’s List (2, 3, 4). Prepared at Cony High School. Major in History. Frank Herbert Swan. 0AX Providence, Rhode Island Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Squad (2. 3. 4); Varsity Cross-Country Squad (3, 4); Dean's List (4); Assistant Manager of Masque and Gown (2, 3), Secretary (4); Commencement Play (2). Prepared at Moses Brown School. Major in English. Everett Lewis Swift Boston, Massachusetts Dean's List (1. 2. 3. 4); Assistant in History (3); Tutor in French (j); Phi Beta Kappa (3); De- bating Council (1. 2. 3). Assistant Manager of Debating fr); Political Forum (3. 4); Stanley Plummer Prize Speaking (3). Prepared at Oliver Ames High School. Major in History. Winsor Lord Thomas, AY Cambridge, Massachusetts Junior Varsity Tennis (t). Varsity Tennis (2, 3. 4), M. I. A. A. Doubles Champion (3), Winner of Fall Tennis Tournament (4); Junior Varsity Hockey (1. 2). Varsity Hockey (3. 4); Glee Club (1); Interfraternity Athletic Council (4). Prepared at Cambridge Latin School. Major in Biology. Fred Wilbur Thyng, A TO Shapleigh. Maine Freshman Football Squad: Interfraternity Basketball (1, 2, 3, a); Interfraternity Baseball (1, 2, 3. 4); Dean’s List (3, 4). Prepared at Sanford High School. Major in Biology. Roderick Louis Tondreau, ATQ Brunswick. Maine Swimming Squad (2. 3); RiHe Club (3, 4). Prepared at Brunswick High School. Major in Chemistry. Felix Smith Verity. ATQ Boston, Massachusetts Chapel Choir (1, 2. 3, 4); Instrumental Club (1.2); Glee Club (l. 2. 3. 4); Glee Club Accompanist (3); Assistant to Director of Athletics (3, 4). Prepared at South Side High School, Newark. N. J. Major in Biology. Howard Hollister Vogel. Jr. _ IFoodmere, New York Intcrfratcrnity Basketball (2. 3); Junior Varsity Swimming Squad (2. 3); Dean’s List (2, 3. 4); Masque and Gown (2, 3, 4); Hygiene Assistant (3. 4); Curator of the Biology Museum (4). Pre- pared at Woodmerc Academy. Major in Biology. Edwin Gilpatkic Walker, AY Biddeford. Maine Debating Team (1. 2. 3. 4). President of Debating Council (3); Junior Class Orator; Masque and Gown (1, 2, 3. 4), President (4); Classical Club (2, 3. 4); French Club (1. 2); Ibis (4); Bowdoin Poetry Prize (3). Prepared at Hebron Academy. Major in English. Winthrop Brooks Holt Walker, 0AX __ Portland. Maine Freshman Football Squad; Junior Varsity Swimming (1), Varsity Swimming Team (2. 3), Captain (4); Ivy Dance Committee (3); Abraxas Cup; Band (1, 2, 3, 4); Masque and Gown (1, 2. 3, 4): Bowdoin Publishing Company (1. 2), Assistant Manager (3). Prepared at Portland High School. Major in History. Edward Rice Ward Kennebunk. Maine Cross-Country Squad (1); Varsity Track Squad (1, 2); Independent Basketball (3). Prepared at Kennebunk High School. Major in Economics. James Raymond West, 'EY ... 9 Town. Maine Fencing Team (2. 3.4); Freshman Track Squad; Freshman Football Squad; Chairman of Ibis (4); Masque and Gown (1,2.3. 4): L’Ours Blanc (1, 2, 3,4); Associate Editor of the Growler (1.2, 3. 4). Prepared at Old Town High School. Major in Chemistry. Donald Robertson Woodward Taunton, Massachusetts Freshman Cross-Country Team; Fairbanks Prize; L’Ours Blanc (i. 2, 3). Secretary-Treasurer (2): Bowdoin Christian Association (1. 2, 3, 4), Member of Cabinet (2. 3. 4). Vice-President (4); Chair- man of Bowdoin Forum of Modern Religious Thought (3, 4). Prepared at Taunton High School. Major in English. 20 JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Wendell Carter Sawyer.....................................................President Robert Marston Porter................................................Pice-President Crowell Clarinton Hall, 3RD ....................................Secretary-Treasurer CLASS DAY PAR IS William Vail Kellen Fletcher.............................. Marshal Frederick Landis Gwyn ....................................... Poet Nathan Dane, 2nd.............................................Odist Richard Vincent McCann......................................Orator IVY DANCK COM MITTEE Richard Winthrop Baker, Chairman Ledgard Mills Hall Mahlon Allen Dane, Jr Virgil George Bond Richard Tunis May David Browne Rideout IVY DAY COMMITTEE Eaton Weatherbee Tarbell, Chairman John Francis Swett Reed Robert Arthur Gentry 30 JUNIORS Simeon Barrett Aronson, AKE Portland, Maine Freshman Football Team; Phi Chi (2). Prepared at Holderncss. Russell Emerson Austin, Jr. Dorchester, Massachusetts Major; History Prepared at Roxbury Latin School and Roxbury Memorial High School. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Richard Winthrop Baker, B0II Norwood, Massachusetts Major: English Assistant Manager of Track (1); Interfraternity Touch Football and Basket- ball (1, 2. 3);One-Act Plays (1); Polar Bears (1, 2, 3); Band (1, 2), Leader (3); Rally Committee (3); Interfraternity Athletic Council (3). Prepared at Norwood High School. John Franklin Barker, AA I Evanston, Illinois Major: Zoology Manager of Freshman Track (3); Glee Club (1); Chapel Choir (1). Prepared at Evanston High School. 31 Richard Kenneth Barksdale Winchester, Massachusetts Major: English Freshman Football Team; Junior Varsity Football Team (a); Freshman Track Team; Sophomore Track Team; Dean's List (2, 3); Classical Club. Prepared at Winchester High School. George Henry Bass, 2nd, AKE Wilton, Maine Major: Economics Freshman Football Squad; Varsity Football Squad (2, 3); Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1); Junior Varsity Hockey Team (2); lnterfraternity Athletic Council (3). Prepared at Wilton Academy and Deerfield Academy. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Walter Sprague Batty, 0AX Hopedale, Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3); Rifle Club (3); Bowdoin Publishing Company (i 2); lnterfraternity Touch Football (3). Prepared at Hopedale High School. 'Transferred from Harvard College. George Goodwin Bean, AT£i Brunswick, Maine Major: Chemistry Track Squad (1, 2); Fencing (1, 2). Prepared at Brunswick High School. 32 Richard Hancock Beck. 'IT Cynwyd, Pennsylvania Major: Economics Outing Club (2, 3); Freshman Football Squad; Junior Varsity Football Squad (2); Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1); Ski Team (2. 3). Prepared at Lower Merion High School. Edwin Bonettb Benjamin, AA4 Portland, Maine Major: Greek Golf Team (1, 2); Dean’s List (3); Classical Club (1, 2. 3); Masque and Gown (1,2, 3). Prepared at Deering High School. THE BOWDOIN BUGLE Wmm memm PercIval Safford Black, AT Bath, Maine Major: Economics Freshman Football Squad; Junior Varsity Football Squad (2); Bugle Staff (1); Union Committee (3). Prepared at Morse High School. Virgil Georcf. Bond, XT Portland, Maine Major: History Varsity Track Team (1, 2, 3); Freshman Cross Country Team, Captain; Cross Country Team (2, 3); Class Vice-President (1); Ivy Dance Committee (3); Abraxas Cup; Classical Club (3); Phi Chi. Secretary-Treasurer (2); Polar Bears (1); Bowdoin Publishing Company (1); Rally Committee (3). Prepared at Deering High School. 33 Thomas Marvin Bradford, Jr.. AA4 Lake Bluff, Illinois Major: Biology Junior Varsity Swimming (i, 2); Rifle Team (2, 3), Treasurer of Rifle Club (2), Vice-President (3). Prepared at Deerfield Shields High School. Charles Foss Brewster, AKK Dexter, Maine Major: History Freshman Track Team; Interfraternity Track (1, 2); Interfraternity Basket- ball (2, 3); Assistant Manager of Football (1, 2, 3); Interfraternity Tennis (2); Dean’s List (1, 2. 3); Bowdoin Christian Association (1, 2, 3); Mathe- matics Club (2, 3); Political Forum (1. 2), President (3); Chairman of Political Action Committee of International Relations Council (2); Orient Staff (1). Sub-Editor (2), Sports Editor (3); Instrumental Club (1, 2); Band (1); Armistice Day Peace Speaker (3). Prepared at N. H. Fay High School. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Donald Robert Bryant, AT Gorham, New Hampshire Major: Economics Debating Team (2, 3); Dean's List (2, 3); Orient Staff (1). Prepared at Gorham High School. William Smith Burton, AKK Cleveland, Ohio Major: History freshman football 'learn; Sophomore Football Team; Junior Varsity Foot- ball learn (2); Varsity football Team (3); Freshman Track Team; Inter- fraternity Track (1, 2); Varsity Track Squad (3); Varsity Rifle Team (2, 3); 7°.Squad (2); Dean’s List (2, 3); Bowdoin Christian Association (1, 2, 3); Political forum (i, 2), Vice-President (3); Chairman of International Com- mittce (2); Bowdoin Rifle Club (2, 3); Orient Staff (1), Sub-Editor (2), Sports Editor (3); Chairman of Armistice Day Peace Program (3). Prepared at Shaw High School. 34 George Warren Butters, Jr., 'IT Lexington, Massachusetts Major: Economics Assistant Manager of Hockey (2); Junior Varsity Tennis Gown (1); Glee Club (1. 2); Orient Staff (1). Prepared at Lexington High School. (l); Masque and Horace Childs Buxton, Jr., Z'F Fort Fairfield, Maine Major: American History Dean’s List (2, 3); Glee Club (1, 2); Instrumental Club (1, 2); Choir (1,2, 3); Band (1, 2, 3); Library Assistant (2, 3). Prepared at Fort Fairfield High School. THE BOW DO IX BUGLE Charles Morgan Call Hyde Park, Massachusetts Major: Psychology Outing Club (2, 3); Fencing Squad. Prepared at Hyde Park High School. Malcolm Walter Cass Old Orchard Beach, Maine Major: Chemistry Dean’s List (1, 2); Instrumental Club (1); Glee Club (2); Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3); Assistant Organist (1, 2), Organist (3). Prepared at Bar Harbor High School. 55 John Brandon Chandler. AY Worcester, Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Assistant Manager Swimming Team (2), Manager (3); Freshman Cross Country Squad; Bugle Staff' (1), Assistant Kditor (2), Editor-in-chief (3). Prepared at Worcester Academy. Dan Edwin Christie. XT Milo, Maine Major: Mathematics Smyth Mathematical Prize; Mathematics Club (3); Freshman-Sophomore Debate (1); Edgar O. Achorn Prize; Assistant in Physics (2. 3). Prepared at Milo High School. Richard Crowell Clapp, £N Watertown, Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Freshman Football Team; Sophomore Football Team; Varsity Football Squad (2), Team (3); Freshman Track Team; Track Squad (1, 3); Inter- fraternity Sports (2); Dean’s List (2, 3); Mathematics Club (3). Prepared at Watertown High School. George Patrick Clarkson, 0AX Swampscott, Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Freshman Football Team; Freshman Track Squad; Varsity Football Squad (2, 3); Junior Varsity Football (2, 3); Sophomore Football 'Team; Inter- fraternity Athletics (1, 2, 3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Instrumental Club (1); Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3); Phi Chi. Prepared at Swampscott High School and St. John’s Preparatory School. 36 Donald Newton Cole, t)AX Brookline, Massachusetts Major: Sociology Freshman Football; Junior Varsity Baseball (i); State of Maine Scholarship; Assistant Business Manager of Bugle (2); Assistant Manager of Quill (2), Business Manager (3); Interfraternity Athletics (1, 2, 3). Prepared at Hebron Academy. Hubert Woodrow Coffin, HBII Portland, Maine Major: Government Prepared at Deering High School. THE BOW DO IN' BUGLE Francis Leroy Cooper, Jr., 2N Brockton, Massachusetts Major: Biology Freshman Football Squad; Assistant Baseball Manager (2); Intramural Sports Manager (3); Secretary of Interfraternity Athletic Council; Rifle Club (2, 3), Vice-President (3). Prepared at Thayer Academy. Robert Henry Cotton, M' Brookline, Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Junior Varsity Swimming (1), Varsity Swimming Team (2); Mathematics Club (3); Orient Staff (1). Prepared at Newton High School. 37 John Chapman Cousins, ATQ Old Town, Maine Major: Chemistry Assistant Football Manager (i); Track Squad (r, 2); Mathematics Club (3); Assistant in Chemistry (4). Prepared at Old Town High School. James Francis Cox, Jr., AKE Bangor, Maine Major: Economics Prepared at Bangor Academy and Hebron Academy. THE IH) V DO IN BUGLE Bion Rudolph Cram West Baldwin, Maine Major: Economics Abbey Page Scholarship (1); L’Ours Blanc (1. 2); Bowdoin Publishing Com- pany (1, 2); Assistant in Economics (3). Prepared at Fryeburg Academy. Arthur Chandler Crawford, ATQ Watertown, Massachusetts Major: Biology Prepared at Watertown High School. 38 Herman Louis Ckkiger, Jr., 2N Reading, Massachusetts Major: German Freshman Football; Varsity Football Squad (2, 3); Freshman Track; Inter- fraternity Athletics (2); Classical Club; Political Forum (1,2, 3). Prepared at Reading High School. John Leland Crosby, Jr., AKE Longmcadow, Massachusetts Major: Government Glee Club (1,2, 3). Prepared at Wilbraham Academy and Classical High School. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Harold Livingston Cross. Jr., PV Maplewood, New Jersey Major: Economics Freshman Football; Junior Varsity (2); Hockey (t, 2, 3). Prepared at Columbia High School. John Adler Crystal Woodmere, Long Island, New York Major: Zoology Bowdoin Kent’s Island Expedition (3); Phi Chi. Prepared at Horace Mann High School. 39 Charles Nason Curtis, AA4 Salem, Massachusetts Major: Zoology Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Squad (2, 3); Glee Club (1, 3); Instru- mental Club (1). Prepared at Salem High School. Ernest Rockwell Dalton, «ax Hopcdalc, Massachusetts Major: Government Political Forum (2, 3); Band (1. 2, 3), Manager (3); Bowdoin Publishing Company (2), Assistant Manager (3). Prepared at Mopedale High School. THE BOWDOIN BUGLE Mahlon Allen Dane, Jr., ZT Skowhcgan, Maine Major: Mathematics Ivy Dance Committee (3); Mathematics Club (3). Prepared at Skowhegan High School. Nathan Dane, 2nd, 'IT Lexington, Massachusetts Major: Classics Junior Varsity Hockey (1, 2, 3); Freshman Tennis Team; Junior Varsity lennis (2); Sewall Latin Prize (2); Classical Club (2, 3); Orient Staff (1). Prepared at Lexington High School. 40 Euan Gamkweli. Davis, YM‘ Newton ville, Massachusetts Major: Government Freshman Track Team; Freshman Football Team; Varsity Football Squad (2, 3); Dean’s List (3); L’Ours Blanc (2); Political Forum (3); Assistant Manager of Bowdoin Publishing Company (3). Prepared at Newton High School. David Turner Deane, AY Holden, Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Team (2, 3); Instrumental Club (2); Band (1, 2). Prepared at Worcester Academy. THE BOWDOIN BUGLE 1 Charles Addison Denny, 3RD, 2N Jenkintown, Pennsylvania Major: English Assistant Manager Football (1); French Club (1), Secretary-Treasurer {2); Masque and Gown (2, 3); Rifle Club (2); Bowdoin Christian Association (3). Prepared at Jenkintown High School. William Henry Dii.ler, Jr., AKE Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Major: French Freshman Track Squad; Track Squad (2); Gym Team (1,2, 3); Interfra- ternity Basketball (2, 3, 4). Prepared at William Penn Charter School. 41 Bertrand Bernard Dionne THE BOW IK) IN BUGLE Maxwell Ascher Eaton, 22 N Wakefield, Massachusetts Major: American History Orient Staff' (i). Board (2), Sports Editor (3). Prepared at Wakefield High School. Jonas Homer Edwards, B0I1 Auburn, Maine Major: Zoology Glee Club (1); Bugle Staff (1), Assistant Photographic Editor (2). Prepared at Hebron Academy. 42 Robert Clyde Falconer Sliirley Mills, Maine- Major: Chemistry Mathematics Club (3). Prepared at Eliot High School. William Vaii. Kellen Fletcher, 0AX Portland, Maine Major: Economics Assistant Football Manager (3), Manager-Elect (4); Freshman Track Squad; Bugle Editorial Staff (1). Prepared at Portland High School and Holdcrncss School. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Eugene Alexander Fortin Brunswick, Maine Major: Economics Prepared at Brunswick High School. Daniel Harold Edwards Fox Enfield, New Hampshire Major: Medieval History Classical Club. Prepared at Bangor Theological Seminary, ’33. Jonathan Wales French, Jr., AT South Braintree, Massachusetts Major: French Junior Varsity Baseball (i); Dean’s List (3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3). Prepared at Thayer Academy. Ellis Lorin Gates, Jr., TV Waban, Massachusetts Major: Government Gojf Team (1, 2, 3); Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1), Varsity (3). Prepared at Tabor Academy. r HE BOW DO IN BUGLE Robert Arthur Gentry, AT Quincy, Massachusetts Major: Government Freshman Football Team; Varsity Football Team (2, 3); Freshman Baseball Team; Varsity Baseball Team (2, 3). Prepared at Thayer Academy. Paul Hussey Gilpatric, XT Medford, Massachusetts Major: Zoology Musical Club (1, 2); Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Polar Bears (1, 2, 3); Chapel Choir (i. 2, 3). Prepared at Medford High School and Hebron Academy. •14 Jack D. Goldman, AKK St. Louis, Missouri Major: Economics Junior Varsity Tennis; Assistant Manager Track Squad (i); Track Squad (2); Interfraternity Athletics (1). Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School and Taylor School. Herbert Melvin Goldstein Portland, Maine- Major: Chemistry Golf Team (1, 2, 3); Brown Memorial Prize. Prepared at Portland High School. _________::_______1________ THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Franklin Farrar Gould, Jr., AA«I Freeport, Maine Masque and Gown (2, 3); Classical Club; Commencement Play (1, 2). Prepared at Freeport High School. Ralph Clifton Gould, ATQ Boxford, Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Junior Varsity Football (2); Junior Varsity Baseball (1, 2, 3); Freshman Hockey Squad; Interfraternity Athletics (3); Dean’s List (3); Mathematics Club (3); Assistant in Research Chemistry (3). Prepared at Topsfield High School. 45 Kenneth Vernon Gray Portland, Maine Major: Philosophy Transferred from Bangor Theological Seminary, '35. William Albert Otto Gross, 7M’ Brunswick, Maine Major: Biology Orient Staff (1, 2); Bowdoin Ornithological Expedition (1. 2); Field Director Bowdoin Biological Station (3). Prepared at Brunswick High School. THK BOWDOIN BUGLE mm Frederick Landis Gwynn, B0H Chevy Chase, District of Columbia Major: English Freshman Football Squad; Interfraternity Athletics (1, 2, 3); Glee Club (3); Classical Club (2, 3); L’Ours Blanc (2, 3); Masque and Gown (1, 2, 3), Executive Member (3); Commencement Play (l. 2); Growler Board (2); Quill Board (3); Cheerleader (3). Prepared at Melrose High School. Benjamin Sti.mpson Hagcett, Jr., ©AX East Orange, New Jersey Major: Economics Freshman football Squad; Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1); Inter- fraternity Basketball (1, 2, 3); Bowdoin Publishing Company (1, 2). Prepared at East Orange High School. ■ 6 Crowell Clarinton Hall, 3rd, AA I West Hartford, Connecticut Major: Economics Freshman Track Team; Sophomore Track Team; Varsity 'Track 'Team (2, 3); Varsity Relay Team (2); Class Secretary-Treasurer'(3); Glee Club (3); President Intcrfratermty Athletic Council (3). Prepared at Loomis School. Lrdgard Mills Hall, AV NewtOnville, Massachusetts M ajor: Government Assistant Manager of Track (2), Manager of Varsity Track (3); Ivy Dance Committee (3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Chapel Choir (i. 2); Assistant Business Manager of Masque and Gown (2). Business Manager (3); Classical Club (3); Interfraternity Basketball (1,2, 3). Prepared at Lake Forest Academy and 'Tilton School. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Charles Joseph Harkins, Z'F West Roxbury, Massachusetts Major: Government Junio Varsity Hockey (l); Varsity Hockey (2, 3); Junior Varsity Baseball (« 2 3)- Prepared at Lawrence and Boston English High School. Robert Harrington Harris, AV Binghamton, New York Major: Economics Assistant Manager of Hockey (2), Manager (3). Prepared at 'Tilton Academy. 47 Milton Haveson Robbinsvillc, New Jersey Major: Economics Prepared at Brunswick High School. Daniel Ward Healy, ZT River Edge. New Jersey Major: Physics Varsity Football Squad (2), Team (3); Track Squad (1, a, 3); Mathematics Club (3). Prepared at Hackensack High School THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Charles Frederic Clifford Henderson, 2nd, XT Nahant, Massachusetts Major: French Masque and Gown (1, 2, 3). Prepared at Kimball Union Academy. William Thomas Henry, K1' Portland, Maine Major: Chemistry Sophomore Track Squad (2). Prepared at Deering High School. 48 John Edmund Hooke, TV Maplewood, New Jersey Major: Psychology Junior Varsity Swimming Team (i); Varsity Swimming Team (2, 3); Masque and Gown (1). Prepared at Columbia High School. Edward Gerard Hudon Brunswick, Maine Major: Economics Freshman Track Squad. Prepared at Brunswick High School. THE IK) WOO IX BUGLE Mansfield Laurence Hunt, ATQ Mexico, Maine Major: History Prepared at Machias High School and Mexico High School. Paul Stetson Ivory, 0AX Koslindalc, Massachusetts Major: Philosophy Track Squad (3); Junior Varsity Swimming Squad (2); Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Instrumental Club (1, 2, 3), Leader (3); Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3). Prepared at Roxbury Latin School. 49 Ralph Gordon Johnson, Jr., ZV Brockton, Massachusetts Major: Economics Freshman Football Team, Captain (i), Varsity Football (a, 3); Varsity Base- ball (2, 3); Interfraternity Basketball (1); Independent Basketball (a, 3). Prepared at Bucksport Seminary. Ara Avo Karakashian, (-)AX Stoncham, Massachusetts Major: Government Freshman Football Team, Varsity Football (2, 3); Freshman Baseball Team; Varsity Baseball (2, 3). Prepared at Stoneham High School. THE BOW 1)0 IN BUGLE Roger Cushing Kellogg, 'IT Reading, Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Golf Team (1, 2); Interfraternity Bowling (2). Prepared at Williston Academy. Walter Lowe Kearin, ATQ Medford, Massachusetts Major: Biology Prepared at Medford High School and Cushing Academy. 5° Frank Wilson Kihbe, AAd Hartford, Connecticut Major: Biology Junior Varsity Swimming (i, 2); Varsity Football Squad (2); Varsity Tennis (1. 2 3); Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3); Outing Club (1, 2). Prepared at Loomis School. William Klaber, Jr., K2 Montclair, New Jersey Major: Government Track Squad (2); Dean’s List (3); Masque and Gown (1, 2, 3), Production Manager (3); Political Forum (2, 3), Executive Committee (3); Mathematics Club (3); Sub-Editor Orient (2), Managing Editor (3). Prepared at Montclair High School. THE BO WOO IX BUGLE Percival Roediger Knauth, 2N Berlin, Germany Major: English Freshman Track Squad; Junior Varsity Track Squad (3); Outing Club (2, 3). Prepared at Petrischule, Leipzig. Basil Alexander Laity, ' .'V Portland, Maine Major: Government Freshman Football Team; Junior Varsity Football (2, 3). Prepared at Deering High School. 5 John Derby Lawrence, AKE Waban, Massachusetts Major: Government Junior Varsity Hockey (i). Team (2, 3); Junior Varsity Football (2); Junior Varsity Baseball (1, 2); Phi Chi. Prepared at Newton High School and Belmont Hill School. William Fullerton Leach, Jr., X4‘ Needham, Massachusetts Major: Economics Glee Club (2, 3); Political Forum (3). Prepared at Hebron Academy. Norman Stanley MacPhee, 22N Dorchester, Massachusetts Major: Economics Freshman Football Team; Junior Varsity Baseball Team (1, 2); Phi Chi. Prepared at Dorchester High School and Mount Hermon School. 52 Richard Vincent McCann, XT Portland, Maine- Major: French State of Maine Scholar; Alexander Prize Speaking Contest; Varsity Debating (2); Glee Club and Choir Soloist (1,2, 3); Masque and Gown (2, 3); College Chimes (3); Assistant in French (3). Prepared at Peering High School. John Barbour Marshall, Z'F Quincy, Massachusetts Major: Economics Freshman Football Team; Freshman Baseball Team; Junior Varsity Baseball (2,3)- Preparcd at Castle Heights Military Academy. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Richard Edson Mathewson, AT North Weymouth, Massachusetts Major: Mathematics Inter fraternity Athletics (2, 3); Mathematics Club (3); Sub-Editor Orient (2), Managing Editor (3); Assistant in Mathematics (3). Prepared at Weymouth High School. Richard Tunis May, KS Cohasset, Massachusetts Major: Biology Junior Varsity Swimming (1, 2); Varsity Swimming (2, 3); Phi Chi; Outing Club (1, 2, 3), President (3); Orient Staff (1); Interfraternitv Athletic Coun- cil (3)- S3 Prepared at Derby Academy. Sprague Mitchell, TV New York, New York Major: History Golf Team (i, 2), Captain (2); Interfraternity Athletics (1. 2); Assistant Football Manager (1); Hiland Lockwood Fairbanks Prize; Phi Chi. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Albert Willis Moulton, Jr., KS Portland, Maine Major: Biology Brown Memorial Award (2). Prepared at Portland High School. George Metcalfe Murray, Jr. Garden City, New York Major: Economics Transferred from University of Virginia. Benjamin Warren Norton North Anson, Maine Major: English Dean’s List (2, 3); State of Maine Scholar; Orient Board (1, 2). Prepared at Anson Academy. 54 Charles Edwards Noyes, 4T Dobbs Ferry, New York Major: History (iolf Team (i. 2, 3). Prepared at Hotchkiss School and Dwight School. John Hubert O’Donnell, I’N Presque Isle, Maine Major: Biology Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Squad (2, 3); Varsity Football Squad (3)- Prepared at Presque Isle High School and Ricker Classical Institute. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE William Robert Owen, B0II Augusta, Maine Major: Government Freshman Track Team, Captain (1); Varsity Track Team (2); Varsity Relay Team (2); Class Vice-President (2); Phi Chi, Vice-President; Glee Club (1); Chapel Choir (1); Student Council (3); Christmas Dance Committee (3). Prepared at Cony High School. Faunce Pendexter, ZT Norway, Maine Major: English Freshman Cross Country Team; Junior Varsity Cross Country Team; Track Squad (1); Freshman Hockey Squad (1); Dean’s List (3); Interfraternity Basketball (3). Prepared at Norway High School. 55 Daniel Waldron Pettencill, aKE Saratoga Springs, New York Major: Mathematics Dean’s List (2); L’Ours Blanc (1); Mathematics Club (3); Alexander Prize Speaking Contest (1); Commencement Play (2); Library Assistant (1, 2, 3); Mathematics Assistant (3). Prepared at Saratoga Springs High School. Robert Marston Porter, 0AX North Anson, Maine Major: Economics Freshman Cross Country Team; Varsitv Cross Country Team (2, 3); Fresh- man Track Team; Sophomore Track Team; Varsity Track Team (1, 2, 3); Class Secretary-Treasurer (2); Class Vice-President (3); Dean’s List (2, 3); Bowdoin Publishing Company (i, 2, 3); Student Council (3); Committee on Physical Education; Interfraternity Athletic Council. Prepared at Anson Academy and Hebron Academy THE BOWDOIN BUGLE John Francis Swett Reed, AKE Rockport, Massachusetts Major: Biology Freshman Track Team; Freshman Football Team; Varsity Football (2, 3); Varsity Track Squad (3). Prepared at Maine Central Institute. David Browne Rideout, AKE Moulton, Maine Major: Government Freshman Cross Country Team; Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track (2, 3)- Prepared at Moulton High School and Hebron Academy. S6 Joseph Rogers, XT Portland. Maine Major: Biology Freshman Track Squad. Prepared at Deering High School Wendbll Carter Sawyer, AV Saco. Maine Major: Government Freshman Football 1'eam, Varsity Football (2, 3), Captain (4); Junior Var- sity Baseball (1); Class Secretary-Treasurer (l); Class President (2, 3). Prepared at Thornton Academy. THE BOW DO I? s' BUGLE Joseph Gilbert Sclar Portland, Maine Major: Chemistry Varsity Golf Team (2, 3); Brown Memorial Scholarship. Prepared at Portland High School. Norman Parnell Seagrave, 0AX Fall River, Massachusetts Major: Government Debating Team (1. 2, 3), Assistant Manager (2), Manager (3); Junior Varsity Swimming Team (1. 2); Varsity Swimming Team (3); Hiland Lockwood Fairbanks Prize (2); Bowdoin Christian Association (1, 2, ?), Secretary- Treasurer (2, 3); Bowdoin Political Forum (2, 3); Alexander Prize Speaking (1. 2, 3), Second Prize (3); Bowdoin Delegate to National Interfraternity Conference (3); Bradbury Debates (1, 2); Secretary of the National Under- graduate Interfraternity Council (3). Prepared at Durfee High School. 57 Richard Warren Sears, AA«I Braintree, Massachusetts Major: American History Freshman Football Squad; Bugli Board (i), Assistant Photographic Editor (2), Photographic Editor (3). Prepared at Thayer Academy. Richard Winslow Sharp. ZSV Longmeadow, Massachusetts Major: Economics Freshman Cross Country Team (1); Fencing (1, 2, 3); Outing Club (1, 2). Prepared at Loomis School. Till BOW DO IN BUGLE Charles Shulman Lynn. Massachusetts Major: Chemistry Freshman Football Team (1); Varsity Football Squad (3); Interfraternity Athletics (1, 3); Political Forum (2, 3). Prepared at Lynn Classical High School. William Milton Simon Beverly. Massachusetts Major: Government Prepared at Salem High School. S8 Charles Howard Smith, AT Fort Fairfield, Maine Major: Chemistry Freshman Football Team; Varsity Football Team (2, 3); Sophomore Football Team; Gym Squad (1); Freshman Tennis Team; Varsity Tennis Team (1); Maine Intercollegiate Singles Champion (1); Junior Varsity Hockey (i); Varsity Hockev I cam (2); Track Squad (3); Varsity Baseball Squad (1); President Phi Chi; Union Committee (2). Prepared at Fort Fairfield High School and Bridgton Academy. Richard Morris Steer, B9II Melrose Highlands, Massachusetts Major: Kconomics junior Varsity Hockey (1), Captain (1); Varsity Hockey Team (2, 3); Junior Varsity Baseball (1, 2); Masque and Gown (1, 2, 3); Interfraternity Athletic Council (3). THE BO WOO IN BUGLE Charles Lincoln Stuart Bath, Maine Major: English Freshman Football Squad; Junior Varsity Football (2, 3); Track Squad (1,2); Independent Basketball (1, 2, 3); Rifle Club (3). Prepared at Morse High School. Eaton Weatherbee Tarbell, B9II Bangor, Maine Major: Mathematics Freshman Track Team; Sophomore Track Squad; Assistant Business Man- ager Bugle (2). Business Manager (3). Prepared at Deerfield Academy. I 59 Gauthier Abel Thibodeau, AA I Rumford, Maine Major: Zoology Varsity Baseball Squad (2); Ski Team (2); Phi Chi. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Philip Bray Thomas, K2 Houlton. Maine Major: Chemistry Freshman Debating Team; Freshman Track Squad. Prepared at Houlton High School and Ricker Junior College. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE John Geyer Thorpe, ATQ Christman Cove, Maine Major: Physics Freshman Track Squad; Interfraternity Athletics (2, 3); Mathematics Club (3); Physics Assistant (2, 3). Prepared at Gould Academy. Henry McKenney Trask. liOlI Bar Mills, Maine Major: Zoology Prepared at Kent’s Hill School and Governor Dummcr Academy. 60 Allen Brown Tucker, aa i Worcester, Massachusetts Major: French Interfraternity Athletics (2, 3). Prepared at Williston Academy. Charles Lemuel Tuttle, KX Kenncbunk, Maine Major: Biology RiHe I cam (2, 3); Junior Varsity Tennis (2); Band (1, 2, 3). Prepared at Kcnnchunk High School. THE BOW DO IX BUGLE Stanley Williams, Jr., 0AX New York, New York Major: French Masque and Gown (2, 3); Orient Staff (1), Sub-Editor (2), Managing Editor (3)- Prepared at Park Lodge School, Pau, France. George Myers Wingate, ZlI’ Ha Howell. Maine Major: History Junior Varsity Football (2, 3); Freshman Track Team; Varsity Track Squad (2. 3)- Prepared at Hallowell High School and Ricker Classical Institute. 61 George Victor Wolf Astoria, Long Island, New York Major: Philosophy Glee Club (3). Transferred from Bangor Theological Seminary, '35- Richard Henry Woods, ZV Cleveland I leights, Ohio Major: Government Rifle Club (3); Masque and Gown (3). Prepared at University School. THE BOW DO IX BUGLE Harold Edwin Wykr, f)AX Brookline, Massachusetts Major: Economics Assistant Manager of Swimming (2); Acting Golf Manager (2), Manager (3); Bowdoin Varsity Rifle Team (2, 3), Vice-President (2). Prepared at Brookline High School. Gerald Marshall York Brunswick, Maine Major: Mathematics Junior Varsity (2); Mathematics Club (3). Prepared at Brunswick High School. 62 Paul Welsh Revere, Massachusetts Major: English Masque and Gown (1,2, 3). Prepared at Revere High School. FORMER MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1937 Thomas Erskine Bassett, 'IT Stetson Coombs Beal, AT Donald Walter Berman, KX Ralph Leaver Clark, Z'P Bradford Harrison Cole, XT Gaylord Everett Conrad Benjamin DeSmith Daniels Robert F.ndicott Faxon, KX Albert Palmer Gould, TT Bradford Harrison Greene, ZT John Edward Hall, AT Lawrence Cecil Higgins David Nickerson Hill, AA I William Jason Holbrook, 2N William Sherman Lackey, XN John Rodham Leigh, XT James Bailey Marsh, AKE Robert Phillips Maxon, BOII Gary Franklin Merrill, AKE Pf.ter Conrad Parfitt, SN William Thomas Rowe, KX Max Rubknstein Walter Lloyd Southam, BAX Thomas Makinson Swift Spencer, AY Douglas Springer Harry Sutcliffe Stott, XT Lockwood Towns John Adams Twaddle, AA ! THE BOW DO IN BUGLE 63 J SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS Frederic Sorer Newman.....................................................President Geoffrey Robert Stanwood............................................ Vice-President Robert Nei.son Smith............................................Secretary-Treasurer 64 the bow do in bugle SOPHOMORE CLASS Donald Paine Allen. AT Saco Stanley Willis' Allen, AKE Bethel Duncan DeWitt Arnold. AA I Evanston, 111. Warren Holmes Arnold, Jr.. 0AX New York. N. Y. Harold David Ashkenzay, Z'F Lynn, Mass. Carl Frank Barron Arlington, Mass. Willard Streeter Bass, Jr., AKE Wilton Francis Waterhouse Bilodeau, 15011 Brunswick Sam McLaughlin Birch. AKE Utica, N. Y. James Alden Bishoi , Z'F Presque Isle Walter David Bishop, X'F Quincy, Mass. William Blades Larchmont, N. Y. James Thomas Blodgett, X'F Woburn. Mass. Daniel Warren Box-well, KX Peabody, Mass. Donald Franklin Bradford, B0II Larchmont, N. Y. Stuart Dexter Brewer, KX Kew Gardens, N. Y. David Ives Brown, GAX Swampscott, Mass. Kdward James Brown, AT Winchester, Mass. Elon Rouse Brown, 'FT Hartsdale, N. Y. Leonardo Edgar Buck, 'FT Bath Roland Stone Bui.lerwell, A TO Belmont, Mass. IIovey Mann Burgess Freeport George Russell Cadman, XX' Pleasantville, N. Y. James IIinkley Card, 0AX Somerville, Mass. Charles Gerard Carlson, 'FT Venice, Calif. Philip Freeland Chapman. Jr., AA I Portland Edward Fuller Chase, AA I Belmont, Mass. Freeman Davis Clark. X'F Milo Robert Wainwricht Clarke. B0U Melrose Hlds., Mass. Stuart Winslow Condon. ATO Roslindale, Mass. Andrew Hood Cox, AKE Bangor Robert Keenan Craven, 0AX Portland Thomas Joseph Craven, Jr., 0AX Portland Robert Haskell Cressey Bath George LeRoy Crossley. ATO Salem, Mass. Edward Lintott Curran, AKE Bangor George Thomas Davidson. Jr.. AA 1 Winchester, Mass. Edward Howard Day. ATO Springfield, Mass. Robert Rudolph Dearing, X'F Needham, Mass. James Ormond Dennis, 'FT Morristown, N. J. Carlyle Neville deSuze, Jr. Taunton, Mass. Audley Dai.y Dickson Portland John Woodburn Dili.er, AKE Philadelphia, Pa. Alide Lemaitre Duhaime, Jr. Manchester, N. H. Norman English Dupee, Jr., Z'F Waban, Mass. Kosrof Ei.igian Portland John Wardwell Ellery, XX Danvers, Mass. John Campbell Emery, B0I1 Dorchester, Mass. Ernest Haskell Files, B0II Westbrook Arthur Ellicott Fischer. X'F Westfield, N. J. William Hudson Fish, Jr., AT Newton ville, Mass. David Waldron Fitts, AA 1 Winchester, Mass. Vasmer Leverett Flint, AA 1 Milton, Mass. 6s Harry Thomas Foote, K2 Lorain, Ohio Robert Bernard Fox, AT Highland Park, 111. Claude Rand Frazier, AT Newtonville, Mass. William Ludlum Fredricks, Jr., 2N Jamaica, L. I., N. Y. William Frost, AA 1 Pleasant ville, N. Y. John Howard Frye, Jr., X’F Westfield, N. J. Rex Harding Garrett, K2 BriarcIifF Manor, N. Y. Scon- Parker Garfield, AA4 Elria, Ohio Carroll Fredrick Gleason Bridgton William Raynes Glines, SN Unity Robert Shaw Godfrey, AA4 Winchester, Mass. Charles Stanton Goodwin, £N Clinton, N. Y. Robert Archibald Gove, B0JI Melrose, Mass. John Pettingill Greene, AT Rum ford William Austin Greenlaw, X'F Fairfield Richard Joseph Griffin, Jr., SN Haverhill, Mass. Roy Chalmers Gunter, Jr. Woburn, Mass. Milton Wei.don Haire, ATfl North Chelmsford, Mass. John Henry Halford, Jr., X'F Norristown, Penn. John William Harrison, AA I Lewiston William Stevens Hawkins, AT ft Wilmington, Vt. James Prf.bi.e Hepburn, 'FT Norwood, Mass. Samuel Kirby Might, AKE Skowhegan Richard Sawin Holt Bethel Robert Lowe Hooke, 'FT Maplewood, N. J. Louis Joffre Hudon Brunswick Vincent Kingsley Hull, Jr., BOH Short Hills, N. J. Latimer Ballou Hyde, Z'F Ware, Mass. William De Witt Hyde, AKE Northampton, Mass. Samuel Kellf.r Jacobs Woodmere, N. Y. James Stodden King Harpswell Centre Robert William Laffin, AKE Springfield, Vt. Harry Tuck Leach, X'F Needham, Mass. Fredrick Gary Lewis, X'F Springfield, Mass. Ernest Alfred Lister, K2 Stoneham, Mass. Frank Dingley Lord, SN Auburn Matson Moorehead Lord, K2 Bucksport Alexander Maitland, Jr., 'FT Thompson, Conn. Scott Chamberlain Marshall, X'F Portland Howard Burnett Miller, X'F Turners Falls, Mass. Donald Francis Monell, AA4 Concord, N. H. Robert Eugene Morrow, X'F Lynn, Mass. Robert Dillingham Morss, Jr., aa ! Berkhamstead, England William Smith Muncy, 'FT Providence, R. I. William Robert Murphy, AKE Lynn, Mass. Edward William Najam Danbury, Conn. Henry Leighton Nash, Jr., 'FT Omaha, Nebraska Phillips Tyron Nead, AT Rutherford, N. J. Edward Bradford Newhai.l, AT Lynn, Mass. Frederic Soper Nf.wman, 0AX Bangor Basil Stuart Nicholson, AKE West Haven, Conn. William Warren Nickerson, ATfl North Dana, Mass. Stuart Oberist, K2 Worcester, Mass. 66 Edward Lynch O'Neill, Jr., OAX Portland Edward Henry Owen, 'J'T Bath Walter Brown Parker, Jr., AA t Cape Elizabeth Donald Irving Patt, AW Jamaica, N. Y. Thomas Franklin Phelps, X Pueblo, Col. Leonard Augustus Pierce, Jr., AKE Portland James Joel Pocock, Jr., AT Merion, Penn. Frank Humphrey Purington, Jr., ATil Malba, N. Y. Dwight Lindi.ey Rafford, 'FT Ashland Robert Charles Raleigh, X'F Philadelphia, Penn. Thomas De Witt Read, Vj Upper Montclair, N. J. John Lei fried Redman, Jr., Z'F Philadelphia, Penn. William Harvey Rice, Jr., X'F Quincy, Mass. Leonard Cary Robinson, Jr., Z'F Concord, Mass. Brewster Runolf.tte, OAX Portland Harwood Eldiudge Ryan, A TO Falmouth Foreside John Lowe Salter, 3RD., 'FT Glen Ridge, N. J. Ralph Butler Savage, Jr. Pittsburgh, Penn. Malcolm Fairbairn Shannon, K£ East Orange, N. J. John Shoukimas Lawrence, Mass. Francis Burton Skillings, OAX Fryeburg Stuart Gerard Paul Small, AT Scarsdale, N. Y. Carlton Kimball Smith, AA I Waltham, Mass. Denholm Smith, AT Worcester, Mass. Oscar Samuel Smith Richmond Robert Nelson Smith, B01I Woburn, Mass. David Bradford Soule, Z'F Augusta Geoffrey Robert Stan wood, AA«f Wellesley Hills, Mass. Henry Alan Steeves, Jr., AT West Roxbury, Mass. Selah Woodhull Strong, Z'F Woodbridge, N. J. Warren Ellis Sumner, BOII Walpole, Mass. Curtis Walker Symonds, AA4 Marblehead, Mass. John Wendell Taylor, A'KE Melrose, Mass. Carroll Franklyn Ferrell Richmond Fredrick Bryce Thomas Bradford, Vt. Harlan Durell Thombs, KS Cumberland Mills John Martin Thurlow, BOII Fryeburg William Eari.e Tootell, SN Methuen, Mass. Dudley Ball Tyson, Z'F Augusta Fergus Upham, BOII Waban, Mass. Ali.yn Knight Wadleigh, AT1 Portland David Carroll Walden, 'J'T Milton, Mass. Mortimer Personia Warren, AKE Cape Elizabeth Randolph Bradbury Waterhouse, AA 1 Deerfield, Mass. William Blaine Webb, Jr., AKE Wabasha, Minn. Vincent Bogan Welch, OAX Portland Wells Seymour Wether ell, ’J'T Omaha, Nebraska Roy Edward Wiggin Peabody, Mass. George Chandler Wilson, K2 Newton Center, Mass. Paul Howland Wilson, Jr., X'F Worcester, Mass Ralph Harold Winn, OAX Hopedalc, Mass. Charles Lorinc Young, BOII Belmont. Mass. William Andrew Young, Jr. Concord, Mass. THE BOW DO IN B U G L K FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS Henry Aucustine Dolan, Jr..............................................President Harold Sewall White, Jr...........................................Pice-President John Hubbard Rich, Jr....................................... Secretary-Treasurer Harold Sewall White, Jr..............................................Pice-President John Hubbard Rich, Jr........................................... Secretary-Treasurer FRESHMAN CLASS Frank Shepard Abbott, AKE West Medford, Mass. Luther Dana Abbott, OAX Auburn Elmer Winfield Allen, ZA Newcastle William Baker Allen, 'I'T Walpole, Mass. William Burrows Allen Cranston, R. 1. Frank Richard Andrews, ZA' Worcester, Mass. Charles Ingersoi.i. Arnold, AA'F West ville. Conn. David Ward Bamkord, AKE Houlton Edward Jackson Bartlett Concord, Mass. Philip Lincoln Bean, 0AX Port Chester, N. Y. John Chadsey Benedict, AT Boston, Mass. Walter McNall Benham, 'FT Arlington, Mass. Dan Langston Berger, at Kansas City, Mo. Bernard Joseph Bertels, Jr., AKE Bangor Kenneth Nettlkton Birkett, X'F Needham, Mass. William Henry Bledsoe, X'F Gloversville, N. Y. Benjamin Howard Blodgett, X'F W. Stewartstown, N. H. Marshall Bridge, AKE Portland William Vincent Broe, 2N Amesbury, Mass. William Herbert Brown, Jr. Portland Louis William Breummer, Jr., ZA' West Newton, Mass. Robert Davies Burhoe, OAX Seymour, Conn. Charles Waring Butler, 'FT Winchester, Mass. Charles Edward Campbell, Jr., AA4 Beverly, Mass. Philip Storer Campbell Portland Richard Bellwood Carland, AA I Nutley, N. J. John Vernon Carten, OAX Braintree, Mass. John Everett Carti.and, Jr., BOH Auburn Arthur Chapman, Jr., 0AX Portland John Noble Church, BOII Millbury, Mass. Graham Churchill, AT Elizabeth, N. J. Warner Jordan Clifford, 'FT Arlington, Mass. Harry Howard Cloudman, Jr. Oklahoma City, Okla. Leonard Jerome Cohen Fort Farifield Albert Randall Coombs, AT Arlington, Mass. Charles Nelson Corey, AT Newbury port, Mass. Robert Eugene Corson, 0AX Melrose, Mass. Malcolm Linn ell Creighton, AA 1 Thomaston Philip Holmes Crowell, Jr., AT Hartford, Conn. Willard Huntington Currier, B0II Andover, Mass. Alden Benjamin Davis South Poland Robert Lawrence Davis, AT Wayland, Mass. William Holbrook Davis, 'FT Hartsdale, N. Y. Henry Augustine Dolan, Jr., AKE Portland Thomas John Dugan Catasauqua, Penn. George Arthur Dunbar, X'F Watertown, Mass. Reed Hobart Ei.i.is, Jr., AT Rangeley Edwin Arthur Emmons, -X Hampton, N. H. Richard Clark Fernald, 0AX Lexington, Mass. Allan Charles Ferris Lynn, Mass. Herbert Field Fisher, Jr. Hartford, Conn. Robert Dixon Fi.eischner, AT Belmont, Mass. Robert Edward Foi.ey, X'F Waban, Mass. Richard Harrison Foster Melrose Highlands, Mass. Louis Garcelon, Jr. Medford, Mass. Paul Edward (Jardent, Jr., B01I Johnstown, N. Y. William Kimball Gardner Auburn Charles Frederick Gibbs, 2N Worcester, Mass. Winslow Curtis Gibson, AM San Francisco. Calif. Everett Lorinc Giles East Baldwin 69 Til E BOW IK) I X BUGLE NeWALL ELLIOT Ci 11. LETT, 2NT Worcester, Mass. Wilfrid Henry Girard, 'FT Brunswick Milton Myer Goldberg Portland Ernest Leroy Goodspeed, Jr., AKE Gardiner Dorrance Haven Goodwin, A TO Sanford Thomas Frederick Gordon Brewer Henry Roaf Graves, 2N Newburyport, Mass. John Hildreth Greeley, AA P Newton Center, Mass. Horace Steere Greene Providence, R. I. Alfred Ingersoll Gregory, BQII Maplewood, N. J. George Michael Lanen Griffin, OAX Haverhill, Mass. Linwood Joseph Groder Skowhegan Eastham Guild, Jr., 'FT Newton, Mass. Gf.orgf. Peter Halekas Taunton, Mass. Robert Henderson Hamblen, Z'F Wynnewood, Penn. Julian Tuthill Hanks Providence, R. 1. Daniel Francis Hani.ey, 2N Amesbury, Mass. Leslie Sylvester Harris Waterbury, Conn. William Coolidge Hart Fall River, Mass. Rowland Johnson Hastings, Jr., BOB Worcester, Mass. Georce Moulton Herrick, 'FT Arlington, Mass. Gf.orgf. Leslie Hill, A TO Wollaston, Mass. Harry Preston Hood, Jr., 'FT Beach Bluff', Mass. Thomas Warren Howard, Jr., 2N New York, N. Y. Hf.nry M ellen Howland, 2N West Hartford, Conn. Albert Edward Hughes, Jr., AT Arlington, Mass. Alfred Francis Hughes Lynn, Mass. Charles Oliver Hunt, ATO Portland James Brown Hunter, AT Newton, Mass. Melville Clarendon Hutchinson, Z'F Peak’s Island Edward Thomas Hyatt Mcriden, Conn. Robert James Hyde, A TO Methuen, Mass. Robert Thompson Hyde, Z'F Lexington, Mass. Pierson Clement Irwin, Jr., 'FT Bronxville, N. Y. William Mac Leod Ittmann, AKE Brookline, Mass. Lionel Frederick Jealous, Jr. Thomaston Everett Porter Jewett, Jr., BO 11 Worcester, Mass. Benjamin Anthony Karsokas, 2N Methuen, Mass. Robert Walter Kasten, AKE Milwaukee, Wis. Mark Elbridge Kelley, Jr., K2 Peabody, Mass. Willard Burr Knowlton, 'FT Tcnafly, N. J. John Thomas Konecki, Z'F South Portland Vincent John LaPlamme Great Works Philip Denton Lambe, OAX Elizabeth, N. J. Sf.th Leonard Larrabee, AKE Portland Albert Amos Learned, AKE Fairfield Leo Henry Leary, Jr., OAX Brookline, Mass. Harold Bernard Lehrman Boston, Mass. Jesse Herman Levin Bath Herbert Mayhew Lord, 2nd, X'P Fort Ethan Allen, Vt. Henry Earl Lucksinger Devon, Conn. John Chapman MacCarey, AT Newton Center, Mass. Myron Stone McIntire, X'P East Waterford Fred Palmer McKenney, Jr., B0n Wellesley Hills, Mass. Ross Lewis McLean, AA I West Newton, Mass. David Haynes Macomber, OAX Squantum, Mass. Ai.vord Newton MacRae, Z'F Concord, Mass. Richard French Marsh Sheldon Junction, Vt. Robert Douglas Martin Stratford, Conn. John Carlton Matthews, Z'F Waban, Mass. Oakley Arthur Melendy, 'FT Gardiner Richard Edmund Merrill Georgetown, Mass. Paul Eugene Messier, 2N Worcester, Mass. Wendell Marcellus Mick. K2 Newton Center, Mass. Burton Irvine Mitchell, AT Saco William Samuel Mitchell, Jr. Malden, Mass. Richard Henry Moore Deep River, Conn. Robert Shii.and Mullen, B0II Dorchester, Mass. Austin Porter Nichols, 2N Malden, Mass. John Donaldson Nichols, Jr. Weston, Mass. William Bridgham Nulty, Jr., AA I Portland Walter Louis Orcera Stamford, Conn. John James Padbury, Jr. Brunswick Edward Lincoln Parsons Brunswick George Bertrand Paull, Jr., AA 1 Roslyn Estates, L. I., N. Y. Jotham Donnell Pierce, AKE Portland Nahum Roy Pillsbury, Jr., 2N Braintree, Mass. Gordon Lloyd Potter Providence, R. I. George Daniel Reardon, X'F Quincy, Mass. John Hubbard Rich, Jr., 0AX Portland Herbert Flanders Richardson, Jr. Augusta Thomas Prince Riley, AA f Brunswick Richard Stanley Rosenfeld, AKE Waban, Mass. Walter Rowson, Jr. East Braintree, Mass. Bunn Whittemore Russell, Jr., ATC Lewiston Robert Crone Russell, X'F Haddam, Conn. Maynard Sandler Haverhill, Mass. John Casmir Scope Hastings-upon-Hudson, N. Y. Edward Emmons Scribner, Jr., AKE East Cleveland, Ohio Edgar Floyd Sewall, Jr., AT Somerville, Mass. George William Shattuck, 2N Peppcrell, Mass. Charles Edward Skii.lin South Portland Albert Gyles Smith, Jr., BOII Brockton, Mass. Edward Hersey Soule, AT Portland Howard Currier Soule, AKE New Bedford, Mass. Peter Dodge Stengel, ATC Belmont, Mass. Theodore Stern New Rochelle, N. Y. Donald Case Stevens, OAX Sanford Edward Stevens, Jr., Z'P Daytona Beach, Ha. Roger Mackintosh Stover, ATC Providence, R. I. Richard Hamilton Stroud West Duxbury, Mass. Kenneth Paul Thomas Sullivan, K Dorchester, Mass. Robert Lee Taylor Rangelcy Cari. MacGregor Thornquist, AT Newton, Mass. David Amos Tilden Holbrook, Mass. Randall Bradford 'Pinker, K2 Duxbury, Mass. James Hewey Titcomb, ATC Sanford Morton Paul Trachtenberg Dorchester, Mass. James Edward Tracy, Jr., K2 Dorchester, Mass. Philip Edward Tukey, Jr. Cape Elizabeth Edwin Lamoreaux Vergason, AT Binghamton, N. Y. Frederick Augustus Waldron, X'F Pittsfield William Marshall Walker Portland George Long Ware, Jr., AKE Brookline, Mass. Donald M erwin Wait, Z'F Lancaster, Penn. Ernest Eugene Weeks, Jr., AT Cornish Paul Purinton Wheeler Auburn Alfred Charles White Winchester, Mass. Harold Sewall White, Jr., AA f Auburn Duncan Kimball Whitehill, X'F Newton ville, Mass. Harry Eugene Williams, Jr., X'F Taunton, Mass. Frank Edward Woodruff, 'FT Barre, Vt. Peter Frederick Wulfinc St. Louis, Mo. Ralph Howard Wylie, Jr., 2X Ayer, Mass. George Hoadley Yeaton Newport, R. 1. 71 S' 3 I X 3 COMMITTEE ON PHYSICAL EDUCATION, 1935-36 REPRESENTATIVE OK THE TRUSTEES Ripley Lyman Dana, Chairman REPRESENTATIVE OF THE OVERSEERS Lyman Abbott Co use ns REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ALUMNI Judge Arthur Chapman Arthur H. Ham Waldo R. Flinn UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES Josiah Hayden Drummond, '36 Philip Given Good, ’36 Robert Marston Porter, ’37 74 FOOTBALL HOCKEY BASEBALL TRACK CROSS COUNTRY MAJOR SPORTS THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Coach Walsh VARSITY FOOTBALL, 1935 FOR 1935 Albert Pearge Putnam...........................................Captain Philip Arnold Christie.........................................Manager Charles Foss Brewster...............................Assistant Manager William Vaii. Kellen Fletcher...................... Assistant Manager FOR 1936 Wendell Carter Sawyer..........................................Captain William Vail Kellen Fletcher...................................Manager LETTER MEN Albert Pierce Putnam, Captain Hubert Seely Shaw William Hilton Soule Rodney Clayton Larcom, Jr. Josiah Hayden Drummond Wilbur Berry Manter Ralph Gordon Johnson, Jr. Wendell Carter Sawyer John Francis Reed Charles Howard Smith Robert Arthur Gentry John Howard Frye, Jr. Ara Avo Karakashian Daniel Ward Healy, Jr. Claude Rand Frazier William Smith Burton Harold David Ashkenazy Richard Crowell Clapp James Preble Hepburn David Waldron Fitts Edward Lintott Curran Andrew Hood Cox Frederic Soper Newman Robert Nelson Smith William Plummer Drake John Blake Roberts, Jr. George Michael Griffiths Philip Arnold Christie, Manager SCHEDULE Date Opponent Place Bow. Opp Oct. s Massachusetts State Amherst 7 6 Oct. 12 Wesleyan Brunswick 33 0 Oct. 19 Williams Williamstown 6 27 Oct. 26 Colby Brunswick 20 0 Nov. 2 Bates Brunswick 14 0 Nov. 9 Maine Orono 13 13 Nov. 16 Tufts .Vied ford 31 0 76 THK 1U) V DO IX Bl'GLK I lie rejuvenated Polar Bears nosed out Massachusetts State 7-6 in the first game of the year. Adam Walsh’s first Bowdoin team found it hard, at first, to click smoothly, but the White completely dominated the last period. The team opened the fourth quarter with a 76-yard march to within 2 yards of State’s goal line, only to be held for downs. Undaunted, the Polar Bears ran back the ensuing Massachusetts State punt and battered their way, gaining numerous first downs, to the goal line. Karakashian took the pigskin over. Bucky Sawyer’s perfect placement kick gave us the game. Massachusetts State kept the ball deep in Bowdoin’s territory for Captain Punum and Coach Walsh the first three periods but the stalwart line did not allow them to score until the last of the third quarter when a pass from Stewart to Adams was made good. Koenig scored after several line thrusts on an end run. In the Bowdoin backfield, Frye, Johnson and Sawyer hammered the opposing line for large gains, while Reed kept the State ends busy. Putnam and Shaw were outstanding on the defensive, while in the line Kitts and Ashkenazy shone. Yet in the last quarter it was easy to see that it was the team as a unit which was outstanding, as was typical of the Walsh team all season. STATE OF MAINE FOOTBALL CHAMPIONS 1935 BOWDOIN 7 MASSACHUSETTS STATE 6 BOWDOIN 33 WESLEYAN 0 Thirty-three Bowdoin men participated in overwhelming Wesleyan 35 o. In this second game of the season, Walsh presented a tricky, smooth-running team which was far superior to the opponents. In the second quarter the Polar Bears opened their deluge of scores when Reed returned a punt to Wesleyan’s 42-yard stripe, and, then, Johnson. Reed and Karakashian carried the ball for large gains with Karakashian putting it over. Sawyer kicked the point. Fitts intercepted a Wesleyan lat- eral on the kick-off, but soon Wes- leyan regained possession. But Reed grabbed one of the opponents’ passes and took the ball 23 yards to their 22-yard line. Johnson carried it through tackle for a score. Griffith and Drake pounced on another Wes- leyan fumble to give the White the ball again. Our backfield of Frye, Reed, Johnson and Putnam forced the ball down to the i-yard line with Captain Putnam making the score. The most spectacular play of the game came when Frye found an open- ing in the line and dashed 20 yards before tossing a nicely timed lateral Karakashian smashing over for the second touchdown in tin- Colby same. Fitts (30). to Manter, who advanced 30 yards Clapp (25). Drake (10). Johnson (27). Sawyer (22) 77 THK BOWDOIN BUGLE — more, and, just as he was about to be tackled, tossed another neat lateral to Johnson, who brought the total gain of the play up to 68 yards. We were deprived of Soule’s score by a penalty. Wesleyan vainly resorted to the air only to be thwarted by an inter- ception by Johnson who ran down the field for a score. Our line showed great strength and kept the opponents’ gains down to the minimum. Our last tally came as Sawyer completed a pass from Gentry and carried it for the final score. Sawyer scored all our points after touchdowns. BOW DO IN 6 WILLIAMS 27 W. Soule making longest run of Maine game, 6o yards. Putnam (ii), Ashkenazy (18). The Williams game was the one mar on the Polar Bears’ good record. However, it was not as one-sided as the score would indicate, statistics showing that Bowdoin outrushed the Purple eleven by 31 yards. Their four scores were made by a dazzling air attack which kept the Polar Bears back on their haunches. The White score came in the third quarter, Williams being forced to kick from behind their own goal line. Reed received the ball at the 40-yard marker and sped down the side- line to score almost untouched. BOWDOIN 20 COLBY 0 The White team swung into the State Series with a decisive defeat over Colby by a 20-0 score. Bow- doin’s low charging line consistently held the powerful Mule back field, and only during the last minutes of the game was our goal line threatened. A Colby fumble in the first period, recovered by Manter, led to Bowdoin’s first score. Putnam, Reed, and Karakashian carried the ball to Colby’s 20-yard line. From here Reed, on an end-run, sped across the goal line as the whole team gave perfect interference. A lateral late in the same period, Karakashian to Manter, was good for 35 yards. Ara again took the ball for 17 yards, and, after an unsuccessful end-run by Reed, scored from the 9-yard line. Colby was caught completely off their guard in the fourth quarter when the Bears scored on a fake drop-kick which became a pass from Sawyer to Frye who went for a touchdown without a Colby man near him. BOWDOIN 14 BATES 0 Bowdoin came out of the second scries game with a 14 -0 win over Bates. The entire line maintained even more than a defensive as they constantly set back the Bobcats for losses. For the first score, Bow- doin received the ball on their 35-yard line, from which an end-run and two passes brought the pigskin to the 5-yard stripe. Frye took it over for the touchdown, and Sawyer converted the point. Bates’ one scoring threat was terminated by Ashkenazy who con- Quartcrback Sawyer {Captain Elect) 78 Ill E BOW DO I X BUG I tinually broke through their line to push the ball back 9 yards. Gentry ran the punt 24 yards to bring the ball out of danger. In the third period, Smith and Larcom had forced the Garnet to give up the ball, and Johnson took a pass from Sawyer to run for a touchdown, accompanied by a few Bates players. Sawyer again kicked the point. At the end of the game the Bears were within 5 yards of a score due to the efforts of Frye, Gentry and Johnson. BOW DO IN 13 MAINE 13 The Brown Bears of Maine furnished the stiffest opposition of the State battles and turned a Bow- doin win into a 13-13 tie. Bowdoin’s glory came in the first half, the first score resulting from Ashkenazy’s recovery of a lateral. After a continued march down the field, Frye carried the ball over on a spinner, and Sawyer drop-kicked the point. Frye picked up a Maine fumble on Maine’s 30-yard line. This followed a first down, and a long pass from Gentry which Putnam caught on the 2-yard stripe. Johnson made the score. The second half was a different story as the Pale Blue eleven uncorked surprising and misleading formations to make the breaks and even the score. The crucial point came at the end of the game, when the Polar Bears came back to hold Maine for four downs on the 2-yard line. The crisis was then passed and the game ended to give Bowdoin her first state title in fifteen years. BOWDOIN 31 TUFTS 0 For the final game of the season, the stubborn Tufts Jumbos gave way before the invincible White team. During the first half Tufts had a slight edge, Bowdoin scoring but one touchdown. Finally in the last quarter it became evident that the Bears could get nowhere on the ground. Despite the wet day, Frye tossed two passes, one to Murphy, and one to Fitts who ran for a score. Bowdoin again got the ball, on the Tufts 17-yard mark. Another of Frye’s passes to Manter brought the score to 18-0. This was immediately followed by Dave Soule’s 67-yard run through the whole Tufts team to chalk up the fourth tally. A pass, Frye to Murphy, gave the extra point. In the last few minutes of the game, Drummond caught another of Frye’s remarkable throws to put the ball on the 37-yard line. Two more tosses, by Reed this time, put the ball in Newman’s hands, and netted the final score of the year. Rcc l running around end in the Colby game. Drake (10), Ashkenazy (18). 79 Lineman Smith HOCKEY, 1936 r 11 ic now do ix bugle Coach Wells FOR 1936 Gaynor Kellog Rutherford ...............................Captain Robert Harrington Harris.................................Manager Phillips Tryon Nead........................... Assistant Manager Robert Wainright Clark........................ Assistant Manager FOR 1937 John Derby Lawrence | . . Captain Phillips Tryon Nead . , i...................... . Manager LETTER MEN Gaynor Kellog Rutherford, Captain Stanley Willis Allen Charles Ingersoi.l Arnold George Henry Bass Leonardo Edgar Buck Robert Rudolph Bearing Robert Harrington Harris, Manager Charles Joseph Harkins John Derby Lawrence John Henry McGill Walter Winfield Peacock, Jr. Richard Morris Steer Winsor Lord Thomas SCHEDULE OF GAMES Date Opponents Place Bow. Opp. Jan. 6 Westbrook Eagles Brunswick 4 5 Jan. S Northeastern Brunswick 4 S I'cb. 6 New Hampshire Brunswick 0 4 Feb. 8 Colby Brunswick 2 4 Feb. 10 Colby Watcrville 4 7 Feb. 12 Colby Waterville 3 9 Feb. 14 Northeastern Boston 5 4 Feb. 15 New Hampshire Durham 0 5 80 THE IU) WOO IN BUGLE HOCKEY SEASON The hockey team opened the home season with a 4 3 victory over the Westbrook F'aglcs, one of the state’s better sextets. Handicapped by lack of ice, the team lost their first intercollegiate game of the season to the North- eastern pucksters by the score of 8 4. Captain Rutherford, Harkins, Lawrence, and Deering starred for the Polar Bears. In the next two games the team bowed to New Hampshire 4-0 and then came back full of scrap to hold an admittedly superior Colby sextet to a 4-2 victory. The Bowdoin team made it an exciting battle for three periods with Jack McGill starring in the goal. The team then traveled to Waterville and dropped another game to Colby to the tune of 7-4, despite the acquisition of Inky Arnold from the J. V. team. The latter scored two of Bowdoin’s goals, while Thomas and Rutherford played an outstanding all-around game. Bowdoin dropped their next game to Colby by the score of 9-3. In the second frame of this encounter Colby ran wild and scored 5 goals. During this period a flying puck hit Steer in the face forcing the flashy Polar Bear goalie from the ice. Garnering its only collegiate victory of the season, the puck chasers nosed out Northeastern 5 4 at the Boston Arena to avenge an earlier defeat by this contingent. In the absence of Dick Steer, Jack McGill performed creditably in the White net. In a game marred by poor ice and injuries, the Polar Bears went down to defeat before the onslaught of a powerful University of New Hampshire team to the count of 5 -0 to conclude the season. 81 VARSITY BASEBALL, 1935 FOR 1935 Douclass Willey Walker.....................................Captain Frank Ei.wyn Southard, Jr................................. Manager Francis Leroy Cooper............................ Assistant Manager James Saye Dusenbury............................ Assistant Manager FOR 1936 Hubert Seely Shaw.......................................Captain James Saye Dusenbury....................................Manager Coach Wells LETTER MEN Douglass Willey Walker, Captain Claude Rand Frazier Robert Arthur Gentry Frank Ei.wyn Southard, Jr., Manager Wilbur Berry Manter David Dustin Merrill Ralph Gordon Johnson, Jr. Ara Avo Karakashian Albert Wilkie Kent Hubert Seely Shaw Walter Seely Shaw Gauthier Abel Thibodeau SCHEDULE 1935 Date Opponent Place Bow. Opp. April 19 Bates Lewiston Exhibition April 24 Colby Brunswick 1 7 April 27 Colby Watcrvffle 4 8 M ay 1 Amherst Amherst 4 8 May 2 Wesleyan Middletown 2 5 May 3 Trinity Hartford 4 8 May 4 Tufts Medford 7 12 May 13 Colby Water ville 4 '4 May 15 Bates Brunswick 4 3 May 17 Maine Brunswick 9 11 May 18 Maine Brunswick 3 8 May 20 Maine Orono 3 1 May 21 Colby Brunswick 7 May 28 Bates Lewiston 3 1 June 19 Alumni Brunswick 5 r 82 NIK BO WO.O IN BUHLR BASEBALL SEASON In spite of 3 runs scored in the first inning as a result of errors by the Colby infield, the Bowdoin nine lost the first tilt of the State Scries, 8 4, to the White Mule. Dave Merrill started oft' the first inning bv reaching first safely after Colby catcher, dropped the third strike. Frazier followed with a single which advanced Merrill to third, and on Bill Shaw’s sacrifice, Merrill tallied the first run while Frazier stole second. On the next play, both Frazier and Shaw scored after a wild throw to first. Bowdoin’s last run came in the fourth with Thibodeau’s sacrifice after two singles by Kent and Johnson. Doug Walker was nicked for a total of 11 hits, while A1 Farnhani. Colby hurler, limited the Polar Bears to 5. In a hard-hitting contest, the Polar Bear lost its first game of the spring trip at Amherst, 8-4. The pitching for both sides was erratic, allowing both teams to threaten in practically every inning. In the Wesleyan game. Manter permitted only one hit in the first seven innings. Errors and a lucky inning helped the Cardinals win in the eighth. Bowdoin’s score came in the ninth when Walker singled and stole second. Kent singled and advanced another on the center fielder’s error. Merrill and Shaw fanned. Davidson singled, bringing Kent home. After a wait for the weather, the Bowdoin nine encountered a veteran Trinity team. Starring for the Polar Bears was W. Shaw who hit a home run in the second, with his brother, II. Shaw, on the bases. The final score was 4-8 for Trinity. In spite of hard hitting by Ara Karakashian, the Polar Bears fell heforc Tufts, 12 7. A triple from his bat in the seventh scored Gentry and Frazier, but proved to he of no avail in the score. Failing to score until the eighth inning, the Polar Bears were outplayed 14 4 by the Colby nine. Ara Karakashian started oft- well for the White by limiting the Colby batters to one hit in the first four innings, but the Bowdoin infield weakened in the third, letting in three runs. A squeeze play in the tenth, Bowdoin’s method of victory over Bates two days earlier, was the trick which Maine turned against the White to eke out an 11 9 victory. In this game, Bowdoin scored first in the second inning when Manter sacrificed and let Merrill in. Maine retaliated with two runs. In the third, a smash to the fence by Kent brought Harkins home for Bowdoin, and then a bunt by Merrill let Kent in. Shaw followed to the plate when Johnson bunted successfully. Maine caught up in the fifth with a hit, two bases on balls, three stolen bases, a passed ball and two errors—all of which netted four runs. Manter allowed only six hits in the eight innings he pitched for Bowdoin. Maine was superior in every department of this second game, and from the first inning held a good lead for an 8 3 score. Bowdoin scored two runs in the second on singles by Walker and Shaw, and a triple by Albie Kent, and did not get another run across until the ninth, when Kent walked, went to third by fielders' choice and stole home. A spectacular squeeze play in the sixth inning gave Bowdoin the victory 3- 1 in Monday’s game and turned tables on Maine after they had captured the first two games of the three-game series. The game was a hard-fought pitching battle, Manter giving up only 4 hits to the Maine nine, while Kilgour of Maine allowed only two to the Polar Bears. Steady pitching and good batting gave the Colby Mule a 7-2 victory over Bowdoin. S'ot until the ninth inning did Bowdoin succeed in turning tables to any extent. In that period, Colby's pitcher, Farnham, weakened and hard hits by Bill Shaw, Walker, Kent, and Thibodeau netted two runs. 83 VARSITY TRACK, 1935 Coach Magee FOR 1935 William Howard Niblock...................................Captain Albert Salisbury Allen...................................Manager FOR 1936 Philip Given Good..........................................Captain Ledgard Mills Hall.........................................Manager David Turner Deane Robert Gilley Dunton John Nichols Estabrook Philip Given Good Richard Lowe Grey Crowell Clarinton Hall, 3RD LETTER MEN Gilbert Duncan Harrison, Jr. Richard Junior Hatchfield Vale Goldthwaitf. Marvin Gardiner Josiaii Maxcy William Howard Niblock William Robert Owen Robert Marston Porter David Browne Rideout John Vanderlyn Shute Harry Whittier Snow William Hilton Soui.e Philip Mersey Tyler SCHEDULE OF MEETS FOR 1935 BOW DO IN J. V.—EXETER DUAL MEET April 27, 1935 Won by Bowdoin, 70-56 BOWDOIN-COLBY—SPRINGFIELD TRIANGULAR MEET May 4 935 Won by Bowdoin 72$, Springfield 40, Colby 22$ BOW IX) IN—A M HER ST DUAL MEET May 8, 1935 Won by Amherst 691-69 MAINE INTERCOLLEGIATE CHAMPIONSHIP MEET Lewiston, Maine, May 11, 1935 Won by Maine 52, Bowdoin 38!, Bates 34, Colby io£ NEW ENGLAND INTERCOLLEGIATE CHAMPIONSHIP MEET Portland, Maine, May 25, 1935 Won by Northeastern 20L Maine zo 84 SPRING TRACK SEASON, 1955 The Junior Varsity downed Exeter Academy 70-56. Each team took seven firsts but the Polar Bears’ strength was too great for the prep school squad. Burritt and Deane were high scorers for Bowdoin, while Geltzner gave Exeter thirteen points. Burritt won the 220-yard dash, and placed second in the 100-yard dash. Deane gained his points in a tie for first in the high jump and a place in the 120-yard high hurdle. The Bowdoin trio of Lane, Larcom, and Skill- ings swept the hammer throw. In the mile run, Bond and Young, Polar Bear teammates, finished in a dead heat. Cowan took the 880. Frye, Fischer. Fox, Strong, Soule, Stanwood, Estabrook, Mann, Diller, Raleigh, O’Donnell. Neal, and Ingalls all contributed to the Bowdoin victory. Whittier Field was the scene of Bowdoin’s triumph over Springfield and Colby. Bowdoin scored 72$ points to Springfield’s 40, while Colby lagged with only 22J points to the Mule credit. Parks of Springfield gained three firsts, but both Good and Niblock of Bowdoin scored two firsts each. Dunton gave Bowdoin a surprise victory in the javelin with a heave of 168 feet, 3 inches. I iatchfield and Shute of the White placed in that order in the 88o, nosing out Vcsey. Porter, of Bowdoin, had an easy time winning the two mile run. Other Bowdoin point winners included Owen, Deane, and Estabrook in the hurdle events; Marvin, who won the 440; Harrison winner of the hammer event; Raleigh and Rideout in the pole vault; Snow in the weights; and Soule in the dashes and broad jump. Bowdoin lost a close and even meet to Amherst 696-69;:. Good, nationally known Bowdoin hurdler, broke the Amherst record in the low hurdles. His time was 24:5 seconds; Estabrook placed third. The high hurdles event was won also by Good. Porter of the Bowdoin squad conquered the field in both the mile and two mile run; in the latter his teammate, Hutchinson, was second. Soule placed in the 100-yard dash and Marvin in the 220-yard dash. Parke of Amherst edged out the Polar Bear captain, Niblock, in the discus throw for a new college record; yet Niblock dominated the shot-put with Snow of Bowdoin second. In the hammer event Harrison won and Lane gained a third. Deane and Niblock tied two Amherst men for first place in the high jump. Marvin was second to Stewart of Amherst in the 44O, while Shute was in the same position when Stewart won the 880-yard run. Soule took the broad jump. Bowdoin placed second in the State meet as both Good and Niblock established records. In the low hurdles, Good lowered the record to 24I seconds; in the highs he made 15 seconds the new mark. Niblock put the shot to 49 feet, 91 inches for the meet record in that event. In the 220 Maxcy and Marvin were the Polar Bears to score second and third respectively. Marvin placed third again in the 440, and his teammate, Grey, was second. Porter scored second for Bowdoin in the two mile run, and Soule won the broad jump. Other Bowdoin points were added by Rideout in the pole vault and high jump; Niblock was second in the discus, and Snow third in the shot. Bowdoin’s honors were carried by Good, Niblock, Porter, Soule, and Rideout in the New England Meet. Although Bowdoin placed fifth, Good was named the outstanding athlete for he successfully defended his titles in both hurdle- events. Niblock was second in the shot put, but Soule had to be content with a third in the broad jump. Porter placed third in the two mile run. The pole vault was the event in which Rideout scored. 85 VARSITY ONE-MILE RELAY TEAM, 1936 Vale Goldthwaite Marvin, Captain William Robert Owen Robert Bernard Fox Geoffrey Robert Stanwood Awards for 1936 AUGUSTA CUP Won by Vale Goldthwaite Marvin PORTLAND CUP Won by Caspar Frank Cowan THE SEASON The Bowdoin quartet opened their season at the Mill rose games in New York running against Williams, Middlebury and Rhode Island. The race was very close, being won in 3:26 by Rhode Island. Bowdoin finished fourth in 3:29, a new college record. The Polar Bears ran very well, but needed Braley Gray who had been kept out of competition because of injuries. Their final competition at the B. A. A. games in Boston was more successful. Fox, Owen, and Stanwood, running the first three quarters for the White, had lost enough ground to give Lasky of New Hampshire an 18-yard lead when Marvin took the baton for Bowdoin. However, Vale ran a whirlwind final lap to overtake Lasky on the back stretch, winning by 10 yards for a total time of 3:31.4. Boston University finished in third place. Bowdoin made by far the best showing of the Maine colleges during the evening. 86 VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY, 1935 John Vanderlyn Shute, Captain Virgil George Bond Frederic Sherburne Mann John Franklin Barker, Manager Caspar Frank Cowan Charles Lorinc Young Robert Marston Porter THE SEASON The cross country team opened the season with an overwhelming defeat over Springfield College on the latter’s course. The score was Bowdoin 18, Springfield 39. The runners of both teams kept fairly close together for over half of the race and then a Springfield man stepped out ahead. However, about a mile from the finish line Captain Shute and Bob Porter of Bowdoin opened up and finished tying for first place. The other Bowdoin men were not far behind, while the Springfield men trailed them at some distance. Compiling an all-time low score of 24 points, the team decisively won the eighth Harvard Open Inter- collegiate Run at Cambridge, Massachusetts. Bob Porter took first place in the long grind over the 4i-mile Charles River course, closely followed by Cap Cowan and Captain Shute in second and third positions re- spectively. Porter fought his way up from the rear to win by a narrow margin of 5 yards. Cowan and Shute came in virtually side by side but the judges ruled Cowan second and Shute third. The excellent support of Charley Young and Fred Mann contributed greatly to the Polar Bears’ decisive victory by captur- ing eighth and tenth places respectively. 87 TRACK RECORDS COLLEGE RECORDS—OUTDOORS ico-Yard Dash......................H. H. Cloudman, ’oi ...................................9J sec. H. M. Mostrum, ’28 220-Yard Dash . 4,................R. E. McLaughlin, ’33 211 sec. 440-Yard Dash......................V. G. Marvin, ’36....................................... 5oJ sec. 88c-Yard Run.......................R. J. Foster, ’25 ... ............................1 min. 56$ sec. Mile Run...........................H. J. Colbath, To.................................4 min. 21 sec. Two-Mile Run ...... I ... $. Lavender, ’32............................ -9 min. 554 sec. 120-High Hurdles...................H. G. Littlefield, ’26..................., • . . 1 si sec. I . G. Good, ’36 220-Yard Low Hurdles...............P. G. Good, ’36...................................... 24 sec. Broad Jump.........................J. W. Adams, '35...................................23 ft 7} in. High lump . . ;..................O. A. Kendall, ’27..................................6 ft. in. Pole Vault ........................F. P. Bishop, '24 . 12 ft. 6§ in. Shot Put . . ..................W. H. Niblock, ’35.................. 50 ft. 1 in. Discus Throw ......... W. W. CharlaS, 25 ........ ? . . 149 ft. 4 in. 16-Pound Hammer F. D. Tootell, ’23 ; 185 ft.. Javelin Throw............... . . . Reino Olson, '31.....................................169 ft. 120-Metrc High Hurdles.............P. G. Good, ’36.......................................14 sec. 200-Metre Low Hurdles . . . . . P. G. Good, ’36 . .... ...... . 24 j sec. 12-Pound Shot Put..............., W. H. Niblock . , ■ .... • - W; ■ - ? . ■ ■ 59 3fin- COLLEGE RECORDS—INDOORS 40-Yard Dash .... . . . . B. K. Conner, ’27 . , . ... . ..................4? sec. 45-Yard High Hurdles . . , . ... . D. Lucas, ’28 _ . . ...................Siscc- C. Stanwood, ’32 P. G. Good, ’36 R. E. McLaughlin, ’33 45-Yard Low Hurdles ....... P. G. Good, '36.......................................5i sec. 440-Yard Dash................ V. G. Marvin, ’36 . . . . . %..................... 511 see. 880-Yard Run.......................C. W. MacKban, ’29...................................1 min. 59 sec. Mile Run...........................R. Porter, '37.......................................4 min. 26 sec. Two-Mile Run......................... R. Portfr, ’37.................................9 min. 55 sec. Broad Jump.........................J. W. Adams, ’35.............................22 ft. ii| in. High Jump . . ,4: .... ...... J. W. Adams, ’35 • ..................... - . 6 ft. 2 in. Pole Vault ...... . .. . .,. F. P. Bishop, ’34............................... 12 ft. 6 in. 16-Pound Shot Put..................W. H. Niblock, '35................................... 49 ft. 10 in. Discus Throw.......................W. H. Niblock, ’35...........................131ft. 6| in. 35-Pound Weight....................F. D. Tootall, ’23................................... 56 ft. 3$ in. 1120-Yard Relay....................B. K. Conner, ’27 N. R. Boyd, ’28 H. G. Littlefield, ’26 H. W. Wood, ’27 .... .2 min. 6} sec. 1480-Yard Relay....................C. B. Norris, ’29 H. W. Wood, ’27 R. K. Swett, ’28 F. Foster, ’28................ . . . . .... 2 min. 44 sec; 1560-Yard Relav....................C. B. Norris, ’29 H. W. Wood, '27 R. K. Swett, ’28 F. Foster, '28 3 min. 12 sec. One-Mile Relay.....................Gatchell, ’32 Thistlewaite, ’32 Foster, ’31 Allen, ’34 . 3 min. 28? sec. 50-Metre High Hurdles..............P. G. Good, ’36...........................................7 sec. 65-Metre High Hurdles..............P. G. Good, ’36...........................................9 sec. 300-Yard Run .; . . • . f. . . . G. Maxcy, ’36 . . . . . - • 32 sec. 600-Yard Run .... . . v . V. G. Marvin, '36 . . . . . m ■ ■ . . 1 min. 15 sec. 1000-Yard Run . T. Uniackf, ’35 2 min. 21 i sec. 12-lb. Shot Put....................H. Niblock, ’35 . 59 ft- 3i m- 88 SWIMMING TENNIS GOLF RIFLE TEAM JUNIOR VARSITY HOCKEY JUNIOR VARSITY SWIMMING FRESHMAN FOOTBALL FRESHMAN TRACK INDEPENDENT BASKETBALL INTERFRATERNITY SPORTS MINOR SPORTS VARSITY SWIMMING, 1936 Robert B. Miller............................................................ Coach Winthrop B. H. Walker, ’36................................................. Captain John B. Chandler, '37.......................................................Manager Harold Livingston Cross, Jr. William Hudson Fish, Jr. David Waldron Fitts John Edmund Hooke Date Feb. iz Feb. 15 Feb. 22 Mar. 7 LETTER MEN Richard Tunis May Walter Brown Parker, Jr. Leonard Augustus Pierce, Jr. Richard Henry Powers, Jr. SCHEDULE Opponent Place Portland Boys’ Club Brunswick Wesleyan Brunswick Boston University Brunswick M. I. T. Boston Brewster Rundlette Thompson Sawyer Sampson, Jr. Norman Parnell Seagrave Winthrop Brooks Holt Walker Vincent Bogan Welch Bow. Opp. 45 32 21 56 35 42 59 17 THE SEASON The first College Meet of the season handed the Polar Bears a stiff setback, the swimmers being defeated by Wesleyan 56-21. Although strong in second places with May, Seagrave, Gates, and Rundlette scoring, the White swimmers were able to secure only one win during the afternoon; Fanner of Wesleyan was disqualified in the 220 giving Rundlette a first place. Gates provided a very exciting race in the IOO, but was beaten by Seigle of Wesleyan in the last lap. On the following Saturday, before a large Campus Day crowd, the Bowdoin natators dropped a very close meet to B. L'., the outcome being decided by the final relay. Rundlette starred for Bowdoin, taking both the 220- and 440-yard swims. The other White wins were secured by May in the breaststroke, Seagrave in the backstroke, and Gates in the 50-yard dash. The 50 proved very exciting, Gates putting on a final spurt for a split-second finish. Although both teams put up slow relays, B. U. showed to be a trifle faster, giving them the meet, 42-35. The final meet of a short season was of a slightly different nature, the Polar Bears coming through to swamp M. I. 1. with a 59-17 score. The Engineers were able to secure only two firsts in the entire meeir Notable among Bowdoin’s point winners were Dave Fitts and Harold Cross, both joining the squad late in the season. Fish did well as anchor man on the Bowdoin relay. He was able to pull the White quartet through after making up a missed turn. Bowdoin took a small squad to the New Englands at Williams, and did well in qualifying men in three events for the finals. May showed up quite well in the breaststroke, finishing third in a record-breaking race. Gates captured Bow- doin’s other point by taking fourth in the iOO-vard dash, in a very fast field. The Polar Bears totalled 3 points giving them seventh place in a representation of 10 colleges. Although not counting in the team score, the Bowdoin quartet of Pierce. Larrabee, Hutchinson, and White handily won the 400-yard exhibition Freshman Relay Race. 90 T M 1C BOW DO I N BUGLE VARSITY TENNIS, 1935 LETTER MEN Walter James Woodger, Captain Howard Hinklf.y Dana Robert Paul Ashley Joseph Lyman Fisher Richard Currie Bechtel Harold David Ashkenazy Winsor Lord Thomas Frank Wilson Kibbe David Waldron Fitts SCHEDULE Date Opponent Place Bow. Opp' $1 Middlebury Middlebury 6 3 Amherst Amherst 2 7 May 3 Wesleyan Middletown 1 8 May 4 Trinity Hartford 5 4 May 5 Tufts Medford 9 O May 12 Colby Brunswick 9 O May 15 Maine Brunswick 9 O May 17 Bates Lewiston 5 4 May 19-21 State Meet Lewiston THE SEASON Bowdoin first Place Bowdoin opened its schedule against Middlebury, winning easily in spite of poor weather conditions. Joe Fisher played a stellar game in defeating Rudd, the Middlebury captain. ( Due to lack of practice the second match was lost to a powerful Amherst aggregation by a score of 7 }■ Ashley s performance in beating Bielaski, No. 3 man, was outstanding, while Dana and Kibbe came through in the No. 3 doubles. At Wesleyan, the White team was at the short end of an 8 1 score. Thomas and Fisher lost close three-set matches, while Thomas and Ashley pulled through to win in the doubles, after having three match points against them. ► In the state tournament, Ashley, playing fine tennis, pulled a surprise win over Joe Fisher to capture the state singles title. In the afternoon Ashley and Thomas defeated the seeded No. 1 team of Woodger and l-isher to annex the doubles championship. 9i the bow do in bugle John Stii.i.man Boyd John Campbell Emery Ellis Lorin Gates, Jr. Date April 20 April 22 April 23 April 24 April 25 April 26 April 27 April 28 May 4 May 9-10 May 11 May 20-21 VARSITY GOLF, 1935 Sprague Mitchell, ’37, Captain Roger Cushing Kei.log Edward Henry Owen Joseph Gilbert Solar SCHEDULE Opponent Place Bow. Opp. Colby Brunswick 9 0 Middlebury Middlebury 2 4 Williams Williamstown } Si Amherst Amherst 4 Wesleyan Middletown Si ; Trinity Hartford 4 2 M. I. T. Cambridge 6 0 Nashua C. C. Nashua 4 i U. of Maine N. E. I. ( . A. Championships Orono 9 0 Colby Maine Intercollcgiates Brunswick Won by Bowdoin 8 I THE SEASON At the close of the season, the golf team emerged with an excellent record, having won eleven out of its thirteen matches. On top of that, Bowdoin won the much sought-after state championship. Boyd was by far the outstanding player on the regular team. He lost only one match, that being played in a hail- storm at Williamstown. Although pressed hard by Gates in one of the preliminary matches, Boyd won the State Intercollegiate Championship. Boyd and Captain Mitchell were the only members of the team to qualify in the New England Intercollegiate Championship. '1 he team, consisting of Gates, Boyd, Kellog and Mitchell, missed third place in the team standing by one stroke. Boyd again distinguished himself by placing third in a fast field. In the state matches, Bowdoin’s usual strong team was supplemented by Sclar and Owen, making a very powerful array. They easily took first place. The spring trip through New England was marred only by nasty weather and a slow start. Especially noteworthy were Boyd’s round at Middlebury, Kellog’s round in a high wind at Amherst, Mitchell’s round at Wesleyan, and Gates' round at M.I.T. 92 r II E BOW DO IN BUGLE RIFLE CLUB OFFICERS Frank Dingley Lord ...............................:..................................................President Thomas Marvin Bradford, Jr......................................................................Pice-President Richard Henry Woods..................................................................................Treasurer Francis Leroy Cooper, Jr.............................................................................Secretary Eastham Guild, Jr............................................................................Executive Officer SCHEDULE Date Opponent Place Bow. Opp. Dec. 6 Ralph Caldwell Post, American Lesion’ Portland 857 79« Dec. 7 Brunswick Town Team Brunswick 362 356 Dec. is Columbia Postal 1270 1319 Jan. 16 St. John's University Postal 1319 1242 Jan. 17 Caldwell Post Brunswick 867 872 Feb. 8 Vermont Postal 335 1348 Feb. 14 Caldwell Post- Portland 878 87S Feb. 15 University of Indiana Postal 1322 1303 Feb. 22 U. S. Coast Guard Postal 1327 339 Feb. 28 Cony High Brunswick 788 70S Feb. 29 University of Maine Orono 1268 1212 Feb. 29 Norwich Postal 1309 1292 Mar. 6 Cony High Augusta 852 7S Mar. 9 University of West Virginia Postal 1326 360 Mar. 15 Harvard University Cambridge 1247 '3 7 Mar. 14 M. I. T. Cambridge 1279 '347 Mar. 20 Caldwell Post- Brunswick Mar. 20 Rhode Island State Postal Mar. 28 Connecticut State Postal Mar. 28 Yale Postal April 4 New England Intcrcollcgiates New London April 18 University of Maine Orono May 3 Edward Little High ‘Indicates Freshman Matches ’Indicates J. V. Matches 93 JUNIOR VARSITY John Chadsky Benedict Warner Jordan Clifford Charles Nelson Corey Willard Huntington Currier Wilfrid Henry Girard Daniel Francis Hanley HOCKEY TEAM, 1936 Albert Amos Learned Oakley Arthur Mei.endy Edward Stevens, Jr. Fergus Upham Nathan Dane, 2nd Roger Cushing Kellog Date Jan. 9 Jan. ii Jan. 14 Jan. 15 Feb. 6 Feb. 11 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Opponent SCHEDULE Place Bow. Opp. Dixficld Brunswick s I Rockland Brunswick 8 0 Hebron Brunswick 2 3 Cony High Brunswick 2 1 Wilton Brunswick 6 3 Dixficld Dixficld 3 1 Hebron Hebron 2 4 Falmouth Brunswick S 5 94 = JUNIOR VARSITY SWIMMING TEAM, 1936 Marshall Bridge Robert Davies Burhoe Charles Gerard Carlson Richard Harrison Foster Melville Clarendon Hutchinson Robert Walter Kasten Seth Leonard Larrabee SCHEDULE Date Opponent Jan. 4 Portland Boys' Club Jan. 11 Olncyvillc Boys’ Club Feb. 22 Huntington School Feb. 24 Dartmouth Varsity Mar. 7 Hebron Place Brunswick Brunswick Brunswick Hanover Brunswick Alvord Newton McRae Basil Stuart Nicholson Jotham Donnell Pierce Orville Bryan Seagrave Donald Case Stevens George Long Ware, Jr. Harold Sewall White, Jr. Bow. 45 '9 30 27 Cancelled Opp. 33 8 35 45 95 TIIK BOW DO I N BUGLE FRESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM, 1935 Charles Nelson Corey, Captain Benjamin Anthony Karsokas Charles Frederick Gibbs Oakley Arthur Melendy Richard French Marsh John Everett Cart land, Jr. Daniel Francis Hanley Howard Currier Soule Lin wood Joseph Groder Dwight Lindley Rafford Leo Henry Leary, Jr. Robert Shi land Mullen Walter Louis Orgera Ross Lewis McLean William Marshall Walker Thomas John Dugan William Vincent Broe George William Shattuck John Thomas Konecki Louis Garcelon, Jr. Paul Edward Gardent, Jr. Lionel Frederick Jealous, Jr. Basil Stuart Nicholson Duncan Kimball Whitehill Walter Rowson, Jr. SCHEDULE Date Opponent Place Freshmen Opponent Oct. is B Team vs. Wilton Brunswick 7 6 Oct. 18 A Team vs. Ricker Brunswick 0 7 Oct. si B Team vs. Brunswick Brunswick '9 18 Oct. 25 A Team vs. Hebron Brunswick 7 7 Oct. 28 B Team vs. Gardiner Brunswick 12 7 Nov. 1 A 1'eam vs. M. C. I. Brunswick 21 6 Nov. 8 A Team vs. Fryeburg Brunswick 20 0 Nov. 23 A Team vs. Sophomores Brunswick O 19 96 THE BOW DOIN’ BUGLE FRESHMAN TRACK TEAM, 1936 Harry Preston Hood, Jr., Co-Captain Elmer Winfield Allen, Co-Captain Henry Augustine Dolan, Jr. Charles Frederick Gibbs Alfred Ingersoll Gregory Robert Henderson Hamblen Julian Tutu ill Hanks George Leslie Hill Robert James Hyde Robert Thompson Hyde Benjamin Anthony Karsokas Leo Henry Leary, Jr. Oakley Arthur Melendy Burton Irvine Mitchell Robert Shiland Mullen George Daniel Reardon Maynard Sandler Howard Currier Soule Robert Lee Taylor Donald Merwin Watt Frank Fdward Woodruff John Franklin Barker, ’37, Manager SCHEDULE Date Opponent Place Bow. Opp. Jan. 11 Portland High Brunswick $6 18 Feb. 12 Thornton Academy Brunswick 80 «5 Feb. 19 Deering High Brunswick 74 30 Feb. 26 Bridgton Academy Brunswick 5$ 40 Feb. 29 Freshman-Sophomore Sophs 53$ Frosh 50$ Mar. 16 South Portland High Brunswick 92$ i THE SEASON The Freshmen opened the indoor season with a sweeping victory over Portland High School 86-1S. Allen was high scorer with 12 points while three records were broken by his teammates in the field events. Melendy lengthened the shot put record to 46 ft. 4i in.: Gibbs extended the broad jump to 20 ft. 4$ in.; and Dolan leaped to a new height of 6 ft. in. In the running events Hood took the 300-vard dash, Allen easily won the thousand, and R. T. Hvde led the mile. Among the other scorers were Mitchell, Hamblen, Soule, Karsokas, and Woodruff. The Bowdoin Frosh routed Deering High School 73-22. Dolan set the only new meet record with a high jump of 5 ft. 10 in. Hood, Hamblen and Mitchell swept the low hurdles after Neal Allen of Deering led them in the highs. Allen of Bowdoin took the 1000-yard run, but Potter of the Purple snatched the mile from him. Karsokas and Soule were among the other Frosh point winners. The Freshmen Tracksters managed to subdue Bridgton, their strongest outside competition, 55 40- Jack Magee’s well-balanced team placed in enough events to come through on top as the field events proved a strong deciding factor for the yearlings. The Frosh swept the high jump and a first and second in the shot put gave them sufficient advantage to take the meet. The Bowdoin Freshmen wound up their successful season by trouncing South Portland 92J n£. The yearlings did themselves proud by capturing the first two places in every event with the exception of the high jump which was a tic between the yearlings’ Reardon and Gregory, and MacVane of the visitors. Hood, Allen, Mitchell, Soule, R. T. Hyde, Gibbs, Karsokas and Reardon all took firsts, while they were strongly supported by Hamblen, Watt, Mullen, and R. J. Hyde. 97 Tin ; bowdoin bugle INDEPENDENT BASKETBALL, 1936 Harold Ashkenazy, Captain Claude Frazier Francis Cooper, Manager Ralph Johnson John Cartland SCHEDULE Wilbur Manter William Walker Frank Kibbe Date Opponent Place Bow. Ind. Opp. Feb. 8 Portland Y. M. C. A. Home 38 40 Feb. 11 Portland Jr. CoIIcrc Away 38 42 Feb. 15 Auburn Mavericks Away 37 4« Feb. 15 Intcrfraternity All-Stars Home 36 26 Feb. 20 Richmond Town Team Away 47 27 Feb. 24 Intcrfraternity All-Stars Home 72 27 Feb. 29 Bath A. A. Home 66 24 Mar. 2 Auburn Mavericks Home 64 46 Mar. 4 Bath A. A. Away 42 28 Mar. 6 Portland Jr. College Home 4° 27 Mar. 10 Bath Colonial Club Home 48 32 THE SEASON The Bowdoin quintet opened a successful season of eight wins and three losses by losing to the highly talented Portland Y. M. C. A., the leaders of the city league. Here, due to inexperience with a five-man defense, the Polar Bears lost a close nip-and-tuck battle, 40-38. The next two games were heartbreakers, the Independents losing to Portland Jr. College and the Auburn Mavericks 42-38 and 4137 respectively. At Auburn, Frazier, the mainstay of the team’s attack, was absent, and Bill Walker substituted in no poor fashion. Ashkenazy, the captain, and Bunny Johnson were the highlights of these games. The Bowdoin five was twice successful against the Interfraternity All-Stars, the first time such a contest has been held here. Through the fine shooting and able passing of John Cartland, a Freshman with good possibilities, the Independents won the Richmond game, after being ahead all the game, and showing their superiority in team work and speed on a strange floor. Wilbur Manter, the only Senior on the team, ended his season in glorious style, outjumping his opponent and being responsible for most of the Polar Bears’ scoring. The season was brought to a successful finish with one of the best basketball games seen in Brunswick. The Bowdoin hoopsters took the Bath Colonials into camp by a score of 48-32. John Cartland and Frank Kibbe were responsible for this win by their constant watch over the opponents’ plays. 98 INTERFRATERNITY SPORTS, 1935-1936 League A Won by Psi Upsii.cn BASEBALL, 1935 Championship Playoff IVon by Theta Delta Chi League B IVon by Theta Delta Chi League A IVon by Alpha Tau Omega TOUCH FOOTBALL, 1935 Championship Playoff IVon by Alpha Delta Phi League B I Von by Alpha Delta Phi League A IVon by Delta Upsilon BASKETBALL, 1936 Championship Playoff IVon by Theta Delta Chi League B IVon by Theta Delta Chi SWIMMING, 1936 Won by Zeta Psi, 37 points Second, Theta Delta Chi, 26 points TRACK, 1936 Won by Zeta Psi, 62 points Second, Delta Kappa Epsilon, 45 points Third, Delta Upsilon, 24$ points 99 THE STUDENT COUNCIL Philip Given Good..................................................................................President Josiah Hayden Drummond........................................................................Vice-President John Vanderlyn Shute.....................................................................Secretary-Treasurer Josiah Hayden Drummond Philip Given Good Rodney Clayton Larcom, Jr. Wilbur Berry Manter William Robert Owen MEMBERS FROM 1936 Thompson Sawyer Sampson, Jr. Hubert Seely Shaw John Vanderlyn Shute William Hilton Soule Robert Paul Ashley MEMBERS FROM 1937 Robert Marston Porter 102 HE BOW DO I N BUGLE THE ORIENT I he Orient is the official college newspaper published every Wednesday of the college year by the Bow- doin Publishing Company. It was first issued on April 3, 1871. It is devoted to the interests of the Alumni and students, and records the campus news and sentiments. The circulation includes all undergraduates, numerous preparatory schools in New England, and about twenty-five percent of the Alumni. The Editor-in-Cnief is responsible for the editorial columns, and supervises news and make-up. 1'hc three Managing Editors alternate in the assembling of the paper. The Sub-Editors act as copy-desk assistants. Editor-in-Chief Robert Paul Ashley, ’36 William Klaber, Jr., ’37 Charles Foss Brewster, ’37 James Alden Bishop, ’3s Stuart Dexter Brewer, ’38 Norman English Dupee, Jr., ’38 Harry Thomas Foote, ’38 VOLUME LXV THE BOARD Managing Editors Stanley Williams, Jr., ’37 Sports Editors Maxwell Asgher Eaton, '37 Sub-Editors Ralph Harold Winn, ’38 «05 Associate Editor John Phillips Chapman, ’36 Richard Edson Mathewson, ’37 William Smith Burton, ’37 William Frost, ’38 William Stevens Hawkins, ’38 Robert William Laffin, ’38 Henry Leighton Nash, Jr., ’38 sjcz ' .yr mi-: now no in duoli-; THE BOWDOIN BUGLE The Bugle is the Junior Class Yearbook of the College published each year and distributed at Ivy Day. The first volume, appearing in July, 1858, was different in size and shape than the present Bugle, being a small pamphlet recording the names of the members of the Class. Year by year, various changes in the size and shape of the book have been made. New material was added, until the Bugle actually became a record of the College. 1'his year we have changed the book to its present large size, and rearranged much of the ma- terial in order to give a more interesting and original presentation. The Bugle was originally published by a committee which was made up of a representative elected from each fraternity and the non-fraternity group. In 1927 the system was changed, and a board was formed containing eight Juniors and four Sophomores chosen by the previous incumbents. Since then it has been changed to the present arrangement in which there is a Junior Board composed of the two department heads and the Editor-in-Chief. Under this is the staff composed of the nine Sophomore assistants. VOLUME LXXXI THE 1937 BOARD John Brandon Chandler, ’37......................................... Editor-in-Chief Eaton Weatherbee Tarbell, ’37.................................... Business Manager ’Richard Warren Sears, '37......................................Photographic Editor John Leland Crosby, 3RD, ’37.......................................Associate Editor Charles Stanton Goodwin, ’38 John William Harrison, ’38 Cari. Frank Barron, ’38 Resigned at midyears Assistant Editors Harry Fuck Leach, ’38 Assistant Business Managers Assistant Photographic Editors Robert Dillingham Morss, '38 William DeWitt Hyde, ’38 Vincent Bogan Welch, ’38 Robert Archibald Gove, ’38 104 BOWDOIN BUGLE THE QUILL I'he Quill is the undergraduate literary magazine. It is published two and sometimes three times during the College year. The contributors are students of the College, and, when of special merit, amateur writers outside of tne College. The magazine contains short stories, plays, articles of current interest, reviews of recent books, and verse of various kinds. VOLUME XL Co-Editors Robert Russell Hagy, Jr., ’36 Burroughs Mitchell, ’36 Associate Editor Lawrence Sargf.nt Hall, ’36 Business Manager Donald Nf.wton Cole, ’37 10; the; bow do in bugle: BOWDOIN PUBLISHING CO., 1935-36 The Bowdoin Publishing Company was established at a meeting of the students of Bowdoin College on June io, 1912. It represented a consolidation for management of the Bowdoin publications, and the entrance of stricter faculty supervision over their business affairs. At that time, it published the Orient and the Quill, established in 1872 and 1898. In 1927 the Alumnus was initiated to allow greater devotion of the Orient to student interests, and to fill the long-felt need for a publication of this nature. The Quill was divorced from the Company in 1930 to be published by an independent student management. The function of the Company is to secure an efficient publication of student organs. It is actively directed bv an undergraduate manager assisted by three sub-managers and a staff of underclassmen. Its general policy is controlled by a Board of Directors composed of two members of the faculty, the Editor of the Alumnus, the Editor-in-Chief of the Orient, and the Manager. The annual change of personnel in the editorial boards and in the Company is made by the Board of Directors. The Company is financially independent and has maintained a strong position since its incorporation. Its income is dependent upon the advertising and subscription revenue of the two publications. It also receives annually from the Blanket Tax Committee a variable sum in return for which it distributes the Orient to the student body. The Manager was formerly the only undergraduate to receive remuneration for service, but beginning this year, the Editor-in-Chief and Associate Editor of the Orient are to be allotted a share in the profits of the Company. VOLUME LXIV Manager Owen Henry Melauch, ’36 Assistant Managers Ernest Rockwell Dalton, ’37 Robert Marston Porter, ’37 Board of Directors Elan Gamewell Davis, ’37 Professor Wilmot B. Mitchell Professor Philip S. Wilder Professor Thomas C. VanCleve Owen Henry Melaugh, ’36 106 Robert Paul Ashlf.y, ’36 ! UK HOW DO I X H UG I. E THE GROWLER The Growler is the student publication which attempts to depict the humorous side of the College. It is an independent activity which dates hack to 1921. At that time it was called the Bowdoin Bearskin. Since its beginning it has at various times been beset with difficulties, and, consequently, has had a rather irregular existence. Three years ago it was successfully revived, and since has had no troubles. THE STAFF Burroughs Mitchell, ’36......................... John Henry McGill, ’36.......................... Carleton Sheffield Connor, ’36.................. Albert Salisbury Allen, '36..................... .....................Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Assistant Business Manager Associate Editors James Raymond West, ’36 Robert Russell Hagy, ’36 Weston Lewis, ’36 107 II IE BOW DO IN hl'GL STUDENT COUNCIL DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE Last year, because of poor management, Phi Chi, the traditional Sophomore society for controlling the Freshmen, was Officially disbanded, and in its place was substituted the S. C. 1). C. This committee is under the supervision of the Student Council, having a Council member as its president. The rest of the member- ship is made up of the Hoard of Proctors and four members appointed from the Sophomore Class. Assuming the duties of Phi Chi, the S. C. D. C. meets weekly in the “ends,” at which time any Freshmen guilty of infractions of the Freshman Rules are disciplined. THE COMMITTEE Rodney Clayton Larcom ...........................President John Phillips Chapman Paul Gordon Favour, Jr. Philip Given Good Robert Russell Hagy, Jr. Andrew Hood Cox David Waldron Fitts Board of Proctors 4'rederic Sherburne Mann John Vanderlyn Shute Hubert Seely Shaw William Hilton Soule Sophomore Members David Bradford Soulf. Robert Nelson Smith tup; bowdoix bugle ioS THE MASQUE AND GOWN Due to the inspiring help of Director George H. Quinby, it has been a year of change and growth for the Masque and Gown. Because of funds allotted it this year for the first time by the Blanket l ax Committee, the Masque and Gown was enabled to purchase some much needed staj e equipment and to admit students free to all performances except that at Commencement. This policy of free admission has stimulated student interest in Masque and Gown activities and greatly increased attendance. EX KCl'TI VE COM M ITT EE President Frank Herbert Swan, Jr..............Secretary Business Manager Frederick Landis Gwyn . . . Member-al-Large Publicity Manager Paul LaidlEY, Jr....Member-at-I.arge Production Manager Mr. George H. Quinby Faculty Member and Director Edwin Gilpatric Walker . Ledcard Mills Hall Asa Burbank Kimball . William Klaber, Jr. . . Professor Frederick W. Brown Miss Nell a Barber Miss Margaret Hines Francis Seymour Benjamin, Jr. Lawrence Sargent Hall Asa Burbank Kimball Paul Laidi.ey, Jr. Thomas Erskine Bassett Edwin Bonette Benjamin Charles Addison Denny, 2nd Franklin Farrar Gould, Jr. Edward James Brown James Ormond Dennis William Hudson Fish, Jr. HONORARY MEMBERS Professor Charles T. Burnett Also Mrs. Emily Holmes Miss Elizabeth Riley MEMBERS FROM 1936 Samuel Finley McCoy Raymond Pach Thurman Everett Philoon Frank Herbert Swan, Jr. MEMBERS FROM 1938 Charles Stanton Goodwin jAMES Preble Hepburn ohn Leifried Redman, Jr. 109 Professor Wilmot B. Mitchell Miss Margaret Treganowan Mrs. James F. White Edwin Gilpatric Walker Winthrop Brooks Holt Walker James Raymond West Howard Hollister Vogel, Jr. Richard Vincent McCann Henry McKennky Trask Paul Welch Stanley Williams, Jr. William Harvey Rice, Jr. George Chandler Wilson MEMBERS FROM 1937 Frederick Landis Gwynn Ledcard Mills Hall Charles Frederick Clifford Henderson William Klaber, Jr. — THE BOW DO IN BUGLE Commencement Play THE MERCHANT OF VENICE By WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE June 19, 1935 Under the direction of George II. Ouinhy Characters Played By Antonio................................................................Richard McCann, ’37 Salarino..................................................................Robert Peakes, ’36 Salanio ...............................................................Robert Cleaves, ’35 Bassanio............................................................... Wyman Holmes, '35 Lorenzo........................................................ Frederick Gwynn, '37 Gratiano...............................................................Stanley Williams, ’37 Portia......................................................................... Elinor Graham Nerissa . ............................................................... Margaret Hines Balthazar ................................................................Hubert Shaw, ’36 Shylock..................................................................... Edwin Walker, ’36 Launcelot.................................................................Howard Vogel, ’36 Leonardo...............................................................Edwin Benjamin, ’37 Jessica.......................................................................Elizabeth Sibley Morocco............................................................. Daniel Pettengill, ’37 Arragon................................................................ Raymond Pack, ’36 Tubal..................................................................Thurman Philoon, ’36 Salerio................................................................Franklin Gould, ’37 Duke of Venice......................................................... Raymond West, ’36 Clerk of Court......................................................... Allen Hubbell, ’35 Stephano............................................................... Donald Barnes, ’35 Venetian noblemen, Jews, etc., Charles Behr, ’35, Stuart Brewer, ’38, Robert Godfrey, '38 Asa Kimball, ’36, George Wilson, ’38, Allan Mitchei.i., ’35 PRODUCTION STAFF Business Manager . . Ledcard M. Hall, '37 Production Manager . William Klaber, ’3 7 Publicity Manager Asa B. Kimball, ’36 Stage Manager . . . George Wilson, ’38 Christmas Play TOM THUMB. THE GREAT, THE TRAGEDY OF TRAGEDIES By HENRY FIELDING December 20, 1935 Under the direction of George II. Quinby Characters Doodle................. Noodle ................ King Arthur .... Queen Dollallolla Tom Thumb, The Great Glumdalca.............. Foodie ................ Lord Grizzle .... Sheriff ............... Deputy................. I he Princess Huncamunca Clcora ................ Mustacha............... Parson.............. Ghost of Gaffer Thumb Merlin.................. Played By C. Goodwin, ’38 D. Stevens, ’39 F. Benjamin, ’36 . H. Vogel, ’36 W. Fish, ’38 W. Bass, ’38 G. Crossi.ey, ’38 S. Williams, ’37 D. Goodwin, ’39 J. Titcomb, ’39 R. Morss, '38 PL Yercason, '39 . L. Hyde, ’39 J. Card, ’38 V. Welch, ’38 H. Niller, ’38 Courtiers, Guards, Rebels, Drums, Thunder and Lightning Scenery by Richard Woods, ’37 Staged by John Redman, ’38 110 DEBATING Edwin Gilpatric Walker Norman Parnell Seagrave Andrew Hood Cox DEBATING COUNCIL President Phillips Tryon Nead Manager James Joel Pocock Assistant Manager Athern Park Daggett Assistant Manager . Assistant Manager Faculty Advisor and Coach Harold David Ashkenazy, ’38 Donald Robert Bryant, ’37 Freeman Davis Clark, ’38 Andrew Hood Cox, ’38 Milton Myer Goldberg, ’39 MEMBERS William Coolidge Hart, ’39 Phillips Tryon Nead, ’38 Thomas Franklin Phelps, ’38 Maurice Ross, '36 Norman Parnell Seagrave, ’37 Stuart Gerard Paul Small, ’38 Edwin Gilpatric Walker, ’36 Vincent Bogan Welch, ’38 Paul Purinton Wheeler, ‘39 THE SEASON The 1935 -36 season of the Debating Team was very successful. With only one man, Edwin Walker, left from the strong varsity team of a year ago, the team did remarkably well, with a record of three won, four lost, and three non- decision debates. One of the most encouraging features of the season was the increased interest in debating as shown by the exceptionally large number of men who took part, and the larger attendance at the home contests. Professor Daggett, Faculty Advisor to the Council, deserves a great deal of credit for the time and effort which he gave in coaching the team. Bowdoin College vs. Union College Schenectady. N. Y.. Nov. 18, 1935 Union-3, Bowdoin-o Bowdoin College vs. General Electric Training School Schenectady. N. Y., Nov. 19. 1935 Non-dccision Bowdoin College vs. Amherst College Amherst. Mass.. Nov. 20, 1935 Bowdoin-t, Amhcrst-O Bowdoin College vs. Mt. Holyoke College Brunswick. Me.. Nov. 22. 1935 Mt. Holyoke-3. Bowdoin-o Bowdoin College vs. Turn College Brunswick. Me., Dec. 16. 1935 Bowdoin-2. Tufts-1 Bowdoin College vs. Boston University Boston. Mass.. Dec. 16, 1935 Non-decision Bowdoin College vs. Brown University Brunswick. Me., Jan. 17. 1936 Bowdoin-2. Brown-i Bowdoin College vs. Brown University Providence, R. 1.. Jan. 17, 1936 Brown-2, Bowdoin-i Bowdoin College pa New Hampshire University Brunswick, Me., Feb. 28. 1936 Non-decision Bowdoin College vs. Bates College Lewiston, Me., Mar. 13, 1936 Bates-2. Bowdoin-t Bowdoin College pa Lafayette College Brunswick. Me.. Mar. 20. 1936 Postponed Bowdoin College pa Boston University Brunswick, Me., Apr. 16. 1936 Forum Debates among the four Maine Colleges Brunswick. Me.. May 8, 1936 in = THE BOWDOIN BUGLE ALEXANDER PRIZE SPEAKING MEMORIAL HALL, NOVEMBER 25, 1935, 8:15 P.M. Dean Paul Nixon, Presiding PROGRAM The Unknown Soldier...........................Harry Emerson Fosdick Norman Parnell Seacrave, ’37 A Man Who Had No Eyes..............................macK inlay Kantor Milton Myer Goldberg, ’39 The Bombardment..................................... Amy Lowell Henry Alan Steeves, Jr., ’38 M tisic Farewell to America..............................Henry IV. Nevinson George Arthur Dunbar, ’39 A Plea for Mercy.................................Clarence Darrotv Harry Howard Cloudman, Jr., ’39 Guilty or Not Guilty.............................James McHenry Richard Vincent McCann, ’37 M usic Ropes............................................Stanford Clinton Andrew Hood Cox, ’38 Renascence.................................... Edna St. Vincent Millay Carlyle Neville de Suze, Jr., '38 Jean Valjean........................................ Vidor Hugo Vincent Bogan Welch, ’38 M usic First Prize Awarded to Second Prize Awarded to Richard McCann Norman Seagrave JUDGES Robert H. Grant, Gardiner George E. Hill, Portland Joseph 0. Purdue, Bath MUSIC BY Paul Stetson Ivory, ’37, Cellist Malcolm Walter Cass, ’37, Accompanist CLASS OF 1868 PRIZE SPEAKING MEMORIAL HALL, MARCH 16, 1936, 8:00 P.M. PROGRAM The Rededication of Democracy Art and the Social Impulse . M usic Ev erett Lewis Swift John Phillips Chapman America and the European Crisis The Right to Think M usic Sidney Raymond McCleary . Edwin Gilpatric Walker Conflict or Cooperation . The Law of Poetry .... Music Bernard Nathan Freedman Lawrence Sargent Hall M usic Announcement of Judges’ Decision Won by Lawrence Sargent Hall JUDGES Rev. Charles M. Tubbs, Bath Lucien P. Libby, ’99, Portland Donald W. Philbrick, ’17, Portland THE BOW DO IN BUGLE IBIS Ibis, founded in 1903, is the only honorary class society now in existence in the College. It consists of ten members of the Senior Class and four members of the Faculty. After mid-year examinations, four men are chosen from the Junior Class, who later select the remaining members. James Raymond West, Chairman John Phillips Chapman Lawrence Sargent Hai.l Robert Russell Hacy, Jr. Richard Osgood Jordan MEMBERS 1 3 Robert Paul Ashley Burroughs Mitchell Thompson Sawyer Sampson, Jr. Maxwell Mowbray Small Edwin Gii.patric Walker THE BOWDOIN BUGLE POLITICAL FORUM I he Forum received, for the first time, this past year an allotment from the Faculty Blanket Tax Com- mittee, and because of this was able to secure a greater number of outside speakers than ever before. Professor Kirkland oi the History Department addressed the first meeting in October on the issues of the coming Presidential campaign, and later in the month the Forum secured Mr. Harrison Lakin, a former consul in Ethiopia, to give some first-hand knowledge of the background of the Italian struggle. Other prominent speakers before the Forum this year included Michael Fredo, Boston attorney, who gave an able defense of the Italian side of the struggle, and Rep. Hamilton Fish of New York who denounced the New Deal. The Forum in collaboration with the B.C.A. also brought Dr. Sherwood Eddy to the College to talk on Russian Communism. On November 8th, in place of the regular morning service, the Forum helped sponsor a Student Mass Meeting in the Chapel at which four student speakers presented various angles of the World Peace question. 1 his was done in connection with Armistice Day Peace demonstrations in colleges all over the country. I hrough the efforts of the officers of the Forum, Bowdoin for the first time this year joined the New England Model League of Nations, composed of thirty-seven colleges and universities. A delegation of six students representing the country of Uruguay was sent down to the League’s annual session at Williams College on March 12, 13, 14. OFFICERS Chari.es Foss Brewster, ’37...........................................................President William Smith Burton, ’37....................................................... Vice-President Sidney Raymond McCleary, ’36....................................... Chairman Projects Committee Norman Parnell Seacrave, ’37..............................Chairman Political Actions Committee 4 BOWDOIN BUGLE BOWDOIN CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION CABINET Thompson Sawyer Sampson, Jr.. ’36............ Donald Robertson Woodward, ’36............... Norman Parnell Seagrave, ’37................. Stanley Williams, Jr., '37................... Norman English Dupef., Jr., ’38.............. Ralph Harold Winn, ’38 ................... ■ gp . President Pice-President Secretary- Treasurer Editor of the Handbook Social Service . . Deputations COMMITTEE ON THE FORUM OF MODERN RELIGIOUS THOUGHT Donald Robertson Woodward, Chairman Norman Parnell Seagrave Norman English Dupee, Jr. MEMBERS Thomas Prince Riley Robert Keenan Craven Thomas Joseph Craven, Jr. Robert Marston Porter ohn Carlton Mathews Ierbert Mayhew Lord, 2nd David Amos Tilden Thomas Frederick Gordon Robert Henderson Hamblen Thompson Chester Baxter William Coolidgf. Hart, Jr. Malcolm Walter Cass Charles Addison Denny, 2nd Richard Sawin Holt Frank Richard Andrews James Hinkley Card Louis William Bruemmer, Jr. Robert Douglas Martin Professor Ernst Christian Helmreich, Faculty Adviser Reverend Chauncey William Goodrich, Honorary Member 5 Till-; HOW DO IN HUG Lie CLASSICAL CLUB OFFICERS Francis Seymour Benjamin, Jr.................. Thurman Everett Philoon..................... Edwin Bonette Benjamin........................ Nathan Dane, 2nd ............................. President ice-P re sident Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS FROM FACULTY President Kenneth C. M. Sills Dean Paul Nixon Professor Thomas Means Professor Robert Peter Tristram Coffin George Hunnewell Quinby VanCourti.andt Elliott Francis Seymour Benjamin, Jr. William Frederick Carnes Isaac Watson Dyer, 2nd Bernard Nathan Freedman Alfred Brooks Gordon Edwin Bonette Benjamin Virgil George Bond Herman Louis Creiger, Jr. Nathan Dane, 2nd William Frost Stuart Gerard Paul Small David Ives Brown Edward William Najam Donald Irving Patt MEMBERS FROM 1936 Thurman Everett Philoon Gaynor Kellogg Rutherford Edwin Gilpatric Walker Luther Stephen Weare, Jr. Abraham Benjamin Abramovitz MEMBERS FROM 1937 Richard Kenneth Barksdale Franklin Farrar Gould, Jr. Daniel Harold Edwards Fox Ledgard Mills Hall Frederick Landis Gwynn MEMBERS FROM 1938 Phillips Tryon Nf.ad Vasmer Leverett Flint Harold David Ashkenazy Roy Edward Wiggin Harlan Durell Thombs 1 116 THE BOW DO IN BUGLE m—mm MATHEMATICS CLUB Reorganized in 1926 OFFICERS John Finzer Presnell, Jr.................... Cuyler Jacob Hawkes......................... Erwin Emerson Morse......................... President . Pice-President Secretary-Treas it rer MEMBERS FROM THE FACULTY Professor Edward Sanford Hammond Professor Cecil Thomas Holmes Professor Noel Charlton Little Reinhardt Lunde Korgf.n Professor Boyd Wheeler Bartlett George Baker Welch Richard Currie Bechtel William Frederick Carnes Josiah Hayden Drummond Harold Roy Fearon Thomas Robinson Pirie Gibb, Dan Edwin Christie Robert Henry Cotton ioiiN Chapman Cousins Lichard Crowell Claim MEMBERS FROM 1936 Mark Edson Hamlin Cuyi.er Jacob Hawkes Arnold Hastings Jenks Joseph McKeen, Jr. Jr. Wilbur Berry Manter Erwin Emerson Morse MEMBERS FROM 1937 M ah Lon Allen Dane Robert Clyde Falconer Richard F dson Mathewson Albert Willis Moulton, Jr. 1 7 John Finzer Presnell, Jr. Maurice Ross John Vanderlyn Shuts Randall Woodbury Snow Homer Waterhouse Daniel Waldron Pettencill John Geyer Thorpe Gerald Marshall York Ralph Clifton Gould THE BOW DO I X BUG I INTERFRATERNITY ATHLETIC COUNCIL Crowell Clarinton Hall, 3ri Richard Morris Steer Francis Leroy Cooper President . Pice-President Secretary- Treasurer William Plummer Drake Franklin Grant Hamlin Rodney Clayton Larcom, Jr. Stephen Howard Lyons MEMBERS Elmer Arthur Fortier, Jr Vale Goldthwaite Marvin Richard Tunis May Robert Marston Porter Winsor Lord Thomas 11S THE BOW DOIN’ BUGLE i . i ■ ■v Xji - :-.3J I B 31 • i 'V; r ‘ 1 « t 4 fit ft r!Tjf,v,;,n | I ? t r | f i ? t K v V - i GLEE CLUB iMr. Alfred E. Brinki.er........................................... Director Edward Lewis Campbell, ’36............................................Leader Harold Bickford Lang, ’36............................................Manager Robert Keenan Craven Herbert Field Fisher, Jr. Harry Thomas Foote Edward Lewis Campbell Charles Nason Curtis Carlyle Neville DeSuze William Henry Bledsoe William Herbert Brown, Jr. John Lei.and Crosby, 3RD David Waldron Firrs Jonathan Wales French, Jr. Henry Roaf Graves Willard Streeter Bass, Jr. James Lucius Bei.den Donald Franklin Bradford ames Hinkley Card Vii.liam Plummer Drake Vasmer Levf.rett F'lint FIRST TENORS Julian Tuthill Hanks Robert William Baffin Geoffrey Robert Stan wood George Victor Wolf SECOND TENORS Claude Rand Frazier James Preble Hepburn Latimer Ballou Hyde Harold Bickford Lang FIRST BASSES Frederick Landis Gwyn Paul Stetson Ivory Willard Burr Knowlton William Fullerton Leach, Jr. Scott Chamberlain Marshall Richard Vincent McCann Howard Burnf.tt Miller SECOND BASSES Frank Wilson Kibbe Ernest Alfred Lister Herbert Mayhew Lord, 3rd Ross Lewis McLf.an Walter Brown Parker, Jr. Gordon Lloyd Potter Malcolm Walter Cass, Pianist 119 Milton Myer Goldberg Vale Goldthwaitf. Marvin James Ai.den Bishop Frederic Sherburne Mann Joseph McKeen, Jr. William Preston Sawyer Donald Francis Monf.ll George Bertrand Paull, Jr. George Daniel Reardon William Harvey Rice, Jr. Thomas Prince Riley Alfred Charles White John Vanderlyn Shute Albert Gyles Smith, Jr. Louis William Bruemmer, Jr. Oakley Arthur Melf.ndy Neal Eltince Howard Crowell Clarinton IIai.l, 3RD. THE HOW DO I X BUGLE CHAPEL CHOIR James Lucius Belden Edward Lewis Campbell William Plummer Drake Lawrence Sargent Hall Horace Childs Buxton, Jr. George Patrick Clarkson Paul Hussey Gii.patric James Alden Bishop Donald Franklin Bradford James Hinkley Card John Campbell Emery Ernest Haskell Files William Henry Bledsoe Julian Tuthill Hanks Everett Porter Jewett, Jr. Malcolm Walter Cass, Organist 1936 1937 1938 «939 120 Harold Bickford Lang Frederic Sherburne Mann John Vanderi.yn Shute Felix Smith Verity Paul Stetson Ivory Frank Wilson Kibbe Richard Vincent McCann David Waldron Fitts Robert William Laffin William Harvey Rice, Jr. Geoffrey Robert Stanwood Charles Andrew Young Willard Burr Knowlton Robert Shiland Mullen Thomas Prince Riley THE HOW DOIN' BUGLE COLLEGE BAND Richard Winthrop Baker............................................................Leader Ernest Rockwell Dalton...........................................................Manager James Hinkley Card.............................................................Librarian William Harvey Rice, Jr.......................................................Drum Major Trombone Thomas Hoppin Mack Winthrop Brooks Holt Walker Roy Edward Wiggin Richard Henry Moore Thomas Fredrick Gordon Clarinet Horace Childs Buxton, Jr. Paul Howland Wilson, |r. Charles Lemuel Tuttle Paul Hussey Gii.patric Edgar Floyd Sewall, Jr. Dorrance Haven Goodwin Pergival Roe dicer Knauth Leonard Jerome Cohen Tuba George Russell Cadman Drums James Hinkley Card John Vernon Carten Kenneth Paul Thomas Sullivan David Warren Boxwei.i. William Fowlie Kierstead Saxophone William Harvey Rice, Jr. Richard Winthrop Baker Robert Bos worth Hatch Ernest Alfred Lister Robert Eugene Morrow David Ives Brown William Andrew Young, Jr. Ernest Haskell Files Trumpets Robert William Laffin Edward James Brown Ernest Rockwell Dalton Fergus Upham Charles Loring Young John Thomas Konecki Willard Huntington Currier Randall Bradford Tinker James Edward Tracey, Jr. Alfred Francis Hughes Alto Horn John Andrews Rodick Charles Ingersoli. Arnold )2 I THE BOW DO IN BUGLE THE POLAR BEARS The Polar Bears arc the College dance orchestra. They play at various College functions throughout the year, including Gym Dances, Union Dances, and House Parties. During the past year they have also played out-of-town engagements, and during the summer they made a trip on a transatlantic liner. Richard Winthrop Baker, ’37 Paul Hussey Gilpatric, ’37 Frederick Landis Gwynn, ’37 Franklin Grant Hamlin, ’36 Mark Elbridce Kelley, Jr.,’39 William Fowlie Kierstead, ’36 Robert William Baffin, ’38 Rodney Clayton Larcom, ’36 Thomas Hoppin Mack, ’36 122 TIIK HOW 1)0 IN BUGLE IVY HOP MAY 24, 1935 Mrs. Kenneth C. M. Sills Mrs. Orren C. Hormf.ll Mrs. Morgan B. Cushing William Preston Sawyer William Byron Flynn, Jr. Mrs. Kenneth C. M. Sills Mrs. Boyd W. Bartlett William Robert Owen Thompson Sampson Sawyer. PATRONESSES Mrs. Kenneth J. Boyer Mrs. Philip Wilder Mrs. Phillips Mason Mrs. James F. White Mrs. Herbert R. Brown IVY HOP COMMITTEE Josiah Hayden Drummond, Chairman Maxwell Mowbray Small Winthrop Brooks Holt Walker Music by Mal Hallett Under (he .'Inspices of (he Class of 1936 CHRISTMAS HOP DECEMBER 20, 1935 PATRONESSES Mrs. Frederic W. Brown Mrs. Edward C. Kirkland Mrs. Stanley P. Chase Mrs. Noel C. Little Mrs. Robert P. Tristram Coffin CHRISTMAS HOP COMMITTEE Josiah Hayden Drummond, Chairman Hubert Seely Shaw Jr. William Hilton Soule Music by Clyde McCoy Under the Axis pices of the Student Council 123 THE HOW DO I X BUGU-: IVY DAY EXERCISES MAY 21, 1935 CLASS OF 1936 OFFICERS Burroughs Mitchell v . . V.............. President Lawrence Sargent Hall . ..................... Odist Willis Hay, Jr.. . „ . | BB.i , Marshal COMMITTEE Robert Russell Hagy, Jr., Chairman Frederic Sherburne Mann Owen Henry Mblaugh PROGRAM Poem ........ . . . . . John Phillips Chapman Singing of the Class Ode Presentation Wooden Spoon to Popular Man.................. Planting of the Ivy Amos Stone Mills, Jr. CLASS DAY EXERCISES CLASS OF 1935 Under Thorndike Oak 3:00 P.M. Music Opening Address................................... William Howard Niblock Poem...............................................Arthur Mills Stratton M usic Oration.................................................. John Otis Parker History.............................................Allan Forbes Hubbell Closing Address.........................................Joseph Lyman Fisher M usic Pipe of Peace Singing of Ode Cheering Halls Farewell GRADUATION EXERCISES ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTIETH COMMENCEMENT JUNE 20, 1935 ORDER OF EXERCISES Music Tenaglia........................................... Aria Prayer Chaos in the Liberal Arts..................Donald Frederic Barnes Fichte, the Prophet of Modern Germany Allan Forbes Hubbell Music Tierne......................................... Serenade The Historical Attitude............................ John Otis Parker Radicalism in the College........................ Joseph Lyman Fisher A New Philosophy for America...........Frederic Alvan Fisher, Jr. Music Tschaikowsky..........................Song Without Words Conferring of Degrees Benediction Song “Rise, Sons of Bowdoin” •Alternate Speaker THE BOWDOIN BUGUC DEGREES CONFERRED IN 1935 John Wesley Adams John Salmon Baker )onald Frederic Barnes George Crosby Bartter ohn Mower Beale Ioward Ray Black, Jr. Irving Grant Bowman Robert Bowman George Foster Cary, 2nd Homer Ridgway Cilley Kmmon Cobb Lawrence Dana Stuart Kennedy Davis Leon Ashby Dickson Alfred Grayson Dixon Allen Gould Duncan Robert Gilley Dunton George Roger Kdwards Gilman Cllndenen Ellis Allan Edward Fenley BACHELOR OF ARTS Frederic Ai van Fisher. Jr. John Benjamin Flagg William Atherton Frost John Charles Hayward Richard Stockwkll Henry Lionel Pinkham Horsman Allan Forbes Hurbell Robert Edmund Hurley Elmer Hutchinson Jacob Iwanowicz Howard Leo Kominsky Neil Hartley La Belle Oram Robert Lawry. |r, Arthur N. Lieberman Henry Shbip Lippincott Elias Edwin Long Walter Marvin Luce John Alexander Macdonald Willard Ronald Marshall Allan Wilcox Mitchell Sterling Darrach Nelson Vincent Nowi.is ions- Otis Parker Iurton Howard Reid Harry Alfred Romherger. Jr. Gordon Allen Rowell iOHN Valentine: Sciiafkner. jrd Iobert Swift Sherman Harry Whittier Snow Gordon Maxwell Stewart Frederick Jackson Stoddard Paul Edward Sullivan Stuart Emerson Tiioits Philip Frost Thorne Nathan Wilbur Watson Isadore Wf.iss Robert Warren Whitmore Walter James Woodger. Jr. John Worcester Harry Abelon Edward Bara valle Marshall Stanley Barbour Preston Nichols Barton Earle Hastings Beatty Charles Edward Behr Ellsworth Benson William Kemiton Bigelow Chester Woodbury Brown- Mason David Bryant, Jr. George Herbert Carter Robert Andrews Cleaves William Dickerson Conklin Walter Franklin Crosby James Donald Crowell James Doak, jrd Kenneth Lewis Dorman Granton Hall Dowse, Jr. BACHELOR OF SCIENCE Lemuel Brooks Emery William Risk Esson Joseph Lyman Fisher Henry Herbert Franklin Charles Frederic Garcelon Melville Clark Grf.eley Gilbert Duncan Harrison. Jr. Hudson Bridge Hastings, Jr. (as of the Class of 1934) Charles Gilbert Hatch. Jk. Richard Junior Hatchfield Ellsworth Putnam Head John Spencer Holden Joseph Bixby Hoyt Arthur William Hunt, Jr. Donald Fowle Johnson (as of the Class of 1934) Albert Wilkie Kent Stanley Herbert Low John Porter McLeod Howard Herbert Milliken David Morris (as of the Class of 1933) William Howard Niulock Roscoe Goodridge Palmer Edward Frederick Robinson. Jr. Andrew Troop Rolfe Stanley Allston Sargent Donald McKay Smith Arthur Mills Stratton Deane Stanley Thomas. Jr. Harold Charles Tippinc Frank Harold Todd Douglass Willey Walker EdWard Paul Webber Frank Burton Whitman. Jr. HONORARY DEGREES MASTER OF ARTS George Bowman Sears (Class of 1890) Anna Elizabeth Smith Frank Gifford Tallman MASTER OF SCIENCE Earle Bryant Perkins (Class of 1923) DOCTOR OF SCIENCE William Converse Kendai.i. (Class of :S$$) Clyde Leroy Deminc (Class of 1910) DOCTOR OF LETTERS Jeremiah Denis Mathias Ford DOCTOR OF HUMANE LETTERS David Richard Porter (Class of 1906) DOCTOR OF LAWS Hugh Dean McLei.lan T 11 E BOW DO IN BUGLE 126 APPOINTMENTS AND AWARDS HONORARY COMMKNCKMENT APPOINTMENTS Clast of ?.? Summa cum Laude Vincent Nowlis Isadore Weiss Josbpii Lyman Fisher Marshall Stanley Barbour Stuart Kennedy Davis Leon Ashby Dickson Alfred Grayson Dixon Robert Gilley Dunton Magna cum Laude Allan Forbes Hubbell John Oris Parker Cum Laude George Roger Edwards Allan Edward Fenley Frederic Alvan Fisher, Jr. Henry Herbert Franklin Robert Edmund Hurley Jacob Iwanowicz Walter Marvin Luce Sterling Darracii Nelson Harry Alfred Romberg, Jr. Harry Whittier Snow Elmer Hutchinson Deane Stanley Thomas, Jr. Philip Frost Thorne Frank Harold Todd Nathan Wilbur Watson Edward Paul Webber COM M ENCEM EN T SPEA KERS Joseph Lyman Fisher Allan Forbes Hubbell Frederic Alvan Fisher. Jr. (alternate) Donald Frederic Barnes Robert Gilley Dunton Elmer Hutchinson Donald Frederic Barnes Robert Gilley Dunton Warren Arnold Hagar. 1936 Raymond Pack, 1936 Edwin Gilpatric Walker, 1936 Provisional Commencement Speakers Vincent Nowlis John Valentine Sciiaekner. 3RD Arthur Mills Stratton CLASS OF 1868 PRIZE SPEAKING Frederic Alvan Fisher, Jr. Joseph Lyman Fisher ALEXANDER PRIZE SPEAKING Edwin Bonette Benjamin. 1937 Franklin Farrar Gould, Jr., 1937 Richard Vincent McCann. 1937 John Otis Parker Philip Frost Thorne Isadore Weiss Allan Forbes Hubbell John Otis Parker Norman Parnell Seagrave. 1937 Harold David Ashkenazy. 1938 Henry Alan Steeves, Jr., 1938 AWARDS Charles Carroi.i. Everett Scholarship. Joseph Lyman Fisher. Class of 1935. Henry W. Longfellow Scholarship. John Valentine Schaffner, 3rd. Class of 1935. Galen C. Moses Scholarship. Vincent Nowlis. Class of '935- David Sewai.l Premium. William Frost. Class of 1938. Brown Memorial Scholarships. Leon Ashby Dickson. Class of 1935: Isadore Weiss. Class of 1953; William Frederick Carnes. Class of 1936; Albert Willis Moulton. Jr.. Class of 193T; Joseph Gilbert Sclar. Class of 1937; and Benjamin Hilton Cush- ing, Jr., Class of 1938. Class of 1868 Prize. John Otis Parker, Class of 1935. Brown Composition Prizes. Donald Frederic Barnes. Class of 1935. first prize; and Kenneth Lewis Dorman. Class of 1935. second prize. Smyth Mathematical Prizes. Isadore Weiss. Class of 1935; John Finzer Presnell. Jr.. Class of 1936; and Dan Edwin Christie. Class of 1937. Sewai.l Greek Prize. Edwin Bonette Benjamin. Class of «937- Sewai.l Latin Prize. Nathan Dane, and. Class of 1937. Goodwin Commencement Prize. Joseph Lyman Fisher, Class of 1935. Pray English Prize. Donald Frederic Barnes. Class of 1935. Goodwin French Prize. Benjamin Hilton Cushing, Jr., Class of 1938. Noyes Political Economy Prize. Alfred Grayson Dixon. Class of 193s. Class of 1875 Prize in American History. John Otis Parker. Class of 1935. Bradbury Debating Prizes. Harold Charles Tipping, Class of 1935. and Edwin Gilpatrick Walker, Class of 1936, first prizes; and Norman Parnell Seagrave, Class of 1937. and Andrew Hood Cox. Class of 1938. second prizes. Hawthorne Prize. Lawrence Sargent Hall. Class of 1936. DeAlva Stanwood Alexander Declamation Prizes. Richard Vincent McCann, Class of 1937. first prizr: and Edwin Gilpatric Walker. Class of 1936. second prize. Philo Sherman Bennett Prize. Sterling Darrach Nelson. Class of 1935. Ai mon Goodwin Prize. Thurman Everett Philoon, Class of 1936. Hiland Lockwood Fairbanks Prizes in Public Speaking. Stephen Evans Merrill. Class of 1935; and Norman Parnell Sea- grave. Class of 1937. Col. William Henry Owf.n Premium. Vincent Nowlis. Class of 1953. Stanley Plummer Prizes in Public Speaking. Lawrence Sargent Hall. Class of 1936. first prize; and Edwin Gilpatric Walker. Class of 1956, second prize. FokBES Rickard Poetry Prize. Edwin Gilpatric Walker, Class of 1936. Lucies Howe Prize Scholarship. William Howard Nib- lock. Class of 1935. Hannibal Hamlin Emery Latin Prize. William Frederick Carnes, Class of 1936. and Thurman Everett Philoon. Class of 1936. Nathan Gould Prize. George Roger Edwards, Class of '935- Sumnf.r I. Kimball Prize. Isadore Weiss. Class of 1935. Horace Lord Piper Prize. Paul Welsh. Class of 1937. Bertram Louis Smith, Jr., Prize Scholarship. Burroughs Mitchell, Class of 1936. Poetry Prize. No award. F dcar O. Achorn Prizes. Donald Robert Bryant, Class of 1937, and Norman Parnell Seagrave. Class of 1937. Biology. Honors, Frederick Jackson Stoddard. Chemistry. Honors, Marshall Stanley Barbour, Elmer Hutch- inson. and Jacob Iwanowicz. Classics. High Honors, George Roger Edwards. Economics, High Honors, Joseph Lyman Fisher; Honors, Robert Gilley Dunton and Harold Charles l ipping. EKpLISH, Honors, John Valentine Schaffner, 3rd. HONORS IN MAJOR SUBJECTS German. High Honors. Allan Forbes Hubbell. Government. Honors, Sterling Darrach Nelson. History, High Honors, John Otis Parker; Honors. Joseph Bixhy Hoyt. Mathematics. Highest Honors, Isadore Weiss. Physics, High Honors, Isadore Weiss. Psychology. Highest Honors, Vincent Nowlis; Honors. Wil- liam Howard Niblock. 1 -7 THE BOW DO IN BUG BE X RATER DBK A A D V Y X 4 A K E O A X A Y Z 4 K £ son £ N A T n PHI BETA KAPPA Founded at William and Mary College in 1776 One Hundred and Tuenly-Ttco Chapters Established at Bowdoin in 1825 ALPHA OF MAINE OFFICERS George Foster Cary, A.M............................................................................ President Gerald Gardner Wilder, A.M.................................................................... Pice-President Stanley Perkins Chase, Ph.D ..............................................................Secretary-Treasurer LITERARY COMMITTEE William Witherle Lawrence, Ph.D., Lirr.D. Laurence Alden Crosby, A.M. Frank Alden Farrington, A.B. Henri LeBrec Micoi.eau, A.B. MEMBERS Stuart Kennedy Davis Leon Ashby Dickson George Roger Edwards Joseph Lyman Fisher Allan Forbes Hub bell Elmer Hutchinson Vincent Nowlis FROM 1935 John Oris Parker Harry Whittier Snow Deane Stanley Thomas Philip Frost Thorne Frank Harold Todd Nathan Wilbur Watson Isadore Weiss William Frederick Carnes Bernard Nathan Freedman Sidney Raymond McCi.eary Thurman Everett Philoon MEMBERS FROM 1936 Howard Hollister Vogel John FinZer Presnei.l Maurice Ross John Vanderlyn Shute Everett Lewis Swift Fourth Row: Lang F. Benjamin Hagy Sampson Moncll Sawyer Campl ell Third Row: Kibbe Hall E. Benjamin Barker Curtis Tucker Gould Sears Bradford Stroud Roto: Flint Symonds Smith Stan wood D. Moncll Garfield Waterhouse Chapman Morss Godfrey Arnold Fitts Harrison Parker Chase Davidson Frost Front Row: Creighton Potter Greeley Hanks Nulty Garland McClean Pauli Nichols Riley Gibson I. Arnold Bowtloin Cl lapter ol ALPHA DELTA PHI Founded at Hamilton College, 1832 Twinty-Seven Chapters Established at Bowdoin, 1841 Fratres e Doc tor ib us William Albion Moody, Sc.D., Bowdoin, 1882, Prof. Emeritus Charles Clifford Hutchins, Sc.D., Bowdoin, 1883, Prof. Emeritus Philip Sawyer Wilder, B.S., Ed.M., Bowdoin, 1923 Marshall Stanley Barbour, B.S., Bowdoin, 1935 Fratres in Urbe Thomas Harrison Riley, A.M., Bowdoin, 1880 Thomas Harrison Riley, Jr., A.B., Bowdoin, 1903 John Winchei.l Riley, A.B., Bowdoin, 1905 Leon Leslie Spinney, A.B., Bowdoin, 1926 John Patten Winchei.l, Bowdoin, 1906 Herbert Frye White, Bowdoin, 1927 Carleton Clark Young, A.B., Hamilton, 1917 I'll E BOW DO IN BUGLE D FRATRES IN COLLEGIO I93 Francis Seymour Benjamin, Jr. Edward Lewis Campbell Harold Bickford Lang Thompson Sawyer Sampson, Jr. George Christie Monei.i. William Preston Sawyer Robert Russell Hacy, Jr. John Franklin Barker Edwin Bonette Benjamin Thomas Marvin Bradford, Jr. Charles Nason Curtis Franklin Farrar Gould, Jr. 937 Crowell Clarinton Hall, 3RD Neal Ei.tinge Howard Frank Wilson Kibbe Gauthier Abel Thibodeau Allen Brown Tucker Richard Warren Sears Duncan DeWitt Arnold Phillip Freeland Chapman, Jr. Edward Fuller Chase George Thomas Davidson, Jr. David Waldron Fins Vasmer Leverett Flint William Frost Scott Parker Garfield Randolph Bradbury Waterhouse Robert Shaw Godfrey John William Harrison Donald Francis Monell Robert Dillingham Morss Walter Brown Parker, Jr. Carlton Kimball Smith Geoffrey Robert Stan wood Curtis Walker Symonds Charles Ingersoll Arnold Richard Bellwood Carland Malcolm Linnell Creighton Winslow Curtis Gibson John Hildreth Greeley Julian Tuthii.i. Hanks Ross Lewis McLean John Donaldson Nichols. Jr. William Bridgham Nulty, Jr. George Bertrand Pauli.. Jr. Gordon Lloyd Potter Thomas Prince Riley Till-: BOW DO IN BUGLE Fourth Row: Mitchell McCoy W. Hooke Drake McGill Allen Bcldcn West Fcaron Third Row: Lewis Kellogg Dane Butters Field Gates Cross Mitchell J. Hooke Beck Second Row: Nash Muncy Carlson Wcthercll R. Hooke Walden Owen Buck Maitland RafFord First Row: Clifford Knowlton Allen Woodruff White Hood Mclcndy Irwin Butler Benham Davis Guild Kappa Chapter ot PSI UPSILON Founded at Union College, 1833 Tiventy-Sevni Chapurs Established at Bowdoin, 1843 Fratres e Doctoribus Charles Theodore Burnett, Ph.D., L.H.D., Amherst, 1895 Philip Weston Meserve, A M., Bowdoin, 1911 Henry Edwin Andrews, A.M., Bowdoin, 1894 Nathaniel Cooper Kendrick, Ph.D., University of Rochester, 1921 Kenneth James Boyer, A.B., B.L.S., University of Rochester, 1923 Herbert Weidler Hartman, Jr., Ph.D., Yale, 1928 George Hunnewell Qltnby, A.B., Bowdoin, 1923 Fratres in L rbe Charles S. F. Lincoln, M.D., Bowdoin, 1S91 Frederick Webster Browne, A.B.. Bowdoin, 1925 Chauncy William Goodrich, D.D., Yale, 18S6 Til E BOW DO I X BUGLE ammtm FRATRES IN COLLEGIO 1936 Albert Salisbury Allen James Lucius Belden William Plummer Drake Harold Roy Fearon William Roy Hooke Paul Laidley, Jr. Richard Hancock Beck George Warren Butters, Jr. Harold Livingston Cross, Jr. Nathan Dane, 2nd Leonardo Edgar Buck Charles Gerard Carlson James Ormond Dennis James Preble Hepburn Robert Lowe Hooke Alexander Maitland, Jr. William Baker Ai.lf.n Walter McNall Ben ham Charles Waring Butler Warren Jordan Clifford William Holbrook Davis Wilfred Henry Girard 1937 Roger Cushing Kellog 1938 Wells Seymour Wetherell 1939 Frank Edward Woodruff Weston Lewis, 2nd Samuel Finley McCoy John Henry McGill Amos Stone Mills, Jr. Burroughs Mitchell James Raymond West Norman Hartry Field Ellis Lorin Gates, Jr. Sprague Mitchell John Edmund Hooke William Smith Muncy Henry Leighton Nash Edward Henry Owen Dwight Lindley Rafford John Lowf. Salter, 3RD David Carroll Walden Eastham Guild, Jr. Harry Preston Hood, Jr. Pierson Clement Irwin, Jr Willard Burr Knowlton Oaki.ey Arthur Melendy Alfred Charles White Fourth Row: McDonald l.anc Jordan Hall I.arcom Mann Ingalls Flynn Kcncrson Third Row: Henderson McCann W. Leach Rogers Gilpatric Bond Greenlaw Second Row: Fischer H. Leach Frye Dearing Raleigh Clark Rice Wilson Morrow Bishop Lewis J. Blodgett Front Row: Whitehill Russell Bledsoe Birkett Lord Dunbar Reardon Wulfing Foley Williams B. Blodgett Waldron Tukcy Harris Alpha t ta ol CHI PSI Founded at Union College, 1841 Twenty-Five Alphas Established at Bowdoin, 1844 Fratres e Doctoribus Manton Copeland, Ph.D., Harvard, 1908 Glenn Rokello McIntyre, A.B., Bowdoin, 1922 Frater in Urbe Ernest Merryman Hall, A.B., Bowdoin, 1922 THE BOW DO IN Bl’GLK FRATRES IN COLLEGIO William Byron Flynn, Jr. Lawrence Sargent Hall Albert Leroy Ingalls Richard Osgood Jordan 1936 Vaughan Hartwell Kenerson Andrew Warren Lane Rodney Clayton Larcom, Jr. Charles Dearborn MacDonald, Jr. Frederic Sherburne Mann Virgil George Bond Dan Edwin Christie Paul Hussey Gilpatric Walter David Bishop James Thomas Blodgett Freeman Davis Clark Robert Rudolph Dearing Arthur Ellicott Fischer John Howard Frye, Jr. William Austin Greenlaw 037 Charles F. C. Henderson, 2nd William Fullerton Leach, Jr. Richard Vincent McCann Joseph Rogers 193$ Harry Tuck Leach Frederick Gary Lewis Scott Chamberlain Marshall Robert Eugene Morrow Thomas Franklin Phelps Robert Charles Raleigh William Harvey Rice, Jr. Paul Howland Wilson, Jr. Kenneth Nettleton Birkett William Henry Bledsoe Benjamin Howard Blodgett George Arthur Dunbar Robert Edward Foley Leslie Sylvester Harris Herbert Mayhew Lord, 2ND 1939 Myron Stone Me Intire George Daniel Reardon Robert Cone Russell Philip Edgar Tukey, Jr. Frederick Augustus Waldron Duncan Kimball Whitehill Harry Eugene Williams, Jr. Peter Frederick Wulfing Fourth Row: Third Row: Second Row: Front Row: Putnam Dyer Mantor Drummond Gray Shutc Maxcy Scholcficld Small Hamlin Lyons Dillcr Lawrence G. Bass Brewster Goldman Crosby Pettengill Cox Rideout Burton Reed Laffin J. Dillcr 1.. Pierce Nicholson Webb A. Cox Warren S. Bass Allen Curran Hyde Might Taylor Murphy J. Pierce Bamford Grodcr Garcclon Scribne r Bridge Ware Ittman Soule Bertels Fasten Goodspeed Larrabee Hyatt Rosen fold Abbott I.carncd I lieta Cliapter ol DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Founded at Yai.e University, 1844 Forty-Nine Chapters Established at Bowdoin, 1844 Fratres e Doctoribus Kenneth Charles Morton Sills, LL.D., Bowdoin, 1901 Noel Charlton Little, Ph.D., Bowdoin, 1917 Stanley Perkins Chase, Ph.D., Bowdoin, 1905 Boyd Wheeler Bartlett, A.M., Bowdoin, 1917 James Fellows White, A.B., Bowdoin, 1929 Fratres in Urbe Harti.y Cone Baxter, A.B., Bowdoin, 1878 Ralph Porter Bodwell, A.B.. Bowdoin, 1902 Jesse Davis Wilson, B.S., Bowdoin, 1903 John Lincoln Baxter, A.B., Bowdoin, 1916 Charles Henry Cumston, A.M., M.D., Colby, 1870 Gilbert Molleson Elliott, A.M., M.D., College of the City of New York, 1886 THE BOW DO IN BUGLE FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Sam McLaughlin Birch Josiah Hayden Drummond Isaac Watson Dyer, 2nd Mark Edson Hamlin Stephen Howard Lyons 1936 Clarence Arlowe Small Wilbur Berry Manter Gardiner Josiah Maxcy Albert Pearce Putnam Harry Barnum Scholeeiei.d John Vanderlyn Suite Simeon Barrett Aronson George Henry Bass, 2nd Charles Foss Brewster William Smith Burton James Francis Cox, Jr. John Leland Crosby, 3RD Stanley Willis Allen Willard Streeter Bass, Jr. Andrew Hood Cox Edward Lintott Curran John Woodburn Diller Samuel Kirby Hicht William Frank Shepard Abbott David Ward Bamford Bernard Joseph Bertels, Jr. Marshall Bridge Henry Augustine Dolan, Jr. Louis Garcelon, Jr. Ernest Leroy Goodspeed, Jr. Linwood Joseph Groder George 937 William Henry Dillf.r, Jr. Jack I). Goldman John Derby Lawrence Daniel Waldron Pettengill John Francis Reed David Browne Rideout 1938 William DeWitt Hyde Robert William Laffin William Robert Murphy Basil Stuart Nicholson Leonard Augustus Pierce, Jr. Mortimer Pf.rsonia Warren Blaine Webb, Jr. 1939 Edward I homas Hyatt William MacLeod Pitman Robert Walter Kastf.n Seth Leonard Larrabef. Jotham Donnell Pierce Richard Stanley Rosenfeld Edward Emmons Scribner, Jr. Howard Currier Soulf. Long Ware, Jr. TUI- HOW DO IN BUGLE Fourth Roto: Walker Dana Mi-laugh 0. Seagrave Hay Chapman Swan Rodick Connor Third Roto: Wycr Cole Ivory Haggctt Clarkson Batty Dalton Fletcher N. Scat rave Porter Srcond Roto: R. Craven O’Neil Newman Skillings Welch Brown Rundlcttc Card Arnold Winn T. Craven Front Roto: Fernald Macombcr Chapman Corson Stevens Cartcn Bur hoe Foster Abbott Brown Cloudman Hart Lambe Rich Eta Charge of THETA DELTA CHI Founded at Union College, 1S47 Twenty-Nine Charges Established at Bowdoin, 1854 Fratres e Doctoribus Wii.MOT Brookings Mitchell, Litt.D., Bowdoin, 1890 Elbridge Sibley, Ph.D., Amherst, 1924 Frater in Ur be Samuel Appleton Melcher, A.B., Bowdoin, 1S77 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO John Phillips Chapman Howard Hinki.ey Dana Willis Hay, Jr. Owen Henry Melauch 936 John Andrew Rodick Orville Bryan Seagrave Frank Herbert Swan, Jr. Winthrop Brooks Holt Walker 1937 W alter Sprague Batty George Patrick Clarkson Donald Newton Cole Ernest Rockwell Dalton W'illiam Vail Kellen Fletcher Harold Edwin Wyer Benjamin Stimpson Haggett, Jr. Pawl Stetson Ivory Robert Marston Porter Norman Parnell Seagrave Stanley Williams, Jr. Warren Holmes Arnold, Jr. David Ives Brown James Hinkley Card Robert Keenan Craven Thomas Joseph Craven, Jr. 1938 Ralph Harold Winn Frederic Soper Newman Edward Lynch O’Neill, Jr. Brewster Rundlette Francis Burton Skillings Vincent Bogan Welch •939 Luther Dana Abbott William Herbert Brown, Jr. Robert Davies Burhoe John Vernon Garten Arthur Chapman, Jr. Harry Howard Cloudman, Jr. Robert Eucene Corson Richard Clark Fernald Richard Harrison Foster W'illiam Coolidge Hart Philip Denton Lambe David Haynes Macomber Richard French Marsh John Hubbard Rich, Jr. Fourth Row: Rutherford Chisholm Cowan Berkeley M. Small Hirth Thomas Kimball Grey Sands Walker H. Brown Third Row: Hall Harris Bryant Deane Mathewson Black Chandler Second Row: K. Brown Fish Newhall Pocock Allen Steeves Fox Greene Frazier D. Smith S. Small Neat) Front Row: Ellis Coombs Churchill .Mitchell Weeks Fleischner Davis Corey Scwall Hunter Berger Soule Thornquist MacCarey Crowell Hughes Y'ergason Benedict B owdoin f DELTA UPSILON Founded at Williams College, 1834 Sixty-One Chapters Established at Bowdoin, 1857 Fratres e Doctoribus Frederic Willis Brown, Ph.D., Harvard, 1S97 Paul Nixon, L.H.D., Wesleyan, 1S04 Charles Harold Livingston, Ph.D., Harvard, 1910 Fratres in Urbe Joseph Snow Stetson, D.M.D., Bowdoin, 1897 Clyde Eari.e Richardson, M.D., Bowdoin, 1909 William Haskell Farrar, A.B., Bowdoin, 1914 Alonzo Barker Holmes, A.B., Bowdoin, 1921 Clyde Thomson Congdon, A.B., Bowdoin, 1922 Francis Woodward Hanlon, M.D., Bowdoin, 1925 Joseph Caldwell Stetson, Bowdoin, 1935 THE BOW 1)0 IN BUGLE unarh — T.ix FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Austin Wkst Berkeley Francis Harold Brown George Frederick Chisholm Caspar Frank Cowan J. Donald Dyer Richard Lowe Grey Percivai. Safkord Black Donald Robert Bryant John Brandon Chandler David Turner Deane Donald Paine Allen Edward James Brown William Hudson Fish, Jr. Robert Bernard Fox Claude Rand Frazier John Pettencill Greene Dan Langston Berger John Chadsey Benedict Graham Churchill Albert Randall Coombs Charles Nelson Corey Philip Holmes Crowell, Jr. Robert Lawrence Davis Reed Hobart Ellis, Jr. Robert Dixon Fleischner 1936 David Russell Hirth Asa Burbank Kimball Gaynor Kellogg Rutherford Douglas Mills Sands Maxwell Mowbray Small Windsor Lord Thomas Edwin Gii.patric Walker 937 LedgarD Mills Hall Robert Harrington Harris Richard Edson Mathewson Wendell Carter Sawyer Charles Howard Smith 93S Phillips 1 ryon Nead Edward Bradford Nf.whall James Joel Pocock, Jr. Stuart Gerard Paul Small Denholm Smith Henry Alan Steeves, Jr. 939 Albert Edward Hughes, Jr. James Brown Hunter John Chapman MacCarey Burton Irvine Mitchell Edgar Floyd Sewall, Jr. Edward Mersey Soule Carl MacGregor Thornquist Edwin Lamorkaux Vkrgason Ernest Eugene Weeks, Jr. Fourth Row: D. Merrill S. Merrill Morse Ashley Peacock Good Kstabrook Marvin Roberts W. Soule Third Row: Dusenbury Dane Cotton French Buxton Davis Sharp Healy Marshall Woods Wingate Pendexter Second Row: Tyson Halford Bishop Miller Hyde Dupcc Read Strong Redman Soule Robinson Front Row: Matthews Stevens Hamlin Skillings Campbell Watt Walker Hutchinson Konecki Green Breummer McRae Andrews Hyde Lambda Chapter of ZETA PSI Founded at New York University, 1S47 Thirty Chapters Established at Bowdoin, 1867 Fratres e Doctoribus Henry Lincoln Johnson, M.D., Bowdoin, 1907 Morgan Bicknell Cushing, A.M., Yale, 1917 Herbert Ross Brown, A.M., Lafayette, 1924 Albert Abrahamson, A.M., Bowdoin, 1926 Robert Peter Tristram Coffin, B.Litt., Litt.D., Bowdoin, 1915 Fratres in Urbe Erik Achorn, A.M., Bowdoin, 1918 Emerson Walter Zeitlkr, A.B., Bowdoin, 1920 William Kelsey Hai.l, A.B., Bowdoin, 1922 Paul K. Niven, A.B., Bowdoin, 1916 N. Brooke Smith, Illinois, 1927 E. E. Hutchins, Tufts, 1923 THE BOW DO IN BUGLE FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Robert Paul Ashley, Jr. John Nichols Estabrook Philip Given Good Vale Goldthwaite Marvin Frank El' 1936 Robert Stuart Morse Walter Winfield Peacock, Jr. John Bi.ake Roberts, Jr. William Hilton Soule n Southard, Jr. Horace Childs Buxton, Jr. Robert Henry Cotton Mahlon Allen Dane, Jr. Euan Gamf.wf.i.l Davis James Saye Dusenbury, Jr. Jonathan Wales French, Jr. Robert Arthur Gentry William Albert Gross Richard 193 7 Charles Joseph Harkins Daniel Ward Heai.y, Jr. Basil Alexander Latty Ralph Gordon Johnson, Jr. John Barbour Marshall Faunce Pf.ndexter Richard Winslow Sharp George Myers Wingate Henry Woods Harold David Ashkenazy James Alden Bishop Norman English Du pee, Jr. John Henry Halford, Jr. Latimer Ballou Hyde Howard Burnett Miller Elmer Winfield Allen- Frank Richard Andrews Louis William Bruemmf.r, Jr. Philip Storf.r Campbell John Thomas Konf.cki Horace Ste ere Greene Robert Henderson Hamblen Melville Clarendon Hutchinson Donal Thomas DeWitt Read John Leifried Redman, Jr. Leonard Cary Robinson, Jr. David Bradford Soule Selah Woodhui.l Strong Dudley Ball Tyson «939 Robert Fhompson Hyde Lionel Frederick Jealous, Jr. Alvord Newton MacRae John Carlton Matthews Walter Rowson, Jr. Charles Edward Skili.in Edward Stevens, Jr. William Marshall Walker Merwin Watt Fourth Row: Mack Kicrstcad Powers Third Row: Henry Thomas Tuttle Lister May Second Roto: Boxwcll Shannon Brewer Lord Front Row: Bartlett Sullivan Taylor Kelley Hill Philoon Garrett Klaber Moulton Foote Wilson Oberist Tinker Mick Tracy Alpl ia Rl 10 Chapter oi KAPPA SIGMA Founded at the University of Virginia, 1869 One Hundred and Eight Chapters Established at Bowdoin, 189.5 Fratres e Doctoribus Donovan Dean Lancaster, A.B., Bowdoin, 1927 Joseph Mii.ton Odiorne, B.S., Bowdoin, 1925 Gerhard Oskar Rehder, A.B., Bowdoin, 1931 Fratres in Ur be Emerson Hiram Higgins, Bowdoin Certificate of Honor, 1920 George Edward Stetson, A.B., Bowdoin, 1930 TUE BOW DO IN BUGLE FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Laurence Gilnack Hill William Kowlie Kierstead William Thomas Henry William Klaber, Jr. Daniel Warren Boxwell Stuart Dexter Brewer Harry Thomas Foote Rex Harding Garrett Ernest Alfred Lister 1936 Thomas Hoppin Mack Thurman Everett Philoon Richard Henry Powers, Jr. 1937 Richard I unis May Albert Willis Moulton, Jr. Charles Lemuel Tuttle 193S Matson Moorehead Lord Stuart Oberist Malcolm Fairbairk Shannon Harlan Dureli. Thombs Philip Bray Thomas George Chandler Wilson Edward Jackson Bartlett Charles Edward Campbell, Jr. Mark Elbridge Kelley, Jr. Wendell Marcellus Mick 039 Kenneth Paul 1 iiomas Sullivan Robert Lee Taylor Randall Bradford Tinker James Edward Tracy, Jr. Fourth Row: Favour Clark Peakes Rice Nason McCusker Reynolds Third Row: Baker Edwards Coffin Gwynn Owen Steer Seeond Row: Young Gove Emery Upturn Clark Bradford Thurlow Files Sumner Smith First Row: Hastings Gardener Currier Jewett Me Kenney Gardent Mullen Cartland Gregory Church Beta Sigma Chapter ot BETA THETA PI Founded at Miami University, 1S39 Eighty-Seven Chapters Established at Bowdoin, 1900 Fratres in Urbe Stephen Adolphus Ellison, University of Virginia, 1897 Willis Elmer Roberts, A.B., Bowdoin, 1907 THE BOW DO IN BOGLE FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Harry Bantz Clark Paul Gordon Favour, Jr. Thomas Bernard McCusker, Jr. Richard Winthrop Baker Jonas Homer Edwards Frederick Landis Gwynn IIENRY Francis Waterhouse Bilodeau Donald Franklin Bradford Robert Wainwright Clarke Hubert Woodrow Coffin John Campbell Emery Ernest Haskell Files Charle John Everett Cartland, Jr. John Noble Church Willard Huntington Currier Paul Edward Gardent, Jr. William Kimball Gardener 1936 Robert Hearing Peakes Spencer Baldauk Reynolds John Dexter Rice 1937 William Robert Owen Richard Morris Steer Eaton Weatherbee Tar bell McKknny Trask 1938 Robert Archibald Gove Vincent Kingsley Hull, Jr. Robert Nelson Smith Warren Ei.i.is Sumner John Martin Thurlow Fergus Upham Boring Young 1939 Alfred Ingerson Gregory Roland Johnson Hastings, Jr. Ever Err Porter Jf.wett, Jr. Fred Palmer McKenney, Jr. Robert Shiland Mullen Fourth Rota: Waterhouse Bechtel Christie Fortier Park Knight W. Shaw II. Shaw H. Lord Third Row: O’Donnell Cooper Greiger Clapp MaePhec La ton Second Row: Part Glines Ellery Tootell Goodwin Cadman Lord Griffin Fredericks Front Row: Mitchell Merrill Howard Shattuck Nichols Hanley Griffin Gibbs Messier Pillsbury Broe Howland Gillctt Graves Wylie Delta P.si Chapter ot SIGMA NU Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1869 Ninety-Six Chapters Kstablished at Sbwdoin, 19iS Fratres e Doctoribus Orren Chalmer Hormell, Ph.D., Indiana University, 1904 Malcolm Elmer Morrell, B.S., Bowdoin, 1924 Fratres in i'rbe Wilfred P. Racine, A.B., Bowdoin, 1919 Harold Eugene Treworgv, A.B., University of Maine, 1921 Allen Everett Morrell, A.B., Bowdoin, 1922 Joseph A. Aldred, A.B., Bowdoin, 1922 THE BOW DO IN BUGLE FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Richard Currie Bechtel Philip Arnold Christie Elmer Arthur Fortier, Jr. William Brewster Hanson John Lewis Knight 1936 Homer Waterhouse Hartley Lord, Jr. Joseph McKeen, Jr. Thomas Lawrence Motley Park Hubert Seely Shaw Walter Seei.y Shaw Richard Crowell Clapp Francis Leroy Cooper, Jr. Herman Louis Criger, Jr. '937 Norman Stanley MacPhee John Hubert O’Donnell Maxwell Ascher Eaton Percival Roediger Knauth George Russell Cadman John Wardwei.i. Ellery William Ludlum Fredericks, Jr. William Raynes Gi.ines '93 s William Earle Tootei.i. Charles Stanton Goodwin Richard Joseph Griffin, Jr. Frank Dingley Lord Donald Irving Patt '939 William Vincent Broe Charles Frederick Gibbs Newell Elliot Gil Lett George Michael Lanen Griffin Henry Roaf Graves Daniel Francis Hanley Thomas Warren Howard, Jr. Henry Mei.i.en Howland Benjamin Anthony Karsokas Richard Edmund Merrill Paul Eugene Messier William Samuel Mitchell, Jr. Austin Porter Nichols Nahun Roy Pillsbury, Jr. George William Shattuck Ralph Howard Wylie, Jr. Fourth Row: Solari Gibb Brock Snow MacFarland Baxter Hawkes Barrcll Hamlin Leonard Third Row: Bean Gould Crawford Hunt Kearin Thorpe Second Row: Hairc Condon Purington Nickerson Ryan Bullerwell Crosslcy Hawkins Wadleigh Day Front Row: Herrick Stover Hunt Hyde Stengel Goodwin Titcomb Stroud Russell Hill Wheeler B owdoin Chapter oi ALPHA TAU OMEGA Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865 Ninety-Five Chapters Established at Bowdoin, 1929 Fratres e Doctoribus Alfred Otto Gross, Ph.D., University of Illinois, 1908 Edward Sanford Hammond, Ph.D., Yale, 1913 George Baker Welch, Ph.D., Bowdoin, 1922 Fratres in Urbe Orrin Freeborn Bathrick, A.B., Tufts, 1910 Joseph Warren Higgins, Jr., A.B., Bowdoin, 1926 Morton Atwell Klein, Jr., A.B., Dartmouth, 1931 THE BOW DO I X BUGLE -'yew A , AV. . FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Thompson Chester Baxter Norman Kenneth Brock Thomas Robinson Pirie Gibb. Jr. Franklin Grant Hamlin Cuyi.er Jacobs Hawkes 1936 Edward Atkinson MacFarland Lawrence Lee Pelletier Randall Woodbury Snow Fred Wilbur Thyng, Jr. Felix Smith Verity Frederick Richmond Leonard George Goodwin Bean John Chapman Cousins Arthur Chandler Crawford 037 Mansfield Laurence Hunt Walter Lowe Kearin John Geyer Thorpe Stuart Winslow Condon George LeRoy Crossley Benjamin Hilton Cushing, Jr. William Stevens Hawkins 938 Roland Stone Bullerwei.i. Milton Weldon IIaire William Warren Nickerson Frank Humphrey Purington, Jr. Allyn Knight Wadleigh «939 Dorrance Haven Goodwin George Leslie Hii.l Charles Oliver Hunt Robert James Hyde Blinn Whittemore Russell, Jr. Peter Dodge Stengel Richard Hamilton Stroud Roger Mackintosh Stover James Hewey Titcomb Paul Purinton Wheeler A L P H A D E L T A BARKER F sometime think that never blows so red The rose, as where our buried Johnnie bled. Miss Davis. Mai. and even Jack Magee Hurled cruel commands on his once lovely bead. They say the lion and the lizaril keep The courts where Barker gloried anti drank deep. All managers die young—cross country men Stamp o’er their heads, and they lie fast asleep. BENJAMIN On desperate seas long wont to roam. Thy bulbous bean, thy classic face, O Benjamin has brought us home To the glory that was Greece And the grandeur that was Rome. P H I BRADFORD Bradford thinks of the city bright That is seated on the lake; Often in thought he has a sight Of the pleasant Loop of that city bright As he swims the pool and back; And a verse of the waltz king’s song Is haunting his memory still “A i oy's will is the wind’s will And the thoughts of youth arc long, long thoughts. CURTIS GOULD HALL Will no one tell me Curtis sings; Perhaps the plaintive numbers flow For old unhappy far off things And women long ago. Or is it some more humble plot. Familiar matter, as the cheer For discus thrown or putted shot Or even sleep -he loves that dear. The Curfew tolls the knell of parting day; The lowing herd winds slowly o’er the wold; The plowman homeward plods his weary way. And leaves the world to darkness and to Gould. Some Freeport Hampden that with dauntless breast The little tyrant of the fields withstood; Some mute inglorious Milton here may rest; Some Cromwell guiltless of his country’s blood. With rue my heart is laden. Alas, for Buzzic Hall; And for the rose-lipped maidens Since he has loved them all. Who is Buzzic? What is he? That our Magee commends him5 Holy, fair, and wise is he: Mercury such speed did lend him That he might admired be. 156 KIBBE Serving cross the courts anti ace; Piping songs of greatest glee; In cloud I saw a face And it called itself Kibbc. Alone, alone, he lives alone Away from Bowdoin far But oft in stilly nights we hear His praise of Emmy’s ear So 'crc’s to you. Kibbc-Wibhc, at your home on Boody Street It’s a long, long trek to master, but, lad, you've got the feet! SEARS O tell me where his fancy's bred. What idle thoughts possess his head. From whence begot and nourished? Reply! Reply! His first thought is Monopoly; His next on winged sails to fly; His third is rested on—Oh. well. I'll begin it. Ding, Dong Bell. TUCKER Proud Tucker was in the woods Walking so airily Sweet Louise was on the bush Singing so rarely. “Tell me. you Bowdoin lad. When can you visit Bath? When baseball is done each day. Then will I whizzit fast.” 1 THE BOWDOIN BUGLE BECK Attention, please! As a lead-off man of our noble group allow us to present Sir Richard-thc-Dudc Beck in the role of The Ralawyd Kid or Why Quakers Sueeeed. Dick is one of those .Mustard House recluses whom it's hard to check up on. One thing is certain, though, and that is that he has risen to the station of a bloated plutocrat with plenty of extra dash and vigor with his new car. We admit that we know little about your private life. Dickie, but after all, one doesn’t leave school early for vacations just to prepare for Mid-years! Beck- Beck is also one those Outing Club Fresh air fiends who will go through anything for a bit of the good old outdoors. (Just ask him about his daily mara- thons and his Ghandi fasts.) And if by chance you think he doesn’t appreciate this life just get him to show you some of the stuff he’s written on the quiet. Yes sir, the Bouncing Brat has the stuff! BUTTERS You’ve heard of Destiny’s Darling, so now we give him to you in the flesh, none other than G. W. the third, guardian of the fraternal coffers, and general house nurse when. if. and as he may be in one piece himself. In fact he is so busy either restoring some lost member of his own or aiding some poor un- balanced soul (indeed wc think that he might even serve in the capacity of Drunkard's Aid and Re- former) that wc wonder if he ever gets time to crack a book. He has a genuine knack of piling all his exams up at the last moment and then suffering intensely through the somewhat shortened ordeal. Don't think, however, that his wonderful will and power to stay at home makes him immune to the fair sex. Wc don’t know, hut by gosh we'd bet that Warren can get you a date from Booth bay to Cape Cod (after all, F.astport to Sandy Hook is a little too much even for such a man). CROSS Harold the-cave-man Cross, alias Hago Harrington (i.e., Kratzman) hunter of big game in the wilds of Damrisscotty. and thundering herd of ye Delta Hockey Rink, is the personification of the pro- verbial Johnny the Woodchuck. In fact so prover- bial was he last year that he managed to slip through the jaws of Reddy the Fox. better known as Barney Smith’s Latin A-B. However, so imbued with that noble language has he become that he is still soaring in its realms. To be truthful he’s back in Latin t-2 again. In his bluer moments he delves savagely into the Satyrieon to learn rougher and tougher methods of life as a means of satisfying his attacks of disgust. We're ready to vouch for you. Hal, so can't you reply with a well-put neat” or “super”? 57 DANK When we first saw Nate, we all realized that we had a steadying influence in our midst. He hasn’t let us down one bit either. In fact the real trouble with Nate is that he helps the upperclassmen too much in his scholarly way and doesn’t Rive his own delegation a break. Ac rding to Dane, his older brother Duke not only discovered the South Pole, but he took Admiral Byrd’s hand and led him to it -Byrd sot all the credit, but anyway that's the truth. Nate isn't stupid, for he'll make Phi Bete in a walk, but he doesn't even know the difference between a passing comment and a dirty crack. Did someone mention Ohio? Off that stuff. Dane. Barney Smith is calling. FIELD Field. What does that remind you of? The woods? Right, and by gosh you've singled out Norm, though you'd never know it to look at him. He may hail from the Styx of Phillips and the Maine Woods, but Exeter and Harvard also have their claims on our traveling prodigy. Furthermore, he has been subjected to the tortures of higher Economics and so we can hardly find a wisp or trace of his native character left in him except for several «lashing mysterious trips up to camp and “home for various unintelligible reasons which generally prove exceedingly valid, particularly when they have distinctively colored hair. Norm has a professed gambling spirit with stock market luck (i.c., ever worse) and heads the sworn triumvirate of cue artists who would lay claims to Mitchell's coveted crown. How’s taters, son? GATES Here he is at last! The dream of the century and plenty to him too. Big Buster, the Blushing Blond Blessing, the man who swings a mean golf club and paddles a wicked crawl in the pool. The truly soft hearted and object of many an unjust attack, he finds great difficulty in avoiding the inevitable embarrassment. He nourishes a secret passionate desire for the supremacy of cuc«!om as the second contender, but sadly declines any statements when really questioned. Just the same, we can’t get along without him. in fact we’d be lost without him. in fact what would we have left without him? Right! We'd Have the house minus Buster, and that would mean plenty missing, so cheer up Ellic. dear! HOOKE According to the report of an eminent phrenologist whose services were engaged by joint action of the Brothers to find out just what this Hooke person was, we offer the following statement on a firm (?) collaboration of character analysis. Here is that lover of the wide open spaces a staid relic of Cracker Jack (i.c.. a prize in every package). John will tell you himself that his prize was the possession of the most common sense in the house.’’ Quite true, perhaps—in fact we do recall his figuring out one- joke since he has been with us. but that was ever so long ago. Ardent emulator of his smoothest of brothers, Bing, deep slumbcrer, anil an active duck- ling of the pool, he needs no further description— just step up and meet our Maplewood oak. KELLOGG “And were Dick and me and old Arch cvcr- Yes, sir, lie's at it again! There's no mistake about Roger. He's the woodsman deluxe (to be truthful “dc boltless-gun woodsman ), third disgusted pool challenger, golf and card genius, and authority on places to go. He’s the la«i who is always spotting the exams and by some hidden power managing to be a pretty good guesscr much to the disgust of other brethren who arc always waiting to catch him up some time. Roger is the house night owl and will sit up as long as there is anyone else around to hull with. A cagey man at knocking down grades with the least possible effort for which he is none the worse for the wear. Rog is another one of those prodigious unfathomable characters who will always get there. By the way, what about vou and old Arch? MITCHELL Sprague the Smooth—ah yes. you know the type— but don't forget that he's also the Suave, the Sar- castic, and at times Chief Exasperating Man (just ask Johnny Hooke). This dapper donation from Deerfield (don't mention Loomis in his presence) to our circle has whaled his way to fame amid the divots of golf courses north, east, south, and west. Noted for his way with women (remember, girls, we sai ! Smooth) he has it all over the rest of us. As near a thing to the well known city slicker without being one. Mitch has got something about him that makes you like him even when he may he making a fool out of you. Furthermore, we'll really give him cretlit as the pool shark in spite of many and sundry protests of several mentionetl above. Hats off to our Champ! 58 NOYKS Charlie Noyes, the man of a million devices, and don't misunderstand us. We said. “Devices! p Just go to Chuck with your troubles. He’ll right x them. Authority on swinging ash-trays, radio o antennae, cars, clothes (you ought to sec that array of vests), travel, dancing, how to handle men like y Camera, etc.—why all modern civilization comes 1 under his scope. In fact so busy was he making the world go round last year that he had the misfortune of taking a forced leave of absence, but he’s back with his grin and smoother than ever. In the winter he is the great boon of the Freshmen with his ability to wield a snow shovel and construct canals. Don’t give him a chance when he's in the mood, however, for his puns arc the creations of a fiend with murderous intent. Rumor has it that he’s an ace on the squash court, and certainly the way he swings a golf club calls for no unfavorable comment for the last of the pear-picking—we mean laurel- winning Noyeses. BOND 0 tzane angelon—Happy is he who has read the works of Xenophon (in the original, of course). Happy, wacky, lively, sleepy and anything else is Dit. Aside from track, history, and Greek, his one and only interest has been in a certain young woman of Longfellow Avenue. That has been one con- sistent part of Dit. The other is that one never knows what he'll do or say next. Happy huntin’. Dit. Good thing that you like dates as it sort of fits in the history nicely. CHRISTIE Ed has unfortunately been conspicuous by his absence in the past year and we wish that be would drop around. ’Tis heard by some nasty rumor or other that he has been doing the best he can to drag down the average of the class by getting straight A’s. Careful Ed. Casey will be jealous and that would be bad. Seriously tho, we’re all rather proud of you and not a little envious. THE BO WHO IX BUGLE GILPATRIC “ bossy as Gil is, he is not bothered much by any- thing but the navy and lately that has ceased to bother a great deal. Tinker, musician, driver, and, best of all. week-ender, seem to sum up Gil in a few words. The week-ends and a certain gal are almost always the cause of a protracted desire to do nothing, but sometimes Gil gets around this and manages to do a good solid hour of work. Taken as a whole (large as it may be) Gil’s of the best and we all like him. dooent we, boys. HENDERSON Tinker, gunnery expert, and philogynist extra- ordinaire. We just never seem to know which one of “those’’ will be mentioned next for honors. Every mathematical formula has been tried and the solution of the system involved still is a great hig mystery. A very consistent part of Hendic's col- lege life started at a church supper and has been con- tinuing in the form of visits just a little way up Boddy Street ever since. Hendic's major, a mathe- matical inclination, and a fascination for tile floors sometimes crop out all at once. Don't let us catch you tunneling through any three foot drifts this winter, guy. It really depends on the perspective you have. They aren’t mountains, you know. LEACH How do he do it? We wonder, Willie, why, when, and whence all the women. Mention a name and add two and Willie knows her. On top of this to show his utter scorn of the boys, Willie studies most of the week and then worries over the week-end. Sailor, skipper, “of a schooner no less. Bill comes back each fall with a long nautical roll to his stride. Voice is good in Willie. Fortunately he can't sing. Imfortunatclv he thinks he can. Result, discord. “Every girl I go with falls in love with me.” Tsk, tsk, Willie. 59 McCANN Oratorical, lyrical, musical, and (not least) bccrical is our Vinnv. Checks seem to bother him more than anything but there is a little item about late house hills that is also an irk. in other words Dick keeps the books and tries to keep us out of the red. He does, too. Although a hit sleepy, he usually manages to get up at eight, get breakfast, and get over to play the chimes in plenty of season. 'Twill be no surprise to hear How'? doin’ come floating over the campus. Don’t worry tho. It’s just our little Richard asserting his independence. ROGERS Joe is quite a traveler and ’tis said that Lorraine and Georgia have had their place in the itinerary of this chap. Incidentally, if you won't tell. Joe plays a marvelous flute and the mere sight of his long face over the end of the thing makes one’s heart (and sides) ache. Unfortunately Joe no spik wal die Eenglisch an dose have make moch trobble in desc house. Taster and sampler extraordinaire, Joe has only one fault in that line. “ I can't seem to control myself when with a girl after a few drinks.” I’oo had. Joe, but we know how it is. Joe’s smoking has caused him much trouble but after two solid years of earnest endeavor he can hold a cigarette in the approved manner. ARONSON p Whether you know it or not, we have in our midst A a gen-u-ine. unadulterated member of the Russian nobility. Simeon, more affectionately known as plain Sommic.” was born in the land of Tsars and Tsarinas—but then along came Lenin. Stalin, Eand the Revolution. This sandy-haired youth has no rivals for the title of Class Peanut.” More than one fleet halfback on the gridiron thought he JT was hitting a stone wall when he ran into all 240 pounds of Sommie's massive hulk. Good-natured S and jolly, he has a hearty laugh ready for any and every occasion. He’s the perfect optimist who [’ would agree with Pangloss, that “Everything is for the best in this best of all possible worlds.” He t counts among his avocations cribbagc, ping-pong, and his capacity (possibly a racial characteristic) Ofor some of the less potent beverages, while his main goal in life seems to be the bettering of Tootell’s , , hammer record. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE BASS Maybe George was born with a cribbagc board (not a silver spoon) in his mouth or in his hand or some- where because for the last three years it has been merely a question of cherchez la cribbagc game and there you will find George. Maine never produced a truer, a more characteristic, a more loyal son than George Henry Bass. Wilton, so we hear, is that beautiful little city up the road a piece where the men are men and the women conduct themselves accordingly. On the hockey rink George has his own characteristically unobtrusive system of body checks—as many a bruised Colby or New Hamp- shire player might graphically explain. Here now. that's no way to break in a pipe.” It seems that those words bring memories of Boston, the Statlcr. and the Lenox and who knows what else? BREWSTER In between week-ends in Boston and points west the Gov” manages to meet a few classes in almost all his courses before showing up at the final exam. After three years of constant campaigning Charles seems to have had a whit more luck down at Sim- mons than some of the less fortunate bow-tied rosy-cheeked Harvards. Topsham fairs and after dinner toasts—well, they all go into the making of a liberal arts education. Don’t worry about who’s going to fill those big parental shoes. I’m looking forward to 194$ or so (by then Quoddy ought to be either functioning or forgotten), to find Charles' own dainty number tens defiantly placed on the dis- tinguished senator from Maine’s desk while he complacently expands Hormellian theories on topics of the day. BURTON 150 pounds of “fighting dynamite” on the football field. Bill makes up for lack of stature by energy and aggressiveness enough for three men. He plays roving center on the gridiron but off' the field, too. the center of his afections for the fair sex has been roving for the past year—down to Boston, out to Cleveland, up to Augusta, down to Virginia—but finally coming to rest right here in Brunswick. Wc might have missed a town or two, but Bill isn't averse to hanging his hat on any peg. Serious and studious by nature. Bill wastes little time outside his few must duties in the social world. He shoots the hull consistently over at the rifle range but very seldom in sessions at the fraternity house. He’s a go-getter of the first water and is out to carve as big a name for himself as his forebears have. That's no mean task, if wc can believe the things we bear in Government classes about the goings on in Cleveland. “I s’y, old topper, 'c's a bit of orl right, wot?” Coxey and his bosom friend tlie Rocket have found linguistic corruption deplorable around Brunswick after their many years in jolly old England. Don’t let that sly. surreptitious smile fool you, Jim's no Sphinx. Though Maine provincialism et al may cramp his style at times, what a difference then appears when mid-years are over and New York beckons, with cocktails for two at the Waldorf and all that. A philosopher no end. Jim leisurely figures out the problems of the world at a dime a dozen. We point with pride to the wonders he has worked on those roommates of his, Reed and Ride- out. Within five years of graduation all three have agreed to pool their respective millions and form a company that threatens to shame the DuPont dynasty. CROSBY Five generations of Bowdoin men, all Dekes—Jack by the way being number five—are enough to start any man off on the right foot down to Dinty’s or the Hagle or what you will. “ Crosel, we have noticed, is at home anywhere on the campus, the dimmer and darker regions of Adams Hall and Memorial Hall excepted. You’ve never seen him hurry, yet he's always there on time with the goods. No football week-end would be a real success if Crosby and Lawrence didn’t appear in the rarest of form to help along the evening's festivities. Last year this famous duo was the bane or something of Appleton Hall and this year in the Dcke house well the year isn't over yet, so we don’t quite know what to call them. Audrey, beer, and ships in that self same order have given Jack a well rounded extra-curricular education. Just mention any of these three topics and the evening will be a success with a goodly amount of polished Greek dialect appearing at the proper moments. Here's a tall one for Buster Junior. DILLER Behold the most popular and familiar male face on the Westbrook Junior College campus. For three long years genial Bill has made himself a negative quantity in Brunswick Saturday nights. Turning west—on Forest Avenue just beyond the cemetery has become second nature to him, for there lives the flower of Skowhcgan maidenhood. She’s a rare catch, too. holding among other honors the Cap- taincy of the Basketball team and Presidency of her Senior Class. And then there is that famous trip to the Old Orchard pier last Ivy. The music was swell that night. How about it. Bill! This Skowhcgan lad has a barrel chest if we've ever seen one, but the only use Ik- makes out of it as far as we can learn is on the parallel bars as a veteran member of the defunct gym team—and possibly it comes in handy week-ends. Among other intellectual accomplish- ments he prides himself as an authority on all the latest detective thrillers of the ten cent variety. ■■■■ THE BOWDOIN BUGLE GOLDMAN LAWRENCE PETTENGILL Telegram for Goldman!” Jack is unquestionably Quiet, you mugs!” Derby’s off again. The If any given book is within a mile of the library Dan the best friend the local messenger boy ever had. nemesis of Newton flashes not only on the hockey knows just where and how to find it. Not everyone They’re thinking of doubling the staff down at the rink and the ball diamond, but rumor has it that he has relations with the faculty, damn it, works half office on his account. If it isn't a telegram, it’s a has flashed—or is it zoomed”—down to Bath once, the week in the library, corrects Math, papers and special delivery or a long distance call. Yes, Jack perhaps even twice in the last three years. If you’ve still finds it a simple matter to be a regular sub- hails all the way from St. Louis, which makes the ever noticed that peg Lawrence has into second from Scriber to that semi-annual unlimited cut list from Tel Tel just so much happier. J. D. always center field, it may bring memories of that ball the Dean's office. Math, one or Maht. twelve, claimed that CB on the license plates of his LaSalle game—with rocks, milk bottles, etc. -between there’s no difference—they’re all duck soup to our convertible Stood for the City of Brunswick. But Appleton and Hyde halls. Did he ever tell you Danny, but when it comes to persuasive arguments in as much as Brunswick is a town, we were forced about his operation? After some few years of con- to be used on Jenny Wren. Dan has been known to in the end to conclude that they might refer to some tinuous football, hockey, and baseball, plus encour- take his own sweet time. Wc sometimes wonder Wellesley student whose initials compare identically agement from a crack-up or two, it’s a wonder those if the shock of seeing the interior of the Cumberland with those on the plates. Jack is an automobile million dollar knees are still in circulation. Fjvery theater some night would be fatal, or just what would connoisseur extraordinary, with a wealth of experi- once in a while Lawrence remembers he hasn't happen, cnce and research that puts the Consumer’s Re- written home for six weeks or so—being so engrossed search to shame. in his studies and inventing formulas for making the Dean's list—finally there's a rush lor the phone and eventually peace is made with the powers that be in Newton—just an All-American “good kid.” 161 RIDEOUT Potatoes and pole vaulting combine to account for E Dave's success in college. One of that famous triumvirate. Cox, Reed, and Rideout, Browne” JL produces a new. if a bit fanciful, side to every argu- ment. Aroostook County figures in all discussions J. sooner or later whether it concerns cards or char- treuse. Not the least among bis distinctions is his all Maine “smoothie” status which he has held for the last three years. If you haven't heard already, Hebron cxcclls all prep, schools in everything. By actual timing. Rideout holds all records for the (j Deke informal debating marathon, haying had experience with the best of Maine’s spinners of XJ yarns. By the way, Da%-c, does it take li or 14 hours for mail to travel from Farmington to Bruns- t wick? 1 BATTY There I was on the 50-yard line, four-forty a scat. And you shoulda seen them debbies! Holy -!” But that was at Harvard, where Walter spent one year preparing for Bowdoin. Since coming to Brunswick “Satchel” has found debutantes very scarce, except in the vicinity of Boothbay, which, we hear, is practically run by said Batty. But he never gives up hope. After spending hours in a recking chcm lab. Walt emerges muttering, “Just wait till you guys have major exams. REED That stocky, diminutive bunch of yodeling, red- headed conviviality. Jack, alias Brick,” takes ’em big as they come on the gridiron and leaves them all the same—flat on the ground. This raucous, red- headed rocket from Rockport has however a morbid propensity for basking in the bigger and brighter lights of New York to say nothing of his explaining football plays to house party guests using numerous glasses to illustrate his points. We’ve never quite found out about those scattered week-ends leading him back to the vicinity of M. C. I., but if nothing else, we trust the rocket implicitly. Among his other activities, Brick is a good man with a shovel, in fact he's the only man in the house who comes anywhere near running Scholeficld a close second. THE BOWDOIN BUGLE CLARKSON The amiable Patrick ( MacGillicuddv ) Clarkson, otherwise known as “ Baby Bunting,” is Seen to best advantage when executing the difficult passages of “Turkey in the Straw in the approved RubinofF manner. However, it is only on rare occasions that this temperamental genius will deign to charm his assembled “fratres in collegio” with his hot bowing. Occasionally the house piano resounds with his “Rhapsody in Blue” and misccllania. This gifted exponent of “the Bath Stomp” is noted for his many deep-seated friendships in Brunswick and the neighboring hamlets. For three years his associates have been waiting in vain for this six-foot-two skulking violet to tear himself loose from his studies long enough to join them in their frivolous revels. Perhaps, someday, this Swampscott Baker-boy will fall into the dough. COLE Don (“the Wolf ) Cole has established himself as God’s gift to the Vestal Virgins. Hailing from North Brooklin, an indeterminate place somewhere north of Brunswick, this shrugging State of Maine scholar has captured Brunswick and environs by the stealthy characteristic of his animal namesake. Don has won fame for his carefree aptitude in pursuing his studies in a most time saving manner. He is also an excellent coal-shovcler (although that isn't the only thing he can throw), and spends most of his hours in horizontal lounging position. But the Wolf really shines at house-party time, as he slinks from house to house, conversing amiably with faculty members and chaperones alike. Hff DALTON While the Italians hurl dum-dum bullets on the poor Ethiopians, on us is hurled “Dumb-Dumb,” fresh from Hopcdalc, Mass. Jocko's chief success on the campus this year can be formulated from the query “Whose band?”, and the thundering chorus in reply: “ Dalton’s band.” His notoriety has even spread to the mail-bag column of the Boston Herald. Jack can't seem to confine his comments to politics, but has made this medium serve as a tryst of lonely hearts, his find—Dorchester. But after all is said and done. Jack has made his mark, even if not on the rifle range. Jack is musical—the “Eli Yale song (with gestures) testified to that his Freshman year. He also goes by the name of a student, and knows Hor- mcll very well. His house-party record is one of generosity rather than success; but it is generally conceded that his heart is one of gold. Good old Jack! 162 FLETCHKR V. K. is the handsome lad from Portland. Always ready to talk, he will amaze you with cliche phrases that rival even Batty’s. V. K. is in his best form when he talks on his favorite subject, the football team. He can tell you virtually all about it; who is going to win, who looked good in practice, and whether the team really is in shape. The poor hoy learned early about women. If you want to bring on yourself a lengthy explanation of just how it happened and a volume of descriptive adjectives of her. just drop a casual remark in his presence about a girl he had up here a few years ago. Then, too, there was that one of about two years back, and—yes—last year's. But don't worry. Bill; we know the right one will come along soon. HAGGETT Bcnjic is the bright boy from Bath, the late owl of house parties, and the greatest liquid connoisseur (self-styled) known in these parts. Jazz fan also, this East Orange product can tell you where any orchestra is at any given moment. Ben’s house party complement comes from Bath also, and speaking of house party reminds one of his marvelous quietness as a gentleman (and a scholar!) in contrast with his beating it out around the house. A stout fella is the Hasit.” and he has dabbled a bit into everything from Freshman football (he scored, fellers) to Spanish champagne (sic). A radio fiend par excellence. Ben is a staunch believer in the old saying that the feet must be above the head in order to assure full functioning of the mind, if any. IVORY Stetson, sometime known as the “Fool.” a name which he loves, has a mind of his own (we hope), and is never stumped for an answer in the witty repartee he is continually indulging in with any and all persons. As for his other attributes, Paul is remarkable for his amazing familiarity with practically every piece of jazz ever recorded. Re- gardless of whether it be an Ellington or a Casa Loma. ‘‘Stcts” can hum you the next chorus, and he never seems to miss. Paul is a modest and retiring gentleman whom we have heard on all-too-rarc occasions in morning chapel, drawing forth, accompanied by the organ, beautiful tones from his cello. THE BOW 1)0 IX BUGLE PORTER Robert came to Bowdoin as a man who had indeed worn a track-shoe in his life, but Magee made a runner of him (aided by Porter), no matter whom he was. Wc have always suspected that this innocent-faced gentleman learned to run when being pursued by the fair sex. as he has always attended house party with North Anson belles (“Anson for- ever!”) and has been seen hanging around at Bates and Westbrook functions. Despite his home in the wilderness (“I always have trouble covering the last ten miles with the dog-team”) Bob has been many times to the big and wicked city on track trips, bringing back cups and chatter which he pours out at meals. Me is a student, but was once known to falter when he asked Cushing whether a “Bank premise” was a long-term loan. The Anson Bash occasionally hammers the piano, and is the composer of the famous ” Cuddlin' a Coed ” song. SEAGRAVE In this corner, “Senator Soapbox Seagrave. Fall River's gift to gab—versus the Mt. Holyoke debat- ing team—subject: Resolved: that beer cures colds. Mr. Seagrave. a true Democrat, will uphold the affirmative on this or any other question which is propounded. This gas-filled molecule grows radishes in his room in his spare time, in an attempt to evade Roosevelt’s processing tax, or perhaps it’s to pre- serve that foolgirl complexion. Seriously, though, we do appreciate Norm's talents as a debater, for he really has done a lot to add to Bowtloin's prestige, than which no more can be said of any man. WILLIAMS Stanislaus Williams, the Bearded Monk from England, is famous for his solo Terpsichorean antics at every house party. Between times, our greatest difficulty is in convincing strangers that our Stanley is really sane. So far. wc have waited in vain for the vigilantes to remove the offending shrubbery from his ruggedly individualistic jaw. But, nevertheless, Stan is remarkable for his really astounding quantity of extra-curricular activities, of which he carries a burden capable of crushing an ordinary, beardless mortal. For those who wish a thrill not often experienced in this mundane world, we recommend a ride with “Lunnon ’Arry as he attempts the intricacies of maneuvering his as yet unfamiliar Ford V-8 in Portland’s traffic. 63 WYKR “Squire” Wycr, the whistling Theta Delt, is the “amachoor” of the house, in radio as well as other occupations. Mis favorite pastime seems to be collecting radio-cards from Java, Australia, etc., and other forms of mail (particularly from Mood Col- lege. in Maryland). At odd (very odd) intervals. Mai is to be seen Stealing across the campus, under cover of darkness, carrying his “rusty trifle” bound for the range in Adams Mall, there to spend many futile hours in a vain attempt to puncture the elusive to-ting. Another peculiarity of Hal’s is his custom of going about campus hatlcss and coatlcss. whistling in the coldest weather, no doubt training for his annual May-day plunge in the icy waters of Casco Bay, accompanied by his equally foolhardy roommate, Ben Maggett. BLACK There is a time favored expression in every Buf.lt T) about boys from Bath. But we’re not going to mention it about Percy; it might not be true. If Syou want to see the prize dimples of the class (and what girl is not attracted to a chubby, dimpled face). j why Percival is around most of the time. We think 1 that the only time he has ever been out of the state was back in '3-5 He got lured into a car full of L classmates on tnc way to the banquet, and lo. he was in Marblehead before he knew it. But that Q soon wore off, and he's back in the Same old rut. With Phil Wilder’s “Ed” course prominent in his XT schedule, and all those economics classes to fill it out - ■' with, there's not much doubt what our Percival’s goal is. I wonder if he can silence a classmate with that “Awright. fellas. He’ll probably try. BRYANT If Bry’s cheerful grim doesn't amuse the boys, he’ll gladly turn it into a laugh, and, you don’t even have to say anything funny. This Dean's List business is a mystery to us. We always thought you had to study to get on it. But now that he's got his unlimited cuts, the road is burned up between here and Gorham. For days at a time, the house falls into despondency, only to be cheered up by Don’s return. We can’t imagine what he docs there, 'cause we’re sure Mrs. God lives somewhere else. That’s enough of a reminder of last Ivy, and each year brings forth something different (we hope). Bry’s major is a mystery (he takes all those Chcm. courses just for fun). If you want a real talc of dissipation, just draw him out about the fall debating trip. Bry, we never thought it of you. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE CHANDLER Jack had a car this year; not much of a car it’s true, but it was too good to last. So one icy day last winter he got tangled up in the congested traffic of Portland. Me claims he wasn’t frightened (prob- ably didn’t know what was going on). Another momentous thing happened recently to this fair-haired boy. Me was running around with a cute little Worcester girl, when, like a shot of buckshot, whom should he appear with but a cute little trick from some other Massachusetts paradise. The student hotly have been unable to agree on the relative merits of the two yet. but give them time. It must be admitted that Jack has appropriate taste in all things. For example, those pink shirts lie wears are something to see. Aside from these trivial things. Jack has one remarkable activity— week ends. It is told that he spent three consecu- tive days in Brunswick this spring; but we very much doubt it. DEANE Throughout it all Davy has been “ Holden his own.” Me tried living at the house last year with three roommates; but now he is back in the “Ends” with one good one. Jack” says his form over the hurdles is the best, so it is really only a matter of time before national honors are his. Davy always has trouble explaining that telegram he got just before last Ivy. But you have to be pretty devoted to go all the way to Easton, Pa., on a bus. David tells us that ping-pong is a better game after a glass 01 two of beer. But Dave is a serious sort. Most of his working hours are spent in the cliem. lab. Did you ever hear him render Turkey in the Straw” on his piccolo? HALL Surely you’ve heard of the sacred Malls of Delta Upsilon. Well, this is Ralph (you may have known him as Jack Jr., or even Homer’s brother). “If an A is good enough for Philoon and Carnes, it’s good enough for me.” He's the one who aids and abets Happy in their fortnightly bridge table routs on the faculty. He balances (?) the Masque and Gown budget on the side. Sibley's course floored him, though; so he dashed madly between the various offices of Mormell. Catlin. and Nixon to emerge as a hopeful Government major. Ruth seems to have controlled his love life for the last four or five years. To us. though, it sounds pretty monotonous. May all your troubles be little ones. Ralph. 164 HARRIS “Happy.” the strong silent man from Binghamton. We have never yet found out the truth about Boh. but maybe that was because we always came right out in the open and asked him. String the boys along” seems to he his motto. There are several ways to help the Kc course; but still, why turn up your nose at a game of bridge, with a few cookies and ginger ale thrown in. Bob seems to like his job helping Linn Wells run the hockey team, some- thing fascinating about Hooding a rink at io below on a December evening. Just as long as you can fool the girls (Suzctte included). Bob, as you fool the boys, you'll go a long way in life. MATHKWSON Dick is a wit. and God help those that have to listen to his puns. Thankfully he's not always in such a mood. When he’s not witty, he’s a very personable chap. Unfortunately no rumors have ever circu- lated about his previous life in Weymouth, but Dick will maintain with anyone that there's a good high school in the town. Dick is our Math, shark, and he helps many a Freshman over the bumps in his official capacity. Anyway, if he doesn't, he should. Dick has another hobby which he indulges in. Any day in the spring you can find him down on the tennis courts, batting the pellet faithfully and heartily, while it quite merrily eludes him. Richard calls himself the doubles champ, because he always plays singles. Oh. yes. almost forgot about Dick's basketball team. Day after day he labored with them, at- tempting to instill the rudiments into their heads. Too bad. Dick, but you tried hard. SAWYER Wendell is redfaced and versatile; quite a combina- tion. It matters not where he is—a Wellesley dinner, a football field, a basketball court, a town hall dance, or even in Saco—if his versatility will not concoct something original, his red face will. One would not say that Wendell, far better known as Bucky. is “rah-rah ; however, he has his moments. There was one little wench, some- body just whispered Dotty, who so embarrasses Bucky by calling him on the phone every evening, that he finally had to discard her. And also, no one except possibly George knows how he spends his numerous Saco week ends. Seriously, however. Buck has done much to deserve praise and to make himself liked around these parts. Always cheerful, modest, and at times even witty, it is not too much to say that everyone that knows him likes him. “Quickie” has numerous claims to fame, perhaps the most outstanding being his achievements on the gridiron. No all-Maine is complete without him. Besides being the Maine Tennis Champ, he does pretty well on the basketball court. Charlie really dominates any sport he enters. He has finally met his nemesis, however, and she lives in Winchester. Charles certainly ought to win out with “Psycho” rj Burnett and Mrs. Casey rooting for him. And he's always welcome up at ex-Governor Brewster's, he tells us. Right now he’s starting at the bottom in the insurance business, but wc hope to sec him back next fall. 'J’ A Genial and efficient unless you should dare to challenge him on the subject of government—and then his soprano makes all the Zeta Psi chandeliers oscillate at an alarming rate and the brothers run for cover. He represents the best (not quite the only) morals and the best scholarship of the ’?7 delegation. When he pockets his Phi Betc key fie is expected to go on a six weeks hull session and talk about everything except scholarship, and don’t think Buck can’t say a thing or two about country life as seen from a drug store counter. Take him for all and all. I shall never look upon his like again. He is the possessor not only of Maria, but of the largest and most varied collection of pipes (not courses), and the least legible hand- writing in college. To sec him in his blue cap, you might think him an admiral -the “baggage-master” in gold letters on the brim is carefully concealed. And if you could catch a glimpse of the tattoo on his arm. you would be quite convinced. It was he who swore that he would not go to Xmas House- party, and yet a few days before its beginning found him saddled with nor one date, but two. In fact the monitor is famed for doing unusual things. He has been known to study for exams by standing on his desk and perching the hook on his feet. The Zcte house's best salesman, he could sell refrigera- tors to the Eskimos. 16s DANE All Pete needs is real tough odds agin' him and then he fights to win good marks, lucrative jobs and better women. No one has this young man from Skowhegan all figured out. He might become one day a mathematical prestidigitator (animal in- digenous to Skowhegan) for Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., or a successor to Prof. Hammond or to Glen Gray. You sec Math. 3-4 tried to get him down for the count and he’s been taking Math, ever since. DAVIS Gabby, the muscle man. came to Bowdoin in the fall of ’33 with a fair physique and a very strict behavior. He can now chew nails and Say! can he talk the vernacular of the sea! Bowdoin has done mighty great things for that man-humanizing him beyond belief as well as developing him into our number one philanderer. Heine reaches his peak playing touch football in his pajamas. The Carrie Nation of the Zctc house; he can still be a lot of fun. DUSENBURY Zeta Psi’s own little Cal Coolidge is a great guy when, as and if you get to know him (It’s worth the trouble, too.). He has a mystic, worthwhile air that comes from the army, whether at Cape Eliza- beth way down South or in Panama (pronounced Pan'a-ma, please!) He’s a great man in a pinch— even when the Colonel arrives unannounced when the boys are verv much “at case.” Dusie’s room is the hut of the house with its radio and his inimit- able roommate, yet he studies on. till dawn if need be. to conquer unruly Economics. As for philos- ophy; he passed it. Nobody but Duse knows what he’s going to do in life, but we’ll bet he’ll do well. THE BOWDOIN BUGLE ■ — FRENCH Up from Thayer Academy came a French scholar who had French pounded into him so well that even the professors can’t tell who does the teaching. Johnny has been on the Dean’s List ever since he has been here. But don’t get the idea Johnny is only a scholar (we admit he looks like one). Johnny is reputed to be the finest connoisseur of drinks in the Zete house and those who know him don’t doubt this. Johnny can tell you where, when and how- to imbibe, only don’t take his advice on how much. His own pet enigma—good marks and good fun to a superlative degree. This droll young man is always good for a surprise—you never know what is coming next but the boys take it and like it. GENTRY Bobbie started off in the well-known rah rah fashion at Bowdoin. Freshman year and if there ever was anything doing he w as in the midst of it. But came a change and with it a change in name. He settled down to housekeeping at Charlie Bowser’s, sopho- more year, and wine, women and song were all tabu. He is an ascetic philosopher, thus “The Friar.” Maybe Linn Wells has a few remarks to make on this subject. “The Friar is the mighty atom of the football team and shows his heels to any tacklcrs. He has very small hips, but can he wiggle ’em! GROSS “The leader of a scientific expedition doesn’t need to know anything about science. The great, all- important thing is to be a mover of men, and a far- sighted executive.” Yes. Bill. But really now, old man. you do know something, about Biology, don’t you? Willie, the Kent’s Island boy. knows a thing or two about the finesse of the social world, as well as the bare facts about Bath. A man of varied talents, a likable personality (and don’t forget the moustache). Bill adds a colorful touch to our little house, and the boys would be lost without his presence at the bakcd-bcan table of a Saturday eve. 166 HARKINS “Anchor A'veigh” Harkins of hockey fame 'came to us fresh from Roxbury, although we’re not sure. If wc didn’t know that “Harkic had great aspira- tions to become representative from the 20th dis- trict wc would almost swear he would end up as a housekeeper for his Bath school mistress. Sjnce arriving at Bowdoin “ Harkic has served in various capacities. As a Freshman he was appointed official barber for the Zetc house and batty will vouch for this. Harkic” then took over the managership of the “ Nest. ” Now he serves in the same capacity for the “Ark. ” and is a bargainer of no mean repute. We don’t believe Harker expects any Phi Beta Kappa keys when he graduates, but he wouldn't mind a Kappa Beta Phi key. HEALY Back in Freshman days the Stooge had a more fitting title— the Stupe. Whose mind was way off in nebular space when Dave roared, Healy, the sugar”? Whose hands had the peculiar facility for spilling the soup on the guests, water on the table, and plates on the fioor? None other than our Stooge. But college. Dave Merrill, and Freshman riding have done things for the Stooge. Surely 4 A's and 1 B (in football) arc fair indication that the Stooge is anything but mediocre. Even at that, he finds time to earn most of his way and rivals Brother Cotton as our Super-Salesman. And it’s rumored that he’s now preparing for the Bradbury Debate. Is there anything lie can't or won't do? Um, um—what college docs for a man! JOHNSON Here's a guy wc won’t forget in a hurry—good ole Ralph. Fiver since he entered Bowdoin he’s been carrying footballs around on gridirons far and near, much to the chagrin of opposing teams. In the winter he keeps in shape playing basketball so that by April he can be out slugging baseballs over the lot. Besides being an all-round athlete. Bunny is a good student (morally too) and a fine ping-pong player. (Last added simply to fill in space.) Boudoin owes a great deal to the bounding Bunny of Brockton, the bouncing buck from Bucksport. LAITY Poor Basil has been on the mend ever since he arrived at Bowdoin. When he got here Doc John- son had to buy out the Johnson and Johnson com- pany to get enough tape to patch Base together so he could do his stuff for dear old '37. Although Base has shown us what he can do to the guy with the pigskin, at times he can’t seem to go through a season without sporting a pair of crutches. Base feels he must keep up the reputation of his prede- cessors so if on Saturday night you don't find him at Odd Fellows you'll find him at the “Nest” with his nose in the hooks. However, if you do find him at Odd Fellows!!!!!!! MARSHALL If wc had to characterize Jack with one word it would be “long —long legs, long face, long tales on the worth of studies, and a long (car to car) smile. “The gentleman obviously docs believe! In prep, school Jack took elementary Latin for four years, elementary French for five years. Bowdoin, however, has had its influence; he licked French 3-4 in two years. Now he’s got up so much speed that he's an ornament to the he depart- ment. It isn’t the start that counts, it’s the finish. He’s the personification of “trucking” at its hottest, is Jack (Benny Goodman) Marshall the rhythm man. PENDKXTKR Faunce’s claim to fame is a bawdy ballad which not even the Quill would print. It deals with Nor- way, and the fair sex; but Fauncc has risen above that. He writes the ballads himself now. At our 25th reunion we arc looking forward to becoming acquainted with Faunce Pcndexter. You see he has never spent a week-end in college, and week-days he spends grinding. One of Magee’s cross-country men. we expect F’auncc to coach a track team of his own some day. Faunce's inimitable method of lucid explanation will make him go far in the pedagogic world, too far. £ o SHARP Dick is our Roek of Gibraltar, our strong-and-silt.ru man, our most unpopular man on the first of the month, our boss, our mother, our house-manager. Following that imposing list of predecessors: Pike, Hurley, and Marvin, he holds up his end well; chat is, as far as running the house is concerned. But in certain other things Becky” deviates sharply from the path of those who have gone before, for he's one of the no-men of the Zctc house. Rumor has it that he once said no to Jack Magee. Just ask him sometime: How about giving me attend- ance in Track, Thursday?- No! How about giving me a rebate even though my check is late in coming?--No!! No, siree, no one is going to put anything over on little Richard. WINGATE Honest George, the man who knows the Scars, Roebuck Catalogue by heart, is going to be a man of wealth, we feel. If Wee-garts knew his theoreti- cal economics the way he does his practical business he would be an assistant professor by now. As it is, our Pabllaisian friend is of assistance whenever a brother needs it. George can tell a talc or two about the quaintest of subjects, ranging from Fort McKin- ley to Horse Collars. In fact. George is good for cheering a man up most any time. Would that the world had more men of his type, although we fear the earth's crust couldn’t support a population all having his wondrous frame. WOODS Smoky Joe has played it easy ever since Freshman year. But the thought of that year and its indis- cretions can still put Smoky into a cold sweat. He can always drive a car well, even on sidewalks. He's a swimmer, a golfer, gunner, and an excellent painter. Joe is pointing toward the law, but Art is beckoning to him. Every once in a while he disappears. He says he paints Boothbay Harbor scenes—he probably does, too, because he has some very fine ship paintings he has done. Smoky wishes he had gone to Harvard, but after all, Bowdoin has been called the Harvard of Maine, and Smoky would be called the smoothie of the Zete house. An embryo painter, politician, preacher, author, or what not. Smoky’s penchant for bulling will talk him into something good. If that doesn't, his many abilities will. TUF. IS own PIN BUG LF, ■a . — , HENRY Meet little Bill, the house grind. Bill takes his courses so seriously that he has even been known to study art notes at the breakfast table. He’s an- other of that mysterious ilk that likes to spend his week-ends at the family mansion in Portland. The attraction is all feminine. Bill is no sailor. Last year up at Poland Springs he refused to enter Ka canoe. No sir. a rowboat was good enough for a Henry! And there the matter rested. A P P A KLABER The eternal sucker. He’ll take any fool job. If there’s a play to be produced, try to hold him back. (It’s a good point to nail down all the furniture too!) Also, he’s an Orient editor. Nuff said. He gener- ally gets around to the house for meals. He plagues the brethren with statistics. He’ll play cards any time. The only thing no one ever sees him do is study. He has a system, but he won’t tell how to work it. A shovel is the best explanation we can think of. MAY When you hear a peculiar “Glcep” coming ’round the bend, watch out, folks, it’s none other than Dickie, the outdoor man. Noted for his puns (about a third of them are worth hearing), Dickie spends his time practicing a dead-pan expression. One has trouble keeping track of Dick. He’s al- ways outside somewhere. Knows all the timbers and lakes around Scbago, to say nothing of the Squam Lake area, much better than he docs his texts. His main triumph at Bowdoin has been beating Mansfield in the latter’s pet contest. More power to him! MOULTON “Where in hell is Moulton? , the cry echoes through the house. There is no reply, for if the truth must be known, no one ever does know where Albic is. Has his meals served at the Chem. lab, where he madly dashes from Chem. I to Chem. 3 with utter abandon. As soon as his last class is done on Satur- day. he packs his little grip and departs “silent as the desert sands ” to Portland. What he does there (girl, study, loaf?) has not yet been determined, and Albic won’t talk. THOMAS The strong silent man from the north. Never around when you want him. but there’s a pretty safe formula for finding him. Spends three-quarters of his time in the biology lab and half of it in the library. Manages to get over to the frat club oc- casionally for a meal and a hand of bridge. Al- though one of the mildest of men, Phil is unsafe when he makes slides in the lab or when a partner raises him to small slam. He lives in mortal dread of the day that Walsh sees him catch one of Kier- stcad's bullet passes. Then he might have to exert himself. TUTTLE Here he is. folks, the one and only Charles Lemuel Tuttle, the modern Casey Nova of the K K Frat Club. He’s reported as having asked Which one? when someone queried, “Who was that lady 1 seen you with last night?” At times, he is seen studying or writing letters, but his car is certainly far from idle. Although we hate to admit it. Tut is no gentleman, for the gentleman obviously doesn’t believe--” THE BOW DO IN BUGLE BAKER COFFIN EDWARDS As of Shakespeare, it is difficult to say anything original about Baker: praise can only be reiterative, and criticism inept and in poor taste. Dick is the power behind the throne. The College wanted to make him Dean the 2nd semester of his Freshman E yor. but he decided he’d rather be the Beta steward: there was more adventure connected with that. T7 Dick decided to major in English because he heard that ping-pong was played after major meetings; nr but alter an English meeting, the boys have to wake up Dick, drag him home, and put him to bed, where A he stays for a week. There is a strange phenomenon which takes place in Baker: if you remove the in- evitable saxophone from his mouth, a funny remark will come out. Most of us have learned that the T saxophone in the mouth is the lesser of the two evils. Dick is made of activity; he has never failed to have — a girl at housepartv time, even if he didn't invite Xl her. Quiet, unobtrusive, dependable, brilliant, ambitious, and intelligent—that's Jim. He works hard for everything lie gets, and appreciates it that much more. After getting high grades and going out for football and track his Freshman year, a series of tough breaks caused Jim to drop out for a year, but he's back with us now, working harder than ever, and showing himself a real friend to his associates. Jim is wise: he prefers to let the extracurricular activities go, spending his time in doing his class work conscientiously and successfully. Jim is interested in Government, and we know he’ll go far. When Joe returned from a 20-milc Freshman rideat 9 a.m. he yawned and casually announced that there’s nothing like a good walk before breakfast. Later Joe went out for track and found that there’s nothing like a good 40 laps to set you up before dinner. Suave and debonair, old Jonas takes things as they come, passing off salient comments for what they’re worth. One of the occupations at the Beta house is deciding in what model of Duscnherg or Hispano-Suiza Jonas is going to show up in next. The other mystery about loe is trying to find out where all his girls are. How can one look like a matinee idol and be besieged by the fair sex for miles around? And if anyone thinks that anything is going to be said about still waters running deep, they had better stop reading this. Anyway, we all like Joe. and he has our best wishes in whatever he docs. 169 GWYNN When Frc l came to College he had a birth certifi- cate. a couple of pretty good ideas, and a passion for reading books —any books. The library proved a paradise for Fred when he found he could get any number of hooks by signing his name and he Spent his first five days carting books in a wheelbarrow, borrowed from Clara Haves, from Mr. Wilder’s shelves to 8 Appleton. Many an anxious moment has Fred spent waiting to pounce on some particu- lar volume that the professor who just entered the door wanted to put on the reserve shelf. He gets a morbid pleasure out of carrying such works about while faculty members rant and tear hair. When- ever Fred can push aside his books to get out the door, he does things. He acts, plays basketball or the piano, drinks tea, sings in the Glee Club, leads cheers or goes to Washington. Because of this peculiar talent for doing things, Fred has become a person who is always “there.” N'o matter what the occasion. OWEN Who has not thrilled to see “Blowen, The Augusta Flash, fading over a hurdle? Who has not seen the Kid,” dressed up in his new suit, giving the girls a break at houseparty? Who has not seen “Fred Owen’s kid” fighting the Maine dormitory single-handed, or heard “the Will” praying to the gods of Vcnzkc and Magee? One who has missed these experiences has simply not lived. Working his way through College has not kept Bill from being one of the best track men in school and one of the most popular men in his class. Willie and Tarby arc inseparable; from morn to night the Beta house rocks with cries of “That’s a corker, Tarbell!” or That’s a hot ’un, Owen!” But there is a deeper side to the Kid’s nature: a drawer full of letters points to that, even if they don’t come as regularly as they used to. Some day we’ll be seeing Bill at the Olympics, saying to Pea- cock, “ Move over, small timer, and let someone run who can run!” STEER Presenting All-State Steer, better known as “the Peek” our president, right or wrong, mostly wrong. No one ever noticed Dick until he got his famous haircut; from that time on “Pecker-head” was a campus character. Dick is a busy man: he tends everything from I.inn Wells’ goal to the Union lunch- counter, from a dubious second base on the diamond to an emphatic charity-ball in Portland. In the summer he does up tea-balls and dreams of going to China. Dick can’t quite make up his mind whether he wants to teach German or English History when lie graduates, and he can’t quite decide whether to teach at Harvard or Oxford. We give up; no one has ever been able to understand Dick since he punned “basoon with bathroom,” and that was a long time ago. Dick rules the Beta house with an iron hand: when two brothers argue in meeting, Pecker settles it with, “I agree with both of you!” Caesar and Napoleon used to do that, but look what happened to their. T II E BOWDOIN BUGLE TARBELL No one has seen much of this quiet, unassuming lad since he entered Bowdoin, for his retiring nature has kept him pretty much in the background. Once in a while, Eaton docs get his car out of his heated garage, shine it up a bit, and go for a little spin. And once in a while he does don the old track suit (collected at Deerfield, Wasookcag, Princeton. West Point, etc.) and bound about the cinders for Jack Magee. Once in a while, too, he sees a movie, if it is educational as well as amusing, or makes a second at Red-dog. if the stakes arc good and low. But otherwise. Eaton Weatherhee Tarbell (born in Smyrna Mills, Maine) is content with burning down the College, setting bombs under professors, shoot- ing the Androscoggin in a canoe, throwing hand grenades at Casey, flying to Chicago, or starting a revolution in the Beta house. Oddly enough, no one has ever seen him for more than three seconds at a time: it’s usually, “There goes Tarbell!” TRASK Speed is one of our silent partners, and therein lies the secret of part of his success in this infernal din which we laughingly term the junior delegation. He’s had a tough time during the last five years, but he has come through in typical Traskian fashion— with a funny crack and a lot accomplished. He was one of Jack Magee’s most promising distance men and has managed many a stage for the Masque and Gown. “MelTie” comes from Bar Mills (find it and it’s yours) and he’s related to everyone in Maine. Speed is a tough man to write about be- cause we have absolutely nothing on him. Suffice it to say that anyone who doesn’t know H. Trask is missing plenty, because he’s the best guy in the world. CLAPP Richard Crowell Clapp is the “II Penscroso” of the decade. Like ourselves. Dick takes his marks straight—all A’s. His only vice is chuckling at the S funny papers and stealing dry bread out of the kitchen. The words, the gentleman obviously _ doesn’t believe in making love” were inspired by J. Clapp. This year he has been overwhelmed by an inferiority complex from rooming with Tootell. His devotion to his books is appalling. Rumor has it that he was pecking at a Chem. book in the huddles during the Bates game. His humility is best revealed by an incident at one of the freshmen's A at homes” at K. Cs. Dick got oozed in behind the President who stepped and remained heavily on Dick’s foot. Rather than raise a stink about it, Clapp left the shoe in the hall, under Casey’s foot, and hopped home. u 170 COOPER Frankie Cooper, the walking blush. For twenty years he has loved and lived with reckless abandon. Every house party means another tangle with some captivated wench. Put sometimes it doesn't: no s take Ivy of our Freshman year for instance. Coops” still has scars where his throat was cut. This dash- ing. darling, debonair, this bon vivant, and daring dilettante of the smart set is being directed into the service of Got! by his old man. Cooper, Jr., will have nun of it. He hopes, with his daddy a parson, to get married for nothing. “ He bcith a fool indeed who marrycth for nothing. Bacon. CRIEGER Herman Crieger (pronounced Kree-ger) is just a peachy fellow. Whether he is being trampled upon on the gridiron, or strangling some unwarned speci- men of pulchritude on the dance floor—he retains that same “gravitas (translated literally: head of granite). Yet while he appears dumb as hell, he’s one of the best students in the house”—quote from Crieger. As a brat, the folks used to keep baby Herman contented with Gibbon's, History of Rome and Vergil's Georgies.” Now look at him. Hermic just wants to make us shout, “Hur- rah! hurrah! he's in our club. DENNY Denny is the socialite of the house. He lights up the corners wherever lit’ry” bull-sessions are going on. Right now he is in the book business, editing primary school readers. Charlie insists every one must have a simple beginning—that’s why he is an English major. His rubicundity was a fatal asset— the rising Freshmen gave him a lift last year! In fact the Freshmen will never know how he got into that closet. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE EATON Who's that whacky little fellow who tries to keep us properly squelched when we soar to the heights? It is no other than wa-hoo Eaton with the whim- sical smile and the too often biting wit. As an entertainer Asher” is damn good—whether you laugh at or with him and it's usually at,” yet his humor is full of meaning to be interpreted as you wish, for it usually admits of more than one trans- lation. He stoutly maintains that the girls call him “beeg boy” but this is doubtful as Maxie is known to be a great student, an absolute teetotaler, and a rabid protagonist against vices—namely: women, weeds, whiskey, and curse words. (Between us, he has been found guilty of saying “Oh, fudge” at a mo- ment of chagrin). Max is now in all athletics, in fact he panics the mob! Magee says that he is going to make a track man out of him regardless of the fact that he never wore a track shoe before.” MacPHEE Bad Man” MaePhee, past-master of the pitch fork. He can trace his ancestors back to the white race. The first MaePhees we find in Scotch history were all slingers in the Highland Infantry. Norman (known in the inner circle of his lucky associates as “old T. S.”) is a veritable demon for agitation. He has campaigned in the Sigma Nu fraternity for more pay for the dish-washers, a stool for the dish-washer to sit on. fewer courses at meals, and an electric dish washer. Incidentally, Normic washes dishes. With militant bravado supplemented by defiant bombast, he faced a seething horde of Freshmen who, last Rising Week, poured into his boudoir. A tense moment follows, paddles rattle. T. S.. swinging both fists, faces the mob. He faints. They revive him with water. In conclusion. MaePhee is a boor, a lout, a bibber and an oaf. and we hope his grand- children read this. KNAUTH Percy (Rabbit Man) Knauth—a Hun and a Nazi and a propagator of the Germo-Hitlerian movement for the Perversion of American Youth. He trans- ferred from dcr Fuhrer's, first class, strong School for Spies in 1934. Get him to snap his heels and say Heil Hitler” for you. We queried him one day on the use and significance of this latter custom, and he said it serves the same purpose as the Yes, Jack’’ in the Bowdoin cage. Knauth is going through college on profits reaped during the War on Belgium Baby-Poison Co. and the Saw- Toothed Bayonet Company” stocks. He buys all his text books in the German translation, and hob-nobs with Fritz, August, September, October Kolln of the German department. 17« T O’DONNELL A Insert shows Jack O’Donnell of Presque Isle. ■rv Augusta, and Brunswick: born and civilized in the tt potato fields. His old gent digs potatoes for P. U Arnold Christie. Jack has been pursuing a liberal education at Bowdoin off and on for three years. He came through the Maine game without a scratch z x hut by an inexplicable twist of fate he bumped his Cl head at a hotel threshold as he went through the , door. Jack has a dandy chest, and on the whole is iV . built like a brick house, as it were. He may enter politics as a babv-kissing. hat-tipping politician, but we hope he goes back to dig potatoes. A BEAN Another one of these pseudo freshman's friends.” He is also known as the local boy who made Goud. His imagination is something to marvel at. which we can attest. One day last spring he came back with a story of his having been kidnapped in front of Ricker Gardens in Portland and taken for a nice long ride. There is some evidence to substantiate this since for several days before no one could get in touch with him nor to our knowledge was he seen around. The date of his Portland episode, however, does not coincide with the previous dis- appearance. So-----!! George also speaks very often of playing both ends against the middle. We don’t know what ends he plans to play and the Bostonians around seem to think it’s just a bit of Maine humor. He really means well though and seems to be more or less resigned to us. COUSINS The he-man from Old Town, the land of the Pcnob- scots. Although John usually does not restrain himself in the matter of talk, there is one secret that we have not been able to worm out of him—where he gets that smooth, scintillating, seductive wave to his hair. We understand that between his loath- some occupancies of the chemistry stockroom he surreptitiously saunters down Gorham way to the dismal dismay of Brunswick's smart set. Taxis have a fascination for John, ask him about the ride from Portland to Brunswick. He also has the habit of turning up faithfully the night before Christmas House Party to carry the mail. His connections with the railroad tracks is most intimate. Last year bis theme song was I Found a Million Dollar Baby in the Five and Ten Cent Store” but the affect of Old Orchard has changed it to “ I Found a New Baby. CRAWFORD Yes, we love our Arthur. He is a man after any woman-----'s heart. One usually secs him setting off down the street with the grim purposefulness of a battleship going into action. If you wish to corner hitn, try sneaking up on a bull session in Ryan's room. He is sure to be there surrounded by a sulphurous haze of adjectives descriptive of the P. E. Department or the present administration. Very often he is to be heart! muttering, “ I hoose no changee, no dittos!” It has been said on the strength of it that he is nuts: at least “some of the boys think so. However. Chan is a Theurer-going chap and we wouldn't be surprised if lie marries the girl. GOULD Well, the last time we heard it, it was this way. “ He was at bat with two strikes on him. . . .” We could finish the story but what's the use. Ralph seems to have two ambitions, aside from baseball: to pick up a working knowledge of French and to get a Chemistry Major. We haven't yet decided which he is the more interested in. He became a charter member of the Night Hawks his Freshman year and ever since, the wee small hours have found him poring over a book. How’s to give me my attend- ance, Ralph? HUNT Out from behind a five buck word looms “ What a Man!” How do you keep from entangling alli- ances. Mike? We had some hope for you after your trip to Mass. State last year but you returned to become a more confirmed bachelor than ever. Mike takes his orders in the dining room with the utmost stoic calm, he doesn't hunt for trouble but woe to the man who excites his stilled countenance. The precision with which he pursues life is enough to take the joy out of any good story. Judging from all appearances he is the most potential member of the delegation but no one is able to determine just what his potentialities arc. We suspect that his repu- tation is entirely confined to the limits of Cape Cod. His imaginative powers arc said to be lacking but those damn limericks of his! 172 REARIN Wall, the self styled Bostonian: we could tell you some good stories, but you never know who’s going to read these things. He became famous in his Freshman year when he set a new high in hair cuts. They laughed when he sat down in class with his hat on, but when he took it off—! Never wake him up quickly. He'll threaten to “ hangonconyourchin.” You’ll like him though when he's awake, except when he tries to sing Home on the Range. Watch out for people who spell your name with a Q,” Bill. Here’s wishing you good luck as an M.D. JOHN G. THORPE We really haven't got much against Johnny, that is in the way of dirt. But did you ever hear of the night that lie visited one of the Faculty members? Well, He went to Gross' for tea. It was just as he knew it would be. His rumblings abdominal Were simply phenomenal And every one knew it was he. He also is an authority on snores. Come on over sometime and perhaps you can persuade him to give a demonstration. The two he is most proud of arc the guilty conscience and the tall blond type. Speaking of guilty consciences lie wants to apologize to a certain little girl by the name of Helen whom he met one night. Really quite a nice little girl, you know, and one whom lie wants to sec again. Perhaps he has seen her since. At any rate an unexplained lady's shoe turned up one morning. F R A AUSTIN 'P Russ is the major-domo of the Faculty room in the “Gooncry.” His bright, ingratiating smile and 17 his suave manners have won the heart of those members of the faculty who stop at the Union to Rfill their bread-baskets. Austie takes intense de- light in showing Psycho Miller the hows and Nwhys of the genteel art of billiard playing. Hailing from Dorchester, Austie is of course a full-fledged man-about-town. To see him perform at thcTown- 1 Hall or at the Music Hall convinces one that he would prosper as an adagio dancer. Although wc 'J’ have no confirmation from Austie himself, there arc some girls from the environs of Bath. Brunswick, Y and Lewiston who consider him as God's hand- picked gift to women. There arc others of the so-called fairer sex who have a different opinion. Austie is a cozy gentleman, but sometimes we won- der if he is smart enough. Undoubtedly he has had many interesting adventures and escapades. THE BOW DO IN BUGLE BARKSDALE Barky is a Winchesterian classicist. It seems a downright pity that a man on speaking terms with the Roman and Grecian literary lour hundred should have to be on the Spick and Span crew of the Union. Though wc don't know his home climate, his smile is certainly full of that ‘'southern hospitality.” Inci- dentally, that smile came into its widest play in the great Plautine role, Tranio. In fact he played the city slicker so well, Winchester ought to be flattered. And also -though lie was the most Roman of them all, we suspect the Peter Pan, impish mood was not too hard for him to put on. CALL Charlie, often called the grand menton. is known to all for his jocular disposition and carefree nature. He avows having roomed off campus in order to have peace and quiet, but lie seldom misses a chance to “bull” in the ends.” Last year Charlie gradu- ated from a bicycle to a car which he claims lias not yet been broken in. It is said that Boothbay Har- bor has its charm in summer, but wc wonder what takes him there in the middle of winter. Wc predict a great future for Monty. He will probably be a great philanthropist when he gets the money. CASS Mai, the guardian angel of Lancaster Heaven, swoops down on the Chapel every morning to pro- duce those strains of unearthly music preventing the boys from returning to Morpheus’ loving arms. A true angel, the lad exercises maternal care, taking the zoo lab’s pet chick embryos under his wings. Mai intends to be a doctor. This means a long, hard struggle ahead. But with his fortitude he’ll pull through all right. The future looms bright for Mai. 173 CRAM Bion (Greek meaning is life), :i sensitive fellow front West Baldwin, has visions of making a fortune in 10 years by playing the stock market. Just for practice he speculates over the quizzes of Economics i, and never loses. His minor vices are teaching typewriting at the Brunswick Night School, and studying Italian in order to get Boccaccio in the original. He always manages to keep his major vices concealed, although he lets escape occasional veiled allusions which hint at a rosy future and a shady past. He says he is going to be a bachelor, but we predict that some Amazon will see him, be captivated and capture him. CRYSTAL Mention'the name of Johnny to any gal within a thousand miles of Brunswick, and she will probably spout. Oh, that Crystal fellow!” His hunting expeditions have taken him far afield. When it is not a lady, it would probably be a seal in the Bay of Fundy, however, it would probably be a lady seal. Brother Bernard has set a fast pace, but Johnny has more than filled his shoes—ask Johnny! DIONNE Driven away by the co-eds of Bates, he finally found refuge in Brunswick. So far, no one has ever seen him go to anything but a stag party. Being quiet like this, even to a deceitful degree, docs not remove our doubts as to his activities oft' the campus. A student of no mean ability, he has been known to go into strict seclusion at certain definite periods, for hours and hours, emerging only long enough to knock off another A. Will give you the chapter and page of any desired reference in Chemistry, just like an English Major would quote you Shakespeare. We haven't known him long but we hope to. FALCONER If you should see a fellow with a long stride ambling across the campus with his shirt tail out, it’s sure to be Bob. We think that must be the custom way up there in Greenville. Freshman year, Bob haunted the Physics Lab. He used to have quite a time showing Mr. Welch who was right. This year he is back again in the Science building, but it’s the Chem. department this time. We always say that when a man takes Math. 3. he's crazy; but Bob even went so far as passing it. He learned his lesson though, and he isn't back there again. Keep up the good work. Bob, and you'll he out of here next year. FORTIN History rings with the names of famous sailors, but let us consider the present age. We have here Commodore Pete” Fortin, as bloodless a buccaneer as ever sailed Casco Bay. This fellow leads a double life. He tries to give the impression that he cares not for women, but we know better. Those trips to North Harpswcll which he claims are purely for business make us wonder if it’s all hard work and wood chopping as he says. Oh. hare-brained youth forbear! Cease studying at the unholy hour of midnight, and resume your old habits. GOLDSTEIN Herbert Melvin Goldstein; alias Clennot. alias Stevens, alias Golden. This charming lad with the whiflle-puss bob. who is well known to any and everybody who has been in the Spa between the hours of 8 a.m. to 1 A.M., is renowned for his Don Juan ambitions, and his constant cry to our kindly Pop : Milk and a brownie.” The lad is quite a magician, also, for during those hours when he is not sleeping, or not ensconced in the Spa. he crams a 40 hour Chem. Lab. week and all his other classes into a minimum of time, so that the dance hall may reap his benefits. 174 HAVESON HUDON GRAY Mister Gray, perhaps we ought to say Brother Gray, is one of those “Maine Birds” who would like to go south in the winter, but foolishly seems to let the matter of an education stop him. But to be very truthful about the matter this thing called love plays a great part too. Ken. as some call him. came to Bowdoin to finish up his education after graduation from Bangor Theological Seminary; hut from the looks of things Bowdoin is trying to finish him. Among the new amusements that now fill his spare time, if there is such a thing in Bowdoin. is a game called pool.” Mere we have the sage who neither studies nights nor takes lecture notes, yet can talk to you about everything and anything. The only razz he ever got was from that girl who used raspberry lipstick, ask him sometime. Milt is an ex-townie who insists that you don't have to take Economics to know the way of the land. He has already achieved his child- hood ambition by receiving an A in a Math. exam. But in spite of it all we think he is a pretty good fellow. Eddy is one o the natives. His habitat is way down on Cumberland Street. He isn’t seen much because he is the local executive for the Lewiston Sun and the Lewiston Evening Journal with an executive staff of 28 howling newsboys. No women in this young man’s life, lie has a positive horror of them and just couldn’t stand them even for an evening. Next to making a million his ambition is to own an ice-cream factory, and be its chief con- sumer. He is the sleepiest guy on earth. Time and place arc no hindrance to his beauty sleep. THE BOWDOIN BUGLE KARAKASHIAN Ara. being one of the “Nesters. has been subject of all the trials and tribulations of this group at Bowdoin, and more too. Since he came to college he has been one of the hardest workers at the “Goonery” and has held the bass position of the “dish room quartet. One of the best remembered adventures of Ara was that never-to-be-forgotten night spent at the Saint Barnabas Hospital. Those who know him say he is one of the best bartenders Bowdoin ever had. But along with this, Ara has brought fame to himself and Bowdoin. He proved himself to he a hard-plunging fullback for Adam Walsh, and an outstanding flinger for the nine. Ara is a real pal to all who know him, and is all ready to lend a helping hand in a pinch. LEVIN At last our Billy’s growing up into a suave, sophisti- cated Junior. Thank God! In his Freshman year he was grand-naive. One day he approached the college office apparently much worried. Even the gods there took notice of his anxiety and said, What can we do for you?” At last Billy was relieved. Do you sell 'Pugh's' here? —Very naive. He’s more matured now, sleeping in the Chcm. Lab., eating in the Zoo Lab. and altogether being a darned good student. Best of luck, Bill! NORTON Among that queer bunch of South Mainers, with whom this business of water tossing is no longer an innocent diveision, but a matter of solemn ritual and inescapable duty, Ben is a ringleader. He and his diminutive roomy team together, and North Anson forever emerges victorious. Then Ben ducks back in his room, though, and settles down to trying to win out over Bohbv in this matter of pulling down the most A's. or the least of those disgraceful B-pluses. Which really gives you the whole picture in respect to lanky Benny Norton. High Potentate of the South Maine Baptists. «75 SIMON SCLAR Joe strolls around the campus, but few of us ever realize the college is graced with his presence until we read about his achievements on the golf course and about his strong support to the Polar Bear team. It is said he sneaks often to Portland—we hope that there is no favored one. German is Mr. Sclar’s pet subject, and he was exposed to it for two years. We think that Joe’s ultimate outcome will be a golf professional, although we haven't heard his own love. SHULMAN Chase's the Bowdoin Bright Boy. if graduating from this den of iniquity in three years means anything. He entered with the ('lass of‘37 and is fast catching up with the Class of '36. He claims he hasn't yet— a major thesis and exam is a high hurdle on any track with six courses on the runner's back -and though we'll admit it's too early to count chickens, still we’re quite certain we hear the peeps within those hatching eggs. It took Chase three years to find out how sinful this place really can be. When he arrived here, a naive Freshman, he was God's gift to virtue. Now look at him—the extremist— imagine giving a fair damsel of Portland a piggy- back ride on a dance floor. Liquor or chivalry? Well, you ought to make a fine doctor. Chase, if you keep on separating your work from your pleasure and doing both equally well. It happened, after one eventful Christmas vacation, that Bill with his necktie around his cars rushed into a friend’s room and described a tense situation. “What would you do? he gasped. We sincerely hope that experience has taught Bill the ways of this wicked world. If Portland and Bath do not teach Bill, nothing will. Bill, however, does not let such experiences dominate him; he too can get A’s in exams. THE BOWDOIN BUGLE STUART Charlie is proud that he came clean from Bath, which is more than most of the boys can say for themselves. It seems that Charles was wont to bicycle to and from that fair city every day, which made him a sort of Horatio Alger to the Faculty. It has been said that he pulled a Lady Godiva after Proc Night his Freshman year, and pedalled to Bath with what he could salvage from that terrible con- flict. When Charlie gets a C in a subject, you may rest assured that it holds no interest for him; for he is one of those rare (half-baked) individuals who major in English. In his Junior year, so impressed was the ex-Dean with his knowledge of American Literature, that he aroused him from sound slumber and bade him lead the class. WELSH Welsh is one of Bowdoin's playwrights. His last production, A Man of Honor,” won him the Masque and Gown prize for one-act plays. The embryonic playwright lists as his favorites Shaw, Wilde, and Somerset Maugham. Away from the typewriter, you will find his princi- pal interests to be Anthropology and Psychology. He is a Philosophy major which may perhaps explain many things. He will tell you himself that he is happiest with a book in his hand for he finds his greatest pleasure in the world of ideas. WOLF “Muggs” is a chap who spent four years in a Con- gregational Theological Seminary, learning all about how to become a good Presbyterian. Well, a Presbyterian anyway. Now he’s working his way back to America—pardon us. New York—via Bowdoin. George is magnificent in his steadfast refusal to let the college curriculum interfere with his education. A competent movie critic, a skilled billiard player, and a dish washer par excellence. Only one girl causes cardiac disturbances within his mighty chest; her name’s “Addie —Mrs. G. V. Wolf, to you. 176 YORK The winsome little feller with the smile full of teeth is everybody's friend, or at least he’s nobody's enemy. His habitat is Brunswick proper, so we don't really see him so much, except when he mounts that there auto, and drops up around to sit in on a couple of Math, classes every day. That’s his Major, is Math. The Math. Club, in fact, seems to be his sole field of social endeavor. There he really shines, they tell us, ruz- zlinR the Union coffee with the best, and all. So that’s Yorkie, like it or don't. INDEX TO ADVERTISERS Allen’s Drug Store.................................................................179 Bangor House.......................................................................180 Benoit’s...........................................................................179 Bickford Engraving and Electrotype Co..............................................182 Chandler, F. W., Son.......................................................... 178 College Spa........................................................................181 Country Life Press.................................................................184 Gherin Gallery................................................................... 183 Hogan Bros.........................................................................178 Lyman B. Chipman, Inc..............................................................181 Oakhurst Dairy Co..................................................................181 Senter’s...........................................................................179 Stuart Clement . 178 Soule Walker , 180 Tondreau’s Market..................................................................180 Uncle Tom’s Cabin Shop............... .............................................181 177 Wiseman Farms . 180 THE COLLEGE BOOK STORE EVERYTHING IN BOOKS— STATIONERY—COLLEGE JEWELRY- BANNERS—FOUNTAIN PENS Portable Typewriters on Easy Terms. Typewriters to rent at $3.00 per month. F. W. CHANDLER SON Let us estimate your next Suggestions for Correct COLLEGE WEAR PRINTING Single breasted country suits of tweed; odd jackets in checked tweeds. Trousers to match; grey flannel; checked pat- requirements terns. Single or double breasted dark town clothing. Soft collar-attached shirts of oxford or broadcloth. White We will call for your order and stiff collar for week-ends. Silk or wool ties, bow ties, crochet ties. Tattersall or deliver the goods promptly. leather waistcoat; knitted pullover. Snap brim hat, pork pie hat, bowler for in-town wear. Camel's hair polo coat. Phone 89-W reversible tweed and gabardine military collar coat, double breasted blue guard's coat. Brown buckskin shoes; all white STUART b CLEMENT shoes or white with black saddles, rub- ber heels and soles; brown heavy TOWN BUILDING brogues; black shoes for week-ends. BRUNSWICK, MAINE HOGAN BROS. BRUNSWICK, MAINE i78 GENTLEMEN'S CLOTHING — FURNISHINGS — HATS AND SHOES BENOIT'S Fidelity Trust Building, Brunswick MONUMENT SQUARE PORTLAND, MAINE SENTER'S ALLEN'S BRUNSWICK, MAINE DRUG STORE PHOENIX SOCKS FOR MEN Drugs and Toilet Articles FANCY LISLE AND RAYON Prescription Specialists MEN'S FINE QUALITY 148 Maine Street BROADCLOTH SHORTS BRUNSWICK, MAINE KNITTED UNDERSHIRTS M C. PERKINS, PhG., Manager «79 WHY SPEND YOUR TIME COOKING? When You Can Buy HOME COOKED PASTRIES AND MEATS AT TONDREAU'S MARKET BRUNSWICK MAINE THE BANGOR HOUSE Famous for its excellent Meals, extends a hearty Welcome to Bowdoin Men Compliments of SOULE WALKER the Bowdoin Barbers WISEMAN FARMS Makers of HIGH GRADE ICE CREAM Telephone 350 BRUNSWICK MAINE BRUNSWICK MAINE Compliments of Compliments of OAKHURST DAIRY CO. LYMAN B. CHIPMAN, Inc. Pasteurized Milk and Cream WHOLESALE Ice Cream and Flavors Made to Order RETAIL FOODS You can whip our Cream but You can't beat our Milk PORTLAND MAINE Speciol Announcement We Excel in Souvenir Playing Cards Sodas - Milk Shakes with Views of Mass. Hall and COLLEGE SPA The Walker Art Building Just Off Campus. — Uncle Tom's Cabin Shop Special Gifts for Every Occasion iSi V Specialists it Desi t s S Ex raVir s jbr School at d G lle e lt t uals E R V BICKFORD ENGRAVING ELECTROTYPE CO. 20 MATHEWSON ST,- PROVIDENCE. R.l. c E 182 GHERIN GALLERY Great Plain Avenue NEEDHAM, MASSACHUSETTS We Service you with Individual Portrait Photography — also — Campus Views Informal Groups Athletic Shots Interiors Fraternities COLLEGE ANNUAL PHOTOGRAPHERS 183 Printed and Bound at the COUNTRY LIFE PRESS Aerial view of Country Life Pres showing plant, power house, R. R. facilities and restaurants. “The true University of these days is a collection of booksf said Carlyle . . . and as printers for the publishers of books, magazines, annuals and catalogues, we arc proud to have a part in the making of The Lucky Bag for The United States Naval Academy, The Howitzer for The United States Military Academy, The Aegis for Dartmouth College, and annuals for many other leading colleges and schools. Many of the best-known books of the last thirty years have been printed under the sign of the Anchor and Dolphin. DOUBLEDAY, DORAN COMPANY, INC., GARDEN CITY, N. Y.


Suggestions in the Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) collection:

Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948


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