Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1929

Page 1 of 426

 

Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1929 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1929 Edition, Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 426 of the 1929 volume:

.AX V 3, vi. Y' N N v v 1 v f :N L1 , . , . 1. Vg . W, .'-K ,Tx J 3 '- '. I, .,f' ,, w -X THE COLUMBIIAN MCMXXIX mf. GEURGJE H my :1 C L 4gi3JmsQe-C The COLUMELAN PUBLISHED' by the SENIOR CLASS S V of COLUMBIA COLLEGE S NEW YORK COPYRIGHT 1929 STANLEY Bofuss J ULE EISENBUD Engraving, Printing, Binding, by THE READ-TAYLOR COMPANY Decorations by GEORGE G. RADDIN, JR. Photography by WHITE STUDIO -p9J F 1-NJ CONTENTS BOOK I TI-IE COLLEGE BOOK II THE CLASSES BOOK III ATHLETICS BOOK IV KINGS CROWN BOOK V ORGANIZATIONS BOOK 'VI IFRATERNITIES Lffa VIEWS .-,. -nga, -if vi CSM! 9611! ,J W. 4, -..f sq, -..mfg -,..-V .. mm Quaairangze di. gaulls Qlzapel gasi Qouri mai Qouri 'lu 1 Cmejicaz Qenier gnu' L1'L1:O'VL ower 4 H 1 1 L s'.'.----- 1 . 'MU-N' :'5.'4- H ., .-, Y 5 '57, , A. -f.f,q . ' Q.. Ex. ,K-r., 90 . - X . . ,- ,. . A x -1... QOI'lft1'IfLL1:CI6 in THE COLLEGE mg THE COLLEGE YEAR BY BERTON J. DELMHoRsT I-IORTLY after the 1928 Varsity Show had turned its back on the grand ballroom of the Waldorf, Kings Crown broke all precedent and awarded over four hundred King's Crowns, together with recognition certificates, to men who had earned them from 1875 to 1917. Although Kings Crown was reorganized in 1913, the present custom of giving gold and silver crowns for non-athletic Work was not inaugurated until 1917. Many prominent Alumni were included in the list of those who received the awards. President Nicholas Murray Butler '82 received recognition of his work during his undergraduate days on the staffs of Acta Columbiana and Columbian, while Secretary Frank D. Fackenthal '06 was similarly honored for his efforts with Varsity Show, Spectator and various musical clubs. Others included in the list were Marcellus Hartley Dodge '03, .lose Capablanca '10, John Erskine '00, William P. S. Earle '04, Father Frederick Sill '94 and V. K. Wellington Koo '08, The usual plans for the Class of 1928 Senior Banquet were made, and the project received columns and columns of space on the front pages of Spectator. After several postponements, the idea was quietly dropped, and 1928 graduated without a Class Day, a Senior Banquet or a Senior Prom. ln the middle of March definite signs of Spring could readily be seen. Out- door baseball practice was started, first on South Field and later on the Baker Field diamond: the crew moved into its training quarters at the Manor House, although the new Eastchester Bay course was to be used for practice: led by Stu- dent Board, the distinctive Columbia College jacket made its first appearance and was taken up with considerable fervor. Jester held its elections, with Robert E. Farlow '29 and Bryan Lawrence '30 heading the new staff, and the improvement which was noticed in the suc- ceeding issues of the comic resulted in a peace pact between Spectator and the Laughing Lion. After the mediocre showing of the football and basketball games, the Campus was able to rejoice with the simultaneous victories of the fencing and rifle teams. The riflemen won the Eastern States Championship at Boston while the fencers came out first at the Annapolis tourney. The swimming champion- ships were held at Philadelphia at the same time, but Columbia was forced to content itself with third place. Spectator experimented in the literary supplement field with a separate Literary Review, but after several issues which appeared at fortnightly intervals the idea was dropped. Throughout the Spring the daily had been pursuing its campaign for a stadium. Countless editorials discussed all aspects of the situa- tion, While front page space was given to letters of commendation from Campus leaders and prominent Alumni. At the end of March Spectator startled its readers by the flashing headline. Stadium Given to Grateful Undergraduates by Lenient Trustees in Generous Gesture , but it was soon discovered that the newspaper was only playing its annual April Fool joke several days ahead of time. Because the issue was dated April 1, 1978 and came out on March 29th, l23l .L 4'L9JmC?s-C ag .P H I2 ,QAQJWSQ3 g T Ag circulation managers had difficulties with advertisers, and the New York Public Library is still asking embarassing questions. Just before the Easter recess Spectator announced its elections, Berton J. Delmhorst '29 and lan F. Fraser '29 were to head the daily's staff, and the old managing board received the customary black border on the masthead. Commander Byrd and Sir Grenfell fuliilled speaking engagements in the McMi1lin Theatre under the auspices of the Institute of Arts and Sciences: Dean Russell was installed at Teachers College to succeed his fatherg the dormitory plans were shifted so that the law students were placed in Furnald where they could discuss torts by themselves: St. Stephen's College at Annandale-on- Hudson was added to the University as the third undergraduate unit on a parity with Columbia and Barnard College, and the time passed all too swiftly. Toward the end of April two big changes provided ample material for midnight bull sessions. Changes in the College Curriculum, described as the most radical changes in twenty years , were adopted unanimously by the Faculty. Contemporary Civilization was to be made into a two-year course and prescribed for all Freshmen and Sophomores, achievement tests were to be administered by the Faculty Committee, and the course in General Honors was to be dropped. Other innovations called for the installation of lecture courses, requiring attendance but no prerequisite or examination, but carrying credit for the degree in the same manner as laboratory work: installation of Junior and Senior read- ing courses to be conducted jointly by two or more instructors of different but allied departments, and a new type of Departmental Honors to be awarded jointly by the Committee on Instruction and the various departments. Finally the hopes of many undergraduates and Alumni were realized when on April 27th plans were released whereby the wooden stands at Baker Field would be enlarged to accommodate forty thousand persons. Spectator went completely crazy over the success of its campaign, and celebrated with a front page editorial, congratulatory messages from other college publications and let- ters from University officers and prominent undergraduates. The Spring elections to Student Board, the King's Crown Board of Gov- ernors, the Athletic Association Committee and the various class ofiices brought forth an exceedingly large number of nominations. Student Board decided to allow students to vote upon presentation of the Bursar's receipt instead of the former system of class dues card, and a record number of votes was recorded in the three-day poll. Along in the middle of May the Department of Buildings and Grounds decided that the stands on South Field needed some attention after the Syracuse football rally of the previous Fall. The result was that the West stand was demolished entirely and the lumber was used to patch up the South stand so that it could be used. Spectator continued to print its series of articles on professional guidance, the annual Pulitzer awards were announced, Varsity elected its new staff, the Freshman and Sophomore Classes gave dances in John Jay, and Commencement plans were formulated. After losing to Yale at Philadelphia, the Varsity crew, winners at Poughkeepsie the previous Spring, succeeded in capturing the historic Childs Cup in the regatta at Lake Carnegie. A Thirty-two King's Crowns were awarded in the end of May, while the Columbia and Syracuse crews became lost in the fog of Eastchester Bay. Presi- dent Butler recovered from an illness that very nearly proved fatal just in time f24l 9 ,191 ness, to take charge of the Commencement activities. Alumni reunion activities cen- tered at Baker Field where the Varsity C Club unveiled a memorial plaque at Baker Field in honor of George F. Baker, donor of the plot. Dr. Robert Arrowsmith '82 who was curator of the Columbiana Collection for ten years and an authority on Columbia history, died three days before the oflicial close of the Spring semester. Elaborate plans for the one hundred and seventy-fourth annual Commence- ment were made: l 16th Street was blocked to vehicular traffic and a large squad of men set up rows of seats and stands that reached from Alma Mater to the middle of South Field. Unfortunate rain at the last minute caused the can- cellation of these plans, and the forty-three hundred degrees were awarded in the Gymnasium, with little pomp. The one hundred and seventy-fifth year was officially opened by President Butler in the McMillin Theatre, on September 26th. His statement that a uni- versity's functions should be The conservation, advancement and dissemination of knowledge struck the keynote of the spirit upon which Columbia's intel- lectual life has always been based. Blue Book, not content with having appeared on time the previous year, made arrangements so that the volume was mailed to Freshmen before the start of the Winter semester. Thus armed. the new students seemed to be less obnoxious than usual, and there were few requests for geographical directions. Spectator was the first of the publications to issue a call to Freshman candidates and was quickly followed by the other activities. In a slow game, the football team downed Vermont by a 20-0 score, officially opening the 1928 season in the enlarged stadium. Despite the rain a crowd of 13,000 turned out for the iirst encounter. On the second of October President Butler inaugurated a series of orienta- tion lectures for the members of the Freshman Class. These meetings were held weekly throughout the Winter semester, and proved invaluable in cement- -Al ing the incoming class into a single unit. 'f - ' :- un. --2. , af t' Q 5- '-P' - .eifrz fel- A, , ah . ,' v- ,, xr , if ,. -' i :, , ., 39- fi' -' ' . 'P 9 9' . l. 1 V' g ',A2',s-VI f 7'-236 'V ww? - I . 'af' 5511 ' 0.-. , . 1 5545-fj'11' ' , '. , -. Z, ' ' + '. . ' ,-av .. .-0 --fu .- - Mists' ..: 5 i ' k '.,'M. KQN'kf 'f-fi' i in 1116! V., 'f 'Q ..a.a.. ' XJ- ' -rf? ' K-A' 'f . '.a-f , . ' HI: iii., Z1 V - 9.5, 1 .,,. aes - . '- - H ff ',H,l1 q -4 , bi i,.is.:,5s.E1,., . .f-ff. 7- 2: ' ,,.,z--1.1311 - 53.3. 4-3, y-3 1.31 f U, .. g: ,5 -'-j-y...- v A :-.Z -. Q...-:-j.3:1,,-, ..,f,,. W, A ng? ffgef yew THE SPRING REUNION Interclass activities started promptly Dues week was passed by without excitement, other than the usual scenes of undergraduates ducking into the tunnels upon the approach of a member of the four finance commit- tees. Student Board endeavored to arouse interest in the game with Dart- mouth by chartering a special train to carry Columbia rooters up to Han- over. Enthusiasm as well as ready cash appeared to be lacking, and the plans were abandoned when a week's campaign failed to produce suflicient reservations, with the first day of classes when the Freshmen and Sophomores held an impromptu free-for-all on South Field. The annual tug-of-war took place in the middle of October, with the second- year class winning a majority of the pulls for the first time in five years. Student Board again showed its ability in taking charge of undergraduate activities by equalizing the sides so that the Freshmen, who secured the larger turn-out, did not have a walk-away. Defeated, the yearlings refused to allow the Sophomores to hold a snake dance in honor of the victory. E251 9, Ag-,9amsC99, as By means of guerrilla warfare the Sophomores managed to get the rope out on Broadway. Here the Frosh came up with reinforcements and with the aid of the rope the two classes succeeded in tying a delightful traffic knot. Down on Riverside Drive several trees were ensnared when some bright fellow brought peace back to Morningside Heights by cutting the rope. . Bringing sections of the rope to prove their victory, both classes returned to South Field and the battle was inal- ly over. On Columbus Day the Medical Center was opened at l68th Street, signifying that the College of P. 25 S., the Dental School, Sloane Hos- pital and the Vanderbilt and Squier Clinics had joined the group of buildings up at THE BAKER PLAQUE IS UNVEILED Washington Heights. While the Sophomores were hearing the Freshmen sing the Columbia songs at the annual song fest, Jester appeared in its new make-up for the Fall. New departments were started, while the type, style and scope of the magazine were radically altered. The rebuilt comic proved to be very popular, and the new features were retained throughout the year. Informal smokers of the Freshman Class, held in John Jay Hall through- out the Fall also helped in solidifying the yearlings into one group. Several water fights from the dorm windows proved amusing for a few students, but the consequences in most cases were rather severe. A group of brilliant Fresh- men decided that inasmuch as the Frosh rules forbade them to sit on the Hamilton fence they would prevent all others from using the seat. Accordingly, the top of the fence was treated to a coat of red non-drying paint one night, and several trousers were ruined before B. '25 G. came to the rescue and redaubed the mess. Class pictures for Columbian were taken after the usual postponements which seem to be necessary every year. Marie Saxon posed with the Sopho- mores, and Odette Nlyrtil was secured to sponsor the Seniors. When the latter Hnally arrived, however, the picture had been taken and most of the Seniors had gone their way. The debate squad met the Oxford University team in its annual inter- national match, but the audience decided with the Englishmen, who advocated the entrance of the United States into the League of Nations. Interest at this time was centering on the presidential election which was about to be held. Spectator stated that national politics held but little interest for the average undergraduate, and that few of its readers would cast ballots in the election. Accordingly, an editorial maintained that the Campus daily would take no sides in the campaign but would remain strictly neutral. Although this editorial stand was not contested, clubs were formed supporting Hoover, Smith and Thomas and Spectator finally succumbed and announced that it would take a straw vote poll of its readers. ln all only 527 votes were cast, while candidate Hoover nosed out candidate Smith by a margin of twenty-ive tallies. Blue Pete, running as a dark horse, received three votes in the poll. A if E f l26J Q.. AfBJ Qs'-X 4 At the end of October the endeavors of the athletic teams in the previous Spring were rewarded when the Athletic Association awarded eighty sports insignia. Most of the awards were of the usual nature, but the members of the 150-pound crew received major sport letters in token of their victory at the American Henley Regatta. Discouraged by the outcome of the Syracuse football rally of the preceding season, Student Board decided in an early meeting that the gridiron team would play just as well Without the assistance of pep meetings. Pressure was brought to bear, however, and a rally was planned for the night before the Cornell encounter. Aided by the Band and a fraternity cannon. the rooters assembled in Commons to listen to Coach Depler relate the prospects of the team for the following afternoon. With the usual cheering and enthusiasm that is indis- pensable for meetings of this sort. the rejoicing students filed out and started the snake dance down Broadway. Unfortunately the Band was going through a much-needed marching drill. so their services were lost to the rooters. At llOth Street the major portion of the gathering voted for the subway. The underground was quickly A'crashed and the first train was boarded with maniacal glee. Car lights were extinguished with little difhculty, and advertis- ing and destination signs were removed as souvenirs. Several discovered the emergency stop cord that runs through each car, and the train made slow prog- ress to Times Square. Most of the passengers clebarked at 96th Street, but those who remained on the ill-fated train witnessed an example of college-boy buffoonery at its worst. Thirty-five minutes behind schedule, the express finally limped into Times Square station, minus most of the windows and a goodly number of seats. THE 1'z4TH COMMENCEMENT f 27 I 9, AJLQJWLQFHC 4 After serenading the Columbia and Cornell Clubs, the group disintegrated, one portion returning to the Campus to visit Brooks Hall and the other con- tinuing South on Fifth Avenue in order to pay the public library lions a respectful visit. One immediate result of the rally was some unwholesome pub- licity in the downtown newspapers, while the football team battled to a score- less tie with Cornell in a sea of mud at Baker Field the following afternoon. Amelia Earhart visited the Campus as a guest of the Women's Graduate Club and spoke on her adventures while making the trip across the Atlantic, while Student Board, undaunted by the failure of the Dartmouth special train, made plans for a trip to Philadelphia for the Penn game. The Glee Club deter- mined to give three concerts in New York instead of the usual two, and plans were laid for the College concert to be given at the Waldorf on Thanksgiving Eve. After persistent pleas from Spectator and the student body, the Men's Resi- dence Hall Committee realized that the telephone service in Hartley, Livingston and Furnald was not all it might be, and the committee planned to install a buzzer system to call dormitory residents to the telephones. The work was started immediately, but in order to limit the inconvenience, progress was exceedingly slow. The next day news of an extension to Schermerhorn, similar to the Chandler extension North of Havemeyer, was released. The new build- ing will facilitate research and when completed will cost one million dollars. The football team managed to defeat Johns Hopkins by a l4-l3 score in a poorly played game, and shortly afterward Student Board supervised the Freshman Class elections. The several Junior Week committees were an- nounced, with George J. Banigan '30 in charge of the arrangements. A golf tourna- ment was run off for the first time in several years, and Monroe l. Katcher ll '29 succeeded in secu.ring twenty-two entrants for the matches. Just prior to the Penn game the Athletic Association released the basketball schedule for the coming season. Navy and Fordham appeared as new-comers on the list, while an extra game was added. Six hundred rooters journeyed to Philadelphia with the Band on the special train, while several hundred others made the trip by private car and bus, Despite this wholesale support from the student body, the team lost to Penn by a 34-7 margin. H Spectator came to the limelight once more with an article on student mar- riage which it reprinted from a Cornell literary magazine. The article, which caused little comment when it appeared at Ithaca, received columns and columns of space from the metropolitan press. Unfortunately the downtown correspon- dentsiconfused the idea of the article with companiate marriage and in this form it was broadcast throughout the country by several news syndicates. Spec- tator's columnists celebrated the event in high glee. Angus satirized the Cornell article in his column the next day, while Off-Hour printed a burlesque of the dramatic review column which appeared regularly in the neighboring space. At the same time Spectator stated that something radically wrong had attacked the football team. Editorials and letters to the editor hinted that with THE FROSH ARE WELCOMED l 23 l fa- 4fL9J Qsx 4 the wealth of material at the start of the season the team should have made a better record. This discussion before the close of the season was unfortunate for the morale of the team, but once started it refused to be halted. Charles Fremd '29 wrote a Sidelines in which he stated that the coaching of the team was perhaps not perfect. This drew a lengthy letter from Captain Adler '28, who claimed that Coach Crowley was the best coach in the country and that the real trouble lay in the sparsity of reserve material, At this time the Sophomore Class gave a dance in the meeting room of John Jay and startled those who attended the affair by actually producing Marie Saxon, the musical comedy star who agreed to spon- sor the hop. Professor Walter Henry Hall gave up the directorship of the Culee Club. and William McDonald '27 was appointed to succeed him. The day before the Syracuse game, on Thanksgiving Day, the Athletic Association put an end to all criticisms of Coach Crow- ley's ability as a gridiron mentor by announc- ing that he had been reappointed for the l929 season. The Glee Club Thanksgiving Dance, given expressly for undergraduates, was a pronounced success. The start of December saw the beginning of the fraternity rushing season. Greek letter houses all over the Campus strove to entertain the yearlings better than their competitors. At the close of the period it was learned that sixty-two per cent. of the class had been bid by the various fraternities, a figure which is believed to be a high record. Despite the heavy bidding, only 175 Freshmen were pledged, with Delta Upsilon taking the largest delegation of eighteen pledgees. The beginning of December saw the first call for candidates of the pony ballet of Varsity Show, while Morningside published an issue which sold out immedi- ately. A second edition of the independent Campus literary magazine was ordered, and again a large sale was enjoyed. Cane Spree practice was started, and the usual wails from managers concerning lack of material could be heard emanating from the Auxiliary Gymnasium. Just prior to the opening of the basketball season the Athletic Association awarded nine- teen Varsity letters along with many minor insignia. Several days thereafter the eighteen men who received football C's gathered to elect a captain for the 1929 season. The re- sult was a tie between Campbell and Bleecker and several ballots and recounts failed to change the situation. After many months of uncertainty, the Athletic Committee announced that the election would be postponed until after the third game next Fall. For a time it was thought that this would put an end to the discussion but in the middle of February Campbell announced that he would withdraw . , , 4 THE FROSH GET WET THE TUG OF WAR IS RENEWED - E291 ,F ,191 Levy -, --7 7-puns-us: lil i , his name from the competition. In a few days the football squad elected Bleecker to the captaincy. ' As soon as the fraternity rushing season was over the Campus was startled to learn that charges of breaking the Interfraternity Agreement had been made against several houses. Dean Hawkes investigated the charges, together with a committee consisting of Ben Hubbard, Hugh H. Gardner '29, Harold A. Rousse- lot '29 and Berton J. Delmhorst '29, but failed to ind any proof of infraction. Inasmuch as these were the Hrst charges to be brought since the agreement went into effect in 1925, they caused considerable comment from fraternity men. Coach Glendon issued his first call for Freshmen crew candidates just before the Christmas recess, while the Sophomores de- feated the Freshmen in the cane spree bouts by a 6-l margin. Thus the yearlings were denied the privilege of smoking class pipes on the Campus after Washington's Birthday. The start of classes in the new year saw the play committee of Varsity Show Iinally come to an agreement concerning the 1929 show. I The closest decision in the history of Varsity ' Shows gave the award to William P. Smith's script, on a 3 to 2 ballot, over the play writ- ten by Harold S. Neuberger '29 and A. Edward Stasheff '29. Thirty-seven men and women delegates from South African universities, on a tour of American educational institutions, spent several days on the Campus and were entertained in John Jay. While in the United States they were in the care of the National Student Federation. The Deutsches Haus, abandoned by the University when the nation declared war against Germany in l9l7, was re-opened with an appropriate ceremony and Germany was again represented on 117th Street, along with Italy and France. The Freshman Class succumbed to the sponsor craze, and invited Dorothy Stone to - A attend their hop in John Jay. The dance proved to be quite successful, the yearlings following the pre- cedent of the Sophomore Class in picking a sponsor who would actually attend. A minor campaign for a College Theatre was started, and after repeated editorials had been written on the subject, slight progress was made. Further developments in the dramatic situation at Morning- side Heights are anticipated, however. Ticket sales for the Junior Prom were started just before the mid- year examination period, and Spectator, suspecting that its pages were never read during the season of academic storm and stress, decided that it would sus- pend publication entirely until the start of the Spring semester. Early in February Dean Woodbridge asked to be relieved of his position at the head of the Faculties of - - Politics, Philosophy and Pure Science so that he could . PETER BRADY, BLUE continue his research in Philosophy. His resignation was accepted by the Board of Trustees, and Professor Howard L. lVlacBain was appointed to the post. I tm BUT THE MELODY LINGERS ON PETE AQ 1 Junior Week and Varsity Show occupied the spotlight during the follow- ing month. The traditional week of the 18th to 22nd was selected for Junior Week, and for that brief period the Class of 1930 held full sway on the Campus. Practically every fraternity gave an afternoon or an evening dance in honor of the Juniors. The Prom. given in the grand ballroom of the Hotel Plaza on Friday evening, was a glorious success from start to Hnish. Attractive favors were distributed by the committee, and the dance music furnished by the Meyer Davis orchestra was superb. Shortly after the beginning of the new semester Dean Hawkes sailed for ltaly and the Holy Land for his first vacation during semesters since 1901. While he was away the various assistants to the Dean and the pre-professional advisers solved the academic problems of the undergraduates. Lincoln's Birthday saw the annual reunion of the Alumni. Many group gatherings were held on the Campus throughout the day, and not a few of the old grads sat in on classes given by their former instructors and professors. A portrait of King George ll was presented by Prof. Dixon Ryan Fox, on behalf of the Columbia Alumni Club of London. Those who found it impossible to make the 1 trip to New York participated in the Columbia-Round-the World Night , and telephone hookups throughout the country connected the various Alumni gatherings. Spectator once more made an improvement by printing a column of weekly fraternity gossip. Although most of the material was of the small-town talk type, the new column met DEPLER INTRODUCES LIFLANDER AT THE with considerable approbation on the part of the undergradu- ates who were interested in reading of the occurrences at other Greek letter houses. Ten Juniors were nominated for Student Board in the Spring election which that body holds each year. The polls were kept open for three days, and Harold A. Rousselot '29, the present chairman, announced the results during the supper at the Junior Prom. George J. Banigan '30 and Remy Tys '30 were chosen for the two positions open. Eighteen gold and sixty-two silver Kings Crowns were awarded by the King's Crown Board of Governors in the middle of February. Men in the following activities were rewarded for their work: Spectator, Blue Book, Debating, Glee Club, Orchestra, Columbian, Var- sity, Jester and the Band. Varsity Show occupied the attention of most undergraduates following Junior Week. Half of the chorus of The Houseboat on the Styx came up to the Campus one afternoon to show the ponies how to go through their dances, and the event was photographed and movietoned for the benefit of the public. Just after the Junior Promenade a group of twelve Alumni sent a lengthy letter concerning the athletic situation to the Alumni News and Spectator, where it appeared simultaneously. The suggested remedies for the alleged faults did 1 CORNELL RALLY E311 2. he not meet with popular approval on the whole, and most of the letter was strenuously opposed in a series of Spec editorials. Just after the publication of this letter John C. Depler and William L. Murray, assistant football coaches under Charles Crowley, resigned from the coaching staff, although it is not believed that their resignations were caused by the football controversy. On February 26th Student Board announced that the name of the Blue Key society, formerly reserved for Sophomore managerical candidates, was to be given to a new group of Juniors whose duty it would be to meet visiting athletic teams that come to Columbia and assist them in any way possible. Student Board had been working on the idea all Winter, but it was not until February that an approved constitution was put into effect. Late in February President Butler announced gifts to the University to the amount of S75,000. At the I. C. A. A. A. meet a few days later Joe lllagen scored the only Lion points by retaining his two-mile title. , Varsity show opened on March 5th and continued a successful run throughout the week, including a matinee given for the visiting delegates to the Columbia Scholastic Press Association which was holding its convention at the time. With the coming of Spring Football practice it was announced that Edward Walker of Stanford and M. V. Hanley of the University of Wash- ington had been added to the coaching staff. Additional gifts to the University, totaling S24,000, were announced on March 13. Gregory and Smith were chosen for posts on the mythical all- eastern basketball team and Columbia received the honor of being the only college to place two men, 1903 AND ITS LION CUB MAscoT l 32 l , . ' 'a ft TRADHUIUN -. 0 if 4 X V . . . -- k . 5- A fA94mig.l A3 THE COLUMBIA LION BY ERNEST A. CARDOZO, '99 OR ONE reason or another many familiar customs and traditions are shrouded in mystery and obscurity, but the adoption of the Lion as a symbol by Columbia is clearly deined. How many for example know that the colors of Columbia-the Blue and White-were chosen because they happened to be the distinguishing colors of the two old Literary Societies-the Peithologian and the Philolexian. Yet such is the historical fact. For many years-from time to time-stu- dents and Alumni had stressed the point that Columbia had no mascot, and there does not ap- pear to have been any organized attempt to 'iilx V A in, A V choose one. 2' ft'. At the Spring meeting of the Alumni Asso- ciation of the College in 1910 George Brokaw ,f?55i .1 - ii,-p Compton of the class of 1909, inspired with - 1 3- 11 ,i . in A- - ,sl 1' . .f ,J ' ' ' ' 'f fa.,-is .r .,, ff 49'x.'a',faw. -.1 J -' .u 'VS 'isfgfff-T'-QV, ' 'fi N t' is 'ba n, 53 i . ff 'iff ,f 'K 1 1' ,. sn- . scintillating and rare acumen and foresight sug- gested, after a thorough examination of the mas- cots of other Universities, the adoption of the if wigL'i':51?ia ,375 . - .i My 1 Lion- as a mascot for Columbia, Sponsored by ,jx-ggfiig. Williani Curtis Demorest '81-then President ' of the Association the resolution was unani- ' gf' mously and enthusiastically adopted by the 'e 1 meeting. ERNEST A. CARDOZO The ferocious Bull Dog of Yale-the famous Army Mule-the curious Cioat of the Navy- the Bears of California and Brown-the Tiger of Princeton-the tribal Indian of Dartmouth were to be faced with a new symbolic rival-a roaring Lion of Columbia. Arguments pro and con were immediately advanced upon the passage of the resolution. There were some who vehemently contended that the Lion savored of Royalty-of British domination imbued with Kings College. There were others who insisted that the characteristics of the animal were not appro- priate-that of the cat tribe it was expressive of cowardice, and by nature pos- sessed of treacherous and stealthy instincts. There were still others who urged the claims of the Eagle and other animals. Students and Alumni aired their views in the Spectator and presented many heated diatribes against the choice. On the other hand the noteworthy qualities of the aptly called King of Beasts became more and more appreciated. His great strength, his boldness-his courage-determination vigor and power-all these splendid attributes were recognized. Finally, however-the vast majority of students and Alumni accepted the symbol as a happy solution and waived aside all prejudices. By a vote of the Student Board, on May 4th, 1910 the Lion was formally chosen as the oilicial 'mascot of Columbia: and not long after that, the Hrst of the Lion Songs was being sung on the campus. F541 Q, ,m9Jmx.C?s-X as The original Lion banner, heraldic in character, is treasured among the Columbiana collection. The action of the Fates is sometimes strange. All this seems singularly to have failed to popularize the selection. The late Robert Arrowsmith '82, in an interesting article on 'AThe Genesis of Leo Columbiae published in the Alumni News of May 30th, 1924, states that once accepted the new institu- tion was quickly assimilated into the body of student tradition. This, to the view of the writer, is scarcely borne out by the facts. Diligent inquiry and careful observation has failed to note among the classes of that period any attempt to capitalize this tradition. Possibly this may be ascribed to the absence of any football teams, for football was under a faculty ban. Perhaps it may have been due to the fact that all attention was focussed upon, and all thoughts centered in and about the World War. Still again there may be said to have been a student apathy upon the subject. Whatever the reasons, there is little evidence that the Lion was popularized from the time of its selection in 1910 to at least until after the close of the war. About this time a new and more vigorous attempt is evident to bring the Lion into popularity. Football which had been resumed as a major sport re- ceived a hearty support from an anxious and eager Colum- bia multitude, and by 1920- l92l, the Columbia teams were heralded by the press and the public as the Lions With the writing and pub- lication of the now famous 'Roar Lion Roar song in 1920, a newly added and much needed stimulus to the Lion movement was given. The inspiring music of the song was composed by Roy Webb '10 and Morris Wat- kins '24 and the stirring words were written by Carey Ford '23, and for it in 1923 the prize was awarded by the Alumni Federation in its Football Song Contest. Other noteworthy Lion songs have been written by Ray Perkins '17 Fight Lion THE L1oN IN COLUMBIA ARCHITECTURE Fight and ffwhen the CO, lumbia Lion Roars by Leon Davidow, dedicated to the Class of 1899. I The Lion mascot for Columbia was now vitally crysta1l1zed. l35l 9. K 4gDJmQ v an It was but a natural step for another happy thought-to have a concrete expression of a lion in bronze, and in October, 1923, the Class of 1899 in cele- bration of its Twenty-Fifth Anniversary decided to present to the University a great massive bronze lion. The design was entrusted to the well known sculptor, Fred- erick Roth, former President of the National Sculpture Society and one of the foremost anima- liere sculptors of America. It marked an epoch making period in fostering and emphasizing the new Columbia enthusiasm, and the idea immediately met with an unbounded welcome by the authorities of the University and was gladly acclaimed by the Alumni and Student Body. History and art tell us of many famed Lions. From the old world as far back as the early Renaissance, we find the famous Lions of St. Mark's at Venice, and later during the real Renaissance the Lion at Flor- ence the Bargello of Donatello followed by the early nineteenth century lion of Thorwaldsen, known as the lion of Lucerne, THE LION BANNER IN COLUMBIANA and the great Ffgnqh Belfort Lion, and finally the massive creatures at the foot of the magnificent monument to Lord Nelson in Tra- falger Square in London. In the New World there are the Lions at the Art Institute in Chicago and those curious lions in front of the Public Library in New York City. Today-to this splendid symposium we have added the Columbia Lion of Roth, truly a masterpiece, natural and impressive in design-artistic real and virile and notably marvelous in execution. Its beauty, dignity and power dis- play the satisfying work of the artist. The ceremonies at Baker Field on that eventful day of June 4, 1924 afforded a most impressive spectacle. As Chairman of the Twenty-Fifth Anni- versary Committee the writer announced the invocation by the Rev. H. C. Staunton, Minister of the First Church of Syracuse. The lion was then un- veiled by Otto Hinck, President of the Class of '99 College, and Howard Chap- man, President of the Class of '99 Mines. A dedicatory poem was read by George S. Hellman '99 after which Arthur A. Fowler ,99 presented the gift to the University in well chosen Words: Since time immemorial, man has expressed his aspiration by symbols, and the symbol chosen by Columbia is the Lion. D The Sculptor, Mr. Roth, has vividly portrayed a lion at his most impres- sive and glorified moment. This is not a conventional sculpture, or a mere design. This is a living and forceful creature, typifying the power and vitality f36l es- 1-a9JwsC?a-C of our University. The Lon is roaring: he is roused and aggressive, his courage is raised to its highest pitch. He is about to charge. Let his foes beware! Here he stands at the gateway of Manhattan, an emblem of the best and bravest that is in Columbia and in America-courage, power and will to overcome. On the pedestal we read the inscriptions chosen from the Scriptures. From Amos- 'The lion hath roared, who will not fearl' Predicting the aggressive- ness of attack and the courage that will win for Columbia teams many a victory on this field , From Proverbs- The slothful saith-'There is a lion in the way' . But it is only to the slothful that the lion of Columbia will stand as an obstacle, while to the ambitious he will blazen the way to greatness. And again from Proverbs- But the righteous are bold as a lion. An allusion to the soundness of the principles on which Columbia was founded and the assurance we may well feel in the success of those principles in the future. In his felicitous speech of acceptance, President Butler said, I trust that we shall all see, and not when years or even months have passed about this granite and bronze, about this stately and beautiful figure, many a gathering of excellent and exuberant youths who are expressing some faith, some satisfaction of achieve- ment in the college life of today and of tomorrow. You put it on this high plane. It will overlook for generations not only the whole of Baker Field, but it will overlook the setting sun of centuries. Some famous thoughts that have been inspired in the minds of poets and masters of prose have been suggested by the fact that the Sphinx has been sitting for hundreds of years facing the rising sun. Why should not our Lion, facing the setting sun, be the suggesting power for poets and writers of prose in and out of Columbia for a long time to come, portraying those very quali- ties which you have described, those very traits which you would symbolize and with it the burden of affection and generous regard and loyal devotion to Alma Mater of the Class of '99. 2 2,3 A .fHere it stands, my friends of '99, overlook- ,kk ing this athletic field and beyond to the Hud- some banks, the iron will watch if au. T' The exercises were ended. As the rays of at the afternoon sun shone down on the glisten- A ff' ing bronze, the Lion was silhouetted against the gf, .x p i'2Q,g:?,i,,,,,,Q9 sky-a lasting monument for the ages, of the ji embodiment of true College Spirit. The story of the Lion has been unfolded. r, g 3, . Around this statue rallies and reunions will be ii , ' 5 '.'A' i7'5iQ.m x Of4Zfm,,4 held. The cheers of the students and Alumni ff' if 'iilli K 'L if shall mingle with that wondrous roar of victory as the teams sweep on to make history and to PRESIDENT OF CLASS OF ,99 emblazon that Columbia spirit, proud and mighty, which must live and exist forever: and while these ringing cheers roll out, along the banks of the Historic Hudson in praise of Columbia they will seem torcarry a symbol-to convey an intangible ideal expressive of that won- derful story that Columbia typifies. OTTO HINCK. E371 A9 9 4 BOOK OF MISDEMEANORS IN KINGS COLLEGE NEW YORK alias THE BLACK BOOK The Hrst of the kind-beginning in the year l7714Abridged 1929 Jan. Y5 Feb. 1771. Shreeve, Abrahams, Bogert: connned to college for taking Tea-cups out of another student's room, and denying that they knew anything of them . . . Skene: reprimanded publicly at a Visitation for having come thro' a Hole in the College-fence, at 12 o'clock at night. June 22d. 1771. Skene suspended by the President for coming over the College-fence at M past ll o'clock, last Night. Restored June 29.1771. Robinson suspended by the President for being indebted in two Gr. Themes, and one Gr. Translation, after having had Time much more than sufficient for the performance of themg it not appearing that he had any Inten- tion of doing them at all. Restored Augt. 5. Bogert to be represented to the Governors, the next Visitation, for refus- ing to come to College, last Saturday, when sent for-tho' he knew he was conined by the President till he should complete some Exercises-and, after- wards declaring Cwhich was proved to his Face to be a Palsehoodj that he did not know he was sent for. Performed the Exercise set him, and was absolved. 1771 Sepr. Bogert, Shreeve, Ricketts: Degraded by the Board of Governors for dif- ferent heinous offences, till by their dutiful Behaviour they shall merit Restora- tion. Novr, 22. A Complaint made by Mrs. Wrag against Dunscomb for wounding her Son. T 23. Dunscomb privately examined-confessed the Pact with which he was charged-reprimanded '55 admonished to behave better for the future, which he promised-public Scrutiny into the Affair omitted on Condition that his Behaviour hereafter be regular 25 irreproachable. l 772 April 28, Robinson spit in the Cook's Face, kicked, '55 otherwise abused him, of which he the Cook-complained to the Governors as they came out of Chapel, after hearing the Students of the Senior Class examined for their Degrees. May 4, the Committee met again on the same Business, when Robinson, for insulting, 8 ill treating the Cook, T5 also for Neglect in his Collegiate Exer- 1381 9, AXDJ S635 A! cises, of which the Professors complained, was confined by the Committee, after being publickly reprimanded, E5 ordered not to go beyond the College Pence for the Space of two weeks: also to perform such Exercises as the President should assign him, besides attending his class at Recitation, f5c. as usual. July 8, Douglas, for stealing 8 Sheets of Paper 35 a Pen-Knife, was repri- manded in the College Hall before all the Students. 'E5 after having his Gown stripped off by the Porter, he was ordered to kneel down S5 read a Paper con- taining an Acknowledgement of his Crime, expressing much sorrow for it, Y5 promising Amendment for the future . . . , July 9, Remsen for beating Nicholls 3, the preceding Week, 25 absenting himself from College under Pretence of Sickness, for several Days. tho it was proved he had been nshing on some of those Days: Was ordered to ask Nicholls's Pardon before the Students. which he accordingly did:-Was also confined to College till the following Saturday Evening, 'E5 injoined to translate into Eng- lish the 21, 22, 23 55 24 Chap. of the 3d. Book of Selectae ep Profanis 2504 besides his usual Collegiate Exercises each Day. July 9, Van Beuren, Douglas '55 Nicholls 3, who had gone over the College Pence the preceding Tuesday, between the hours of 3 '55 4 P. M. to bathe, were summoned before the Committee of Visitation, then met: 25 after being repri- manded, were ordered by the Committee to be confined to College until the next Saturday Evening-each of them was also directed to translate into Latin 4 Pages of Dr. Chandler's Charity Sermon-besides attending the usual Colle- giate Exercises. 1773 Feb. 13. Thomas ordered by the President to attend ye Board of Gov- ernors on Thursday next at Hull's, 6 P. M. for the abusing, along with many others, Mr. Harpur, the Evening before. Remitted-it having appeared that Thomas was not ye. person. March-Nicoll, Troup, Cock, Greswold, Samson, Dibblee, Seaman: for ill-using Mr. Harpur, by calling Names in the Dark, chose to make a public Acknowledgement of their olfence, in the public Hall, and to ask pardon for their Conduct, in respect both to Him and the Government of the College, which they had affronted,-by which means they were excused from being Rep- resented to the Governors. July 20. Davan suspended by the President, till the Meeting of the Com- mittee of Visitation, on ye. 22d.-for being indebted six Exercises at once. August 25, Jauncey suspended by the President till the next Meeting of The Governors, for ye. most insolent personal Treatment. Sep. 2. Jauncey-by ye. Board of Governors, Expelled. Novr. 1773. . . . Ordered That . . . John Jauncey be restored, he mak- ing a public Confession before ye. Committeee of Visitation, the President '85 Professors, at the next Time of Visiting. Thursday Decr. 9th. at a Visitation. Dr. Clossy having complained of the following students for making, one Evening after Prayers, so much Noise and Confusion as to cause him to stop his Anatomical Lecture. Ordered, That ye. President do assign each of the Delinquents ,... such Exercises as he shall judge proper, to be ready by this Day Eortnight. Jan. 19,1774 Rapalje 2d. suspended by the President, till the next Visitation, for leaving College, contrary to express Order, before he had finished a Theme.-and also for being indebted two exercises at once. E391 Jan. 23. Amory suspended by the President, till the next Visitation, for repeated Neglects of 'Duty-and for absenting himself, without Leave, for Five Days together. Jan. 27. Both the above suspensions taken off. June 17. Davan to be represented to the Committee, ye next Visitation, for refusing to open his door when repeatedly called upon by the President, Qbeing sent for also from home, where he had not been for some daysj and causing four Doors to be broke open before he could be laid hold of-found, at last in the Room opposite to his own, where he had hid himself, having opened the Door with a false key, and hid himself in one of the studies. June 20. Rapalje 2dus. to be represented for stealing a pair of Cotton Stockings belonging to Moncrieffe. June 21. Van Beuren, Willet, Davan, Rapalje 2d.: to be represented to ye. Comee. '55 Board of Governors for having stolen a very large Quantity of Wine out of the President's garret. July 12, 1774. Bogart-a most frequent offender absent: when sent for, answer returned by his Mother that he had gone from home as to ye. College: own'd afterwards he was skulking behind the College. July 13. Rapalje lmus. suspended by the President, till the next Meeting of the Governors, for using Mr. Harpur in the most scandalous Manner, and making use of ye. most indecent Language. July 21. The above George Rapalje-being fully convicted of the Charge before ye. Board of Governors,-was sentenced to be Expelled. Sepr. 27. At a Quarterly Visitation, 1774 Bogart for absenting himself for months together, and owing more than twenty Themes '55c. suspended till the next Board of Governors. Remsen, Greswold: having left ye. College, and gone into the Country, without Leave, Ordered, for this act of Contumaciousness, they be confined within the Walls of ye. College, one Portnight after Vacation, and yet they do perform such Exercises as the President shall think proper to assign them, on pain of the above penalty. Rapalje, for stealing Moncrieff's Stockings, ordered to be con- fined within the walls of ye. College for one Month after next Vacation, subject to such daily Exercises as the President shall assign him: and in Case of Deficiency in the performance of either order, that he be recommended to ye next Board of Governors for Expulsion, and that he also make a public Acknowledgement, in the Hall, for his offence. Davan, to be represented to ye. Board, but first to ye. Committee of Visitation, for breaking thro' his Confinement in the very next Morning, imme- diately after Prayers. Made Satisfaction. McQueen, Moncrieffe: for breaking thro' their Coninement, to make pub- lic Acknowledgements, in the Chaoel, and to translate Nos 255. 256. of the Spectator into Latin, against the first Day of next Term: on pain of being presented to the next Board of Governors for Dismission or Degradation. All the firewood to be moved immediately out of ye. Rooms: and nothing but Coals to be used on any pretence whatsoever. Students going without their caps and Gowns, to be presented to the next Board of Governors. Quarterly Visitation, Anril ll. 1775. Livingston Stiles 'Ed Davan: for going into the Countrv, for a week together, without Leave, to translate Nos. 69 E5 70. of the Guardian into Latin: l401 2 fA9JM9ss. ag W4 sa f9JmxC?sx Ag to be given in April 24. Kissam, for behaving irreuerently at prayersg and Nicol! Zd, Bayard, and Brookman, for breaking Nloncrieffes Door, Qwhich they are to mendl to translate Nos. 19. 'E5 20. by the said Day: and Reid for talking at Prayers, to translate No. 70. . . . Whoever hereafter shall be guilty of such neglect, or make a practice of absenting himself from any part of his Duty, or of going Without his Aca- demical Habit, by Day or by Night: in public or in private. or shall be found to have broken a Door, entered a Window, or done any Mischief to ye College or his fellow-sludenls, shall be reported to the Board, Without favour or affection: and the board shall be requested, by this Committee, to give I-Iim or Them so offendeing a speedy Dismission: so that peace an good order may be effectually preserved in this Society. Bogart. having entirely quitted College, whilst under Suspension by the Committee. and whilst he owe more than lwenly Exercises, to be recommended to the Board, for a formal Expalsion: in order that others may not hope. to escape due punishment. shou'd They act in the same disorderly and undutiful manner. July 4, l775. At a Visitation of the Committee. Reid and Johnson for entertaining Company, 55 making an unseasonable noise, at unreasonable Hours. to be confined to College till next Sunday, 'E5 have such additional Exercises. as the President shall think proper, '55 in Case of their leaving College during that Time. or failure of performing those Exercises. to be presented to the next Board of Governors for Degradation or Expulsion. Agreed, that the Committee of Visitation will present every Student tothe Board for Degradation. who shall hereafter absent himself from two Recitations in Succession. 1, , ,9 ,f,,, ,r1H.f.. NA 111070411 sal-1. . lit.. ,. H 52,1 ii,.,4e.ffla. '+1a.a1i6f!fii.1f1ff,. Ji.1sl..iidg ' from fu-inxn cut! fiat-Jin lzirfmfwb L1 mc bfrluxi-Kiiwfirl 7 down rkmzagrx bmflm 1ov1lreu1vTiEIcmv1u91lftr1M-7ff!f3? '11f'fI'f 'J I '1 'vnu ln I fx P1 ll'4 ar , Qlxwj' it44,:1:4.d mf- fv1i61'?3if. la 4-his Ind farm one . l'l'li J A it J It ,,,i,am i1.fnrfe.w.fqf-em M is iw l 91 wichwligamxarifim lavglegrjulciiy , rv cv 'i 73 JIJMJ K 'N uh N m Jliw-fi ptf'4l3xvJLzg4, 3071 75,4 at-bmzd rug. 'flwfufrgdil p horn lic.Lr1-1 Wu. ?J?3t+vlaI 4.7l9uvf' fu oirr?r?W' G1 J wud cs 0 confwnl fffllwxl 0 fe Q W7 ws vn pub fr M3544 wh in all KUQLMQZZ1, use-mpdiooflfw Slfbwfi of frfiufeefk f -7gwfD,4C'fuJ uduafcQWr7iwlcY0CKl1f4fPJ'5'V ' CW Inn ' JD W1 gf'l'f.g,iinffU3 4.32-Z-'hurl' owe Buwqi gi gacaugjmtimi hmei5iM 6r if-Jun Qliifvww pfgali l'M'Y1. lb bww., wutc .1 hw Wwe AZTLML vvhvvwi Ui wx yheji C ' in 7 igrxlmcxklgg, LfUuAU.r5t3iQ,,1u4214 fo 54 lzhnm' 1, ,ti y,4,hl4fulfes41lCMl'.lwlxV1xuA1 l00?':'f:j1 fe-ffellffm wcihiexiligxblxmtdcb lvlwrw-Jlwlc vwfb ,fn A ionjgd of in G:eAnbYux'd Qzuinfivvk wll'V 15'Y'- Leigh, WMLH Mil? HM name? Qifuaial locumhd - tw , rn Mrnontan MCMXXVlll F11 Rohert Arrowsmith, Ph. D. Adolph CC. Bahenroth, l3'h.D. Bashford Dean, l3'h.D. Thomas B. lFreas, Ph.lD. Pliny lEarle Goddard, Ph.D. l-lenry Arthur Griimn, NLD. Charles W. Mayer, A.M. Newhold Morris, l.,l.,.D. Miehael A. O9Byrne, Ph.B. Rohert M. Raymond, EM., Stall Herhert Manle Richards, Sell William M. Sloane, lL.l-l.lD., l.,l...D. Herhert lL. von lsaelcnrn, MJD Taleott Williams, lL,l...D., l...l'l.D., l.,itt.D. Rollin l-lranlc Lewis, lr., '30 Palmer llohn Wright, 927 ,f 44 55 K . ' 4656 7 C:- JFAQULTY 0 M1 'W MA, ' N . , ,y 9 4- . . f - 3 3 4 Q. PRESIDENT NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER HIS Columbian appears on the eve of a most important University cele- bration. On October 31 next will occur the l75th anniversary of the formal issuance of the Charter of Kings College in the Province of New York, out of which our Columbia University has grown. No better description of it all can be given than that found carved in stately English on what I like to call the forehead of the University, the front of the noble Library building. There the long story is told as concisely and as precisely as words will permit. This celebration invites nrst of all, reflection. It tempts us to look back to the days when the Middle Colonies, originally founded largely for purposes of trade, began to feel the need of institutions to give expression to their intel- lectual ambitions and to the intellectual life. The provinces of New York, of New Jersey and of Pennsylvania were moved in like fashion at about the same time. It was for this reason that almost simultaneously there came into existence the College of Philadelphia which is now the University of Pennsylvania, the College of New Jersey which is now Princeton University, and Kings College in the Province of New York which is now Columbia University in the City of New York. As fitted those times, these institutions began as colleges of the old-fashioned sort. The work which they did is now done in large part by the secondary schools, but not all of it is so done. Their early administrators and teachers were men of exceptional scholarship, of strong character and of zeal for public service. Pew things can give the son of present-day Columbia more justifiable pride and ground for satisfaction than to look back at the list of those early captains of the spirit and their pupils and see what parts they played in laying the foundations of the new nation in the New World and of building a stately and enduring structure upon those foundations. The struggle for existence was long and often hard. No individual for- tunes were at hand to provide willing benefactors with means of constantly relieving the anxieties of these fine growing institutions. Public authorities were often at their wits end to provide funds with which to maintain the simpler and more usual functions of government. These colleges had largely to shift for themselves, and shift they did for more than a hundred years. Then the period of growth and expansion began. Modern scholarship, taking its rise in Great Britain, in France and in Germany, solicited ambitious Americans to the universities of Europe. These young scholars returned eager to teach what they had learned and to build the like of which they had seen. It was of such stuff that the American university movement was made. Now and then' there were voices crying in a wilderness, but little by little these -voices were harkened to and the process of university-building began. The result can be read by all. V r For some reason which it is not easy adequately to explain, something like an urge for university-building had been present from the very beginning in the case of King's College. The first plan for anything like a modern uni- versity that was ever propounded in this territory went from the Governors of Kings College to the appropriate authorities in London in 1770. In 1784 the committee of which Alexander Hamilton was a member submitted to the trustees of the newly named Columbia College a plan for university organiza- tion and development, some features of which have only just now been worked out and accomplished. Another plan came forward in 1830-31 andlstill an- other and more carefully formulated scheme followed upon the prolonged studies of 185 6-57. This was nipped in the bud by the Civil War. There matters rested until the prophetic voice of President Barnard began to be heard. His Annual Reports, his speeches, his appeals, often neglected and misunderstood, are now seen to have been of large meaning and high importance. Fortunately, before his life ended he could see that the seed which he had planted was begin- ning to sprout, however unfriendly that soil often seemed to be. The last forty years are the record of what has happened, The Columbia University of today is the honorable child of all these efforts, these tendencies, these strivings. Old Kings College with its new name is the cornerstone upon which and about which all the rest of the University has been built. To be a member of this University, to share in its pride, to glory in its tradition, and to take part in its service, is for every Columbia man the most satisfying of associations. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER Columbia University March 2, 1929. 3, C' ' air-'bw E461 dk ,mm CHAPLAIN KNOX TASSIN SICEL OFF FITE TAYLOR CU RTIS SPIERS RANDALL MURRAY LANCENELD BERKEY BARRY MURPHY COSS YOUNG HOFFHERR ' J. R. SMITH McGOLDRICK HEUSER BINGHAM J ,Q Qi ' Wfimjfb Mah f '52, JW W ,JSM of I ,V 4 4 S3 M46 fa1f,,35ggQQi,5,25gz Q ox J 3 my sw nf' 'f ?MWbW51-iigmfg gf' ',f:g?iMf11f, ,z M f 555, 1453 My mv in Wwwggfgiiif 'mgggj ff ,'w1,gff an QWW -.34 'N 62 f QW 4211. N Wav 2,125 ,f 51,574 A ,IQM ma , 411 J 'A' xfvf 'ff wwf 'Wm 1114, , W X 4' 1 Ama 2 NYU mf f-.4 ,, ,4 I do-gpevi-32: .1 A A My Aa V020 J, M wx ic -L.,-I 5 5. ...,:. ,.L.: '- ': : '-- 1 1 A 'fm EM Q35 w . WI' Mx ' ' ' ' 'X Q, .1 -L., x XX YQ sw N A ::g.gkg:, 5f,?. rr I., I-:ii :3g,.. .,t .. ,. . X XJ - -'-, L l Q-. N 4, , :x .A QM ' 6565 , M, . ...Mig 'NSN Q X ,Qs x xxx WN X Y Q Nw if. X- 'A , wwwdg M 9 ro X X fx. W M 3' .X EN 4 2 I QC X 6' N3 xi? x A , , Y wb, x B N M K - - - A ' :s f ' . 5 , - . '1f1fiE,- . - f .1 ' ' : Q '. '4P' 1'.2:',1:7,-4- 1' fffi-if-'15.?1i. ft, S'g'fF22.qIf5:-iff1ZXLfff',I1. ':,G -Q, - I -.9-M ,5,::.-Q:-ir.,-v35,g:g.,g.:::-fl 5 Yu xv -. . ' ' - -K - K x-ffii-2 -61 - 1 . 121- K 1' - uw:-ga - 5 BREBNER WELD WEINRICH VAN DOREN CARPENTER SEVERINGHAUS 4 SCHULZE NEFF EDMAN ' R. G. SMITH CROXTON FARWELL KNOX ODELL ELLIOTT HAWKES MA CMAHON HARRINGTON STEEVES i 1 W L w 1 mb THE CLASSES gm . G 0 SENIQRS 4 '1 5 tx I, H, c x lx kdxh I L9 123 Z ' 5 5 THE CLASS OF 1929 GARDNER GLENN McKINLEY 1929 CLASS OFFICERS Victor P. Glenn President Hugh Gardner George McKinley Charles Fremd, Jr. Vice-President Secretary Treasurer SENIOR CLASS COMMITTEES CLASS DAY Samuel Walker, Chairman Wayne Battelle Berton Delmhorst Horace Davenport Hugh Gardner Henry Kurnpf George McKinley Harold Rousselot PROM William Smith, Chairman Fred Baniield Arthur Douglas John Fiske Gordon Piercy Robert Pond Ross Strait . RING Edward Tassi, Chairman Joseph Burns W. Scott O'Connor Wiuiam Rydeu I E591 FINANCE Thomas Kelley, Chairman Wayne Battelle Joseph Burke Horace Davenport Berton Delmhorst Hugh Gardner Joseph Geagen Thomas Haney Edward Kilroe Alastair MacBain Gordon Piercy Harold Rousselot William Smith Samuel Walker William Woodworth DINNER John Nichols, Chairman E. Arthur Hill Alastair MacBain Frank Nugent Louis Slattery ,A t 4 THE HISTORY OE THE CLASS OE 1929 OLLEGE SPIRIT, we say, is not what it was when we were Ereshmen. The youth, which each year invades the sacrosanct portals of this college, seems more and more sophisticated and less interested in real fun. To us who have grown old in college tradition this seems a deplorable condition of affairs. The Black Avengers have become almost a Sophomore honorary society with no particular function. But, oh boy, do you remember when Black Avengers meant being taken 'over the river', of being subjected to all sorts of hideous humiliations, of being set up to the scorn of the whole campus? At least it was not so much fun to us then, but now as busy men of affairs, mulling over mathematical formulae and indulging in metaphysfcal speculation, we sometimes let our thoughts wander back to the days when innocent and virginal we came to Columbia, and find the retrospect highly amusing. The first year was a rare mixture of green paint, penny pushing, and paddles, the sting of which was tempered by the Apollo Burlesque and the Nemo. The devotees of Terpischore at the Apollo were as a balm to our bleeding pride. The Nemo is calculated to have been the most successful means of wasting time with the notable exception of reading the Jester. Each senior must chuckle when this ludicrous kaleidoscopic scene moves before him. He no longer feels the misery of being a freshman. His sense of humor prevails over his self-pity. He thanks God that it has all happened, wouldn't have missed it for all the world, sort of wish it might happen again, but not for anything would any senior change places with a freshman. No, he covets above all things his prestige, his honors, his dignity, and his important intellectual superiority. THE ERESHMAN YEAR In the Class Rush when we were Erosh, we were taken unawares. In a H61'C6lY contested battle over fifty of our men were captured and their shoes removed before the remainder of our class organized to do battle. The ensuing combat found us overcomfng our earlier reverses, finally forcing the Sophs into retirement, overcome by great odds! In the Tug-of-War we, as Prosh, turned out en masse, and in spite of the spirited efforts of a handful of Sophomores, dragged them through the icy stream of water for two successive victories. We did well in the Song Pest, pouring forth in weird lament the glorious melodies of Columbia. The effect was so astounding that the disappointed Sophs lost an opportunity to revenge the Tug-of-War. Pew of us were painted for displaying our ignorance of Alma Mater's songs, and all finally emerged bedecked with white tags signifying our proficiency in this art. A large turn-out of candidates for the Cane Sprees gave promise of future success for our class. The more experienced Sophomores, contrary to our expec- tations, triumphed over us by a four to three score in one of the closest matches ever witnessed at Columbia. , At the class elections, Harold Rousselot, now a busy Jester financier, was chosen president, Donald Curtiss, vice-president, Edward Aranow, secretary, and Horace Davenport, the athletic achievement of the age, treasurer. Our class was the first to enter college under the new lnterfraternity Rush- ing Agreement. Thereby we escaped that affectionate man-handling act popu- f60l 9, 1vl3J kQsx .9 larly called sand-bagging. Well do we remember passing judgment on frater- nity meals. Oneof our crowd went to a certain house because they used only candle light to eat by. Long bull sessions were held in dormitory rooms debat- ing the subject of whether or no a man owed it to his future social prestige to become a fraternity man. Then during rushing came the furtive midnight parties to isolated speakeasies where we were drowned in bad gin and soaked with etherised rye, In a moment of weakness we were persuaded that Phi Phi- Phi was the only worthwhile house to join. ln a daze a shiny new pledge pin was hooked in our gills. Like fish we floundered through Hell Week to rise to mystical heights in a formal initiation where hung skeletons dangling lurid with phosphorescent light. Brothers congratulated us to promptly forget us until the phone rang. Dinner Week was the first underclass activity to occupy our interests after the mid-year exams. Disillusioned and exasperated over our newly-acquired D pluses, we sought oblivion in a banquet graced by a few soft-boiled Sophomores as hors d'oeuvres. Over a hundred and fifty freshmen journeyed to Harmon. New York where we dined at the Mikado Inn. Due to the strict secrecy with which the Sophomores conducted all their plans, we were unable to learn the whereabouts of the Soph dinner until just before the appointed hour. Con- sequently, not a single one of us was on the scene when Twenty-Eight sat down to eat. One day in the middle of May, we were taken by surprise, and those who were not mighty in physical combat were separated from their caps, the insignia of the humble Freshman, by the Sophomores, who took this last chance to subdue us. We then turned out in the latest fashions to assume our rights along with the rest of the Morningsiders. Already we were become Sophomoric in spirit. Final exams decided our fate, and many of us through sheer intel- lectual prowess were permitted to return, elevated persecutors of 1930. THE JUNIOR WEEK COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN o'GRADY BATELLE WOODWORTH ROUSSELOT SMITH E611 9. -A'9J kQsS, Ag Our early years were graced by some notable athletic achievements. Our yearling baseball team rode roughshod over all its opponents to be the third cub nine to complete the season without a defeat. The biggest single factor con- tributing to the team's success was the superb pitching of Joe Burke, the poet, who fanned one hundred and twenty-seven opponents in ten gams. Displaying fine oarsmanship, our Freshman crew turned out in a brilliant victory in the Derby regatta. Our crew was hard pressed by the Penn cubs, but nosed them out at the finish by a two-foot lead, covering the course in less time than the Varsity. In the meet with the M. I. T. freshmen, our powerful yearling sweepswingers beat the Massachusetts cubs to the mark by two lengths. Our victory at Poughkeepsie has been one of our great sources of pride. THE SOPHOMORE YEAR For many years the Athletic Association had coped with the problem of supplying eflicient student managers for the various teams. Plan after plan was tried with little success. In our sophomore year an innovation took place in the selection of forty of our men to form the Blue Key Society. This society is composed only of Sophomore aspirants for managerial positions. At the end of their second year they cease to be members and forty men from the follow- ing class are chosen. As Sophomores we so conducted the hazing and the Class Rush that '30 could not forget it, and 'in the Tug-of-War they turned out in droves to drag us gleefully through the icy water. To still further avenge themselves, the freshmen Wrested from us the right to smoke class pipes by winning four of the seven cane spree bouts. Although we failed to break up the Freshman Banquet, we were some- what compensated by being permitted to hold an equally quiet dinner. Over a hundred of our men gathered in small groups at 180th street, and rode by train to Scarsdale, where the dinner was held in the Donny Brook Lodge. The dinner committee, headed by Rousselot, hit upon the novel plan of seclud- ing themselves in the Union Square Savings Bank until the evening of the din- ner, when they left their lair for Scarsdale. Only one of our men was captured, and the dinner went off without a single freshman appearing on the scene. Returning in triumph to the campus, we built a huge bonfire on South Field and indulged in songs and snake dances until midnight. When the ballots in the Spring 1926 election for class oflicers had been counted, the following men were declared elected: Robert E. Speller, president, William Woodworth, vice-president: Thomas V. Haney, secretary: and Howard G. Riley, treasurer. Owing to unfortunate circumstances, Speller had to obtain leave of absence for the second semester, and the leadership of the class fell into the hands of Woodworth. Spring found our class busily engaged in impressing upon the Yearlings for the last time the spirit of humility, while they themselves were acquiring the political finesse of their elders, the Juniors. THE JUNIOR YEAR With Hugh Gardner as president, Joseph Oeagan, vice-president, Darius Phillips, secretary, and Wayne Battelle, treasurer, at the helm, our class forsook underclass scraps and rivalries and proudly assumed the rank of Juniors. The turn of interest lay now in the more cultural activities on the campus. Jester, Varsztg and Spectator claimed the intelligensia of the class, while the hardy athletes made history in their own field. ' As Juniors we had good reason to be proud not only of the class as a f6Zl whole, but also of particular members. For had not the championship Pough- keepsie crew with two exceptions consisted exclusively of such '29ers as Lambart, Davenport, Piercy, Lightbowne, lVlacBain, Walker, and 'ACox Berman? ln fact we practically ran Columbia's biggest crew year for sitting in the jayvee shell Donaldson, Douglas, Danneman, and coxswain Phillips brought the total varsity oarsmen to eleven, leaving seven places to the other classes. And we as newly knighted Juniors were not going to let the campus forget it. Finally the lightweight crew claimed Kilroe, Ames, Rousselot, and Fiske. The 1927 crew season coming as it did after many years of defeat for Columbia oarsmen proved to be the greatest success of the Morningside athletic season. Seven crews had struggled down the four-mile course lined by cheer- ing spectators, and Washington and Navy had failed to keep their unbroken string of victories since 1921 intact as blue and white tipped oars flashed over the finish line. When the lion began to roar on the gridiron, Lambart, Davenport, and Lightbowne left the shell for the football field. Kumpf played brilliantly in nearly every football contest while Thorsland, Glenn, Hamilton, Kleigman, and Nichols played frequently. The opening of the basketball season found Ancelewitz and Urbach on the quintet, who, together with Riley, filled the quota for the class in that sport. Wright, Forsyth and Kumpf starred on the swimming team together with Davenport and Bowden. Lambart joined Jorgensen and Peraino on the water polo squad. Burke, Riley, Thorsland, Dulin, and Freundlich were among the mainstays on the baseball diamond. Nichols and Simmons provided two of Gus Petersen's biggest wrestling threats- while Bowden ably defended Columbia's tennis honors. u SENIOR CLASS DAY COMMITTEE F 4 P LT GARDNER KUIVIP BATTELLE Diliblfilggggr Dfvlfiliililzag GLENN mi W sk fmiea A2 Meanwhile most of those Juniors not athletically inclined were tucked away on the activity floor of John Jay Hall in their spare time. Delmhorst, Neuberger, Neel, and Mansour proved to be the outstanding journalists on the News Board of the Spectator. Raddin and Donovon had in their hands the guiding reins of Jester as managing editor and business manager. Cn the COLUMBIAN Stanley Boriss and Jule Eisenbud were to become in their senior year editor and business manager respectively. ln the Glee Club and the Var- sity Show and other activities the Juniors were outstanding, ready to assume the controlling positions in 1929, their Senior year. The crowning event of the year for the class was the Junior Prom held in the Grand Ballroom of the Plaza Hotel on Friday night, February 25th. During the week preceding the Promenade, designated as Junior Week, we, as Juniors, ruled supreme. Tea dances were held by the class at most of the fraternity houses and a joyous carnival week ensued. r At the Junior Prom the announcement was made that two of our men had been elected to the Student Board. Horace E. Davenport and Harold Rous- selot had by popular vote of the campus won two of the positions of college leadership for their senior year. . With the coming of spring various members of the class succeeded to the elective positions on the many campus activities. Senior society elections took place and the prominent men of the class, those who had devoted some of their time to deriving other than scholastic and social benefits from college life, found themselves rewarded with membership in the traditional honorary organi- zations, Nacoms and Sachems. THE SENIOR YEAR With the coming of the winter session of 1928 a more serious cast is dis- cernible on the senioric physiognomy. Only a few of us can hope for a pro- longed stay at Columbia under the veiled excuse of graduate work. Already many men have planned to enter the professional schools. Many of those men who met in 1925 as freshmen now have more or less the mature aspect of future professional men, financiers, doctors, and in some few cases college professors. Shades of D's and F's haunt many of us. Life at last has become some- thing more than a lark. That degree never seemed more worth having than now when like a luscious peach it hangs just within reach. By this time we have accomplished all that may be in the field of extra-curricular activities, and for once concentrated attention is given to Trigonometry, French and Chemistry. All is a fever of activity with frequent invasions of the registrar's ofiice to find out if we received due credit for our Hygiene. This college business has been fun, but many of us are ready for further adventure, and graduation for us is a deliverance. A deliverance it means from French verbs and Romantic poetry. Many will return to the provinces from whence they came, and in the verdant seclusion of small towns will tell their prospective offspring of Odell, Dick and Loomis. These men will be remem- bered for what culture they were able to instill in us. Steeves will be recalled for his gregarious cogency, Van Doren for his snap courses, and the Chaplain for his awful gyp in Religion l. Our athletic laurels this year have been well cultivated. On the football field Kumpf and Davenport have more than held their own. Piercy, although disabled last year, may row again this year. Rousselot, Geagan, Bouton and E641 fr AQQQJWCPQ-C an vom Saal have proved competent and worthy managers of the major sports. Jorgenson and Peraino this year hold forth on the water polo squad. These men have distinguished themselves during their college career. They are men of whom the senior class may well be proud. This year finds the non-athletic activities being conducted almost exclu- sively by seniors. Farlow holds forth as editor-in-chief of Jester while Delm- horst and Neuberger have bravely run the gauntlet with the Spectator. The Varsity Show this year was written by William P. Smith, and is the second production of which he has been the author. Travis has written music for the show and is the male lead. The class has witnessed many events significant in Columbia history. While we were taking our entrance exams we inwardly cursed the riveters so busily at work on the new Physics Building. Havemeyer has been enlarged. John Jay Hill was turned from a happy dream into a reality in our Sophomore year. As Seniors we have seen the new Medical Center opened and an addition to Schermerhorn started, and we must not forget the new stands at Baker Field. We wonder vaguely what Columbia will look like when we return for the twenty-fifth reunion, on the occasion, incidentally, of Co1umbia's two- hundredth anniversary. There are other things, perhaps equally significant: who of us will soon forget the Army game in 1925: the Cornell game in 1926, the Poughkeepsie Regatta and the Syracuse game in 1927? Memories of formulae and the history of the Peloponnesian War will vanish first! And long years hence we will talk of what happened after the Junior Prom or that Saturday night at Varsity Show . Senior Week and Commencement, the crowning activities of our college career, are yet to be experienced. We know and can anticipate those pleasures. For three years we have looked on with not a little envy while somber-robed seniors marched forth to receive a printed piece of paper, an honorable discharge from Columbia College. It's ave atque vale then to Herby and to Alma Mater. 35 ei fair V651 PROFESSOR HARRY J. CARMAN voted Columbicfs most popular instructor fs ,f-,9Jws6?1-C 4 THE SENIOR VOTE AUU099 Helighf -------- ....... F ive feet, nine and one-half inches AUGFUQQ Wefghf 4.......--.........-..e.. ,,,...., O ne hundred and fifty-one pounds Average age at gl'0dLZCIfl-OU ,,,A,.,,,A,,x,AYA----,---A--,-,-.A-,,,---A,x -M----M-YiAM--VYYA T WQnty-QnQ Probable occupation after graduation E,E..... Law, 395 Medicine, 255 Business, 24 Has your college education been worth while? e,,.,s,,,,,-,,,,,,-,-,,,,- Yes, 1233 NO, 5 Has college been worth while? ......,,u.,,......,,,,,,.. ,,,-,,e Y es, 1135 No, 13 Favorite Prof. .............,..........., Best department ...u.,... Most valuable course ...... Favorite girls' college ...... ----,-,--,,t---.,,r,Carman ..,,..,e,e...............,,..... History ,,------Contemporary Civilization -----,---,r--------------------------Smith Favorite author ......., ,,,,.,,,,1 J , B. Cabell Author least liked ......,. ..,....,.... J ohn Erskine Favorite stage actor ....... ........ W alter Hampden Favorite movie actor ....... .,......................... E mil Jannings Favorite stage actress ....,.. Jane Cowl, Ethel Barrymore Favorite movie actress ,,,..... ...ee... G reta Garbo, Joan Crawford Favorite play of the year ....., ......ue.....,....,e S trange Interlude Worst play of the gear ........ .e.....e T he Ladder Best movie of the year ...... ........ T he Patriot Worst movie of the gear .....,...........,.........,r.............,r,...............r.............. .Fazil Favorite magazine ,r....., Saturday Evening Post, American Mercury, New Yorker Favorite paper .............,......,...........r.,....,.,...........t.........,,,.............. The Times Favorite sport Cto watchjm.-- Favorite sport Cto plagj ..... Favorite automobile .,....., r-,-----Football ---,,-----Tennis ---,----PaCkard Favorite political party .................. ., .........,............. ..,.........,.. R epublican Do you favor compulsory attendance at classes? ..... .,..... N O, 110: Yes, 23 Done the most for Columbia ......................4........ ...... H 2rOlCl A. ROUSSQIOF Done Columbia the most. ............... Most nearly ideal Columbia man .,,..... Best athlete .......................,.............. Best speaker ....,,.. Best writer ....,............. Best all-around man ...,... Best natured ............... E671 -,,,----,,--l-Iugh Gardner ,. ..... Harold A. Rousselot ----,-----I-lorace Davenport -----.Kenesaw M. Landis Il ------Neuberger, Delmhorst ---ml-Iarold A. Rousselot --,----Alastair lVlacBain fA l 4 Most likely ro succeed .........,. ....... H arold A. Rousselot Most ardent lover ......,.............. ......,..... W ayne Battelle Has most drag with the profs ........ ........ H orace Davenport Needs it most ,............w.......... ......., H orace Davenport Best dressed ......... .......... J oseph Geagan Handsomest ....A.... .......... S amuel R. Walker Most unselfish ....,,., ....... M acBain, Woodworth Most dignified ....................... ...... ............. E d Ward Kilroe Most helpful activity ,.............. ............v................. ' 'Spectatorn Highest undergraduate honor ,..... .,.,-., C hairman of Student Board Do you drink? ........., .r....... ...... ........ Y e s , 71: No, 61 Do you smoke? ........ ,t,...,, Y es, 843 No, 41 Do you swear?--- ..,.., Yes, 1085 No, 18 Do you dance? ...... ........ Y es, 114: No,l3 Do you neck? ,.......,............... ........ Y es, 903 No. 29 Do you favor prohibition? ....... .....,.. o. 88: Yes, 38 '3 C Aqrk l68l . .2. . . , . ' 6 .0 BIOGRAPHIES - . ,1 '-5 0 4. 4-' ' 5 AQLWMQL l REUBEN ABLOVHTZ Brooklyn, N. Y. X Prep: New Utrecht H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbian CZD : Social Problems Club: Pre-Law Association: Mathematics Club. NATHAN ACKERMAN New York, N. Y. Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Freshman Tennis: Interclass Boxing CZD: Cane Sprees CZD : Deutscher Verein: Social Problems Club: Pre-Medical Society. A JOHN DANIELS AGAYOEE . Pall River, Mass. Insignia: Minor Sports C: jCv: WCt: 1929 Prep: B. M. C. Durfee H. S.. Pall River, Mass. Wrestling, Freshman: J. V. CID, Varsity CZD. Interclass C25 CBD, Champion CZD C3D: Grap- pilers: Pre-Medical Society: Chandler Chemical So- ciety. CHARLES HENRY ALSTON Charlotte, N. C. Alpha Phi Alpha Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Jester C3D: Morningside CU: Columbian l70i 9- AQGAQJMC?-X WINSLOW AMES Chappaqua, N. Y. Delta Psi Insignia: Cl50: 1929 Prep: Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. Crew, Freshman: Lightweight CZD CBD C4D: Jester CID CZD C3D C4D: Soph Show Committee CZD: Junior Prom Committee C3D: Van Ams: Varsity C Club. NATHAN S. ANCELEWITZ Staten Island, N. Y. Phi Sigma Delta Insignia: C: 1929 Prep: Curtis H. S., Staten Island, N. Y. Basketball, Freshman, Varsity CZD CBD: Base- ball, Interclass ClD, Varsity CZD CED C4D: Fresh- man Tennisp Varsity C Club: Pre-Law Society. EDWARD R. ARANOW New York, N. Y. Zeta Beta Tau V Insignia: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Tennis, Freshman, Varsity CZD CBD C4D: Swimming, Interclass CZD, Varsity C4D: Spectator CID CZD C3D C4-D, Advertising Manager C4D: Columbian CZD C3D: Varsity CZD: Blue Book CZD C3D 3 Class Secretary ClD : Finance Committee C3D: Junior Prom Committee C3D: Pre-Law So- ciety. NORMAN W. ARNHEIM New York, N. Y. Phi Sigma Delta Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Fencing, Freshman, Varsity CZD: Spectator ClD CZD CBD: Varsity CID CZD C3D C4D, Advertis- ing Manager CBD , Assistant Business Manager C4D : Varsity Show CZDQ Columbian CZD C3D: Soph Show CZD: Philo Show CZD: Deutscher Verein Play C3D: Morningside, Business Manager C4D: Morningside Players: Deutscher Vereing Pre-Medi- cal Society. l71l Sa PLQQLQA --f E721 Prep: ARTHUR A, ARSHAM New York, N. Y. Alpha Epsilon Pi Prep: Morris H. S., N. Y. C. GEORGE PETER ATSALAS New York, N. Y. Prep: Morris H. S., N. Y. C. 1 THEODORE P. ATSALAS New York, N. Y. Prep: Morris H. S., N. Y. C. MILTON AXENPIELD New York, N. Y. Alpha Epsilon Pi West Division H. S., Milwaukee Wis Pre-Medical Society gg a4z9JmsQ-QC HERBERT DELBERT AYERS, JR. Flushing, N, Y. Delta Phi Insignia: jCv: 1929 Prep: Flushing H. S. J. V. Football C25 : Cane Sprees C25 1 Wrestling, Freshman, Varsity C25 p Grapplers. FREDERICK WILLIAM BANFIELD New York, N. Y. Sigma Nu Insignia: C: Minor Sports C: 1929 Prep: Riverdale County School, Riverdale-on- Hudson, N. Y. Freshman Cross Country: Manager I. C. A. A. A. A. Indoor Track and Field Meet C453 Manager I. C. A. A. A. A. Cross Country Run C45: Man- ager Interscholastic Track Meet C45: Manager In- terscholastic Cross Country Run C453 Spectator C15 C251 Soph Show C253 Soph Show Business Committee C25: Freshman Rules Committee C251 Chairman Junior Prom Finance Committee C352 Spiked Shoe: Blue Key. BIAGIO BATTAGLIA Brooklyn, N. Y. Prep: New Utrecht H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Chandler Chemical Society: Pre-Medical Society: Circolo Italiano: Social Problems Club. W. WAYNE BATTELLE Wikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii Phi Gamma Delta Nacoms Insignia: C: 1929 Prep: Yonkers H. S., Yonkers, N. Y. Track, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C453 Stu- dent Activities Committee C45: Class Treasurer C35: Chairman Junior Prom Finance Committee C35: Class Finance Committee C352 Van Ams: Spiked Shoe. 1731 4.4-Jiameg Ae i ABBOTT L. BAUM New York, N. Y. Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Vafsifl' C35 C421 Blue Key: Pre-Law Society. CHARLES BELOUS Corona, N. Y. Insignia: 1929 Prep: Stuyvesant H. S., N. Y. C. Freshman Cross County: Freshman Track: President Pre-Law Association Clj : Politics Club. JOHN W. BENJAMIN Brooklyn, N. Y. Beta Sigma Rho Insignia: jCv Prep: Boys' H. S., Brooklyn. N. Y. Wrestling, Freshman, Varsity C255 Interclass Baseball C253 J. V. Football C31 C4j: Spectator C15 C27- ADOLPH R. BERGER New York, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Spectator CU C25 C353 Blue Book CU: Pre- Medical Society. C741 BERNARD BLUM Los Angeles, Cal, Zeta Beta Tau Prep: Morris H. S., N. Y. C. University of California C25 C35: Freshman Fencing. . REGIS ZABRISKIE BOCERT Ridgewood. N. J. Prep: Ridgewood I-I. S. Freshman Crew. CHARLES FRANCIS BONILLA Albany, N. Y. Phi Sigma 'Kappa Phi Beta Kappa ' Insignia: rCt: 1929 Prep: Madrid Institute, Madrid, Spain Cross Country, Freshman. Varsity C25 C35 C45: Track C25 C35 C45: Rifle, Freshman, Var- sity C25 C35 C45, Range Officer C45: Freshman Crew: Freshman Water Polo: Baseball, Freshman. Interclass C25 C35: Chess C15 C25 C35 C452 Varsity Show C35 C45, Manager Lighting C455 Pre-Engineering Society. , STANLEY BORISS New York, N. Y. Insignia: 1929: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Water Polo, Freshman: Varsity C25 5 Columbian C25 C35 Editor C451 Pre-Law Association. I75J 119 QLi ag FREDERICK BORTZMEYER San Diego, Cal. Prep: East Denver H. S., East Denver, Col. DAVID KIPP BOUTON Hackensack, N. J. Phi Kappa Psi Sachems Insignia: C: Minor Sports C: 1929 Prep: Hackensack H. S. Track, Freshman, Varsity C253 Assistant Man- ager Track Team C35, Manager C45: Manager I. C. A. A. A. A. Cross.Country Run C35: Man- ager I. C. A. A. A. A. Indoor Track Meet C353 Manager Interscholastic Cross Country Run C35: Manager Interscholastic Track Meet C35: Spiked Shoe. FRANK BOWDEN New York, N. Y. Insignia: C: Minor Sports C: 1929 Prep: Evander Childs H. S., N. Y. C. Tennis, Freshman, Captain, Varsity C25 C35 C45, Captain C45: Swimming, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C45 Captain C45: Insignia Committee: Dolphins: Varsity C Club. JOHN MERRILL BRAISTED Port Richmond, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta Phi Alpha Delta Prep: Curtis H. S., Staten Island, N. Y. Crew 439. Baseball C351 J. V. Football C452 Jester E761 5. -!39J Q9x EDWARD BRAUSE Glen Cove. N.. Y. Zeta Beta Tau Insignia: C: 1929 Prep: Glen Cove H. S. Track, Freshman. Varsity C25 C35 C-45: Cross Country, Freshman. Varsity C25 C35 C455 Spiked Shoe. EDWARD SUMNER BREWSTER New York, N. Y. Delta Beta Phi Prep: Evander Childs H. S., N. Y. C. Fordham University C15 C252 Track C35 C451 Cross Country C35 C452 Pre-Medical Society. VICTOR BROCINER New York, N. Y. Insignia: 1929 Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Fencing, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C457 Ra- pier Club Secretary: Pre-Engineering Society. R. BOLAND BROOKS Cairo, Ill. Phi 'Gamma Delta Insignia: C: 1929 Prep: University of Illinois I-I. S., Urbana, Ill. University of Illinois C15 3 Track C25 C35 C45 5 Soph' Show C25 1 Columbian C25 : Spiked Shoe: Varsity C Club. 1771 J-a9awsQ A. HAROLD BROWN New York, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Freshman Rifle: Orchestra CID CZD CBD C4D, Manager C4D: Varsity C4D: Chamber Music So- ciety. NORBERT HUGH BROWN Lima, Ohio Prep: St. Rose Academy, Lima, Ohio Notre Dame CID. . ISIDORE JACKSON BUCHMAN Brooklyn, N. Y. Omicron Alpha Tau Prep: Boys' H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. JOSEPH WILLIAMS BURNS New York, N. Y. Delta Beta Phi Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Classical H. S., Providence, R. I. Band CID CZD CBD C4D, Assistant Manager CZD C3D: Instrumental Club CID CZD C3D, As- sistant Manager CID CZD: Debating Team CID CZD: Freshman Reception Committee CZDQ Dues Committee C2D: Baton. E731 9- 4x3amQ SAMUEL WOLFF BUXBAUM l New York, N. Y. l Insignia: King's Crown, Silver and Gold 1 Prep: Townsend Harris Hall. N. Y. C. Freshman Crew: Fencing, Freshman, Varsity C21 C31 C412 Spectator C11 C21 C31 C412 Colum- bian C21 C31 C41, Advertising Manager C413 Varsity C21 C41, Business Manager C412 Rapier Club. HOWARD JUSTUS CANTUS Hollis, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Jamaica H. S., Jamaica, N. Y. Glee Club C21 C21 C413 Columbia University Chorus C31 C415 Klef Club. XVILPRED CARROL Newark, N. J. Prep: South Side H. S., Newark, N. J. EDWARD H. CARROLL Warner, N. H. Prep: Tabor, Marion, Mass. Author Class Song. E791 f3JmsQ3 1.4 GENARO CAUTINO, JR. Guayama, Porto Rico Phi Lamda Alpha Insignia: Minor Sports C: fCt Prep: New York Military Academy, Cornwall-om Hudson, N. Y. Fencing, Freshman, Captain, Varsity C23 CED MD: Rapier Club. WILLIAM TALBOTT CHILDS, JR. Baltimore, Md. Delta Phi Prep: McDonogh School, McDonogh, Md. Swimming, Freshman, Varsity QZD 1 Tennis C21 : Assistant Manager Track CSD 1 Blue Key. VICTOR D. CIONE Brooklyn, N. Y. Alpha Phi Delta Prep: St. Ann's Academy, Brooklyn, N. Y. JULIAN COHEN Paterson, N. J. Prep: Eastside H. S., Paterson, N. J. E301 Cp ,gL9JmsC?1-C KENNETH SOLLIS COHEN 1 New York, N. Y. Bela Sigma Rho Prep: Horace Mann School, N. Y. C. Spectator C11 C21 C31: Varsity C11 C21 C31: Morningside C11 C21 C31: Blue Book C11 C21, Assistant Business Manager C21. MILTON BERNARD CONFORD Irvington, N. J. Alpha Epsilon Pi Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Irvington H. S. Orchestra C21 C31 C41: Jester C21 C31: In- strumental Club C21. JOHN F. CONNELL New York, N. Y. Prep: DeWitt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Pre-Medical Society: Newman Club. JAMES EDMUND CONNOR Flushing, N. Y. Beta Theta Pi Nacoms , Insignia: C: 1929 Prep: Regis I-I. S., N. Y. C.: Flushing I-I. S. Freshman Wrestling C11 : Freshman Fencing C11 : Assistant Manager Baseball C31 , Manager C41: Cheerleader C31: Blue Key. 1811 fsmsg. -...Q W. NASON COOPER Ozone Park, N. Y. Prep: Jamaica High School, Jamaica, N. Y. VICTOR CARLISLE BARR COUTANT East Orange, N. J. Prep: East Orange H. S. Rutgers CU. , JAMES EMERSON COWIE Buffalo, N. Y. Beta Theta Pr' Prep: Lafayette H. S., Buffalo, N. Y. Spectator CU CZD: Class Finance Committee C25 . ARTHUR BRINTON CRAP Claremont. N. H. Phi Sigma Kappa Prep: Stevens H. S.. Claremont, N. H. Freshman Tennis: Interclass Basketball CZDJ In- terclass Baseball C25 C3j3 Fencing CBD: Blue Key: Newman Club. E821 5. axL9JmsQl M ...Q HARVEY WILLARD CULP Chestertown, Md. Prep: Chestertown H. S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology CZD. Washington CID. BENJAMIN CLINTON DALWAY Fairlield, Conn. Insignia: 1929: jCv. Prep: Roger Ludlow, Fairfield, Conn. Freshman Baseball: J. V. Football C2D: Crew C35 3 Pre-Engineering Society. HENRY FREDERICK DANNEMANN, JR. New York, N. Y. Theta Delta Chi Insignia: C: 1929 crossed oars: jCv Prep: Stuyvesant I-I. S., N. Y. C. Crewv, Freshman, Varsity C22 C2D: J. V. Foot- ball C231 Cane Sprees Clj C2D: Cheerleader C421 Van Ams. Crewsters, Varsity C Club. HORACE ELSTUN DAVENPORT Brooklyn, N. Y, Beta Theta Pi N acoms Insignia: C: C with crossed oars Prep: Manual Training H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Football, Freshman, Captain, Varsity C2j C32 C4jg Crew, Freshman, Captain, Varsity C21 C3D C4j, Captain C4-D: Swimming, Freshman, Inter- class CID CZD, Varsity CZD CBD: Class Treasurer CID: Soph'Vigilance Committee CZDJ Soph Din- ner Committee C251 Committee on Undergraduate Activities C3j C4D: Insignia Committee C4D: Stu- dent Board C4-D: University Committee on Athletics C455 Van Ams: Black Avengers: Dolph- ins: Crewstersg Varsity C Club. i331 4'9 Q5 .gn BERTON JOHN DELMHORST g Brooklyn, N. Y. Delta Phi Nacoms Insignia: King's Crown, Gold and Silver. Prep: Brooklyn Technical H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Spectator CID C25 CBD C4J, News Board C3D, Editor-in-Chief C4j: Student Board C453 Kin'g's Crown Board of Governors C419 Class Finance Committee C15 CZD: Dinner Committee CZJQ Vigilance Committee Chairman CZDQ Junior Prom Publicity Committee C3j: Junior Week Commit- tee C3D: Alumni Day Committee C4jg Interfra- ternity Council Special Investigation Committee C4D : Van Ams. ANTHONY JOHN DEMAY Brooklyn, N. Y. Alpha Phi Delta Insignia: King's Crown, Silver. Prep: Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day School. Brooklyn, N. Y. Wrestling, Freshman, Varsity CZD: Cane Spree CID: Band CID C25 C31 C4D: Varsity Show C3H: Instrumental Club CID CZD: Cirapplers: Baton. SAMUEL AARON DIAMOND Brooklyn, N. Y. Tau Epsilon Phi Insignia: jCv Prep: Erasmus Hall H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Freshman Baseball CU: Manager J. V, Foot- ball CBD: Executive Committee, Pre-Law Asso- ciation: Blue Key. JOHN CHRISTOPHER DIESER Tottenville, N. Y. Prep: Tottenville H. S., N. Y. C. E341 3. ,mga 591-C ALFRED EDWARD DIETZ New York, N. Y. Alpha Sigma Phi Prep: Evander Childs H. S., N. Y. C. RICHARD KEMP DIXON Connellsville, Pa. Prep: Connellsville H. S. GEORGE DONALDSON Cuba, Ill. Phi Kappa Psi Sachems Insignia: C: 1929 Crossed oars Prep: Cuba H. S. Crew, Freshman, Varsity CZD 3 Sophomore Dinner Committee C259 Black Avengers: Van Amsg King of Crewsters. THOMAS FRANCIS DONIGAN, JR. Brooklyn, N. Y. Zeta Psi Insignia: 1929 Prep: Erasmus Hall H. S., N. Y. C. Freshman Swimming: Freshman Baseball: Cane Sprees CID: Interclass Basketball CU C253 Spec- tator Clj CZD 3 Jester CU CZD 3 Varsity Show CZD. . I85l ff9.L Q2- 4 1 CHARLES EDWARD DONOVAN Q Pelham, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: New Rochelle H. S. Jester C15 C25 C25 C45, Business Manager C35, Advertising Manager C453 Dues Committee C15 C25 C45 : -Vigilance Committee C25: Junior Prom Committee C35: Laughing Lion. HARRY RIVERS DOREMUS, JR. Newark, N. J. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Barringer H. S. Varsity Show C15 C25 C35 C453 Laboratory Players. ARTHUR DOUGLAS New York, N. Y. Delta Kappa Epsilon Sachems Insignia: C: C with crossed oars: fCt: 1929 Prep: Stuyvesant I-I. S., N. Y. C. Football, Freshman C15, Varsity C25: Crew C25 C35 C45: Basketball, Freshman CI5, Inter- class C25: Glee Club C15: Vigilance Committee C25 1 Cap and Rules Committee C25 : Black Aven- gers: Crewsters: Varsity C Club, DONALD C. DOW Peekskill, N. Y. Insignia: Minor Sports C: King's Crown, Gold Prep: Stuyvesant H. S., N. Y. C. Freshman, Crew: Freshman, Fencing, Varsity C35 C451 Glee Club C15 C25 C35 C45I Rapier Club: Klef Club. 1361 G - 4191 LOUIS EDWARD DREW Fairneld. Conn. Prep: Fairfield H. S. ARMAND BUDINGTON DUBOIS Stamford, Conn. Prep: Evander Childs H. S. Pre-Law Society. MILO ALEMBERT DURAND Brooklyn, N. Y. Insignia: 1929 Prep: Boys' H. S. Freshman Water Polo: Rifle, Freshman, Varsity C23 CD C4-D, Ass't Manager KZJ OD, Manager 4 . ISIDORE EDINGER Brooklyn, N. Y. Insignia: 1929 ' Prep: Boys' H. S. Interciass 'Basketball C35 . E871 J ,amen A, JOHN CAMPBELL EICKWORT Fulton, N. Y. Delta Kappa Epsilon Sahib Alpha Kappa Psi Prep: Fulton H. S. Freshman Crew. JOHN O. EINERMAN Paterson, N. J. Prep: Paterson H. S. JULE EISENBUD Brooklyn, N. Y. Zeta Beta Tau Insignia: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: Erasmus Hall H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Swimming CZD UD: Soph Show CD: Colum bian C25 C31 C4-D, Business Manager QU. RICHARD W. ELFERS Tottenville, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Tottenville H. S.. N. Y. C. Columbian CBD HD: Mathematics Club. ISSJ Qs f'!l'JWsQ.s-C ROBERT E. FARLOW New Rochelle, N. Y. Delta Upsilon Nacoms Insignia: Minor Sports C: King's Crown, Gold and Silver Prep: New Rochelle H. S. Swimming and Water Polo, Ass't Manager C35. Manager C45: King's Crown Board of Governors C453 Varsity.ShoW C15 C25 C35 C45: Soph Show C25: Jester C15 C25 C35 C4-5, Editor C451 Varsity C25 C35: Morningside C35 C45: Colum- bian, Art Editor C353 Soph Show Committee C25: Junior Week Committee C35: Dolphins: Blue Key: Black Avengers. JAMES FRANCIS FARRELL Central Falls, R. I. Sigma Chi' Sahib Insignia: Minor Sports C Prep: Central Falls High School, Central Falls, R. I. Interclass Baseball C15 C25 C353 Cane Sprees C15, Manager C25: Soph Show C25: Class Fi- nance Committee C25 C35: Vigilance Committee C25: Blue Key. . WILLIAM CLAUDE FIELDS, JR. New York, N. Y. Delta Kappa Epsilon Prep: Evander Childs I-I. S., N. Y. C. JOHN W. FISKE, JR. Pelhamwood, N. Y. Zeta Psi Insignia: C, 1929 Prep: Trinity Prep., N. Y. C. Football, Freshman CI5, Varsity C355 Light- weight Crew C25 C35 C453 Wrestling, Fresh- men C15, Varsity C25: Frosh Vigilance Com- mittee CI5 : 'Soph Vigilance Committee C25 3 Crew Dinner Committee: Junior Prom Committee C353 Van Ams: Grapplers. l89l 42946393 1 ALFRED SMITH FORSYTH St. Davids, Pa. Phi Kappa Psi Nacoms ' Insignia: 1929. sCt, Minor Sports C. Prep: Radnor High School, Wayne, Pa. Swimming, Freshman CID, Varsity CZD C313 Dues Committee CID: Vigilance Committee C213 Activities Committee C31 C4Dg Livingston Hall Committee C311 Dolphins, President C4D. VESTER G. FOWLKES N. Tarrytown, New York Prep: N. Tarrytown H. S. IAN P. FRASER New York. N. Y. Phi Sigma Kappa Insignia: King's Crown, Gold and Silver Prep: George Washington H. S. Spectator, CZJ C32 C4j, Business Manager, C4j. IRWIN BURT PREUNDLICI-I New York, N. Y. Delta Beta Phi Insignia: 1929: bCh Prep: Evander Childs H. S. Baseball, Freshman CID, Varsity C3j C4?3 Freshman Debating: Freshman Reception Commit- tee CZD, E901 C:- l in JULIAN J. FRIED New York, N. Y. Beta Sigma Rho Insignia: jCv Prep: De Witt Clinton High Sch J. V. Football HD: Freshman Sprees CID CZD. EDMUND B. FRIT Brooklyn, N. Y. Theta Xi Prep: Erasmus I-Iall H. S., Bro Freshman Crew: Track C252 Fe ager CBD. Manager 141: Blue Key . ,MORTIMER H. FURT New York, N. Y. Pi Lambda Phi Prep: New Rochelle H Freshman Crew: Freshman Ten ELMORE GRANT CAM A Norwalk, Conn. Phi Sigma Kappa Insignia: 1929 Prep: Norwalk H. S Freshman Crew: Varsity Fencing terfraternity Council Q35 C4-D. Insignia: 1929. C. oklyn N Y ncing As fa9aw-5-Qsx x an HUGH H. GARDNER New Rochelle, N. Y. Phi Gamma Delta Nacoms Insignia: 1929: C: King's Crown, Gold and Silver Prep: New Rochelle H. S. Manager Cane Sprees C155 Lightweight Crew C25 C33 C455 Cheer Leader C455 Soph Show Business Board C25: Stage Manager Varsity Show C35, Production Manager C455 Jester, Associate Editor C455 Class President C35, Vice-President C455 Chairman Freshman Reception Committee C255 Student Activities Committee C455 Student Board C45, King's Crown Board of Governors C455 Freshman Advisor C355 Dinner Committee C15 C255 Vigilance Committee C255 Vice Presi- dent, Van Ams5 Black Avengersg Varsity C Club. JOHN VINCENT GAZZOLA N. Tarrytown, N. Y. Insignia: l929 Prep: N. Tarrytown H. S. Basketball, Freshman, Interclass C35. JOSEPH J. GEAGAN New York, N. Y. Alpha Delta Phi N acoms Insignia: C with crossed oars5 1929 with crossed oars5 King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: Xavier Prep. N. Y. C. Freshman Crew: Assistant Manager Crew C25 C35, Manager C455 Varsity Show C25 C35 C45, Manager C45 5 Business Manager Soph Show C25 C Class Vice-President C35 5 Junior Prom Committee C355 Blue Keyg Crewsters5 Players Club. HERBERT ARTHUR GERSBACH Woodhaven, N. Y. Theta Xi Prep: Jamaica H. S. Sec.-Treas. Pre-Engineering Society. i921 WILLIAM EDWARD GILBERT Brooklyn, N. Y. Theta Xi Prep: Richmond Hill H. S. Freshman Cross-Country: Freshman Track: Freshman Tennis. WILLIAM BYRNE GILLIGAN Shortsville, N. Y. Phi Delta Theta Prep: Shortsville H. S. Cornell C15 C25. VICTOR PHILLIP GLENN Rockville Centre, N. Y. Delta Chi Sachems Insignia: fCt: bCb: 1929 Prep: Hempstead H. S., Hempstead, N. Y. Football, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C451 Baseball, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C45: Interclass Basketball C25 C35 C45, Manager C25 C35: Pre-Law Executive Committee C35 C-45. Treasurer C35 1 Class President C45 : Cap and Rules Committee C253 Patroness Committee C25. MEYER LEO GOLDMAN Arverne, N. Y. Prep: Far Rockaway H. S. Freshman Baseball. E931 ,LQJ sQsx A ,L GEORGE LUKITCH GORBATENKO Harbin, Manchuria Insignia: Minor Sports C Manchuria Eastern Railway Commercial School Cl1 C213 Varsity Cross Country C41: Varsity Track C413 Spiked Shoe. - HERBERT ROBERT GORE Enlield, Conn. Insignia: 1929 Prep: Enfield H. S. tator C21 : Varsity Show C41 3 Pre-Medical Society, Vice-President C31, President C41. EDWARD BERNARD GOTTHELF New York, N. Y. Prep: Franklin School, N. Y. C. Spectator C11 C21: Varsity C11 C213 Blue Book C21. MAURY G. GOULD New York, N. Y. Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Varsity Water Polo C313 E941 Prep: Eastern Railway Commercial School, Harbin, Freshman Football: Varsity Wrestling C21 : Var- sity Cross Country C21 : Varsity Track C21 1 Spec- Q. 4p'L9J kesx BENJAMIN ERNEST GREEN Tampa, Fla. Q Sigma Nu Prep: Hillsborough H. S., Tampa, Fla. University of Florida C211 Orchestra CID C33 C4-D: Varsity Show CU : Chamber Music Society. ADOLPH GREENBERG Brooklyn, N. Y. Insignia: 1929 Prep: Boys' H. S. Interclass Basketball QU CZD OD: Interclass Boxing CZQ, Champion. EMIL HENRY GRIECO Bayonne, N. J. Prep: Bayonne H. S. Interclass Boxing QZJ HD: Cane Sprees CZD: Pre-Medical Society. ' AUGUSTUS HOOEY GRIFFING Summit, N. J. Phi Kappa Psi Insignia: 1929 Prep: Summit H. S. Freshman Football. E951 FRANK ANDREW GULOTTA Ridgewood, N. Y. Alpha Phi Delta Insignia: Minor Sports C: jCv Prep: Newtown H. S., Elmhurst, N. Y. Basketball, Freshman, Varsity CZQ C355 J. V. Football CZD CBD: Pre-LawISociety: Circolo Ital- iano. Vice-President CZD, Delegate CBD. CHARLES F. GUNTHER East Orange, N. J. Delta Kappa Epsilon Insignia: tCt: 1929 Prep: Stuyvesant I-I. S., N. Y. C. Cheerleader CZJ C31 CAO, Head C415 Manager Freshman Tennis CZD, Varsity C4j: Junior Prom Committee ' ROBERT GIRARD HAMILTON Caldwell, N. J. Zeta Psi Insignia: C Prep: Caldwell H. S. Football, Freshman, Varsity CBD C4D: Fresh- man Baseball: Freshman Wrestling. JAMES WEBB HAMPTON Stapleton, N. Y. Upsala CU: J. V. Football C4J: Varsity Base- ball C4-D: Orchestra C4j. l96l fr 4gL9JmxC?1-C GEORGE HENRY HARDY Woodside, N. Y. Alpha Sigma Phi Prep: Bryant H. S.. N. Y. J. V. Football CZD: Pre-Engineering Society C27 C35- HARRY HELLER New York, N. Y. Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Pre-Medical Society. RICHARD GIBSON HENSLEY Clarendon, Va. Prep: Moore County H. S., Lynchburg, Tenn. George Washington Universcity CBD. HERBERT HAROLD HINMAN Tuckahoe, N. Y. V Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Waverly H. S., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Instrumental Club CID CZDQ Band C25 C35 C4D: Math Club. E971 1v,9JmQ..f-C M, DAVID HIRSH Brooklyn, N. Y. Prep: Boston Latin School: Erasmus Hall H. S., N. Y. C. Mienorah Society CID KZDQ Avukah Society CZD I C35 C45- HARRY JAMES HITCHING Westfield, N. J. Insignia: 1929 Prep: Curtis H. S., N. Y. C. Water Polo, Freshman, Varsity 125. ARTHUR HAROLD HOROWITZ New York, N. Y. Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Fencing. Freshman, Varsity C253 Pre-Medical Society: Chandler Chemical Society. RULEF B. HOVEY Addison, N. Y. Beta Theta Pi Insignia: 1929 Prep: North Side H. S., Corning, N. Y. Freshman Football: Baseball, Freshman, Varsity C21 CED UU: Varsity Show QU: Glee Club CU. I98l ep 419awsQa-C EDWARD YUEN HSU Peiping, China Prep: St. John's Middle School, Shanghai. China Kwang Hua CU EDWARD JOHN HUGHES Elmira, N. Y. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Prep: Elmira H. S. Varsity Show C3D: Junior Week Committee 635. WILLIAM HENRY IMHOF New York, N. Y. Phi Kappa Psi Insignia: bCb Prep: All Hallows School, N. Y. C. Freshman Wrestlingg Manager Freshman Baseball C355 Junior Prom Committee C355 Blue Key. RICHARD WILLIAM INCE New York, N. Y. Delta Kappa Epsilon Insignia: C Prep: George Washington H. S., N. Y. C. Football, Freshman, Varsity C252 Water Polo, Freshman, 'Varsity C21 : Varsity Swimming C311 Varsity Crew CZD C351 Dolphinsg Crewsters. l99l ffllbwsfia-L JOSEPH JOPPE New York, N. Y. Prep: Evander Childs H. S., N. Y. C. A Chess Team: Treasurer Chandler Chemical So- ciety. JAMES ELDRIDGE JONES White Plains, N. Y. Prep: Yonkers H. S.: White Plains H. S. Executive Committee, Pre-Law Association C35 C45- CHRISTIAN THEODORE JORGENSEN New York, N. Y. Alpha Sigma Phi Insignia: Minor Sports C: Kings Crown, Silver Prep: Stuyvesant H. S., N. Y. C. Freshman Football: Swimming, Freshman, In- terclass Champion C25 : Water Polo C25 C35 C45 2 Spectator C15 C25 C35 C45, News Board C35, Contributing Board C45: Glee Club C151 Band C15 C251 Soph Show C259 Columbian C15 C355 Varsity Show C451 Morningside Publicity C453 Music Committee Junior Prom C35 7 Dolphins. MONROE I. KATCHER 2D Brooklyn, N. Y. Zeta Beta Tau Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Organizer, Manager Golf C45: Spectator C15 C25 C35 C45, News Board C35, Contributing Board C453 Columbian C35 C45, Athletics Edi- tor C35 C45: Morningside C35. C1001 9. ,,x'13J kQ,9x HENRY WILLIAM KAUFMANN New York, N. Y. Pre-Engineering Society C25 C355 Deutscher Verein C35 EDWARD VINCENT FRANCIS KELLY, JR. Brooklyn, N. Y. Theta Delta Chi Prep: Manual Training H. S. Crew, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C45: Swim- ming C35. ROBERT JOSEPH KELLY New York, N. Y. Prep: Regis H. S., N. Y. C. THOMAS JOSEPH KELLY Flushing, N. Y. Delta Chi Insignia: wCp Prep: De La Salle H. S., N. Y. C. Water Polo, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C45, Interclass C15 C25: Crew, Freshman, Varsity C25 3 Interclass Swimming C25 C35 C45 5 Interclass Base- ball C35: Finance Committee C25 C453 Pre-Law Societyg Dolphins. 51013 4.fL9JmQs-F .Q i CHARLES HARRY KEZAR Rockville Centre, N. Y. Theta Delta Chi Insignia: Minor Sports C: 1929 Prep: South Side I-I. S., N. Y. C Manager Freshman Wrestling C35 , Varsity C45 3 Blue Key: Grapplers. EDWARD LAWRENCE KILROE New York, N. Y. Delta Psi Sachems Insignia: C: C1501 l929 Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Crew, Freshman, Lightweight C25 C35 C45, Captain C453 Patroness Committee C351 Varsity C Club. KENDALL C. B. GRAHAM KIMBERLAND Forest Hills, L. I. Prep: Pawling School, N. Y. Manager Class Boxing Team C25: Morningside C25 C35 C4-5, Editor-in-chief C35: Glee Club C25 C353 Debate Council C35 C455 Philo Show C15 C25 C35: Vigilance Committee C25: Philo- lexian Society. JACOB H. KLIEGMAN Brooklyn, N. Y. Insignia: C: fCt: 1929 Prep: Boys' H. S., N. Y. C. Football, Freshman. Varsity C25 C35 C452 In- terclass Boxing C25 C351 Interclass Baseball C25: Student Advisory Committee C45 3 Varsity C Club. l102j gl -KLQJ ABE LIONEL KORNBLITH Brooklyn, N. Y. Prep: Boys' H. S., N. Y. C. JOHN KRAET New Castle, Pa. Sigma Nu Prep: New Castle H. S. Grove City College CID CZD: Varsi ming C4j. JULIUS CHARLES KRAUSE New York, N. Y. Prep: Evander Childs H. S., N. Y DAVID A. KROSNICK Ansonia. Conn. Insignia: jCv: l929 Prep: Ansonia H. S. Wrestling C35 3 Interclass Boxing OD: Interclass Baseball QED: Carapplers. ty Swim- . C. Champion I: 103 :I S- .4 HENRY WILLIAM KUMPF, JR. Buffalo, N. Y. Sigma Nu Nacoms Insignia: C: 1929 Prep: Masten Park H. S., Buffalo Football, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C453 Swimming, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35: Freshman Track: Student Board C45: Univ. Committee on Athletics C45: Varsity C Club, President C45: Black Avengers: Dolphins. WILLIAM KUPPER Passaic, N. J. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Clifton H. S., Clifton, N. J. Varsity Track C25: Orchestra PEDRO JUAN LABARTHE San Juan, Porto Rico Prep: Central H. S.. San Juan, Porto Rico Fencing C45: Pre-Medical Society: Newman Club: Instituto de las Espanas: Circolo Italiano. I KENESAW M. LANDIS Logansport, Ind. Delta Tau Delta Prep: Great Neck H. S., N. Y. Crew Cl5 C25: Debate Council C35 C455 Uni- versity Orchestra CI5 C25 C35 C453 Varslty Show C25: Philolexian Society. 51041 Cn afmfiamsei- NATHAN M. LASS New York, N. Y. Prep: Gimnazia, Lithuania CHARLES FRANCIS LAVERS Larchmont, N. Y. Prep: Mamaroneck H. S., N. Y. MAURICE LEVIN Far Rockaway, N. Y. A Phi Sigma Delta Insignia: Minor Sports C: 1929: King's Crown Silver and Gold Prep: Far Rockaway H. S. Water Polo, Freshman, Varsity C32 C433 In strumental Club CU CZD CBJ, Manager C317 Klef Club, President -C413 Dolphins. ISAAC LEVITATS e Zagare, Lithuania Prep: Gymnazia, Siauliai, Lithuania L1051 fbamx ...Q BERYL HAROLD LEVY Brooklyn, N. Y. Delta Sigma Rho Prep: Boys' H. S., N. Y. C. Debating C25 C35 C451 Varsity C45. BERNARD STOLPER LEWIN Manhattan Beach, N. Y. Beta Sigma Rho Prep: Erasmus Hall H. S., N. Y. C25: Varsity Show RUBIN DUFFY LEWIS New York, N. Y. Tau Epsilon Phi Insignia: 1929 Prep: Flushing H. S., N. Y. Track, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C45 Football C25: Jester C25: Spiked Shoe. SIDNEY KARL LICHTMAN Brooklyn, N. Y. Phi Beta Delta Insignia: 1929 Prep: New Utrecht H. S., N. Y. Interclass Wrestling C35 : Baseball, Freshman, terclass C15 C25 C35 . 51061 Interclass Boxing C25 C35, Champion C25 C Interclass Basketball C153 Interclass Baseball : J. V 35 In WILLIAM MCKINLEY LIGHTBOWNE New York, N. Y. Phi Gamma Delta Sachems Insignia: C with crossed oars: fCt: I929 Prep: Brooklyn Technical H. S. Crew, Freshman, Varsity C2D CBD C4D: Foot- ball. Freshman, Varsity C2D CBD C4D: Swimming. Freshman, Interclass CID C2D: Interclass Track CZD: Cane Sprees CID CZD: Junior Prom Com- mittee C3D: Van Arns: Crewsters. CHARLES C, LINK, JR. New York, N. Y. Delta Beta Phi Insignia: bCb: 1929 Prep: Jamaica H. S., N. Y. Baseball, Freshman, Varsity C2D C3D C4D, In- terclass ClD C2D. JAMES LLORENS Denver, Colo. Phi Lambda Alpha Tau Kappa Alpha Prep: North Denver H. S. Colorado College CID: Debating C3D C4D. JOSEPH PAUL LOMBARDI Mount Vernon, N. Y. ' Prep: Mount Vernon H. S. Il Circolino, Business Manager C4.D 3 Circolo Ital- iano, Treasurer C3D C4D: Pre-Medical Society. 51071 -4 MICHAEL E. LOPATO Harbin, China Theta Xi Prep: Classical Cwyrnnasia, Harbin, China Hgluke University C15 C253 Varsity Wrestling STANLEY J. LOWELL Elmhurst, N. Y. Beta Slgma Rho Insignia: jCV: 1929: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Newton H. S., N. Y. Freshman Wrestling: J. V. Football C45: Cane Sprees C253 Varsity Show C15: Glee Club C15 C25 C35 C453 Pre-Medical Society: Klef Club. ALASTAIR MACBAIN Closter, N. J. Sigma Nu Nacoms Insignia: C with crossed oars Prep: Closter H. S. Crew. Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C45, Cap- tain C353 Student Board C45: University Com- mittee on Athletics C451 Van Ams. GEORGE MCKINLEY New York, N. Y. Sigma Chi Insignia: 1929 Prep: Theodore Roosevelt H. S., N. Y. C. Cross Country, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C453 Track, Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C451 Interclass Boxing C'I5 C35 C45: Spectator C15 C25 : Class Secretary C45 : Soph Vigilance Commit- tee CZ5-: Spiked Shoe. C1081 I Q. 4xL9Jm-sQ -L IRVING MADOEF New York, N. Y. Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Varsity Baseball f4J: Orchestra C4jg Medical Society. WILLIAM JOHN MAGNA Brooklyn, N. Y. Prep: Erasmus Hall H. S., N. Y. CHARLES A. MAIER South Nyack, N. Y. Prep: Nyack H. S. PIERRE JEAN MALRAISON Mount Vernon, N. Y. Delta Chi Insignia: C: Minor Sports C1 1929 Prep: Manhattan Prep, N. Y. C. Rifle, Freshman, Varsity CZD CBD UU. ager KZD CBJ: Freshman Crew. l Pre- Man- 51091 .1891 bein A SALEM GEORGE PAUL MANSOUR Niagara Falls, N. Y. Phi Kappa Psi Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Niagara Falls H. S. Niagara University CID: Spectator Q23 C35 Debating UD: Soph Show JOHN WILLIAM MARCHETTI New Rochelle, N. Y. Prep: New Rochelle I-I. S. Secretary Engineering 1931: Pre-Engineering So ciety. CHARLES MARGULIES Jersey City, N. J. Prep: Lincoln H. S., N. J. Pre-Medical Society. ELKAN MARKS New York, N, Y. Pi Lambda Phi Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. fiioj ff- l -JLQJWLQQC THOMAS FRANCIS MEADE Cleveland, Ohio Prep: Holy Name H. S., Cleveland, Ohio John Carroll CID. JOHN CANNON MERRILL Passaic, N. J. Delta Tau Delta Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Passaic H. S. Glee Club CZD C35 C4D: Philo Show C215 Co- lumbia Laboratory Players. COLLIN D. MEYERS East Orange, N. J. Insignia: cCc Prep: Erasmus'Hall H. S., N. Y. C. Track, Freshman, Varsity CZD CBD C4D: Cross Country, Freshman, Varsity C21 C31 C425 Spiked Shoe. I ARTHUR HAROLD MILBERT New York, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver ' Prep: Yonkers H. S. Freshman Cross Country: Spectator Clj CZD C33 C4D, News Board C3D, Contributing Board C455 Blue Book C251 Pre-Medical Society. flllj AQQQJMQ4-L. 4 FRED MILLER New York, N. Y. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Prep: Hempstead H. S., N. Y. Freshman Crew: Varsity Show CZD. WILLIAM FREDERICK MULLER, JR. Brooklyn, N. Y. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Poly Prep, N. Y. C. Band CZD C35 C432 Instrumental Club CU ers Blub. MAXWELL N. NAAS Cohocton, N. Y. Theta Xi Sahib Prep: Cohocton H. S. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Clj CZD. SIDNEY ARCHER NARINS New York, N. Y. Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Freshman Baseball: Freshman Swimming: Pre Medical Society. 51121 CZD: Varsity Show CZJ C3j Cfljg Baton: Play- 2 4!L9 - .4 WILLIAM EVERETT NEFF, JR. Waterbury, Conn. Delta Tau Delta Prep: Crosby H. S., Waterbury, Conn. Frosh Reception Committee C2D: Radio Club. JOSEPH ARTHUR NESBITT - New Rochelle, N. Y. Zeta Psi Prep: New Rochelle H. S. Lightweight Crew C2D CBD: Spectator CID C2D: Blue Key. HAROLD S. NEUBERGER New York, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver and Gold A Prep: Franklin School, N. Y. C. Spectator CID C2D CBD C4D, Managing Editor C4D: Varsity C2D CBD: Columbian C2D CBD: Jes- ter C4D: Soph Show Author C2D: Philo Show CBD 5 Varsity Show CBD : Debating CID: Class Publicity Committee C2D : Junior Prom Committee CBD: Philolexian Society: Deutscher Verein. JOHN PETER NICHOLS Chicago, Ill. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sachems Insignia: Minor Sports C: jCv: fCt: 1929 Prep: Peddie School, Hightstown, N. J.: McBur- ney School, N. Y. C. Football, Freshman CID, Varsity C2D CBD C4D, J. V. C2D, Captain: Wrestling, Freshman CID, In- terclass CID, Champion, Varsity C2D CBD C4-D: Baseball, Freshman Varsity C2D, Interclass C2D: Sponsor Committee C2D: Dues Committee CID: Inter-Fraternity Council C2D CBD C4D: Chairman Senior Banquet Committee C4D: Grap- plers. C1131 4fL9J Q1x A! ROBERT EDWARD NOTH Chillicothe, Ohio Sigma Chi Alpha Kappa Psi Sahib Prep: Chillicothe H. S. Ohio State FRANK STANLEY NUGENT New York, N. Y. Delta Chi Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Regis H. S., N. Y. C. Interclass Baseball C3D C4D: Spectator CID CZD C3D, News Board C3D: Jester CID CZD CBD, As- sociate Editor C3D: Song Fest Committee CZD: Finance Committee C2D Q Senior Dinner Committee C4D: Pre-Journalism Society, Treasurer CZD. WILLIAM SCOTT O'CONNOR Laurelton, N. Y. Delta Chi Prep: Oyster Bay H. S., N. Y. Basketball, Freshman CID, Interclass C3D C4D3 Freshman Tennis CID 3 Interclass Baseball C4D 3 As- sistant Manager Soph Hop C2D: Cap and Rules Committee CZD. DANIEL PATRICK O'GRADY Leonia, N. J. Phi Sigma Kappa Sachems Insignia: 1929 Prep: Leonia H. S. Track, Freshman Captain, Varsity CZD CBD C4-D: Cross Country, Freshman CID, Varsity CZD CBD C4D: Frosh Dinner Committee CID: Fi- nance Committee C2D 3 Chairman Junior Prom En- tertainment Committee CBD: Black Avengers: Van Ams: Spiked Shoe. C1141 Q.. ,- 1 -4.3 RUTHERFORD OLLIPHANT New York, N. Y. Delta Tau Delta Sachems Insignia: Minor C: 1928: King's Crown, Silver Wrestling, Freshman C11, Varsity C21 C315 Manager Interclass Wrestling C21 C313 Spectator C11 C21 C31, News Board C31: Varsity C11 C21 C31 C41, Associate Editor C41: Class Treasurer C31 : Class Vice-President C41 : Finance Committee C21: Junior Prom Publicity Committee C31: Grapplers. President C31 C41. GERHARD ARVID OSTERBERG Yonkers. N. Y. Theta Xi Alpha Kappa Psi Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Yonkers C. H. S. Freshman Tennis C11 : Freshman Wrestling C11: Jester C11 C213 Columbian C11 C21 C31 C41, Assistant Editor C31 3 Finance Committee C41- JAMES DANIEL PARIS North Pelham, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Pelham Memorial School, N. Y. Cane Sprees C21: Freshman Fencing C11: Var- sity Show C21 C31 C415 Spectator C11: Players Club: Newman Club. KENNETH TWITCHEN PATTENDEN New York, N. Y. Prep: Evander Childs H. S., N. Y. C. Cane Sprees C215 Varsity Swimming C41. C1151 fbameax 51161 EINAR BERNARD PAUST Brooklyn, N. Y. Beta Theta Pi Insignia: 1929 Prep: Manual Training H. S., Brooklyn N Y Track, Freshman CID, Varsity C25 C3 Fresh man Crew CID: Soph Show WILLIAM AMBROSE PECK Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y. Alpha Sigma Phi Prep: Cornwall-on-Hudson H. S JOHN PENEK Summit, N. J. Prep: Summit H. S. Freshman Football CID : Freshman Wrestlin C 1 D : Debating, Freshman CID , Captain Varsity C21 C3D: Secretary Law 1931 C4Q. AMBROSE J. PERAINO Ridgewood, N. J. Alpha Phi Delta Insignia: Minor C: 1929 Prep: Ridgewood H. S. Water Polo, Freshman CID, Varsity C2 C37 C4jp J. V. Football CZJ: Cane Sprees CI 2 Coach C433 Dolphins. gf 40,94 ALAN F. PERL New York, N. Y. Alpha Epsilon Pi Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Manual Training H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Columbian C15 C25 C35 C45. Assistant Photo- graphic Editor C35, Photographic Editor C451 Pre-Law Society. HELMUTH LOUIS PFLUGER New Dorp, N. Y, Prep: Curtis H. S., N. Y. C. Soph Show C25 1 Chandler Chemical Society. President C25 C35 1 American Chemical Society: Deutscher Verein. DARIUS V. PHILLIPS New York, N. Y. A Phi Kappa Psi Insignia: C1 19291 Kings Crown, Silver Prep: Peekskill Military Academy, Peekskill, N. Y. Crew, Freshman Cl5, Varsity C25 C35 C452 Columbian C25 C35 C45, Fraternities Editor C451 Jester C15 C25 C351 Class Secretary C351 Publicity Committee C151 Engineering Honor Committee C451 Crewstersi Varsity C Club: American Society of Mechanical Engineers. GORDON CLAYTON PIERCY A New York, N. Y. Psi Upsilon Nacoms Insignia: C with crossed oars1 1929 with crossed oarsz King's Crown, Silver Prep: Collegiate School, N. Y. C. Crew, Freshman C15, Varsity C25 C451 Jester C15 C25 C35 C451 Instrumental Club C151 Band C151 Finance Committee C251 Dinner Committee C251 Freshman Advisory Committee C351 Pa- troness Committee Junior Prom C351 Cap and Rules Committee C251 Black Avengers: Crewsters1 Van Ams, Treasurer: Varsity C Club. 51171 K 4 gz I I 3 - All A, JOSEPH PISCHKITTEL Irvington, N. J. Prep: Irvington H. S. JACOB PRAGER Keyport, N. J. Zeta Beta Tau Insignia: 1929 Prep: Kcyport H. S. Water Polo, Freshman CID, Varsity C2D C3D C4D: Spectator CID C2D: Soph Show C2D. ELWOOD LEWIS PRESTWOOD Slatington. Pa. Insignia: Kings Crown, Silver Prep: Slatington H. S. Freshman Baseball CID: Band CID C2D C33 C4D: Varsity Show C3D: Instrumental Club CID C2D C3D C4D: Baton. MAURICE PRICE Newark, N. J. Alpha Epsilon Pi Prep: Far Rockaway H. S., N. Y. lems Club. I:118fI Cane Sprees CID C2D: Interclass Boxing C2D: Assistant Manager Freshman Tennis C3-D5 Specta- tor CID: Treasurer Law 1931 C4-D: Social Prob- CHARLES RABBINS New York, N. Y. Sigma Alpha Mu Insignia: Minor Sports C: 1929 Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Wrestling,'Varsitv CBD, J. V. CZD, Interclass CZD. Champion: Grapplers. GEORGE GATES RADDIN, JR. Beaver, Pa. Phi Kappa Psi Sachems Insignia: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: Beaver H. S. Carnegie Tech: Boston Museum School Jester CID CZD C3D, Managing Editor C3D: Varsity CID CZD CBD C4D: Columbian CZD C31 C4D, Art Editor C4D: Philolexian Society, Presi- dent C3'D C4D: Laughing Lions. WILLIAM IRWIN RADNER Holyoke, Mass. Beta Sigma Rho Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Holyoke H. S. Spectator CID CZD C3D, Business Board C3Dl Blue Book CZD CBD, Assistant Business Manager CBD: Debating CID CZD C3D C4D. CLARENCE REGIS REARDON Mt. Carmel, Pa. Prep: St. Charles Prep, Baltimore, Md. St. Charles College ClD CZDZ Basketball C4D: Baseball C4-D. H1191 4xJ3amQ:5 .4 HOWARD GORDON RILEY New York, N. Y. Phi Kappa Psi Insignia: bCb: 1929 Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Baseball, Freshman ClD, Varsity CZD CBD: Bas- ketball, Freshman CID, Varsity CZD CBD 5 Class Treasurer CZD: Junior Prom Finance Committee C 3D 3 Van Ams. RAY CARL RISLEY Brooklyn, Nj Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Stamford H. S., Stamford, Conn. C Yarsity Show CZD C3D C4D: Glee Club CZD 3 . JOSEPH RICHARD RONGETTI New York, N. Y. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Insignia: Minor C: jCv Prep: St. Francis Xavier, N. Y. C. Water Polo, Freshman CID, Varsity CZD CBD C4D, Captain C4D: J. V. Football C3D: Dolphins. Vice-President C4D. CHARLES LOUIS ROOS New Rochelle, N. Y. Delta Chi - Prep: New Rochelle H. S. Orchestra CZD C3D. 51203 fa. fbameax HAROLD ANTHONY ROUSSELOT New York, N. Y. Zela Psi Nrzcoms Insignia: C: rCc: C1501 1929 Prep: Eyander Childs H. S., N. Y. C. Crew, Lightweight C25 C35 C45, Varsity C351 Freshman Swimming C15 : Assistant Manager Foot- ball C35, Manager C451 Chairman Student Board C451 Secretary,Interfraternity Council C35 C451 Jester C15 C45, Business Manager C451 Class President C151 Chairman Soph Dinner Week Committee C251 Chairman Junior Week Commit- tee C351 Vigilance Committee C252 Chairman Sub-Frosh Day C351 Blue Key: Van Ams: New- man Club: Varsity C Club. ANTHONY WILLIAM RUSSO New York. N. Y. Delta Beta Phi Prep: Evander Childs H. S., N. Y. C. Spectator C15 C251 Debating CI5: Frosh Re- ception Committee IRVIN C. RUTTER Brooklyn, N. Y. Prep: Boys' H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. WILLIAM TYCO RYDELL . Brooklyn, N. Y. Prep: Brooklyn Technical H. S., N. Y. C. C1211 fgamim .4 JOHN PETER SACCO Brooklyn, N. Y. Beta Theta Pi Insignia: 1929 Prep: Brooklyn Technical H. S., N. Y, C. Track, Freshman Cl5, Varsity C25 C35 C45: tee C35. ALFRED WILLIAM SAMUELS New York, N. Y. Phi Sigma Delta Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: George Washington H. S., N. Y. C. Spectator C25 C35 C453 Blue Book C35 C45 GERALD HERBERT SAMUELS York, Pa. Prep: York H. S. Pre-Law Association. MARTIN JARVIS SAND Jackson Heights, N. Y. Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S.. N. Y. C. Spectator C25 C352 Jester C351 Writers Club 51221 Varsity Show C25 C451 Junior Prom Commit- ., AAAQJMQQL IRVING SAROTZKIN East Orange, N. J. Phi Delta Epsilon Insignia: 1929 Prep: Stuyvesant H. S., N. Y, C. Freshman Track Cl5: Spectator C25 C351 Colum- bian Cl5 C25 C35, Junior Board C35: Pre-Medi- cal Society, Secretary C25, President C35. Wrestling, Freshman C15, Varsity C25 C35' EVERETT LOUIS SAUL Woodhaven, N. Y. Prep: Richmond Hill H. S., Richmond Hill, N. Y. J. V. Fencing C35: Chandler Chemical Society, President C45. Secretary C35. ALFRED SIDNEY SCHECHTER ' Mount Vernon, N. Y. Beta Sigma Rho Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Mount Vernon H. S. Glee Club C15 C25 C35 C452 Orchestra C25 C35 C453 Klef Club. ALBERT SCHLEFER Brooklyn, N. Y. Prep: Erasmus Hall H. S., N. Y. C. C1231 Jagawkesx Ao DAVID SCHLEIN Jersey City, N. J. Prep: Dickinson H. S., Jersey City, N. J. Pre-Medical Society. JOHN CLARENDON SCHRAMM Flushing, N. Y. Prep: Flushing H. S. Freshman Rifie fljp C. U. C. A. MORTIMER SCHULTZ West New York, N. J. Insignia: Minor C: jCv: wCp: 1929 Prep: West New York H. S. Water Polo, Freshman Cll, Varsity CZD C43 J. V. Wrestling OD: Dolphins: Curapplersz Pre Medical Society. OLAP JUELL SEVERUD Bogota, N. J. Prep: Hackensack H. S., N. J. fl?.4j Q. 4aDamQa- ABRAHAM s. SHAYEVITZ I South River. N. J. Prep: South River H. S. FREDERICK THEODORE SHOPOEE New York, N. Y. Omicron Alpha Tau Prep: Boys' H. S.. N. Y. C. Politics Club. THOMAS HOWARD SIMMONS Astoria, N. Y. Alpha Sigma Phi Insignia: Minor Sports C: 1929 Prep: Newtown H. S., N. Y. C. Wrestling, Freshman CID, Varsity CZD C33 CAO, Captain C4D: Cane Sprees CU. IRWIN WILMER SMITH West Englewood, N. J. Prep: Englewood H. S., N. J. f125:I AAAQJMQLB ag WILLIAM PHILIP SMITH New York, N. Y. Delta Upsilon Sachems Insignia: King's Crown, Gold Prep: Riverdale Country School, Riverdale-om Hudson, N. Y. Lightweight Crew CBD: Varsity Show CID, Co- Author CZD CBD, Author C4D: Jester CID CZD CBD Associate Editor C4-D5 Varsity CID CZDQ Columbian CID CZD CBD: Glee Club CZD C3D: Chairman Junior Prom Committee CBD: Chair- man Soph Show CZD: Vigilance Committee CZD: Van Ams: Philolexian Society: Players' Club: Klef Club: Laughing Lion. CARLETON JAMES SMYTH Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Sigma Nu Prep: Mount St. Mary's Prep. Emmitsburg, Md. Soph Show CZDC Junior Prom Committee C3D . DIRAN SOGHIGIAN Harpoot, Armenia Prep: Anatolia College Prep, Salonica, Greece. SIDNEY C. SOLOMON New York, N. Y. Beta Sigma Rho ' Prep: De Witt Clinton I-I. S.. N. Y. C. 5 Crew, Freshman CID, Varsity CZDZ Cane Sprees I CID C2Dg Spectator CID CZD: Blue Book CZD. ! C1261 RAYMOND THOMAS STAPF U Brooklyn. N. Y. Prep: Erasmus Hall H. S., N. Y. C. LLOYD WILLIAM STAPLES Jersey City, N. J. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Dickinson H. S., Jersey City, N. J. Glee Club C15 C25 C35 C45: Pre-Engineering Society: Math Club: Geology Journal Club. ADOLPH EDWARD STASHEFE New York, N. Y. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Freshman Fencing C151 Jester C15 C25 C35 C45, Dramatics Editor C35 , Managing Editor C45 3 Varsity Show C15 C25 C35, Chief Electrician C357 Morningside C25 C35 C45, Associate Edi- tor C45 3 Spectator C45 : Varsity -C45 9 Soph Show, Stage Manager C25 3 Boar's Head: Laughing Lion: Columbia University Players. HERBERT JEROME STONE New York, N. Y. Prep: Evander Childs H. S., N. Y. C. lf127:I ag ROSS WORTHINGTON STRAIT Yonkers, N. Y. Delta Chi Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Gorton Prep, Yonkers, N. Y. Freshman Fencing C153 Varsity Wrestling C25: Cane Sprees C251 Instrumental Club C15 C25 C35 C45. Manager C45: Jester C25 C35 : Varsity Show C25 : Manager Interclass Wrestling C45 5 Song Fest Committee C25 1 Senior Dance Committee C45. JOSEPH STRUTKO Kingston, Pa. Kappa Gamma Bucknell C15 C25: lnterclass Baseball C353 In- terclass Basketball C35 C45: Deutscher Verein. JOHN JOSEPH TADDEO New York, N. Y. Prep: De Witt Clinton H. S., N. Y. C. Social Problems Club: Chandler Chemical So- ciety: Deutscher Vereing Pre-Medical Society: New- man Club: Il Circolo Italiano: Clinton Club: Math Club: I1 Circolino Staff. KCDNGKEEN TANG Canton, China , Prep: Fat Shan Normal School, Canton, China I University of California C15. 51281 9 AILQJM 1.43 EDWARD EMIL TASSI Brooklyn, N. Y. Insignia: C1 1929 Prep: Brooklyn Technical H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Football. Freshman. Varsity C25 C35 C452 Wrestling. Freshman, Varsity C25 C35 C45, Inter- class C15 C25: Grapplers: Varsity C Club. JOHN HENRY THORSLAND New York, N. Y. Insignia: C: fCt: 1929 Prep: Morris H. S., N. Y. C. Football. Freshman. Varsity C25 C351 Baseball, Freshman Cl5. Varsity C25 C35 C45, Captain C45 1 Insignia Committee C45 1 Varsity C Club. JOSEPH L. TIERNEY, JR. Scarsdale, N. Y. Phi Kappa Psi Insignia: Minor C1 1929 Prep: All, Hallows Prep. N. Y. C. Freshman Water Polo: Manager Frosh Cross Country C351 Manager Varsity Cross Country C45: Secretary I. C. A. A. A. A. C35 C451 Blue Key: Spiked Shoe. ALAN TOMPKINS Bridgeport, Conn. Insignia: Minor C: 1929: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Bridgeport H. S. Fencing, Freshman Cl5, Varsity C25 C35 C45, Captain C453 Manager Interclass Fencing C35: Jester C35 C45, Art Editor C451 Rapier Club, Secretary ' C45. If129:I . .3 FRANK HENRY TSCHORN New York, N. Y. Insignia: C: Minor C: l929g King's Crown, Silver Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Freshman Crew C15 3 Tennis, Freshman C15 . Varsity C25 C35 C45 5 Varsity C Club: Pre- Engineering Society. GEORGE URBACH Harrison, N. J. I Beta Sigma Rho Insignia: C: bCb: 1929 Prep: Harrison H. S. K Basketball, Freshman C15 , Varsity C25 C35 C45 : Varsity Track C35 9 Pre-Medical Society: Varsity C Club. FREDERICK H. VOM SAAI. Sharon Springs, N. Y. Phi Kappa Sigma Insignia: C: 1929 Prep: Lawrence Prep, N. Y. C. Assistant Manager Basketball C35 , Manager C45 I Spectator C25 : Business Manager Philo Show C25, Manager C351 Soph Show C25: Philolexian So- ciety: Blue Key. EDMUND IRVING WALDMAN Providence, R. I. Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: Classical H. S., Providence, R. I. Brown C15 C255 Band C35 C455 Instrumental Club C35 C455 Baton. Liaoj -.5 191. i 4. i ll HAROLD JAMES WALKER Wichita, Kan. Theta Xi Prep: Wichita H. S. University of Washington ClD CZD: Swimming C3D: Track ,C3D. SAMUEL R. WALKER New York, N. Y. Alpha Delta Phi N acoms Insignia: C with crossed oars Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Crew. Freshman, Varsity CZD C3D C4D: Stu- dent Activities Committee C4D : Junior Prom Com- mittee C3D: Van Ams: Black Avengers: Crewsters. IRA DAVID WALLACH New York, N. Y. Pi Lambda Phi Insignia: Kings Crown, Silver Prep: Townsend Harris Hall, N. Y. C. Spectator CID CZD C3D . FRANK BERWIN WARD Cambridge, Mass. Beta Theta Pi Insignia: 1929 Prep: Trinity School, N. Y. C. Springtield College CZD: Freshman Football ClD: Basketball, Freshman CID, Varsity C3D: In- terglass Baseball C3D: Manager Interclass Baseball C3 . - 51311 .-.. 4 ERWIN W. E. WATERMEYER Hamburg, Germany Prep: Landschulheim Am Lolling, Holsminder. Germany Orchestra CBD C491 Philolexian Society: Deut- scher Verein. ALBERT CHARLES FREDERICK WESTPHAL Ridgewood. N. Y. Alpha Sigma Phi Insignia: King's Crown, Gold A Prep: Newtown H. S., N. Y. C. Spectator CID CZI: Band C25 C33 C41 Leader and Manager C4-D: Varsity C4j: Baton, President C43- JULIAN ROBERT WILHEIM ' Denver, Colo. Tau Epsilon Phi Insignia: 1929 Prep: Townsend Harris, Hall, N. Y. C. Freshman Baseball CID : Pre-Law Committee CED : Blue Key: Pre-Law Society. ALFRED WILLIAM WILKEN Redhook. N. Y. Prep: Tivoli H. S., Madalin, N. Y. 51321 .J E-QJWCQX GEORGE ALBERT WILKENS Ridgeheld, N. J. Prep: Englewood H. S.. Englewood, N. J. Engineering Honor Committee C45: Chandler Chemical Society, Secretary C45: Pre-Engineering Society. THEODORE B. WOLF Brooklyn, N. Y. Sigma Alpha Mu Insignia: King's Crown, Silver Prep: New Utrecht H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y. Spectator C15 C25 C35 C45, News Board C25 C35, Contributing Board C35 C45: Columbian C25 C353 Varsity C45. WILLIAM WOODWORTH New Rochelle, N. Y. Theta Delta Chi I N acoms Insignia: C: 1929: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: New Rochelle H. S.: Western H. S.. Wash- ington. D. C. Crew. Freshman Cl5, Lightweight C25 C35 C451 Manager Blue Key C451 Assistant Manager Varsity Show C35, Manager C45: Student Board C45: King's Crown Board of Governors C452 Class Vice-President C25: Chairman Dinner Com- mittee C15g Dues Committee C353 Chairman Junior Prom Patroness Committee C35 : Van Ams, President C25 : Black Avengers: Blue Key. KENNETH MITCHELL wYcKoEE A Newark, N. J. ' Prep: South Side H. S., Newark, N. J. 1 C1331 AAJDJMQA. 4 FRANK ARTHUR ZAKLASNIK Newburgh, N. Y. Insignia: Minor Sports C: 1929 Prep: Newburgh Academy sity C25 C35 C45, Interclass C351 Champion: J Grapplers. FRANK ZEITLIN Brooklyn, N. Y. Insignia: sCt: King's Crown, Silver and Gold Prep: Brooklyn Technical H. S., Brooklyn, N. Y man Track: Varsity Show C252 Glee Club C25 C35 C45, Manager C45: Dolphins: Klef Club. ABRAHAM ZLOTNICK Newark, N. J. Prep: South Side H. S., Newark, N. J. JOHN D. ZUBAY New York, N. Y. ' Prep: City of Kesmark, Czecho-Slovakia University of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary. fl34j Wrestling, Freshman, Winner Kilroe Medal, Var- V. Football C455 Freshman Cross Country C153 Swimming, Freshman, Varsity C25 C353 Fresh- X . , 4 ig ffi ff ' 6 . . G ix SENIIORS . .0 INFORMALLY N ft ' . I ' - u 0 4, 4 fi v S5 ,lf LIGHTBOWNE BANFIELD RoUssELoT BURKE WESTPHAL PHILLIPS BERMAN GLENN PARIS TOMPKINS MACB AIN FRITZ THORSLAND TIERNEY DONOVAN KILROE GEAGAN . FARLOW WOODWORTH W. P. SMITH FORSYTH HAMILTON . URBACH MCKINLEY KUMPF DAVENPORT GARDNER FRASER NEEL 5 DELMHORST JORGENSEN NEUBERGER AND STASHEFF ARANOW my vig 3 YY QW., x , ,N -W f .. 'KI' 5 . NICHOLS BATTELLE WALKER BOWDEN POND RONGETTI TSCHORN MARSHALL BROWN KEZAR CONNOR SIMMONS BUXBAUM OSTERBERG KATCHER PERL BORISS EISENBUD ZEITILIN RADDIN Q. Afzfbmea-. J THE STARTLING ADVENTURES OF NINA MANX as Told to the Little Black Cat of Hartley, interpreted by C, T. J., who understands a Woman's Heart DEAR BLACKIE, I hardly know where to begin. I had the most astounding dream. I mean I simply can't understand it. It all started when I took a stroll on South Field with Sally Calico and Mamie, We were watching Blue Pete, who was beating one of the neighborhood children with a stick, when we got too close to the board track that those crazy students run around on. It was shady under- neath the track so we all crept under for a chat. Well, Blackie, the Iirst thing you know we heard an awful pounding and we rushed further underneath the track to hide. When the pounding had stopped Mamie discovered a large, flat bottle E1 - I A full of reddish-brown liquor. g V+ -T' None of us had ever seen such a bottle r-5433 I before, Blackie: It had a label which said, Top-and-Bottom in large letters. Mamie ,, got devilish and decided to take a swig and ia If XM! 1-3' Sally and I thought we'd try one too. Well, Blackie, you have no idea how funny I started 'J' to feel. It seemed as if every hair on my H n , body was trying to curl itself into a cork fiohfegfxe no Idea how funny I Started screw. And Mamie started doing an ele- gant dance, waving her tail so gracefully, and, Blackie, we laughed and laughed. I thought it was rather tasty, so I had some more drinks and as far as I know, what happened after that might have been real or not. I couldn't tell. Mamie and Sally disappeared and I just seemed to fly through space. I tried to scratch myself to see if I was dreaming, but I got no sensation from it, and then I didn't know what to think. I kept flying until I was higher than Hartley, higher than John Jay, maybe even higher than the Library dome, and South Field looked like a little mud puddle. The track seemed to have disappeared. I began to wish I could get down to the ground again when. sure enough, I felt myself falling. Suddenly I saw a long, black object coming toward me. I got frightened thinking it was a Zeppelin but when it got closer it turned out to be a long, narrow boat with a lot of naked students in it. They were bending back and forth and flying through the air at an awful speed. They came straight for me and I was just about to shout Look outl , when I recognized Wee Willie Nightgowne. I-Ie reached out and grabbed me and said, Hello, Nina : I said, Why, Bill, you look so strange! I-Ie was rowing the boat with one arm. With the other he was reaching down and going through a card file with nimble lingers. There were a lot of girls' names on the cards in the file. Around his wrist was a large hand-cuff with a little label attached to it. I couldn't quite make out the words, Blackie, but it looked like neurosis or neuritis or something. The other boys in the boat 51441 9 ' 4 were all doing different things instead of paying attention to their rowing, Alastair MacBain was singing at the top of his lungs, I have become so closter you. Gordon Piercy was massaging his foot. Ed Kilroe had a big bunch of golf socks in his arms and was try- . ing to pick out a pair that would harmonize 'f i Xvgith his sociology professor's necktie. Sam , alker was wearing a tall silk hat and Geor e Donaldson was fumbling with a large lagiv l T T book and chewing on a Cuban cigar. Dav- y L ix enport was pepping all the boys up and at ' 'iv' law the same time tracing interminable A's with his left foot on the bottom of the boat. As ..a-- they rowed along Davenport would stop the H I boat for a minute and reach out and rab a Sudflenll I fjwmezfnlong black object freshman out of thin air and send hiIn off with a message to Chadwick, Once in a while his eyes got kind of dreamy, Blackie, and I thought, just by looking at him, that he really was an awfully nice fellow, Blackie,-you know,-the kind that can understand a Woman's Heart. Pretty soon we got to John Jay Hall and the boys all leaped out of the boat, picked it up, and threw it high into the air, and it disappeared. You could have knocked me over with a feather, Blackie, I was so surprised. I looked around for Wee Willie Night- gowne, but he too had disappeared, and in his place stood a large ugly flea scratching itself gently with its hind paw. If there's anything I hate, Blackie, it's a flea, but something about this flea made me look closer, and I discovered a little collar around its neck with the words, Blue Key. I got so mad, Blackie, I justishouted right at the darned parasite until I was hoarse, but the flea paid not the slightest attention, and started to rip railroad tickets in half and put one-half in its pocket and give the stubs to a lot of funny looking fellows with dull eyes and great bulging muscles. Suddenly I caught sight of Mamie, and I C01'1'1lHg ONV3 asked her what these fellows were supposed N to be. She told me they were athletes, and X then I noticed that all of them carried great lg? heavy loads on their backs. They seemed f i ' weighted down under the burden of them. I ff! HN -4 Z' f was curious to know what was in the bundles, , Syl ' ?af3 and Mamie said they were filled with quiz -TTLTSCAACJUEK I papers and books. I got kind of bored, Blackie, so I went into John Jay hall, hop- ing to see you, but there was a great crowd H: . . clawing agen other and shouting of yelling students in the lobby. The first 'I' Italian ' person I saw was a pleasant looking chap, Hugh Gardner, who stood in front of a small table and held a bunch of long wires in his hands. The wires all led to different slots in the table, and each slot was painted a different color and had a brass name-plate underneath it. One of the slots, a nice blue one, was marked Varsity Show. Another was labelled Fraternities, and still another, Stndent Board. A beautiful red silk-covered wire led to a little slot which seemed to, be right in the young man's pocket. A tag on this wire was marked Class of 1929, while another wire which he manipulated with great ease was called Jester. The rest of the wires led to slots variously labelled Cheering Squad, Committees and Ben Hubbard. At his side was a desk telephone, a 1:1451 . M .. . feirmsfs 4 direct wire to Johnson Hall. I got dizzy watching him pull all the wires and looked over at a cubby hole in the wall. Stern-looking fellows with large ticket-punchers leered at me from behind the wicket. I tried to get away from them, and was almost stepped on by a tall, cadaverous fellow who apologized in a soft voice and asked me to buy a Morningside, before it was suppressed. I ignored him and he began to scribble on his cuff. I was curious to know what he was writing on his cuff, Blackie, so I jumped up on a chair behind him and looked over his shoulder. He was writing Lloyd Frankenbergn in old English script and making little sketches of white rabbits. On the other cuff I noticed he had a sonnet and a dramatic monologue. The smell of cooking filled the air and I began to feel hungry, but I had no money, Blackie, so I walked through the doorway and asked the person inside the door if I could work in return for a meal. He asked me if I belonged to Sigma Chi and I said, Of course not. K2 X A Thenuhe got angry and said, i'ScatI'i Really. I m y Blackie, I was never so humiliated in all my . . Q life. I ran up two flights and found myself VA in a long, bare corridor. Strange creatures Il M ,Qi were rushing up and down and talking to 'xl ib' I themselves. I was startled by a thundering . 'N sound, punctuated by agonizing screeches, 2, 2 55 I . U coming from a nearby room. I rushed in through the door, and saw Stanley Boriss and Gerhard Osterberg crouching in a corner. fellowsf' They were being bombarded from all direc- tions by large, heavy Columbians which hit them with terrible, resounding whacks and kept piling up on the poor fellows. There was a calendar on the wall marked with a blue pencil. The leaves kept flying off the calendar, and the Columbians kept raining down on the helpless boys with greater and greater force, until at last, with an agonized wail, they disappeared beneath the hurtling volumes as the last leaf flew off the calendar. A jeering crowd of lower classmen and contributors laughed sardonically. . . . hit them with terrible resounding whacks and kept piling up on the poor Then suddenly I couldn't remember any more, Blackie, until I found my- self in the Purnald locker room. This also resembled a mad house. Johnny Sacco was running on a treadmill and playing a jazz symphony on a grand piano which kept sliding out of his reach so that he had to run faster and faster to keep his hands on the key board. R. Boland Brooks leaped over the heads of the crowd, time and time again, busily taking notes with a gold pencil in a green edged note book at the same time. Carl Merner was running around the room with a big bull whip, lashing Iiendishly at the retreating backs of the helpless track men. I cried out to him to stop, but he didn't hear me and Bob Pond picked me up and swung me by the tail three times around his head and let me go. I never flew so far in all my life, Blackie, honestly. I thought I would never stop. I landed in a heap on a table in Child's. For a minute I felt stunned, but I managed to whisper, Where am I? I looked up and was astonished to see Bob Parlow peering gently at me from behind his spectacles. He rapidly drew a picture of me on the edge of the menu card and kept mut- tering to himself about dummying something or other. His talk was unintel- ligible, but I caught the words, Jester, swimming team, D. U. and art. He began munching a peanut butter sandwich and a welsh rarebit and paid not the slightest attention to me. Eddie Stasheff and Harold Neuberger were humming. scribbling and laughing and ignoring the waiter who was tearing L1463 his hair. Stasheff kept taking triolets out of his pockets, one after the other, and tossing them in the air. Bill Woodw'orth was whispering softly and earn- estly to each one at the table in turn. He intrigued me, Blackie, and I asked him what it was all about. Shh , he said, A'Politics . Dudley Taft reached over and began to stroke me gently, and Frank Zeitlin came in, dressed in his Tux, and began to sing with all the rest of the Glee Club. Fritz Banfield stumbled through the revolving door and was promptly thrown out. I couldn't understand any of these silly people and I began to get lonely for you again, Blackie, so I walked over to Uni- versity Hall. I caught two sparrows in the gym while a knot of students smiled approv- ingly. On the steps leading down to the pool I saw Al Forsyth, whose father was holding him by the coat-tails. Neither would budge, so I threaded my way around them and went ' I I al- downstairs to the pool. Hank Kumpf was . N,.,,,,,-,,, I E doing flipflops on the end of the spring board X dressed in his football togs, throwing the ' E' ball into the air and tucking it under his '-Hank Kumpf was doing flip naps on arm before coming down on the board again. the end of the Springboard , Frank Bowden was Houndering in the pool, trying to paddle himself along on his back with the aid of a tennis racket in each hand. Joe Rongetti and Ambrose Peraino were clawing each other and shouting in Italian, while Ted Jorgensen applauded them with a birdie from the side lines. His birdie grew louder and louder until the walls trembled. Filling his lungs to the utmost he blew a last terrifying peal which rocked the columns to their very foundations and the building collapsed with a rumbling roar. Gee, Blackie, I was scared stiff, but I wasn't even hurt. There was a profound blackness for a few minutes and when the smoke had cleared away I found myself in a little forest glade. I followed a little path and came to a great clearing, with an old mansion in the foreground. Chuck Rousselot, laden with towels and water buckets, his shoulders bent under the terrinc weight of the many charms on his watch chain, staggered out to meet me. He was very unsteady and leaned heavily on a rowing sweep as he walked along. His derby and spats were immaculate and his shiny black fur coat reminded me of you, Blackie. Bill Makser and Bill Adler stood on each side of the entrance to the mansion in threatening attitudes. I asked Bill Adler what he was doing. Oh, I'm just a guard , said he modestly. I entered the house and began to feel hungry. An orange and black bird was flying around the room and my mouth watered, Blackie, really it did. I made a leap for it and hooked it a good wallop on the side of the head with my paw. Then I saw it was an Oriole. I was just about to devour the bird when I saw it wasn't an Oriole at all but Johnny Nichols in disguise. Ed Tassi and Vic Glenn were walking around with jeweled rings on all their lingers, gurgling childishly and trying to sell them to everyone. Whitey Thorsland and Winslow Ames were designing a huge theatre, using racing shells and baseball bats for decorative motifs. Pretty soon Bert Delmhorst came strolling along the path, arm in arm with the Dean. They were holding an animated conversation in low tones, and Delmhorst had a microphone on his coat lapel to capture whatever fraternity gossip came his way. Joe Burke, still wearing the crown of the king of the Black Avengers, 51473 Q... zL9J QL .9 ,E ,4 I, .L , ,' ,,,,, ,,,, .ig..mii: all-jQ3,f,,,M ' was hurling base balls viciously at a signboard bearing his own likeness as an ad for Arrow collars. There was a great commotion from the direction of the clearing, and Teddy Wolf, Carlton Cutbill, Harry I-Iitching, Torn Haney, Ken Landis, Joe Nesbit and George Raddin came rushing frantically down the path screaming for mercy. Cuthbert, the campus squirrel, was chasing them! This was too much for me, Blackie. I was going to their aid by chasing that mean Cuthbert off when I saw it was unnecessary. Bill Mitchell had accompanied them on the piano, and he rapidly reduced Cuthbert to raving lunacy by a hot jazz symphony. Gee, Blackie, what does it all mean. I can't understand any of it, and I'll never drink any of that Top-and-Bottom again. When I came to, I was lying by the brick pile in the corner of South Field in a cold sweat and my head aches yet, Blackie, really it does. No more Top-and-Bottom for me. I'd rather stick to your old fashioned catnip. Write to me soon, Blackie dear, and watch out for that darned Jorgensen fellow. It's a shame the way he lays bare the secrets of a Woman's Heart. Your loving Nina 35 C , qw:-Q L14sJ 1 'f J Q A X 4 ' ' if . '15 0 5 JIUNIIURS 4 L V THE CLASS OF 1930 BROWN BUSER JOHNSON THE CLASS OF 1930 William B. Buser President Eaton Goldthwaite Bernard Axelrod Harrison Johnson Vice-President Secretary Treasurer JUNIOR CLASS COMMITTEES JUNIOR WEEK George Banigan, Chairman Eaton Goldthwaite Sheridan Cuarratt Silas Cmiddings Malcolm Bleecker Bernard Axelrod PROM PAV OR Prescott Blatterman, Chairman William Middleton Haakon Gulbransen Charles Lea John Murphy PROM FINANCE Harrison Johnson, Chairman Joseph Keane James Morrison Joseph Hagen Will'iam Sanford EISIJ PROM PUBLICITY Frederick Platt, Chairman Richard McAvOy John McMahon George Odom Donald Peyser PROM PATRONEss John Henry, Chairman Arthur Hixon Malcolm Bonynge Clarence Schwerin CLASS DUES Harrison Johnson, Chairman David Estlow Alton O'Brien Prescott Blatterman Louis Pettit Thomas Brown 5- AILQJWLQA. ,J THE HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1930 FTER one of the most promising Freshman years in the history of recent classes, with undefeated football and baseball teams and a Freshman crew good enough to take third at Poughkeepsie, with a victory over the Sophomores in the Cane Sprees as well as a successful class dinner, 1930 started its second year in Columbia with a strong tradition of accomplishment already well established. The Sophomore year showed the class still prominent in athletics. 1930 again won the Cane Sprees. The class also succeeded in breaking up the Fresh- man Dinner at the Hotel St. George in Brooklyn, or at least until the police interfered. The press notices of the affair so instilled the fear of college class banquets into the heart of the proprietor of the Amber Lantern Inn in Flushing, which the Sophs had engaged for their dinner, that he flatly refused to serve it. Thus the Class of '30 went hungry to the glee of numerous Freshmen who were saved the trouble of actually breaking up the affair. ln the role of Juniors the class started the l928-29 academic year with greater enthusiasm than ever. The class was well represented on the gridiron by Malcolm Bleecker, Captain-elect, Remy Tys and Jim Campbell, President of the Class. During the basketball season Captain Magurk, Remy Tys and Bill Mid- dleton upheld the prestige of the class on the court. With the coming of the Spring semester Blesse, Bonynge, Sanford, Murphy and other Junior oarsmen began work in the pool intent on making Varsity berths for themselves. At the same time Joe Hagen was starring for Carl Merner on the track, winning the l. C. A. A. A. A. two-mile track title for the second consecutive year. Hanley, Ghillany and Joyce were the other con- sistent point scorers for the Blue and White, among the l930 track delegation. When Coakley issued his call for battery candidates, his best hurler headed a l930 delegation on the Varsity baseball squad that comprised three quarters of the infield and a large portion of the rest of the squad. ln the minor sports 1930 was not so prominent as it was in the majors, but swimming, wrestling, fencing and rifle all had fairly strong Junior delega- tions. Gaynor, '30 was the backstroke star of Kennedy's outfit. With the 1930 athletes performing so well on the field, the management did their prowess justice. Graduate Manager Benson, in the middle of April announced the election of Banigan to the football managership, Platt to crew, Henry to baseball, Aikenhead to basketball, and Odom to track. Norton was made swimming manager, Daniel getting J. V. football, Mansneld fencing and Stewart wrestling. These men formed the second delegation to pass suc- cessfully through the new method of managerial competition. Spectator, Jester, COLUMBIAN, Varsity Show and kindred King's Crown activities were not neglected by l930 for a too strong interest in athletics. Those, who early in the Freshman year started heeling for the various publica- tions and activities now began to show their mettle. Block, Banigan, Claman, Isaacs, Meyer, Peyser, Rosenberg, Schlessenger, and Kosting began to show up well on Spectator while Levy carried the class honors on Jester. Odom, Garratt and Pearson assisted prominently in the management of Varsity Show while Keating played one of the leads. 1930's Junior year saw the formation of the only Junior Society f152j fa-A ag!-9JmsC?sx A, now in existence in college. The New Junior Society of Blue Key, though it did not receive its ollicial charter until the beginning of the Spring semester, started informally during the early part of the football season. The ive assistant managers of the major sports, Banigan, Platt, Henry, Aikenhead and Odom, with Daniel, Goldthwaite, McMahon and Giddings formed the first delegation. These men started meeting visiting athletic teams toward the end of the football season. and now they meet all Varsity teams competing on Columbia grounds and in addition prominent prep and high school squads play- ing the Lion yearlings. The society operated successfully during the Winter under the direction of Harold A. Rousselot '29, Chairman of Student Board. Early in February it received its charter from the University Committee on Student Activities. This society marks the end of the old Sophomore Society of Blue Key. The climax of Junior year came with Junior Week and the Prom at the Plaza, After a Week of successful tea dances at the various houses, over one hundred and seventy-five couples danced to the music of the Meyer Davis No. l unit on Washington's birthday night in the Grand ballroom of the Hotel Plaza. The committee composed of Banigan. Junior Week chairman, Camp- bell chairman of the prom. Henry patroness chairman, Blatterman favor chair- man, Platt publicity chairman and Johnson finance chairman held the most suc- cessful prom in recent years. With the strains of Roar Lion Roar to fox trot time bringing Junior Week and the prom to a glorious close at four o'clock on Saturday morning the Juniors ended the biggest event in the class year and went back to the serious work of the Spring semester to prepare for the culmination of the class's career in its Senior year. JUNIOR WEEK COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN HENRY BLATTERMAN PLATT JOHNSON BANIGAN CAMPBELL f153j AQAQJWSQA, ROSTER OF THE CLASS OF 1930 Abler, Charles Abramson, Irving M. Adriani, John Alexander, Jerry M. Ames, Thomas G. Andriette, Allen S. Arifian, Nubar Arnold, Paul D. Arwine, John S., 3rd Ashman, Hyman Axelrod, Bernard J. Baker, Edward G. Ballon, Charles Bancroft, Shaler B. Bane, James E. Banigan, George J. Barnhart, Harry H. Baruch, Edward Beggs, Roy J. Belgorad, Samuel H, Berman, Marshall C. Bird, Junius B. Blaisdell, William W. Blatterman. Prescott H. Bleecker, Malcolm S. Blesse, William H. Bleyer, Archibald M. Block, Frederick H. Bloom, Seymour L. Blumenthal, Basil Blumofe, Robert F, Bongiorno, Michael A. Bonynge, Malcolm Boulton, Schroeder Bowman, Harry G., Jr. Bradasch, George A. Brown. Robert T. Brown, Thomas R. Bruns, John S. Bull, Robert G. Burkey, Kenneth Burkland Stewart. A,, Jr. Burton, William A. Buser, William B. Byers, Ralph Byron, Robert E. Caduff, Henry Cahill, Thomas V1 Calyer, William N. Campanella, Dominic Campbell, James L. Campbell, Victor E. Cantor, Manuel Carson, John C. Carton, Donald Casciano, Adolph D. Cerny, Charles W. Chambliss. William C. Chamlin, Max Chattaway, Charles W. Chirico, Marius Claman, John Clark, Curtis W. Clark, Orrin H. Clyde, William H. Cohen, Abraham Cohen, Jacob I. Coles. Rolston Connoly, Phillip - Cook, Henry R., Jr. Cowger, David L. Creamer, Daniel B. Cummings, Joseph L. Curtis, Norman E. Curtis, William B. Curtman, Howard R. Damiano, John B. D'Angelo, Renato R. Daniel. John C. Dealy, Edwin J. Deardoff, Frank B. Dehtart, George K. Demorest, Beaumont deRaczyiska, R. NV. Dropkin, John J. Drozdoff, Paul V. DuBoif, Philip L. Duellselmann, William Dumey, Saul A. Dunekack, George J. Dutko, Joseph F. Dyal, Thomas Echert, Leonard P. Edwards. Elvin F. Egel. Francis X. Eibel, Isidore Eigerman, Hyman Ekstrom, Joel Ellenbogen. Abraham Ernst, Frederick Estlow, David R. Evans, Robert H. Fusco, Edmund Falck, Edward Farmlett, George Farrely, William A., Jr. Fegan, Kenneth S. Feldman, Max Fileman, Harry L. Fine, Jesse J. Fiordalisi. George Fiooinger, Alfred Fischer, Emil C. French, William C. Friedelson. Bertram Friedenberg, Robert Friedlander, Bernard Friedlander, Edward Friedman, Alfred H, I1541 Furbush, Merril A. Gallagher, Frank J. Garatt, Sheridan Gaynor, William C. Genovese, Rosario Ghiselin, Francis H. Giddings, Silas Gleisten, Henry S. Glinsmann, Walter F. Goewey, Galen Goffen, William Goldbloom, Maurice J. Goldman, Richard Goldstein, Hyman Goldthwaite, Eaton K. Goodman, Louis Graham. James Greene, Justin Greig. Norman Griffith, P. LeRoy Gula, John Gulbransen, Haakon Hagen, Joseph Hamilton, James A., Jr, Hanley, James A. Hanley, Raymond W. Hansel, Leslie R. Hanson, Joseph Hanwell. Richard J. Harris, Gordon L. Heffelfinger, Heaton Heinemann, Herman F. Hendrickson, Edgar W. Henry, John S. Hepburn, Clinton M. Hernandez, Francisco A Heubner. Herman N. Hewitt, William P. Hixson, Arthur N. Horan. Harold A. Housekeeper. Peter C. Hovorka, August J., Jr. Hsu. Yuen Huebner. Walter C. Hughes, John J. Hunter, William M. Ingrisch, Rudolph Isaacs, Harold R. Isaacson, Morris Jaffe, Hyman Jann, Ansco E. Jahelka Robert G. Jakes. Otto H. Jeffords, Raymond C. Jenkins, William L. Jenney, Charles P. Jersawit. Herman Jewell, Howard Jochum, Clarence C. Johnsen, John O. A.e'-AQJM-Q1-X Johnson, Frederick K. Johnson, Harold W. Johnson, Harrison H. Johnson, Walter P. Jones, David E. Joyce, Edward P. Kaback, Erwin R. Kaczanowsky, Thomas Kagno, lsadore N. Kalmykow, Vladimir Kalmykow, Andrew Karsten, Walter A. Katims, Milton Katz, Abe Katz, Albert Kaufman. Lionel M. Keane, Joseph Keating. Thomas Keene. Melvin Kehoe. Bradley S. Keppel, Charles Kerrigan. Frank Kcstenbaum, Milton Keyes, John H. Khanlian. John Kilroe, Frank E. Kirkland, Claude J., Jr Klein, Harry Knowles, Clayton Konheim. Albert J. Kopp, Robert E. Kosting, Ernest D. Kott, Joseph H. Krin, Arthur B. Krupski, Joseph Lombe, Wendell B. Lancaster, William Lange, Mavus M. Lanier, Sterling Larkin, Francis Lawrence, Bryan Lazarus, Leonard Lea, Charles A. Lee. Jesse M. Lee, William Leipic, Stanley Levy, Lawrence H. Lichterman, Jacob J. Lidz, Theodore - Little, Frederick H. Lopez, Leopold E. Lorenz, Alfred Lou-Hing. Edward W. Lowenheim, Frederick Lubell, Benedict I. Lundgreen, Harry Lutz, Werner A., Jr. Lynch, Robert J. Lyons, Frank McAvoy, Richard McCarron,. James A. McCarthy, John P. McCrum, Lloyd D. McGough, Thomas F. McKinney, Charles H., Jr. McMahon, John J. McQuilkin, Walter A. MacWood, George E. Maddaus, Ingo, Jr. Maddow. Ben Maguire, Everett M. Mainwaring, John W.. Jr. Mairs, Hamilton Maltz. Albert Mamet, Barney Mampoteng. Charles Mansfield, Allan H. Marcus. Abraham Marek, Jaroslav Markovits, Theodore Marmor, Judah Marshall, St. Julien R., Jr Nlartoccio, Daniel A. Marx, Joseph L. Maslen. Edwin Mason, Charles Mason. Malcolm Mathews. Thomas P. Mathis. John Harris Matthews, William Messman. Henry Meyer. Ma tin Meyer. William J. Middleton, William T. Mikolainis, Mindaugis V Missall, J. Ellsworth Moloney. John F. Moran, John E. Morris. Howard B. Morrison. Andrew M., Jr. Morrison. James Moscoto. Rafael E. Moskowitz. Jesse Mount, Thomas L., Jr. Mucha, Frank A. Muller. Edward Muravchik, Aaron Murphy, James A. Murphy. John F. Naughton. Thomas Neikrug. Edward Nelson, Benjamin O. Nobert, Lionel Norton. William Nussenfeld, Sidney R. Oberhaus, Thomas M. Oberist. Charles J. O'Brien, Alton D. O'Brien, Peter J. O'Connor. John E. Odom, George Olsson, Arthur Olstead. John W. Orr. William, Jr. Orsenigo. Eugene H. O'Shaughnessy, Elim Overby, Andrew N. Pantz, Theodore Paolucci. David Parker, Saul Parry. Robert L. Pearsall, William Pearson, Milton H., Jr. Peele. Wilfred If155j Pettit, Louis L. Peyser, Donald I. Pilz, William A. Pirone, Amato Platt, Frederick Pollitz, Adolf Potter, Robert S. Pryor, William Y. Rabinowitz, Sidney Rand, Ellis - Randazzo, Michael Raskin, Eugene Rasmussen, Lawrence Read, Frederick W., Jr Reck, Paul A. Reis. Lincoln Resnik, Simon Richards, Howard K. Richards, John G. Riley, Randall Robertson. Douglas M. Robinson. Allyn P., Jr. Rosenberg, Paul Rosenburgh, Bernard M. Rosin, Seymour Roth. Julius Rothlisberg. Allen Rudolph, Gilbert Runge, Edmund Russell. William Sabatelli, Emil Sandman, Howard E. Sanford, William B. Sanville, Richard Sargent. David O. Sasso, James Savoia. Domenico Schoid. Charles Schenk, Kenneth Scherl, Egon Schlessinger, Edward Schwartz, Solomon Schwarz, Timothy Schweitzer, Meyer Schwerin, Clarence M., Scott, Theodore L. Seaman. Julius J., Jr. Sgroi, Anthony V. Shaw, David F. Shaw. William H. Shaw, John D, Shear, Nathaniel Shishkin. Boris B. Shookhoff, Howard B. Shure, Edward Siegel, Milton Slattery, Louis R, Slobodin. Harry Smith, William B. Smith. Wilson M. Smyth. Joseoh P.. Jr. Sonderlick. Emil J. Sonne. Niels Sonnemay. Otto F.. Jr. Sprecher. Daniel R. Steen, Hall Steinbock. Leon T. ' Steneck, Nicholas Stewart, Aubrey W. Stretton, Ernest H. Styles, Thomas A. Sun, Harry T. Swanson, Herbert Swettman, Herman Tarushkin, Benjami Tarajano, Placido Taubota, Hyoma Thlick, Ralph Thomas, Gervase Thomas, John A, I1 Thorne, Frederick C. Tietenberg, Harry H. Timberg, Sigmund Tomei, Alexander Tompkins, William G. Tong, Tan C. Tonn, Frederick R. Totton, Alfred G. Tron, Emil H. Tys, Remey Vander Veer, Adrian H. Vann, Felix Van Ness, Paul H. Vincent, Howard Vlackoulis, William Von Sternherg Julius R Voorhis, Henry A. Webb, Mortimer G., J Wegrocki, Henry Weigl. George E. Weiner, Samuel Weinstein, Lawrence Weiss, Paul Weiss, Robert F. Weston, Milton M., Jr. Jr ai . .wir . f1561 ., Jr. Wheeler, Fred Wheeler, Henry I. Vsfhite, Edward S. Wight, Addison D. XVilliams, William J. Wilson, Stanley K. Winkelstein, Oscar L. Wintner, Albert Witmer, T. Richard Wong, Chaak Y. Wood. Francis, Cart Wright, George W. Yarbrough. Millard Zaglio, Edmund Zeidler. Gilbert E. Zerr. Harold Zuckerman. Daniel Zwerling, Henry B. Cf I , , . l it 535 ' 6 .0 SOPHOMORJES - 4 V 4 ' 6. Y - . - 4 M fr L' ' N THE CLASS OF 1931 WILLIAMSON LUSK SCOTT CLARK 193 l CLASS OFFICERS George W. Lusk President Henry Scott Donald Williamson William Clark Vice-President Secretary Treasurer SOPHOMORE CLASS COMMITTEES CAP AND RULE ENTERTAINMENT Adolph Shea, Chairman . Edward Thomas, Chairman Harry Krebs George Bohrer Howard Walker Adolph Gobel Robert Werner Walter Keyes Donald Williamson George Simoncelli FINANCE . Arthur Smith, Chairman Bernard Dougall Richard Redfield Harvey Fitzgerald James Rogers Malcolm Hartsell William Sweeny fl59j 9 4L9JmQ.fx .Q THE HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1931 THE SoPHoMoRE YEAR ITH memories of a victorious Freshman Year, the Freshman returned to Columbia College, and found himself a Sophomore. He not only found himself a Sophomore, but found himself surrounded by a throng of petulant wearers of the black cap, only too eager to test the sophomoric powers of endur- ance. If there had been fewer Freshmen, the story might have been different, as it was, however, the sheer strength of numbers enabled the yearlings to gain a short-lived victory in the informal combat. The Sophomores gained their first victory when in the annual Tug-of- War, previously won tive times in succession by the Yearlings, the second-year men dragged an equal number oftenacious frosh to a drizzling defeat. Student Board arranged for this traditional combat to take place on a fair basis. Equal numbers of the respective classes pulled on the opposite ends of the rope, and three tries were made, the yearlings winning but one of them. The inevitable snake dance followed, tangling traffic and pedestrians on Broadway and River- side Drive, until the hawser was fastened to a tree on the drive, cut in two, and returned, minus small strands as souvenirs. Shortly before this classic struggle, the Van Ams, the Sophomore society, elected its officers. Adolph Cmobel was chosen President. Lindsay Warwick, Walter Hall and C. Dorsey Forrest were I . elected Vice-President, Secretary and Treas- i urer, respectively. ' The yearlings were then initiated into the mysteries of Columbia songs. The Song Fest, chaperoned by members of the Vigilance Committee and the Black Avengers, was held on South Field, according to custom. The successful yearlings received printed acknowl- edgment of the fact that they had memorized the necessary songs, or at least had moved their lips in such perfect unison with the other members of the class, that the Sopho- mores had not been able to detect them. However, sixty-five recalcitrant songsters were fou.nd and promptly advertised by futuristic daubs of Mercurochrome. not to mention the fact that their names were on the black list of the Black Avengers, and that sundry and divers public appearances, especially in front of Hamilton Hall, were granted to those few and unhappy frosh who faltered in their lines. Cheers also were rehearsed to the tune of Hugh Gardner's stentorian voice. and red paint again marked those victims of a poor memory who happened to be members of the Freshman Class. ' On November 23, 1928, the Sophomore Hop was held at John Jay Hall. Marie Saxon, of Ups-A-Daisy wasihostess, and the Musical Lions furnished the music. The decorations, in black and silver, were executed by the committee, headed by George Lusk, President of the class. The other members , , A VICTORY FOR 1931 I 160 1 5, 4az9amsC's-C ag of the Dance Committee were, Donald Williamson, William Clark, Edward Thomas, George Bohrer, Adolf Gobel, M. Simoncelli, W. Keyes and Duke Shea. The affair was pronounced a great success. The Cane Sprees again loomed up in public view as thirty aspiring yearlings re- ported for practice under Coaches Peraino and Gardner early in December. Thus the third interclass scrap was started with much interest, as each class had won one of the contests, and in the Student Board point system of scoring, the winner in this event would obtain a considerable lead over the opposing class, as the only other scheduled event on the program, would be Dinner Week, a light to the finish. Besides, it had become almost traditional for the second year men to triumph. as the past three matches had been won by the Sophomores. Of the thirty cane spree matches held in the T history of the sport, the Sophomores had won seventeen, the Freshmen ten and three had ended in a deadlock. Victory for the yearlings would mean the privilege of smoking class pipes on the campus after Washington's birthday, a much coveted and rare honor. Ralph Laycock, 1931 manager of the sport, arranged matches in seven designated weight classes, 115 pound, 145 pound, 158 pound, 175 pound and unlimited classes being represented. Solomon coached the second year men, approximately twenty-reporting for practice. Johnstone, Appel, Lombardo, Rosensweet, Amster, Fox, and Burger represented the Sophomores. Experience and strategy on the part of the Sophomores won the afternoon, six of the seven tilts having been captured by the second year men. By per- mitting their opponents to stay on the aggressive in the beginning of the matches, the Soph fighters were able to wear them down and linally secure the stick. ln the lightweight division, Johnstone, of the second year men defeated Martiner in a short and snappy bout lasting fifty-five seconds. ln the 125, pound class, Myron Appel, '31, won over 1. Friedman in a little over two minutes, while Lombardo '31, in the 135 pound match, walked away from Shafer '32, in twelve seconds, the fastest bout. Charles Tesar, in the 145 pound division, defeated Rosensweet, after a struggle of three minutes. This was the only Freshman victory in the entire series. Amster took six minutes to defeat Jay Hanson '32, in the 158 pound tilt, while Fox '31, in the longest match, took over eleven minutes to wrest the stick from Wood in the 175 pound bout. Harry Scott '31, ended the events of the day and clinched the victory for the Sopho- mores, when he disposed of Banko, in the heavyweight group. Doc Weiman refereed the bouts. The Sophomores again scored a victory, when they placed first in the lnterclass Track Meet, held early in February, tallying fifty points to their credit, -The Freshmen followed with 28 points, the Juniors third with 11 points and the Seniors fourth with 1 point. Everard was high scorer for the Sophs, gaining twenty-one points by three firsts and two seconds. Finally, by a score of 23 to 22, in an overtime game in the Gym, the Sophs defeated the Seniors in a brilliant game of basketball. THE HEAVYVVEIGHT BOUT H1611 JL9J QL ..l ROSTER OF THE CLASS OF 1931 Adolphe, Edward Agate, Frederick J., Jr. Ali, John L. Allens, Clarence W. Altman, Leon L. Amster, Harold F. Amster, Lewis E. Anderson, Everet A. Anderson, Willis C. Appel, Myron H. Appelgate, Raymond DeW. Arida, Hickmat K. Arnold, J. Kester Ashley, Eugene, Jr. Atkins, James S. Ayars, Laurence S. Baggett, Lewis F. Ballweg, Harry A. Banks, J. R. McReynolds Barcham, Irving S. Barlow, William H. Basler, Lloyd M. Bauer, Francis J. Bauser, Sydney C. Becken, Charles A. Becker, Sidney B. Bedrick, John J. Beisheim, George, Jr. Bell, William E. Bergen, John W. Berlow, Melville J. Bemfeld, Louis G. Beyer, Theodore H. Beyer, Werner Bieberstein, Ralph A. Birgel, Henry T. Bishop, Ellsworth C. Blaise, Edward, Jr. Bloomfield, Sylvan Bogdon, David O. Bohrer, George G. Bonynge, Robert J. Booth, Harold T. Bowles, William G. Boyd, Alfred A. Bradley, John W. Brams, Stanley R. Briganti, Anthony H. Britton, Howard A. Brown. Stanley M. Broderick, Adrian M. Broudy, Jacob Brown. Nathaniel W. Bruce. Peter P. Buchanan, Emerson Buchsbaum, Leonard S. Bull, John S. Bunbury. Frank E., Jr. Burger, Harvey W. Burgevin, Frederick E. Burggraf, Robert W. Burghardt, George C. Burr, Albert H. Cafarelli, Roosevelt Cafarelli, Saverio Camson, Edwin J. Cameras-Ledon, Miguel, Jr. Celiano, Joseph Chapman, Christopher J. Chasserot, Harry L. Childs, Russel W. Christman, Charles W. Clark, William W., Jr. Congdon, William H. Corsentino, Bartholomew E. Corso, Sam V. Costello, Francis V. Costigan, George B. Crapper, John C. Currie, Ronald S. Dailey, Franklin B. Dailey, Harry W. D'alessandro, Arthur J. Daley, Charles G. Dalsimer, Allan F. Danysh, Joseph A. Davies, Hugh, Jr. Dawson, Stanley R. DeFlice, Aurelius F. Delanoy, Nelson deMaya, Charles P. Dennick, William H. Devoe, Alan T. Dickler. Gerald Dietz, Richard F. Dilks, Jerome J. DiMunzio, Michael W. D'Isernia, Richard Donahue, Frank R. Dougall, Bernard DuFine, Irving H. Dunning, David W. Ebeling, Eugene W. Eberle, Merlo Edwards, Walter F. Eggleston, Maurice D. Egidio, Paul T. Ehrenberg, Martin F. Evans, Thomas Everard, Edward K. Ezayuk, Peter, Jr. Fagan, William H. Farwell, Fred W. Feldman. Jack L. Finan, James E. Finch, Richard F. Fischer, Robert J.' Fischer. Charles Henry III. I162j Fitz, Otis R. Fitzgerald, Harvey J. Fitzgerald, Walter J. Forestiere, Jasper A. Forrest, Charles D. Forster, Edward E., Jr. Fortner, Edward, Jr. Fox, Stephen M. Frank, Charles F. Freedman, Emanuel R. Freeman, Carl N. Frehner, Charles J. Friedman, Melvin I. Fritz, Milo H. Fruton, Joseph Furno, Vincent Gaeta, Louis E. Gallivan, Thomas F., Jr Ganzle, Carl M. Gaylor, Newton R. Gilchrist, William Gino, Frank S. Ginsberg, Irving Gluckman, Earl C. Gobel, Adolf, Jr. Gold, August B. Goldberg, Bernard Goldberg, Henry Goldberg, Isidor Goldfrank, Max Goldschmidt, Arthur E. Goldstein, Hyman Goldstine, Sydney Gordon, James Gordon. Myron Gordon, Philip Gore, Richard,T. Gozan, Henry A. Grafer. Harold Graubard, Seymour Graves, Madison B. Green, Harry S. Greene, Leon N. Greenberg, Lawrence J. Gregory. George, Jr. Grossi. Olindo Grover. Victor Guernsey. Robert W. Gustafson. Einer G. Hackett. Ralph E. Hadley, James N. Haedrick, Vincent W. Hall, Walter R. Haller, Ward M. Hamon, Francis J. Hanneken, Bernard J. Hanson. Herbert F. Harisiades, Alexander I-Iarsenji, Alexander J. Ca- AJ BQSK Hassialis, Menelaos Hastings, John Hawkes Lawrence P Heath, Millward W Heck, Charles B. Hewitt, Christian B. Hedekin, Edwin C. . Hirschfeld, Nathan B. Hinman, Ford B. Hladky, Emil Hoffman. Robert H. Holmes, Louis A. Holzinger, John F. Hopkins, Eli W. Hopkins, James D. Horvath, Walter J. Howard, Sumner J. Howell, John D. Hufnagel, Robert W. Hunt, Charles A. Hutchinson. Edward Ireland, Bernard P. Jaeger, Herman Jahelka, George W. Johnson, George V. Johnson, Percy Johnstone, George C. Jones, Richard H. Joseph, Stephen Kalamaras, Louis B, Keenan, James J. Kees, Walter T. Kehoe, William M. Keil, Francis C., Jr. Keller, Oscar Kelley, Frank R. Hartsell, Malcolm J. T Kendrick, Benjamin B.. Jr. Kiehl, Robert E. Kilgore, John M. Kilgore, Joseph Kirch, Frederick W., Jr. Kirk, Neville T. Kleefalo, Robert Klinger, Oliver C. Kohn. Leo Konselman. Charles B., Jr. Kourides, Peter T. Krebs, Harry Kuhlman, Herman R. Kuhlmann, John I-I. Kulikofsky, Charles W. Kun. Laszlo J. Kurtin, Abner Kuusiluato, David Lacey, Warren W., Jr. Laler, Howard L. Lamonsoff. Samuel Lamprinos, Gregory Landan, Frederirck L., Jr. Landow, Herman I. Landry, August F. Lane, William H., Jr. Larden, Olaf L. Laubshire, Kenneth Lavino, Joseph S. Laycock, Ralph T Leahy, Thomas V., Jr. Lebow. I-larry Lee, Granville W. Levin, Lester M. Levin. Samuel Levine, Bernard Levy, James Lifshutz, Edmund Lindberg, Ben A. Lindley, Frederick A. Lipsky, Daniel L. Lonbardo, Robert A. Loomis, Hart S. Low, William N. Lozier, Edwin R. Lundell. Cyrus L. Lusk, George W. Lyons, Hilany H., Jr. McBrian, Welford M. McCalmon, George A. McCarthy. Cornelius J. McCormick, Douglas N. McGee, Hugh E. McNamee, Thomas J. McSorley. John J. Mabon, John S. MacCaro, Henry A. Mahon. Justin D. Makinon, Ilpo Malmgreen. Henry P. Manfredi, Dan H. Mankue, Charles T. Marcus, Abraham Margolies, Hirsch H. Marino, Edmund R. Marro, Charles J. Marson, Rudolph E. Martin, Gerald M. Martinson, Edgar C. Massall, Edward M. Melichar, Joseph T. Merteno, Edward J. Metzner, Charles M. Meyer, Gerard Michaelson, Erwin T. Michels, Walter P. Midgley, James C., Jr. Miller, Herbert I. Miller, Joseph M. Mills, Leslie Milton. George A. Monaghan, Thomas E. Morrison, Albert L. Mortimor, Harry S. Moukad, Joseph E. Mullahey, William J. Muller, Edward B. Narodny. Leo H. Ng. Tsz N. Nichols, Clyde H. Nichols, John S. Nordstrom, Victor F. Obey, John E. O'Connell, James J. O'Cor1nell. John J. O'Keefe. Richard E. Olson, Victor 51631 Ostertag, Otto C. Panero, Hugh Pantalakos, George A, Pattenden, Franklin J. Paul, XVallace C. Paynter, Frank L. Peck, Ronald M. Penner. Sidney L. Peplan, Clifford H. Perley, Albert L. Perlo, Victor Pnster, Leonard C. Parrine, Alan J. Phelps, John R. Philipson, Albert Phillips, Randolph G. Piaget, Warren E. Pilgrim, Aubery Pingitore, Anthony J. Plage, Herbert Playle, George A. Pope. Douglas E. Powell, George M. Pratt, Eugene L. Pratt, Robertson Priestley, Leo R. Preite, Ernest D. Prince, Leon M. Puglisi, Vincent L., Jr. Pulver, Stanley Queneau, Paul E. Rahm, Eric T. Raley, Loker Rath, Walter Rathemacher, John J. Redfield, Richard B. Reeves. Edward A. Reilly, Philip J. Reilly, Thomas J. Reiner, Milton Reiss, Emil, Jr. Relyea, Hubert M. Rheaume, Alton V. Ridder, Herman H. Rigney. Harold J. Ripley, Paul H. Rissmann, Richard P. Rizzuti, Angelo Roe, Howard S. Roes. Jerome, Jr. Rogers, Edgar O. Romano, Vincent E. Rose, Paul C. Rosen, Samuel R. Rosenberg, Samuel I. Rosenblum, Louis Rosenbluth. Raphael H Rosensweet, Bernard Roshovsky. Hyman Rundlett, Howard F. Ryan, Luke F. Sage. Lester Salmon, Pierre J. Sass, Joan I. Schnetzer, Otto Schuler. George J. Scott, DeVallon D. we D-a9Jms6?a-C HL Scott, Henry, Jr. Scurti, Bernard Shapiro, Arthur Shapiro, Herbert S. Shapiro, Morton I. Shapiro, Nathan D. Shea, Adolph D. Shea, Raymond G. Sheridan, James E. Sherwood, Roland A. Simoncelli, Mario A. Sink, Frederick D. Slade, Eugene M. Smith, Arthur V. Smith, John E. Snyder, David U. Soden, William H. Solomon, Hyman L. Sonderlick, Theodore W. Spiller, Clifford R. Stanczyk, Joseph J. Stauracos, George B. Steenland, Marinus E. Stevens, Edward W. Stewart. Leo J. Stone, Raymond Strack, Vincent J. Stringer, William Stutz, Morris Sutton, George Swan. Charles H., Jr. Sweeney, J. Clement Sweeney, James R. Sweeney, Thomas F. Taggart, Leslie Tanz. Stanley S. Taylor, J, Richard Thomas, Edward H. Tierney, John Timiriasieff, John Travis, James R. Tressel, John A. Trevor, Bronson Trevor, John D., Jr. Triska, Alfred Trubowitz, Sidney Tull, Victor C. Tuttle, Silas B., Jr. Tuwiner, Sidney B. Tysdale, Richard V. Umansky, Julius J. Urquhart, Russell Vavrina. Raymond J. Votromile, Gerard Von Helms, Ereienrnuth Von Salzen, Charles F, Von Sneidern. Karl Voorhis, Henry A. Wakelee, Arthur H. Walker, Herman Walker, Howard L. Wallner, Louis W. Walter, Henry Ward. Granville 3: fc 7 'wir' ' I:164J Warwick, John L, Watkins, John B. Weinstock, Edward Weiss, Prank Wells, Arthur M. Wendt, Herbert E. Werner, Robert G. Westervelt, John L., Jr Weston, Frank E. Wayl, Nathaniel Whiting, Edmond J. Wikler, Abraham Wildebush, Joseph Wilhelm, Richard Willey, John S. Williams, George M. Williams, Richard F. Williamson, Donald E. Willing, Wildurr Wilson, Henry Wilson, Wallace R. Winkelman, Clifford S. Wise, Nathan A. Wright, Gordon Vifyler, Julius S. Yao, Sing C. Yerg, Richard W. Ziferstein, lsidore Zimmerman, Harold Zuzzolo. Dominick ff ' x 4 xm gz x . ff 5 GL N tx 0 G 0 . I JPRJESHMJEN N K N Z M fl - 3 3 4 5 5 THE CLASS OP 1932 DELAFIELD JONES VAN PELT GLADSTONE 1932 CLASS OFFICERS david n. jones President Wm. Wells van pelt richard delaield arthur gladstone Vice-President Secretary Treasurer I PRESHMAN CLASS COMMITTEES FALL DANCE , Wm. wells van pelt, Chairman richard delaiield freeman snyder john thomas arthur gladstone francis simmons r. shelley wood CHARMS A raymond fowlkes, Chairman david hunt lamoyne jones donald shaefer MANAGERS OF INTERCLASS SPORTS charles joyce-Baseball charles haughey-Boxing james mcnaughton-Basketball francis simmons-Wrestling julius dolgos+SWirnming Willard somers-Track MANAGER OF CANE SPREES robert n. cauldwell f167j Q.. ali i X- Y A! THE HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1932 EPTEMBER 27, 1928-a memorable day in the lives of the members of the class of 1932. On that day this class came into existence. A small, determined group gathered before the entrance of Hamilton Hall to light for the glory of the new-born class. Bewildered they huddled together, waiting for something to happen. Slowly, in front of the adjourning Hartley a muscular, husky gathering of sophomores gradually increased until they greatly outnumbered the new men. Jubilant at the small number of Freshmen present, they made ready for the fray. Victory seemingly on their sidejthe second year men urged the small, frightened group out onto South Field. There a surprise awaited them, for through the Broadway entrance there marched the main body of nrst year men, four hundred strong. With cries of 32 and Frosh they swooped down on the sophs and separated them from their shoes, garters, socks, shirts, and other things. Thus decisively did the class of '32 mark its entrance into Columbia. A few weeks passed with the new students gradually becoming acclimated to the customs of the campus and making the acquaintance of such celebraties as Blue Pete and Papa Nubling. Once more Soph-Prosh activities held sway and tug-of-war was the order of the day. The much advertised fire hose through which the vanquished were to be pulled turned out to be nothing more than a mere garden hose. The delegation of second year men being rather small, the ranks of the yearlings were thinned by industrious members of the Student Council. The sophs got the jump on the freshmen and won the nrst contest, but the latter had their revenge in the second encounter, pulling the entire sophomore tuggers past the hose. In a close final tug the older men were victorious and the usual parade along Broadway and Riverside Drive followed, vigorously opposed by the youngsters, who accomplished the feat of holding up traffic on Broadway for a full ten minutes. Then came the dreaded day on which the frosh were herded together on the South Field stands and under the vigilant eyes of the Black Avengers were forced to prove their knowledge of Columbia's songs and cheers. Weakly and feebly this was done, the erring first year men were weeded out and with the aid of mercurochrome were made to resemble as nearly as possible the original inhabitants of our continent. Soon followed the period when the freshman, humble and meek, came into his own. Suddenly he became popular. Numerous and persistent invitations poured in upon him, invitations to bounteous dinners, formal dances, long- drawn-out luncheons, and leisurely and luxurious smokers. Wherever he went the hand of brotherly love was extended to him and he must have had a strong constitution indeed to have escaped unassailed by acute indigestion. Alas, the two short weeks passed and the poor youth found himself disregarded, no longer the center of all activity. Orientation lectures' had held sway every Tuesday at 1:00, much to the delight of the knowledge-seeking frosh, However, in spite of a feeling of great loss, one of the lectures was called off in order to hold class elections. f168:I sa 4z9Jm5?sx as David Jones was chosen President of his class and W. Wells Van Pelt, 3rd, Richard Delafield, and Arthur Gladstone, were elected Vice-President, Secretary, and Treasurer, respectively. After a period of three weeks training the frosh met the sophs in the Cane Sprees. Here again experience triumphed. Six out of the seven bouts went to the older men and thus the class of '32 was doomed to a class-pipeless year. Dinner Week had been postponed until April this year thereby giving the frosh more time to formulate their plans. Several meetings were held and the yearlings were determined to wreck the soph dinner and to have a success- ful meal themselves. How successful they were a future historian must relate. Now for a glimpse of the class of '32 in athletics. The football season has been ex- tremely successfully complet- ed, the frosh turning in vic- tories over such teams as New York Military Academy, Roxbury, and C.C.N,Y. Ju- nior Varsity. In cross-coun- try, swimming, and basket- ball, they also managed to chalk up impressive victories. In interclass competition the class of '32 showed of what material it was compos- ed. With the aid of David Jones it annexed the interclass THE FRESHMEN AT T1-I1-2 SONG FEST tennis championship, a rare - occurrence in the history of Columbia. In interclass track the frosh finished a close second to the powerful sophomore class. Such stars as Ralph Hewitt, David Jones, Ray, Ruddy, Julius Dolgos, Willard Somers, George Rowland, Charles Joyce, Lou Bender, Hans Jorgensen, and James McNaughton have done much toward the achievement of success by the Freshmen and have made the future of Columbia's ranking in the realms of sport indeed look bright. fl69j ava9amQ..4x ROSTER or THE CLASS OP 1932 abbott, pierce ackerman, elbert d. agelolf, harry albertson, j. donald allan, william, h, allen, everett r. allen, james d. althaus, charles f. anderson, john anfanger, herman angus, david r. apisdorf, harold applegate, oliver e. arbiter, nathanael atkinson, Sheridan auer, edward e. auerbach, arnold m. aungst, herbert rn. avakian, karapet avedikian, souren z. avignone, carlo j. avins, jack bailey, merrill r. baker, douglas c. balquist, john W. banko, august f. baptiita, robert i. barg, henry. r. w. lsarone, michael barton, robert W. bases, leonard baxter, george l. beling, henry k. bender, louis bergen, teunis j. bermant, bernard l. bernard, robert, jr. binder, donald k. bischoff, gilbert r. bloom, edgar i.. jr. bloor, william bogoluboff, anatoly book. harold p. booth, george o. borsodi, ralph W. bough, james a, 1. brandstadter. eugene j. bratter, william j. breiter, mark c. britt, james a., jr. britton, george W. britz. irving j. bruell, frederick m. bruns, joseph b. buhler, louis burcher, william m. hurnet, norman c. cadogan, lawrence j. caldwell, robert n. callahan, parnell j. calvert. william g. campbell, William carnes. william h., jr. celeste, john c. checkovich, joseph chopin, alexander p. cohen, morris cohen, rowland b. cole, peter a. coletti, cataldo j. connelly, william f. cook, charles l. courtney, jeremiah d. coyne, peter j. crap, john r. curtis, burr h. curtis, russell h. czaplicki, eugene j. dana, lynn b. danaher. william r. darling, samuel t. deems, john delafield, richard m. demarinis, tiberius c. dibowski, charles c. dickinson, stuart difabio, frank dobson, john p. dolgos, julius donegan. raymond e. doorly, norman c. doscher, william f. j doyle. lawrence b. dreyer, john h. dreyfus, harold dunlap, gordon e. dworkowitz, kermit eagan, james m. eberstadt, lindley e. edling. edward h. edwards, ronald a. ellison, Socrates elson, milton i. emmerling. alfred engelhardt. earl W. engkjer. walter s. esch, albert g. evans. joshua l., jr. exner, max v. faluotico. joseph fanelli. joseph a. fay, albert h.. jr. fay. edward r., jr. feely, pallisted h. feld, charles a. Ella. joseph f. fleiss, arthur n. florsheim. james h. foley, william t. forhes. george b. foss, paul f. f17Oj fowkes, raymond f. fowler, frank e. fox. duncan e. frank, adam, jr. frapwell, henry W. frese, robert g. freyberger, george a. friedland, lester friedman, irving e. fruchtman, edward j fuld. joseph e., jr. furcht, theodore furman, sylvan S. gaguine. benito garcia, john r. gardner, otis a. gartner, peter h. garzetta, carmel gaskill, james r., iii gazik, ladislav geismar, maxwell d. germain, warren giesemann. george a. gildersleeve, george b. giordano, william c. girshick, meyer gittell, george gladstone. arthur gloster. arthur. j. goldberg, maurice goldberger, irving l. goldgraben. Seymour goldschmidt, henry j. goldstein, julius goldwasser, fred e. gorn, saul grahm, malcolm f, grahm, william c. grasso, thomas greenebaum, theodore greenfield. william a. gregory, alva k. gustafson, richard k. hagman, john S. haines. edward b. hall. edward b. halley rudolph halnan, john j. halper, edward p. hamann, john h. hanson, john d. harding. charlton c. harper, norman harris, alfred harris, reed haughey, charles j. havemeyer. frederick c hawkins. francis h. hefzer, edwin f. heiland. curt f. heller, jacob b. herbert. benne, s. hewitt, ralph a. heydecke. joseph f. hicks. keith s. higgins, leo r. hill, john d. hlavac. albert f. holbert, dwight h. holman. carl d. horowitz, eugene l. house, daniel k. houston, howard e. howard, george g. howard. george w. hughes. alfred s. hunt, david t. hyman, irwin jablonsky. william a. jackson, egbert s. jacobson. abraham s. jalil. cecil j. japar, romeo jenkins. robert e. joffe, eugene johnson, carl j. g. jones, lamoyne a. jorgensen, hans h. e. joss, emil t. joyce, charle a. joyce, richard e. kahn. richard f. kasa, william a. kehrer. william h. kellog. alonzo c. kelley, richard c. kennedy, chandler W. kennish, alan g.. jr. kenney, john kerr. harry t. kiefer, alfred W, kihss, peter f. king, gordon van beuren kinzel, otto, jr. kip. ira b. kish, ernest kleban, samuel klein. milton kleinbaum, alfred W. knapp, charles t, knehr, charles a. koenigsberg. samuel m. kohan, david j. kramer, herbert e. krasnow, bernard kritzler, godfrey f. kroll, paul kupperman, sydney kuster, gino f. lagas, frank lacina, milton laidhold, norman i. landsman, paul a. lang, julius a. lang, richard m. larson. alfred h. laster, morris lates. denton V. lautkin. arthur lawless, sydney a. lawton, edwin f. leahy, daniel a. leahy, francis t. leask, richard f. leonard, george s. levene, richard s. levett, irving l. levey, ralph g. lewis. alfred e. linden. erick g. lipsky. eleazar little. george I. lopiparo. peter letterhand. jason c. loud, william s. ludwig, william luxenberg, harold l. lyons. ernest t. mcandris. james p.. jr. mccormick. james h. mcduffee. william m. mcfadden. james r. mcgarry. frank m. mckane. leonard h. mclean. william g. mcloughlin. thomas f. mcnaughton, james d. mctague. frank h. macbain. gavin t. maccash. douglas macgready, donald l. mack. ira james mack, william m. mackay, william r. h. mackenthun. frederick j. maclagen, kenneth b. madonick. leon madow, william magill. harold k. mallin, edward j. maloney. james j. mankowitz, leonard mandelbaum. joseph margolis, isaac marks, eli s. marsh, louis t. martin, thomas t. martiner, joseph j. maun, cyril j. meehan, charles r. meehan, john t. merker, aaron miner. roy W. mischo, robert p. moisio, walfred r. molinaro. leopold moller, paul a. moloshok, ralph mantalbano. thomas d. moore, robert l. morehouse. richard e. morgan, james f. morass jerome moscato louis rnoskovitz. irving 51713 mosser, james d. mouradian, vahe muh, everett b. muller, rcne murray, francis j. murray, francis x. murray, howard j., jr. nacca, raphael m. nagourney, david neumaier, arthur neumuller, walter newcomer. earl h. nightingale. john e. nims, marshall g. nirrengarten. richard a. nisenson. aaron nobiletti, frank norton. george t. o'br.ien, matthew f. o'connor. george a. o'connor. william b. o'dea, john j. o'donnell, james f. o'donnell, william s. onorato. james owens. simon d. page. james pasqualicchio. francis f pastor. stephen v. pegram, william b. pennington. ralph i. peterson. richard o. a. phillips. robert j. piatt, howard r. pickett, robert s. pike, bertrand f. pitluga. george e. plant. jules a. pollard david h.. jr, posteraro, francis X. powell. joseph f. powers, phillip n. pozdena. milton o. prince. samuel proulx, romeo punzak, emil g. queneau, bernard r. ramirez, erasmo s. rackman, emanuel read. donald b. reidy, john t. richardson. william h., jr richter. donald a. riconda, leo j. ridgely, richard riemenschneider, otto r ritchie, thomas a. robertson, james a. robertson. robert f. robison, david v. robison. joseph b. roecker, roland d. rogow, david r. rojas. jorge l. rosen, sevmour rn. rosen. victor h. rosenfeld. mortimer a. AQBJMQA rosenthal, gabriel ross, donald d. roth, francis b. rotter, saul d. rowland, george n., jr rubin, mitchell sahrbeck, charles j., jr. salvo, Walter f. sanchez, alvaro m. santangelo, alfred e. scavroneck, louis scheel, Walter a. schelberg, edwin j. schluter, henry c. schmitt, john n. schmunsees, charles e. schneider, theodore g. schneller, William h. schwartz, isaac schwind, george, jr. scully, leonard t. segman, alexander seidman, lloyd g. sementa. joseph a. shafer, donald m. shaffer. james m. shaffer, robert l. shepard, george q. sherman, louis shilland. peter d. siegel, sidney sieger, henry f. silich, robert silverberg. nathaniel h. simmonds, jules g. simmons, francis g. simon. bernard e. Simons, robert smith. william a. snyder, freeman t. snyder, William l. socalof, milton sola, marcelino s. Solomon, irving somers, Willard h. songdahl, harry southwick, gilbert g. spaulding. irving s. spellman, frederick c. spicola, louis a. spinner, ernest spottswood, maurice d. springer, jonathan d., jr. stacey, alfred e.. 3d stackpole, paul c. stacy, robert s. steegrnuller, lawrence steinbrenner, ernest stelljes. henry steinmetz, carl stetkewicz, joseph d. Stillman, William b. stover, robert d. strait, almuth strasser, george W. strumpf, jerome c. teltsch, edward tenney, alvin h. tesar, charles thomas, john W. thompson. ernest c. thorne, charles W., jr. tighi, eugene timpanelli. alphonse traunstein, samuel treat, edwin p. truhlar, joseph turadian. george h. turner, charles l. j. Valery. William h. vanpelt, William wells vassiliades, theologos volckhausen, Walter r. Wadsworth. nhilip c. Waldman, julius l. Walker. marshall s., jr. Walsh, joseph d. Walsh, lawrence e. 3 C Am as Ifl72j Walsh, richard W. Ward, William a. Warden, shreve g. Warner, lewis j. Warren, lawrence y. Wasmuth, albert Webb, john n. Weber, edmund jr. Webersinn. arthur W. Weiman, waldemar W. Weir, frank m. weiss, gerard a. Weiss, oscar Wells, henry c. Wells, Webster p. Wells. William a. Wendorf, paul White, ernest b. White, harry n. White. john e. Whitner, chauncey h. Wibell, oke v. ' Wieder, emanuel s. wiegman, albert h. Wiggins, glenn m. Wiggins, harry W., 3 Wike. john s. Wilbur, jack a. Wilkens, edward b. Wilkens. william b. Williams, frederick r. Wiseman, joseph h. witze, claude s. o. Wolfram. julius wolkind. harold Wood. ralph s.. jr. wood, richard a. Wright, William j. Wronker, stanley s. Wycalek. julian zauderer. jerome zipser, stanley s. Zucker. mendel gm ATHLETICS Q23 er . ,fjiamxiis-C as get a national intercollegiate crown, through the medium of the 150-pound Blue and White crew, coached by Hugh Cilendon, in his irst year as assistant to his brother. The Lion lightweights, though beaten in the Blackwell race at Derby by Penn's 150-pound oarsmen, went to the Henley at Philadelphia at the end of May and, by the astonishing margin of five lengths in this short- distance race, led P-enn, Princeton, Yale and Harvard to win the Wright Chal- lenge cup and title. The Junior Varsity and Freshman crews were able to gain only one notable victory apiece, that of the Jayvee eight over Yale and Penn in the Blackwell race and the win which the Lion yearlings got over the Kent School eight, which had in previous years been more or less of a jinx for Columbia's freshman sweeps. At Poughkeepsie, however. both of these boats made poor impressions, coming in next to last in their respectiv-e races. Thus, on the whole, Columbia's crews get the major portion of the athletic honors for the year, since rowing continued to make the name of'Columbia in intercollegiate competition the symbol of Eastern Poughkeepsie supremacy. Since rowing and football can be regarded as far and away the two greatest major sports of Columbia's athletics, it is fortunate that although football failed, row- ing did not. The question as to whether the Glendons will be able to extend Columbia's high rowing standard indefinitely into the future has been said to rest with the candidates of the Class of l932, inasmuch as the set of oarsmen with whom the Lion coaches have been working for four years are to be lost. Perhaps this is so. We do not think so. We, on the contrary, believe that there will always be eight men at Columbia with whom a good coach will be able to work successfully enough to put out a high-rating crew. Rowing in this respect is not football, where at least two good teams are necessary to make a irst-rate eleven in major circles, ln lesser l928 success spotlight is a team which year in and year out pro- duces uniformly successful results. This is the fencing team, and, last Spring, Norman Cohn, '29E, Columbia's captain, practically single-handed won the In- tercollegiate Sabre Team Championship. The Blue and White leader captured the Individual title, and with John Ely '28L, the team title. Later, Cohn was chosen as one of the members of the American fencing squad which competed at the Olympics in Amsterdam. Aside from the triumph of Columbia's oarsmen and the fencing victory, the Blue and White's sports were attended with mediocre success. The perform- ances of the track team last Spring cannot be regarded as overly successful. Army's track team severed the hitherto unbroken string of Columbia's outdoor dual-meet victories in the first engagement of the season, although Brown and Syracuse were again vanquished. Joe Hagen and Anthony Ghillany, in the two-mile and javelin throw, were Coiumbia's point-scorers in the outdoor Intercollegiates. Hagen, who had beaten Reid of Harvard for the indoor championship, bowed to the Crimson runner at Cambridge. This year the Blue and White two-miler proved to be Columbia's sole point-scorer in the indoor intercollegiates by retaining his title. The 1928 baseball team did not live up to the expectations that the mate- rial had, aroused, although its victories included such satisfying triumphs as those in the final two contests of the season over Pennsylvania by 13 to 4 in the annual Commencement Day tilt, and in the closing game with Fordham by 3 to 2. The failure of the Lion ball players at the bat was responsible in the main for a record no better than eight won, seven lost and one tie with Brown. L177j 5, ,p,,9JmsC?s-X A, Art Smith, Joe Burke and Charley Cerny were the pitchers for Golumbia's nine and, on the Whole, Cerny ushered in the most successful season for the Blue and White. The victories Coakley's team got Were over St. Johns, Upsala, Princeton, Seton Hall, Williams, Dartmouth, Penn and Fordham. The fifth of Columbia's major sports-basketball-did not fare so Well as it should have. The Lion live was clearly the potential champion of the League. With a star center in George Gregory, a guard like Dave Smith, and veterans in Remey Tys and Don Magurk, the team was beaten twice by Dart- mouth and once by Yale and Penn in the League. The redeeming feature of the season was the triumph over Penn which the Lions garnered after the Red and Blue had been unbeaten in the East in seventeen games and in the League in seven straight tilts. The Meenanites were conquered also by St. Johns, Army, and by N. Y. UQ by a single point. For some reason or other, the team displayed unprecedented erratic-ness and was equal to any occasion in which it could be steamed up . The Freshman team proved to be one of the best in years, producing a marvelous record and such sterling players as Charlie Joyce, Dave Jones and Lou Bender. The 1928 cross-country team was led by Joe Hagen and Went Well until the Quadrangular run against Cornell, Penn and Dartmouth. Although the Lion harriers had finished beautifully the week before to trim Yale, theyifailed to do a thing, although Hagen was individual Winner. Joe finished Well up among the Hrst five in the Intercollegiate run, but the team was Way down on the list. With Bill Wright, l927-8 captain, Who had placed second in the Eastern 50-yard free style event and in the national fifty-yard title race, out of school, as Well as Giles Rae, who took fourth place in the Eastern title 200-yard breast- AT POUGHKEEPSIE f 17 8 J THE CHEERLEADERS DANNEMAN GUNTHER GARDNER stroke race, the Columbia swimmers completed their worst season in history, losing every meet. The water polo team fared slightly better but was handi- capped by lack of continued participation by some of the best men on the team. Coach Ed Kennedy, however, received the best Freshman swimming mate- rial Columbia had ever received when Ray Ruddy, youthful world-record-holder and Olympic team member, led a host of stars which included Hans Jorgenson, of Mercersburg, George Rowland, of Erasmus, Julius Dolgos, of Clinton, Rich- ard Joyce, a teammate of Ruddy at All-Hallows, Cieorge Donegan, of Manual Training, and others which gave the Lion cubs a splendid season including a brilliant victory over Princeton's frosh mermen. The Freshman relay team of Rowland, Joyce, Donegan and Dolgos cre- ated a new Columbia relay mark in l:4l 2-5 in beating Princeton. Another Lion mark to the credit of the remarkable yearlings was set by Dolgos swim- ming the 440-yard free style in 5:43 in the same meet. Rene Faure of the Varsity likewise created anew Columbia record for the 200-yard breaststroke in 2:46 4-5. Gus Peterson's wrestlers did not make out so well as had been expected. The loss of Captain Tom Simmons and the absence of a good ll5-pounder made it difficult for the mat coach to turn out a good team. The Lions behaved nobly, however, on Alumni Day by conquering Syracuse's grapplers in the main gymnasium. The 1928 tennis team won but one important match, that against Dartmouth, but with material from the freshman team was promised a better season in 'l929. However, Bowden and Tschorn won the Eastern Intercol- legiate Doubles Cup. The rifle outfit continued with high success in the Eastern States Rifle League, finishing in a tie for the title. 51793 QDJWQLN .4 J ATHLETIC AWARDS Joseph Burke Charles Cerny Ralph Furey Charles Harris Ernest Costes Nathan Ancelewitz Richard Kessler, Mgr. 'William J. Madden Robert Berman William Blesse Horace Davenport Malcolm Bonynge Henry Danneman Arthur Howell, Mgr. Charles Fremd W. Wayne Battelle Robert Brooks Jacob Edelstein Anthony Ghillaney MAJOR SPORTS Baseball C August Hovorka Alfred Kunitz James Morrison bCb lrwin Freundlich Charles Link l 929 James Connor Basketball C Donald Magurk William Middleton Fred Rieger bCb Prescott Blatterman Crew C With Crossed Oars Arthur Douglas Thomas Kerrigan Eric Lambart Junior Varsity Crew C Richard lnce John Murphy Lionel Nobert Darius Phillips rCr Hugh Gardner Jesse Moskowitz Track C Joseph Hagen Charles Hamilton Raymond Hanley Herbert Holiner rCt H. Bayley R. Brown C. Lea J. Bogle E. Hill F. Keppel Indoor Track C Joseph Hagen Percy L. Griilith Varsity Football C Wm. F. Adler, Capt. Hyman Ashman Malcolm Bleeker Wm. B. Buser James L. Campbell George Costigan Horace E. Davenport Robert Hamilton Jacob Kliegman Henry W. Kumpf E. P. Liflander William Makser I:18O:l Arthur Smith John Thorsland Remy Tys Robert W. Watson, Mgr. William Paxson Remy Tys George Urbach Robert Watson 7 William Lightbowne Alastair MacBain Samuel Walker James Reynolds Fred Rieger William Sanford Harold Rousselot Charles Lea Robert Mindlin Robert Pond Owen Brown, Mgr. L. Slattery P. Schweitzer David K. Bouton. Manager Harold A. Rousselot, Mgr. H. Harrison Scott James Sheridan Joseph Stanczyk Edward Tassi Remy Tys 4'Dams9gx E. S. Anderson XVm. Barlow John XV. Bradley Earl Carlsten Winslow Ames John Domenech John Fiske John Atkinson Frederick Banfield David K. Bouton. Mgr. Norman Cohn Hugo Alessandroni Eugene Ashley, Jr. John W. Benjamin Wm. E. Bell Wm, Blesse John C. Daniel, Mgr. John O. Deming Pallister Feely Julian J. Fried Louis Goodman John Cahalan John Daniels Myron Cummings Ronald Allwork Frank Bowden Clarence Conard Charles Booth Frank Bowden Melville Brill fCt Carl Ganzle Victor Glenn Arthur Hill Ford Hinman MINOR SPORTS 150 Ib. Crew Major C Hugh Gardner Sheridan Garratt Edward liilroe Cross Country Minor C Edward Brause George Gorbatenko cCc John Thirlwall Fencing Major C John Ely Minor C Genaro Cautino Donald Dow fCt Julius Roth J. V. Football Minor jCv Merrill Gille Haakon Gulbransen Stanley Lowell Hart Loomis Charles H. McKinney James Morrison Edward A. Mueller Paul S. Nonn Rifle Major C F. W. Frey Everett Garnsey Minor C rCt Archie Sabin Swimming Minor C Frederic Dassori, Mgr. Rene Faure Alfred Forsyth Richard Goetze sCt Horace Davenport Tennis Major C Minor C Edward Hymes 51811 John Nichols Vifm. Rydell Louis Slattery Philip Raff Harold Rousselot Kenneth Schenk Joseph Hagen Edward Joyce Joseph Tierny Frederick Plumb Alan Tompkins Victor H. Nordstrom Benjamin Raines H. S. Shapiro Mario A. Simoncelli Herman E. Swettman Wm. Treiber John W. Van Pelt Frank A. Zaklasnik Pierre Malraison Merrill Furbush Francis Wood Charles Horton Giles Rae William Wright Frank Zeitlin Frank Tschorn David Sargent 4-,9amsQax tCt George Hammond Victor Sheshunolf Water Polo Minor C Thomas Brown Daniel Clifford Frederic Dassori John Agayoff George Brown Earl Carlsten Renato D'Angelo Edward Baker Ralph Byers John Bradley George Bohrer George Costigan Thomas Gallivan John Bradley George Gregory Francis Egel Maurice Levin Ambrose Peraino wCp Henry Osterholz Minor C Ernest Cuneo Norman Flint wCt John Carson George Farmlett Junior Varsity Wrestling jCv Orrin Clark George Farmlett David Krosnick FRESHMAN SPORTS Baseball 1 93 l Charles Heck Louis Kalamaras George Schuler Herman Swettman Basketball 1931 George Milton Victor Nordstrom 1931 With Crossed Oars Ralph Hackett John Obey Howard Walker 1929-Frederick vom Saal Crew Stephen Fox Carl Ganzle David Kuusiluato 19 2 9-Joseph Geagen Peter Blasi Cataldo Colletti Peter Coyne John Dreyer Joseph Fanelli Irving Levett Edwin Lozier Walter Michels Victor Nordstrom 1931 Frank Kiel Floyd Sanford Cross Country 193 Z James McAndris John Meehan Romeo Proulx Walter Rath Freeman Snyder 19 3 0-Frederick Moloney Fencing 1 9 3 l John Bergen Nelms Black 1929-Edmund Fritz If 182 :I Joseph Rongetti Robert Williamson Charles Yankauer John Nichols Thomas Simmons Horace Robbins Donald Peyser Mortimer Schultz Daniel Zuckerman John Obey 1929-James Con Minor bCt-Harry David Smith R. Shea Herman Swettman Clifford Spiller Alfred Triska Henry Walters Charles Metzner Marcelino Sola William Somers I-Xlmuth Strait Paul Wendorf Joseph Wiseman William Kees Rudolph Marsten DOI' Bowman 4fL9aWsC?1-C James Allen Charles Althous Herbert Aungst August Banko Michael Barone John Deems Lindley Eberstadt Minor C-Eaton Goldthwaite Louis E. Gaeta Madison B. Graves Charles A. Monroe Paul E. Queneau 1930-Milo A, Durand Adolf Gobel Walter Hall John Howell Joseph Kreuttner Paul Monn 19 3 O-XVilliam Duesselman Harvey Burger John Holzinger 19 2 9-Charles Gunther William Clark Edward Everard William Gilchrist Frank Gino George Gregory Ralph Hackett 19 2 9-David Bouton Edward Eortner Carl Ganzle Frederick Kirch David Kuusiluato 19 2 9-Robert Farlow Harold Amster Lewis Amster 19 2 9-Charles Kezar Foolball 1932 Ralph Hewitt Edward Hall Romeo Japar Charles Joyce James Mosser Frank Nobiletti Rifle 1 93 1 Raymond Vavrina Swimming l 93 1 Leslie Taggart Tennis 193 1 Donald Williamson Track 1931 John Tierney Water Polo 1931 John Warwick Wrestling 1931 Henry Scott I: 183 :I Gordon Spencer William Valery Stuart Van Voorhees Lewis XVarner Arthur Webersinn Edward Weinstock Ralph Wood William B. Short John E. Smith Robert 'W. Stafford Marinus Steenland Leon Prince Howard Roe Edgar Rogers Luke Ryan Adolph Shea 1 9 2 9-Robert Farlow Howard Roe Raymond Stone George Jahelka Abner Kurtin Robertson Pratt Henry Scott James Sheridan John Smith Floyd Sanford Marinus Steenland William Stringer Samuel Rosenberg Ben Lindberg Hubert Relyea DAVENPORT KUMPF MACBAIN THE UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE ON ATHLETICS HE University Committee on Athletics is the body of linal authority on matters pertaining to Columbia sports, It is composed of three members of the Alumni, three University Officers, three Seniors and the Graduate Man- ager, ex-oficicio. One of its most important functions is passing on the eligi- bility of competitors. Alumni Members Rogers Bacon, '96, Chairman Gale H. Carter, '96S Robert W. Watt, '16 University Officers Dr. Edward S. Elliot Frank D. Fackenthal, '06 Edward J. Grant, '09, Secretary Undergraduate Members Alastair MacBain, '29 Horace E. Davenport, '29 Henry W. Kumpf, '29 Graduate Manager Reynolds Benson, 'l5S fl84:I I I l . g . 46 ff ,N C '-0 BASEBALL - m 0 - g 3 4 - 1928 VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM WATSON LINK BURKE MAYER COSTES FREUNDLICH CERNY TYS GLENN CAMPBELL ANCELEWITZ COAKLEY BARRETT MORRISON HOVORKA FUREY SMITH KUNITZ THORSLAND PAXSON HARRIS CONNOR C:- fugamafx 1928 VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM CAPTAIN SMITH Outfiela' Ralph Purey, '28 John Thorsland, '29 Remey Tys, '30 Ernest Costes, '30 Charles Link, '29 Pitchers Joseph Burke, '29 Charles Cerny, '30 Arthur Smith, '28 Captain Robert W. Watson, '28 Manager James E. Connor, '29 Assistant Manager John S. Henry, '30 2nd Assistant Manager Andrew Coakley Coach COACH COAKLEY li 187 :I MANAGER WATSON Infield Charles Harris, '30 August I-IoVorka,.'30 James Morrison, '30 Arthur Smith, '28 James Campbell, '30 Irwin Freundlich, '29 William Paxson, '30 - Catcher Alfred Kunitz, '29 THE 1928 VARSITY BASEBALL SEASON ITH a record of eight games won, seven lost and one tied out of the sixteen played, the Varsity baseball team of 1928, like its '27 predecessor made a fair record, but failed to distinguish itself except for three games in the latter part of the season. Of the Quadrangular League opponents, Dartmouth was defeated 10 to 7 in a special game at Hanover played because the two scheduled games were both called off owing to inclement weather. Pennsylvania beat the Lions by one run at Philadelphia in May but in the Alumni-Day game on June 2 at Baker Field the Lion Varsity rose to the inspiration of the presence of two thousand cheering alumni and trounced the Quakers 13 to 4. Cornell, the remaining league opponent, reversed the 1927 record recompletely and beat Columbia in both the games of the cup series, winning by one run in each case, 6 to 5'and 4 to 3. The outlook at the beginning of the season was excellent for the Morn- ingside aggregation. Three good pitchers in Smith, Cerny and Burke furnished Coakley with sufficient strength in the batteries, with the veteran and able Al Kunitz behind the plate. Captain Art Smith, when he was not in the box, held down the short stop berth and was without doubt the best all-around ball player the team possessed. 1 Three Sophomores, Havorka at lirst, Morrison at second and Campbell at third formed the rest of the infield and except for a certain amount of ragged- ness owing to inexperience, performed capably. Preundlich replaced Campbell toward the middle of the season at third except that Freundlich played short and s ..,,,....- A .L HARRIS SACRIFICES, THORSLAND Go1No TO THIRD CPENN. GAMED I iss 3 IN THE DUGOUT Campbell went to third when Art Smith was in the box. Harris who came out later in the season was also used at the third sack in several games. ln the outfield Captain-elect Jack Thorsland, Ralph Furey and Remy Tys formed a capable hard-hitting trio. Havorka at first base, however, was the home run king of the outfit with as high as two a game to his credit. 1 The season opened at Baker Field auspiciously on April 3 with a victory over St. Johns, 6 to 2, and two days later Upsala was defeated 9 to 1. Cerny, although playing his first game of Varsity ball, pitched like a veteran in this game and the infield made but one error. Manhattan was the Hrst snag. The visitors from Riverdale scored four runs in the first frame and were never headed, winning handily, 12 to 6. A strong Brown team came to Baker Field for the next game and an improved Lion tied the Providence outfit l to l. The Yale and Syracuse games at Baker Field were both postponed because of rain and then the first foray out of town into an enemy stronghold resulted in a 4 to O shutout over Princeton. Cornell, Columbia's first league opponent, gave Coakley's men a stiff battle at Ithaca and finally scored in the last half of the twelfth inning. Cornell nicked Smith for two singles and Smith passed Degenhardt to get at Hebert who made good for the lthacans by batting out a clean hit that brought a run across the plate and sent the tally to 4 to 3 favor Cornell. The next two games were both called because of inclement weather, Dart- mouth wiring to Manager Watson that the Hanover field was buried in snow drifts. The Amherst game was called because of rain. The Lions then defeated Seton Hall in a one-sided game, 13 to l, the Blue and White Varsity pounding two pitchers for eight runs in the first inning. ln the second game with Cornell, on Friday, May 4, the Varsity again went down to defeat by a one-run margin, though it was to some extent atoned 51891 . I . wi- ,. . ., c THORSLAND SAFE AT FIRST for by a 2 to l defeat administered the Cornell Freshmen at Ithaca by the Columbia Frosh. The Saturday following the team journeyed to West Point for the annual Army game, with high hopes, but again the Varsity went down to defeat, 2 to O. Pennsylvania the following Tuesday gave the nine its third straight defeat in another twelve inning game in what the New York Times called one of the most sensational games seen on Franklin Field in recent years. During this encounter Al Kunitz collapsed as a result of being hit by a pitched ball and was taken from the game. It was beginning to look like a dry season for Columbia when, with Art Smith starring, the Lions shut out Williams at Williamstown 5 to O and then decisively defeated Dartmouth at Hanover IO to 7 for the irst league victory. After trailing the Green aggregation 5 to 2 for seven innings the Lions received their chance when Harris, Dartmouth pitcher blew up and allowed six runs to cross the plate. before the side could be retired. Charlie Cerny, star Sophomore hurler, was sent to the showers in the fourth inning after five runs had been scored by the Hanover outit. Joe Burke, who replaced him, did well except for the seventh inning when a home run with a man on base netted two runs for Dartmouth. Smith and Thorsland each collected three hits and each scored twice during the game. The infield functioned well, but one error being committed by the Morningsiders, while Dartmouth was guilty ,of no less than six. The Lion was Yale's sixth consecutive victim in the next game, played at New Haven. Eight Yale hits and thirteen passes and a wild pitch by the Columbia pitcher were enough to bring the score to 8 to 4 in favor of Yale. Columbia lost the next game to Rutgers at Baker Field, 6-2. Poor fielding offset the good work of Joe Burke who allowed but five hits. In the annual Alumni Day game the team showed renewed vigor to over- whelm Pennsylvania by a score of 13-4, before what was easily the largest crowd of the season. This marked the second of the Blue's only two league I:190j .an ram. HOLD IT! victories. Columbia scored eight runs in the first inning, one in the fourth, three in the fifth and one in the eighth, making a total of 13 hits. Penn was held to seven hits and four runs. Furey and Kunitz had a gala day at bat, each collecting three hits in four trips to the plate. Cerny started the game but was replaced on the mound by Burke in the fifth inning, after which Penn made but two hits. The season closed on June sixth when the team defeated Fordham for the second time in as many seasons. This victory, by the close score of 3-2, brought the total of games won to eight, as against seven defeats, and improved the Lion's standing considerably inasmuch as Fordham had one of the best teams in the east, The '28 team started strong, fell into a slump showing the effects of too large a proportion of Sophomores on the nine and finally pulled out of the slump sufficiently to beat Williams, Dartmouth, Penn and Fordham toward the end of the season. With the added experience supplied to the Sophomores by the l928 season and with the addition of at least two good players from the l93l nine, Coakley was promised an effective 1929 combination. The loss of Smith, Furey and Kunitz followed the 1928 campaign. fl9IfI ,gL9J kQsx 5, .Q VARSITY BASEBALL SCHEDULE, 1928 Date Ar Opponents Score-Columbia Opponents April 3 Columbia St. Johns 6 2 5 Columbia Upsala 9 l 7 Columbia Manhattan 6 12 9 Columbia Brown 1 1 ll Columbia Yale Game called-rain 14 Columbia Syracuse Game called-rain 18 Princeton Princeton 4 0 21 Hanover XDartmouth Game postponed 26 Ithaca D Cornell 3 4 27 Columbia b Dartmouth Game called-rain 28 Columbia Amherst Game called-rain May 2 Columbia Seton Hall 13 l 4 Columbia P'tCornell 5 6 5 West Point V Army 0 2 8 Philadelphia 'Pennsylvania 4 5 12 Williamstown Williams 5 O 13 Hanover 3'Dartmouth 10 7 15 New Haven Yale 4 8 17 Columbia Rutgers 2 6 19 Columbia N. Y. U. Game called-rain June 2 Columbia ,'4Pennsvlvania 13 4 6 Columbia Fordham 3 2 yt Quadrangular League Games. Won 8: Lost 75 Tied 1. 3 C dl IN. 'wir' 51921 ff ' X , '9 . ' A M -2 TRACK 5 A5 ' M M ,f l , -A , , , g a l s 1928 VARSITY TRACK TEAM RYDELL BRAUSE MEYERS SLATTERY MERNER AXELROD KNOWLES BROWN SCHWEITZER BOUTON HAGEN EDELSTEIN LEA GHILLANY POND BATTELLE BROOKS HANLEY LEWIS JOYCE GORBATENKO QP t AxL9JmQs-C 1 THE 1928 VARSITY TRACK TEAM Carl J. Merner Coach S prin ls Carl Axelrod '27 Jacob Edelstein '29 Rubin Lewis '29 Raymond Mindlin '28 John P. Sacco '29 Peter Schweitzer '30 Middle distance John Bogle '28 Robert Brown '30 Charles Hamilton '28 Clayton C. Knowles '28 Ingo Maddaus '30 Robert Mannheim '28 Collin D. Meyers '29 Hurdles Bernard Axelrod '30 Wayne Battelle '29 Prescott Blatterman '30 MANAGER BROWN Owen P. Brown '28 Manager COACH MERNER I 195 I David K. Bouton, '29 ' Assistant Manager Distance John Atkinson '29 Edward Brause '29 Joseph Hagen '30 Edward Joyce, '30 Charles Lea '30 Daniel P. O'Grady '29 Field Harold H. Bayley '30 Robert B. Brooks '29 Anthony Ghillany, Bu Raymond Hanley '30 Edwin A. Hill '29 Herbert Holiner '28 Paul Keppel '28 James Murphy '30 Robert Pond '29 William Rydell '29 Louis Slattery '29 .49 THE 1928 VARSITY TRACK SEASON ARSITY track during the 1927 season was fairly successful, the team defeat- ing Brown and Syracuse in dual meet encounters and Joe Hagen capturing the I. C. A. A. A. A. Indoor two-mile title in the '28 and '29 championships. In addition Anthony Ghillany took a second in the javelin throw at the I. C. A. A. A. A. Outdoor Championships at Cambridge and Hagen took second in the two-mile run at the same meet. Army was the only victor over Columbia in the Lion's dual meets. Along with Hagen and Ghillany, Hamilton, Hanley, Battelle, Mindlin, Edelstein and Griffith scored with a fair degree of regularity during the season and were consistent and sure point winners in the dual meets. In the Fordham games, the opening meet of the indoor season, for the Blue and White runners, Joe Hagen won the mile handicap and Chuck Lea placed third in the 440-yard handicap. Hagen, in winning the mile, defeated Joe Hickey of New York University who the following season beat Phil Edwards of the same school to annex the Intercollegiate mile title. The Brooklyn College games were next on the program and Hagen went down to defeat before Schaacklette of Manhattan in a handicap two-mile. Hagen came back strong a short time later, however, and in the Indoor Inter- collegiates took the title, coming in irst to beat Totten of Union by twenty feet. Hagen ran a beautiful race and duplicated the feat a year later to win the title two years in a row. Joe won the '29 championship run by almost half a length, beating Levering of Cornell and Captain Jimmy Reid of Harvard, JOE HAGEN WINS THE TWO MILE RUN IN THE SYRACUSE MEET I: 196 1 ' - - W fiffri fi BATTELLE BEATS BARBUT1 OF SYRACUSE who had beaten the Columbia entry the previous June in the outdoor inter- collegiates at Cambridge. Percy Griflith made Columbia's only other score in the '28 championships by taking fourth in the broad jump. Army defeated Columbia in the Lion's first dual meet of the season, 93 to 42, but the Lions came back strong to win the Brown and Syracuse encounters. ln the Army meet Ghillany took first in the javelin throw, beating Simon of the Army with a toss of 170 feet and seven inches. Edelstein took two events, leading the cadet entries to the tape in the century and in the 220-yard dash. Joe Hagen unexpectedly lost the two-mile to Lermond of the Army but Hamil- ton gained first place for Columbia in the 880 yard run ,defeating Dice and Pram of West Point. Cadet Wood took first in the hammer throw with Hanley and Rydell of Columbia following him. Cadet Jark broke the Academy record with a toss of 136 feet five and a half inches in the discus throw, while Sprague smashed another home mark when he put the shot 46 feet four and one-half inches. Army cleaned up in the mile run, the pole vault, the high jump and the discus to clinch the meet. Syracuse proved the season's Hrst Victim of the Lion when the Orangemen came to Baker Field to be beaten by the narrow margin of 71 to 64. Entering the discuss throw, the last event on the program, Slattery, Hanley and Ghillany placed one, two, three for the Blue and White to carry off the meet. Ray Hanley tied Ray Barbuti, Syracuse's Olympic champion, for high scor- ing honors, each man winning thirteen points. Battelle beat Barbuti in the high hurdles to take iirst place and Hagen took the two-mile without much difficulty, beating Fairbrother by half a lap. Hamilton jumped the field at the start in the half mile and stayed in the lead till the end, though severely pushed in the stretch by Rubardo of the visitors, the two men pounding down the last hundred yards with Hamilton a bare pace in the lead. Brown was the next and last victim of the Lion when the Rhode Island aggregation went down to defeat by a score of 77M to 57M at Providence. The Brown outfit was able to triumph in only three of the track events and took three firsts in the field. Joe Hagen set a new mark for the Providence fl97fI SYRACUSE WINS THE HUNDRED track when he took the two-mile in 10:01, while Ghillany also set a new record for the Brown Held when he hurled the javelin 190 feet and five inches. Collins of Brown set a new mark for the Bruin's track in the 220-yard low hurdles, while Kearns hung up a new record in the mile run. Columbia cleaned up in the sprints, Mindlin winning the century and Edel- stein taking second, while Lewis tied Collier of Brown for third place. Schweit- zer of the Lions won the 220-yard dash, his team mates, Mindlin and Edel- stein, taking second and third. Boyle beat Howard and Kelly of Brown in the 440, while Hamilton won the 880 by beating Kearns of the Bruins. Mannheim of Columbia placed third. Kearns came back later, though, and won the mile run with Lea and Meyers of the Lions second and third. Battelle lost to Collins, Brown's inter- collegiate champion, in both hurdle events but forced the Bruin runner to a new mark for the track in the 220-yard low hurdles. ln the weight events Pond of Columbia won the hammer throw and Hanley the shot put, while Par- ber and Cornsweet of Brown took first and second in the discuss throw with Slattery of the Lions third. Hanley took second in the hammer throw and Cornsweet third, while Cornsweet placed second in the shot put to Hanley, and Cuhillany took third. . Cihillany won the javelin throw for Columbia with a new mark for the Bruins' field and Hill of the Lions took second. Holiner and Brooks placed Hrst and second in the broad jump. ln the Blue and White and Carney of Brown took third. Stephens of the Providence outit placed first in the pole vault and Baylor garnered second place for Columbia. In the remaining Held event, the high jump, Keppel tied Pachard of Brown for third place. With the dual meet season over, the Blue and White representatives jour- neyed to Cambridge in June for the climax of the season, the Outdoor Inter- collegiates in the Palmer Stadium at Harvard. There Joe Hagen placed second to Captain Jimmy Reid of Harvard in the two-mile run and Anthony Ghillany took second to Hines of Georgetown in the javelin throw. Reid just nosed out the flying Hagen in the final spurt to the tape. Reid won in 9:42 while I fl98J 9. -.ILQJWLQFGC ue Hagen, who has done 9:30 on a board track for the distance, was slowed con- siderably by the very sloppy going. Ghillany hurled the javelin 199 feet and four inches to come through just behind Hines of Georgetown with a mark of 200 feet and ten inches. SUMMARY OF THE VARSITY TRACK SEASON Columbia, 42-Army, 93: May 5, 1928. 100 yds.-Won by Edelstein, CCD: Sawin, CAD, second: Stuart, CAD third. Time- 0:10. One Mile-Guertler, CAD, Vittrup. CAD Rasmussen, CAD, in dead heat for Hrst Time-4:35. 220 yds.-Won by Edelstein, CCD: Sawin. CAD, second: Axelrod, CCD, third. Time -0:22. 120 yd. High Hurdles-Won by Luckett. CAD: Battelle, CCD, second: Murrell, CAD, third. Time-0:15 9f10. 440 vds.-Won by Hall, CAD: Brown, CCD, second: Dent, CAD, third. Time- O:51 7f10. Two Miles-Won by Lermond, CAD: Hagen, CCD, second: Kissner, CAD, third. Time-9:30. 220 yd. Low Hurdles-Won by Piper, CAD Z Vestal, CAD, second: Battelle, CCD, third. Time-0:25. 880 yds.-Won by Hamilton. CCD: Dice. CAD. and Traub, CAD, tied for second. Time-2:05. Pole Vault-Won by Barnes, CAD 1 Hutchin- son. CAD, second: Parks, CAD, third. Height-12 ft. High Jump-Luckett, CAD, Landon, CAD, and Brett, CAD, tied for first place. Height --5 ft. 6 in. Discus-Won by Jark, CAD, C136 ft. 5 in.D: King, CAD, second: Elias, CAD, third. CNew Army record.D Shot Put-Won by Sprague, CAD, C46 ft. 493 inD: Hanley, CCD, second: Elias CAD. third. CNew Army Record.D Javelin-Won by Ghillany, CCD, C170 ft. 7 in.D: Simon, CAD, second: Spiney, CAD, third. Broad Jump-Won by Stuart CAD, C22 ft. 592 inD: Brooks, CCD, second: Holiner, CCD, third. Hammer Throw-Won by Woods, CAD, C133 ft. l in.D: Hanley, CCD, second: Rydell. CCD, third. . : x- yt. f . HAMILTON BREAKS THE TAPE IN THE HAI E MILE 51991 5. ,mqamxegx D A, SUMMARY OP VARSITY TRACK SEASON CONTINUED Columbia, 71-Syracuse, 64: May 12, 1928 100 yds.-Won by Barbuti, CSD : Harwood, CSD. second: Lewis, CCD, third. Time -0:10 1f5. 220 yds.-Won by St. Claire, CSD: Edel- stein, CCD, second: Putnam, CSD, third. Time-0:22. 440 5Vd3.-WOR by Barbuti, CSD: St. Claire, CSD, second: Denton, CSD, third. Time -0:51 215. 880 yds.-Won by Hamilton, CCD : Rubar- do, CSD, second: Maddaus, CCD, third. Time-2:00 3,f5. 120 yd. High Hurdles-Won by Battelle, CCD, Wiggins. CSD, second: Axelrod, CCD, third. Time-0:17. 220 yd. Low Hurdles-Won by Battelle. CCD: Barbuti, CSD, second: Wiggins. tsp, third. Time-0:25 3f5. One Mile-Won by Godell, CSD : Lea, CCD, second, Hardin, CSD, third. Time-4:39. Two Miles-Won by Hagen, CCD: Pair- brother, CSD, second: Joyce, CCD, third. Time-10:20. High Jump-Won by Schwartzman, CSD: Keppel, CCD, second: Kepner, CSD, third. Height-5 ft. 8 in. Hammer Throw-Won by Hanley, CCD: Pond, CCD, second: Cornell, CSD, third. Distance-136 ft. l in. Pole Vault-Won by Briegleb, CSD: Bay- ley, CCD, second: Cornell, CSD, third. Height-10 ft. 8 in. Shot Put-Won by Hanley, CCD: Ghillany, CCD, second: Raymond, CSD, third. Dis- tance-41 ft. 5M in. Broad Jump-Won by Harwood, CSD: Brooks, CCD. second: Holiner, CCD, third. Distance-21 ft. 8 in. Javelin Throw+Won by Ghillany, CCD: Gould. CSD, second: Hill, CCD, third. Distance-174 ft. 6 in. Discus Throw-Won by Slattery. CCD: Hanley, CCD, second: Ghillany, CCD, third. Distance-111 ft. S in. Columbia, 77M-Brown, 57M: May 14, 1928. 100 yds.-Won by Mindlin, CCD: Edel- stein, CCD, Collier. CBD and Lewis, CCD, tied for third. Time-0:10 3f5. 220 yds.-Won by Schweitzer, CCD : Mind- lin, CCD, second: Edelstein, CCD, third. Time--0:23 3f5. 440 yds,-Won by Bogle, CCD: Howard, CBD, second: Mannheim. CCD, third. TimeQ2:00 315. One Mile-Won by Kearns, CBD : Lea. CCD, second: Meyers, CCD, third. Time- 4:27. Two Miles-Won by Hagen, CCD: Shotten, CBD, second: Hard, CBD, third. Time- 10:01. 12O yd. High Hurdles-Won by Collier, CBD: Leland, CBD, second: Battelle, CCD, third. Time-0:15 3f5. 220 yd. Low Hurdles-Won by Collier, CBD: Battelle, CCD, second: Crull, CBD, third. Time-0:25 115. Shot Put-Won by Hanley, CCD: Corn- sweet, CBD, second: Ghillany, CCD, third. Distance-43 ft. 1 in. High Jump-Won by Russel, CBD : Packard, CBD, and Keppel, CCD, tied for third. Height-5 ft. 8 in. Hammer Throwv-Won by Pond, CCD: Hanley, CCD, second: Cornsweet, CBD, third. Distance-125 ft.-5 in. Pole Vault-Won by Stephens, CBD : Bayley, CCD. second: Bennet, CBD, third. Height -10 ft., 9 in. Broad Jump-Won by Holiner, CCD: Brooks, CCD, second: Carney, CBD, third. Distance-21 ft. 1M in. Discus Throwv-Won by Farber. CBD : Corn- sweet, CBD, second: Slattery, CCD, third. Distance-116 ft. 7 in. Javelin Throwv-Won by Ghillany, CCD: Hill. CCD, second: Hardy, CBD, third. Distance. 190 ft. 5 in. KZOOJ THE 1928 VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY SEASON HE team concluded the 1928 season without having suffered a single defeat in dual meets. An eighth place was achieved in the Intercollegiates with Captain Joe Hagen taking fifth. In the four-cornered contests the team did not display the prowess which they showed in the earlier dual meets, finishing second to N. Y. U. in the Columbia-N. Y. U.-Manhattan-Fordham run and third to Cornell and Dartmouth in the Columbia-Cornell-Dartmouth-Pennsylvania race. On the whole the season may be termed a successful one if it is allowable to use the results of the Intercollegiate run as a barometer to supplement the vic- tories in the dual engagements. The team finished in eleventh place in 1926 and tenth in 1927 while this year they crept two more steps closer to victory by coming in eighth. The outstanding feature of the season was Captain Joe Hagen's consistent running. He won first honors in all the dual meets and in one of the quadrangular contests as well as finishing fifth among the favorites in the Intercollegiate run. Hagen linished behind Lerner and Edwards of N. Y. U., in the Columbia-N. Y. U.-Manhattan-Fordham run. Later in the Intercollegiates he avenged this defeat by finishing ahead of both these runners. The season was officially opened on October 20 when the Lion Harriers overwhelmed the Syracuse hill-and-dalers 21-34 over the six mile Van Cort- landt Park course. Hagen, Joyce and Ciorbatenko finished in one-two-three order to clinch the victory for Columbia while Syracuse took the next three places and Atkinson and Thirlwall took seventh and eighth, respectively. Hagen's winning time was 21 min. 24 sec. Lehigh furnished little trouble to the team in the second meet on the schedule, October 27 when they lost to the Lion by an 18-37 score over the six-mile route. Hagen and Joyce loafed to the tape and took first and second places respectively one second apart. I-Iagen's time was 26 min. 43 sec. Mer- ner's charges also took fourth, ifth, and sixth places. Thirlwall and Brause were tied for fifth position. The Blue and White harriers had a big job on their hands on the after- noon of November 2 when the Eli runners were barely nosed out, 26-29 at Van Cortlandt Park. Hagen took first place, his time being 32 min. nine sec. and Jacob of Yale was runner-up eleven seconds behind the Columbia captain. Yale won second, third, sixth and eighth places. Joyce and Ciorbatenko shared honors in fourth place. The following Saturday the harriers lost their first meet when the com- bined efforts of Penn, Cornell and Dartmouth gave the runners a total of 53 points, Cornell walked off with the team honors, having 38 points: Joe Hagen retained the individual honors by running the course in 31 min. 8 sec. N. Y. U. handed the harriers their second defeat of the season on Satur- day, November 2O in a four cornered encounter with N. Y. U., Columbia, Manhattan and Fordham competing. For the first time Hagen failed to win individual honors when Edwards and Lerner of N. Y. U. held him down to third position. f20lj ,.M:..,, . , VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY TEAM MOLONEY MERNER ATKINSON BRAUSE CAHILL THIRLWALL NIEMAN TIERNEY JOYCE .HAGEN GORBATENKO THE 1928 VARSITY CROSS-COUNTRY TEAM Joseph Hagen, '30 Joseph L. Tierney, '29 Captain Manager Carl J. Merner J. Fred Moloney, '30 Coach Assistant Manager THE TEAM John Atkinson, '29 George Cworbatenko, '29 Edward Brause, '29 Joseph Hagen, '30 Thomas Cahill, '30 Edward Joyce, '30 John Thirlvvall, '29 SCHEDULE Scores Opponent Date Columbia Opponent Syracuse October 20 21 34 Lehigh October 27 18 37 Yale November 2 26 29 Cornell 38 Dartmouth November 10 53 43 Pennsylvania 76 N. Y. U. 25 Manhattan November 20 42 71 Fordham 72 Intercollegiates November 26 19514 XEighth Place 52021 ff X 1 .,. . . 0 . ' 492 4 CRE G 4 W - I f If 4 .gi . . U ar wrap 1.12.52 1:2-525' 55.:::.i ' X V72 'vt - -:a- X 1. 'Q 'fJ1,Q':' Z 24 we 55 -- :E Q E A Q 2 wzzzzw Q Mefifvky 1928 VARSITY CREW LAMBART DAVENPORT BLESSE LIGHTBOWNE KERRIGAN DOUGLAS MacBAIN WALKER BERMAN Cr THE CAPTAIN MacBAIN 1928 VARSITY CREW Alastair MacBain, '29 Captain Cieorge Conway, '28 Manager Joseph Geagan, '29 Assistant Manager Richard Glendon, Jr. Coach Hugh Glendon Assistant Coach MANAGER CONWAY THE SCHEDULE Saturday, May 5th 1928 Philadelphia, Pa. COLUMBIA YALE PENNSYLVANIA Varsity CBlackwelI Regattab Junior Varsity 150-lb Saturday, May 12, 1928 1 Princeton, N. J, COLUMBIA PRINCETON PENNSYLVANIA Varsity CChila's Cupb I Junior Varsity Saturday, May 19, 1928 V Eastchester Bay, N. Y. COLUMBIA VS. SYRACUSE, called on account of fog. Saturday, May 26, 19828 Philadelphia, Pa. AMERICAN HENLEY REGATTA-150-lb. Crew. Tuesday, June 19, 1928 Poughkeepsie, N. Y. POUGHKEEPSIE REGATTA-Varsity, Junior Varsity. July, 1928 Philadelphia, Pa. OLYMPIC TRIALS I: 205 I A ei K J THE 1928 VARSITY CREW SEASON The Blackwell Regatta VGfSl'fy Crew Junior Varsity Crew Samuel Walker, '29 Bow Lionel Nobert, '30 Alastair lVlacBain, '29 2 Henry Danneman, '29 Arthur Douglas, '29 3 Fred Rigger, '28 William Blesse, '30 4 John Murphy, '30 William Lightbowne, '29 5 James Reynolds, '28 Thomas Kerrigan, '28 6 Richard lnce, '29 Horace Davenport, '29 7 Malcolm Bonynge, '30 Eric Lambart, '29 Stroke William Sanford, '30 Robert Berman, '29 Cox Darius Phillips, '29 T WAS a confident crew of Poughkeepsie champions which went down to Philadelphia early last May to race Yale and Pennsylvania in the annual Black- well Cup event. But Ed Leader of Yale brought them around to his way of thinking before the day was out. The Lion Varsity trailed across the line, a bit less than a length behind, giving Yale its sixth straight victory in as many years in this triangular regatta. lt couldn't have been much more decisive. The Blue swept out in front from the start and stayed there until the final flag flashed down. Columbia's threats found a ready answer every time and the Lion was just about able to close up an interval of open water in its linal spurt, as the line was crossed. Columbia was humbled that afternoon but defeat was like a welcome tonic. The following week the Blue and the White captured the Childs Cup. Columbia's Jayvees on the Schuylkill that Saturday afternoon sprang a spectacular surprise by nosing out Yale to win the most unexpected victory of the season's rowing. Of the four Columbia crews which appeared on the river, least was expected of the Varsity seconds. Their performances in practice ses- sions had been decidedly disappointing and the boat's victory over Yale and Penn created a considerable stir among the thousands who had been reading of a Columbia Junior Varsity which didn't seem able to make a crew out of itself. Anybody who could have seen the eight in action during the final time trials at Eastchester Bay before the race would never have believed, in the furthest stretch of his imagination, that the performance they turned in at race-time could be possible. They took the lead away from the field soon after the start and stood off a rending Yale attack in the last few hundred yards, nosing across the line a winner by one-fifth of a second. The Freshman boat bowed to a superior Yale crew in the afternoon's preliminary, trailing the Blue by two lengths, but leading Penn to the finish with a length to spare. Penn nosed out the Lion l50's by a quarter of a length. ' In the Varsity event, Yale took command from the word go and swept down the course with Columbia snapping viciously at its rudder posts all the way. As the three crews shot out from under Strawberry Bridge at the half- fZO6j 49 fr -f'BJ Q!i A! mile mark, Penn ceased to threaten and the two leaders settled down to the long three-quarters of a mile which remained between them and victory. Yale kept the beat high and Lambart attempted a spurt. Only a few feet were gained and the stroke lengthened out again. As the boats stroked past the tip of Peter's Island with the final quarter-mile to go, Coxswain Bob Berman called for the finish which had sent this same fighting eight out in front at Pough- keepsie a year previous. Lambart was there with his answer. The count went up to a crazy forty-two which the oarsmen held throughout the remaining hundreds of yards. Yale lost the few feet of open water it had gained but stopped Columbia right there, swinging across the line just about a length to the good. Penn led at the start of the Junior Varsity event but very soon relinquished it to Columbia. Bill Sanford, Jayvee stroke, sent his eight three-quarters of a length out in front with Yale and Penn in a dead heat astern. Rowing high, the Lions successfully answered a Blue spurt at the three-quarter mark and nosed out into the final stretch. Yale leaped out into its final spurt which drove it almost bow to bow with the Columbia shell. Sanford sent a steadily rising beat back to seven straining oarsmen who pulled through in the final seconds of the race, winning by a scant margin of three feet in one of the most exciting finishes ever seen on the Schuylkill. ' The Childs Cup Regatta Varsity Junior Varsity Bow-Samuel Walker, '29 BOW-LiOI121 Noberr. '30 2. William Sanford, '30 2. Henry Danneman, '29 3. Arthur Douglas, '29 3. Fred Rieger, '28 4. Thomas Kerrigan, '28 4. John Murphy, '30 5. William Lightbowne, '29 5. James Reynolds, '28 6. William Blesse, '30 6. Richard Ince, '28 7. Horace Davenport, '29 7. Malcolm Bonynge, '30 Stroke-Eric Lambart, '29 Stroke-Edward Kilroe, '29 Cox-Robert Berman, '29 Cox-Darius Phillips, '29 YALE NosEs our THE VARSITY AT PHILADELPHIA 52071 fr Af-a9amxQs-C Ag Still smarting from their defeat of the week before, Columbia's oarsmen paddled down to the mark in Lake Carnegie against Princeton and Penn in the annual regatta for the coveted Childs Cup. No Lion crew had been able to annex it since 1923. Despite the loss of Captain MacBain due to illness, and all predictions to the contrary, Columbia's shell headed out in front at the start and showed only the backs of its blades to the field all the way down the course. Not long afterwards the handsome Childs Trophy took its place in the case in John Jay Hall next to its even more famous neighbor, the Poughkeepsie Cup. During the week that separated the Yale defeat and the Childs Cup victory, setbacks of almost every description visited the Columbia camp. The home course at Pelham determinedly showed its teeth daily, choppy waters and sharp, biting winds making good' workouts fairly impossible. Captain Al MacBain dropped out with a bad case of grippe and the crew for a day or so seemed to fall to pieces. They went down to Lake Carnegie to meet certain defeat at the hands of Princeton, according to every sports writer in the metropolitan district. But the Columbia eight had its own little way of upsetting the dope Coach Glendon sent Bill Sanford into Captain MacBain's seat at No. 2, and the stroke of the Jayvee boat proved himself a worthy substitute. lt was a crew that had seemingly been transformed over night that slowly paddled to the start that afternoon. lt was almost like home on Lake Carnegie. A brisk wind whistled off the west shore, chopping the usually placid waters of the lake into gleaming whitecaps. The Lions, if nothing else, were most certainly accustomed to rough water rowing. They lashed out into the start and stroked down the course, showing a flying rudder to a Pennsylvania crew which surprised everybody by leaving the favored Princetonians more than a length astern. The Lion bow glided past the finish, more than two lengths in front of the field. Shouting thousands who lined the banks rendered unto these Blue and White Caesars that which was theirs. No victory could have been more emphatically decisive. Princeton had its own way in the earlier races on the afternoon's program. A strong Tiger cub eight walked away in its event winning by two and a half lengths ahead of Columbia with Penn trailing. Ed Kilroe of the lightweights THE vARs1TY WINS THE CHILDS CUP fzosl . Lian ,L .... S an THE JAYVEES BEAT YALE ON THE SCI-IUYLKILL took over Bill Sanford's stroke seat in the Jayvee shell, but didn't add the punch that could beat a superior Princeton boat. Penn entered its l5O's as Jayvees in this race, but they early ceased to be a factor, crossing the line of flags three lengths behind. Columbia rowed high and well to the finish, but not well enough to catch the flying Tigers, who won by three lengths. Columbia us. Syracuse Music has its lost chord, science its missing link and Columbia its lost race. Optimistic powers that were, scheduled a dual regatta between the Varsity crews of Columbia and Syracuse for May l9 at Eastchester Bay. The event was hailed as the first home crew race for Columbia over a space of years and the inauguration of the new Pelham course into the field of intercollegiate row- ing. But fog came in on big flat feet and two eight oared shells steered a crazy course far out into the sound, The race ended in long streams of gentle language which flowed from the mouths of the aesthetically inclined oarsmen in the boats, who found some- thing funny about the crews heading straight for shore and almost crashing into it at the mile mark, after more than two miles of rowing out into the bay. The frantic coxswains could barely see the bow men in their boats, not to men- tion the finish line more than two miles away. The race was called off when the referee's launch came puffing out of the gray mist. Bob Berman headed his shell around and paddled to the finish line, crossing it exactly thirty-nine minutes after the start of the race. It was supposed to have been a two mile contest. Good crews cover two miles in well under ten minutes. During the progress of the season much criticism had been heard on all sides of the new home course at Eastchester Bay. The daily workouts of the crew squad were marred by a bitter, unrelenting offshore wind that started whistling across the water just about the time practice would begin. The bay was most commonly a broad expanse of gleaming Whitecaps which made smooth rowing a practical impossibility. Coach Glendon was constantly being ham- pered in his work by this very definite handicap. At no time for any lengthy period were the crews able to go through a sustained drive in intensive prepara- tion for some big event earlier in the season. It was with a sigh of relief that the men packed up and left for Crum Elbow at the end of May. Another f2091 9 4 pleasant thing about the course was its rocks at low tide. These outjutting monstrosities helped rip the bottoms out of three perfectly good shells, dumping their contents into the none too inviting waters of Eastchester Bay. The Syracuse fiasco was the climax to a season of workouts up the crik . That ever thickening sinister vault of mist crept up slowly enough to permit two preliminary races to be run off. The Jayvees defeated the l50's and the Third Varsity and the Lion cubs turned a four length grin of triumph in the general direction of the Kent School seconds. By the time the Varsity crews started down the course however, the misty vapor had grown thicker and it was impossible to see anything within a hundred yards. The crews were swallowed up in the fog when they left for the start and weren't heard from for almost an hour. Suddenly newspapermen who were waiting in a launch at the mile mark heard the Zip and flash of oars coming from a totally unexpected direc- tion. Out of that great white barrier forged the Columbia eight, heading straight for shore. Syracuse followed three lengths behind. Confusion fol- lowed during which the crews stopped disgustedly and then appeared Referee Charles Scheafe of Harvard who puffed in out of the fog to call off the race. Tolley, the Syracuse helmsman, pulled his shell alongside the press launch and ruefully asked if there was a compass aboard. There was no angrier bunch of oarsmen anywhere on the water than were those Orange Varsity oarsmen- and nobody could blamethem much. Shipping water by the gallon with every stroke, they had to stop and start bailing. Wringing wet sweatshirts went flying overboardg remarks of no uncertain character concerning the course, the water, the fog, the race, the shell, their fellow-oarsmen, and everything in general and particular came through the fog. Some semblance of order was finally restored and the crew continued its sorry way to the Columbia boathouse. Cheers from a worried disgusted crowd greeted the upstate boat as it pulled across the line. Columbia's horne course had added to its list of accomplishments-rough water, wind, waves, rocks, uncounted spoiled workouts-yet another, this time Pog- and a scheduled race that was never consummated. The Poughkeepsie' Regatta Varsity Junior Varsity Bow-Samuel Walker, '29 Bow-Lionel Nobert, '30 2. Alastair lVlacBain, '29 2. Henry Danneman, '29 3. Arthur Douglas, '29 3. Fred Rieger, '28 4. William Blesse, '30 4. John Murphy, '30 5. William Lightbowne, '29 5. James Reynolds, '28 6. Thomas Kerrigan, '28 6. Richard lnce, '28 7. Horace Davenport, '29 7. Malcolm Bonynge, '30 Stroke-Eric Lambart, '29 Stroke-William Sanford, '30 Cox-Robert Berman, '29 Cox-Darius Phillips, '29 Columbia's l928 Varsity crew relinquished its title at Poughkeepsie in the greatest history-making, record-breaking race of all time. Seventy thousand people viewed the upper Hudson classic through a driving rain that lasted all day. Califor'nia's great crew, later an Olympic victor, took victory away from Columbia by the slim margin of three-quarters of a length, clipping more than seventeen seconds off a Cornell record that had stood for twenty-seven years. Columbia's gallant boat flashed across the line only three seconds later. 52101 ea- A! Strung out behind the two leaders were Washington, Cornell, Navy, Syra- cuse, and Pennsylvania in that ord-er. Cornell surprised everybody by striking out into the lead at the start and holding it for two miles. Navy stayed near the head of line during the earlier stages, but soon fell back and with Syracuse and Penn, failed to be a factor. Columbia and California took the start in stride and watched each other closely as the oarsmen swung down those first two miles. After the middle mark went sailing by, Cornell fell back and the two went out in front to stage the greatest battle in D rowing annals. A tensely silent crowd on the observation train watched that third mile duel, with both crews slamming down, stroke for stroke at a killing pace which didn't break for a full quarter-mile. Bow for bow they battled until the Columbia shell nosed the least bit out in front for a few fleeting seconds. Don Bless- ing, California coxswain, held his men in an instant and then called for all they had. Inch by inch the Bears regain- ed lost feet and captured the lead. Lambart in the Lion boat answered and for the last quarter of that historic third HUGH AND RICHARD GLENDON mile, both shells kept bob- bing out and back until the strength in the California shell began to tell as the Westerners drew away from Columbia, foot by foot. Out from under the bridge under gray skies the two crews appeared, Cali- fornia a slight quarter length to the good. Berman called for bid after bid, Lambart and his mates answering with a final spurt which just failed to match the California strength. The Bears stopped Columbia right there, and swinging well together at the terrific pace of forty or more to the minute California held its lead and slammed across the line, winner by three-quarters of a length as whistles and sirens broke loose in a mad chorus of shrieks and steam. Superlatives were the despair of every rowing expert and critic in the country after this epochal exhibition of rowing supremacy, fought out between two of the greatest crews that ever took to the water. To these gallant men must go the tribute that belongs to the great. Richard Cilendon sent out to the starting line a crew greater than the victorious Lion shell of the previous year. Practically the same men, older, seasoned, paddled down to defend their title. Ky Ebright produced, however, a boat whose equal did not exist last season. This same crew went over to Amsterdam two months later and carried off Olympic honors in an historic victory over an English crew in the finals. That afternoon on the Hudson they were invincible and Columbia, mighty as she was, was forced to bow before her conquerer, fairly, squarely beaten. The Blue and L2111 at 4z9JmQ:5 H... l...g White in defeat in 1928 was even greater than the victorious Lions of 1927. This season will be the last for the famous 1929 oarsmen who captured the Poughkeepsie Regatta as Freshmen, and repeated the following year in the Varsity event, only to lose last Spring to a greater crew. How they will write Hnis to the glorious page of rowing history they have written is a question to conjure with. Navy ruled much as she pleased in the minor races of the afternoon. Co- lumbia's Junior Varsity, of which much had been expected, failed to live up to its reputation, finishing fifth in a field of six, behind Navy, Cornell, Syra- cuse and Washington, leading only Pennsylvania. Cornell wallowed along through most of the race, a slow fifth, but afforded a sensational finish by throwing off its lethargy and lashing forward into second position, almost nipping Navy into the lead in the closing seconds of the race. All six crews who competed excelled the record set by Washington in 1926. Columbia faded out after a strong start and fell back when the pace grew too hot, leaving the field of battle to Navy and Cornell. The middies found no such battle on their hands in the Freshman event. They nosed out into the front at the half-mile and fought off the bids of a fighting Cornell crew, finally edging away into a lead that increased with every stroke, leading to victory by a length and three-quarters. The Columbia yearlings failed to register and were out of the afternoon's activities at an early stage in the game. The Olympic Trials Varsity Eight Bow-Samuel Walker, '29 5. William Lightbowne, '29 2. William Sanford, '30 6. Thomas Kerrigan, '28 3. Arthur Douglas, '29 7. Horace Davenport, '29 4. William Blesse, '30 Stroke-Alastair MacBain, '29 Coxswain-Robert Berman, '29 THE END OP A GLOOMY DAY AT POUGHKEEPSIE-CALIFORNIA DEFEATS THE COLUMBIA VARSITY Y 52121 Varsity Four Bow-Mal Bonynge, '30 3. James Reynolds, '28 2. John Murphy, '30 Stroke-Henry Danneman, '29 Cox-Darius Phillips, '29 Misfortune dogged Columbia down to Philadelphia as time drew near for the Olympic Trials, early in July of last year. Five days before the races began, it was announced that Eric Lambart, veteran Lion stroke and former captain, would be ineligible to row. It was found that Lambart is an English subject and therefore disqualified from competition for the honor of representing the country abroad. Despite the loss of its stroke, Columbia showed the way in an amazing Hve-length victory over Harvard in its preliminary heat and entered the semi-Hnals against California, Poughkeepsie conquerers. Over the shorter distance, the Bears again proved their superiority by defeating the Lions by a bit better than a length. Captain Alastair MacBain went into the stern seat of the Lion shell the day of the Harvard race, Bill Sanford, former Jayvee stroke, going back to the No. 2 seat. Pulling smoothly behind their captain, the Columbia boat drew away from the stake boats out into the lead and were never troubled by the Harvard oarsmen. MacBain kept the beat high and stroked his crew across the nnish line more than five lengths ahead. That same day California subdued Princeton in its heat and Yale eliminated the Wyandotte Barge Club. In the semi-Iinals Columbia drew California and Yale drew Princeton. California had beaten the Lions at their full strength over a four mile course in the Poughkeepsie classic. They had now to repeat their performance over a 2000-meter course against a crew minus its star stroke, and a lineup that was undecided until race-time. But there were no alibis to offer when California cut down the Schuylkill, driving fast and clean through its long stroke, heading into the finish, victors by a length and a quarter. Yale defeated Princeton and the next day California's wonder-boat took the Elis' measure. A month later the scene was transferred to a ship canal outside of Amsterdam where this same fighting eight became champions of the world after a thrilling victory over an English club eight. Columbia also entered a crew in the four-oared competition but the squad, composed of Jayvee men, was eliminated in the first heat by the Bachelors Barge Club of Philadelphia. 52131 9. IBJWLQDX .Q s. U 1928 150-LB. CREW-INTERCOLLEGIATE CHAMPIONS KILROE ROUSSELOT GARDNER FISKE AMES SCHENK RAFF GARRATT DOMENECH THE 150-POUND CREW PTER two years of running second-best, Columbia's lightweights nnally brought home the bacon, Hugh Glendon, in his iirst year as Assistant Crew Coach, took a well-groomed crew down to the Henley at Philadelphia the end of last May and watched his eight show its rudderposts to the best lightweight crews in the East by the amazing margin of ive lengths. Their victory annexed for Columbia what is virtually the 150-pound championship of the country and the Joseph Wright Challenge Cup. Penn, Princeton, Yale and Harvard fol- lowed in that order. Revenge was sweet for the lightweight Lions. ln the Blackwell Regatta earlier in the season, they had bowed to Pennsylvania and the year previous had been defeated by the same crew at the Henley. But every dog has his day and the 1928 Henley Regatta belonged to the Lion. Columbia rooters didn't iind it unpleasant, watching that smooth, polished combination flying the Blue and White, swinging down the final stretch, moving -farther away from the field with every stroke. Pennsylvania captured the start and held the lead until the boats reached Strawberry bridge, marking the beginning of the Hnal three-quarter mile stretch. At this point, with the beat in the Lion shell slightly lower than the Quaker count, Penn seemed to shorten up and the Lions drove into the lead which they steadily increased without seeming effort until they flashed through the fading daylight at the finish, five lengths' margin giving them undisputed supremacy in the l5O-pound division. At Philadelphia in the Blackwell event, the Blue and White l5O's lost to Penn by a matter of two seconds, a scant half-length. The race, of course, was over the usual Henley distance of one mile and ive-sixteenths and the Lion crew failed by this slim margin only to break the Penn streak of victories. Henley Day told another story. Yale's much-touted lightweights failed to threaten in the Blackwell race, and finished well in the rear, a full three lengths to the bad. Hugh Glendon, with the aid of unusually excellent material, achieved an enviable success with his first crew. He will have on hand this Spring most of the veterans of this championship eight and l929 can look forward to an able defense of Columbia's title and claim to 150-pound supremacy. The Boating Bow-Sheridan Ciarratt, '30 2. Philip Raff, '28 3. Kenneth Schenk, '30 4. Winslow Ames, '29 5. John W. Fiske, '29 6. Hugh Gardner, '29 7. Harold Rousselot, '29 Stroke-Edward Kilroe, '29 Cox-John Domenech, '28 f215fl , 2 Ns.- l928 JUNIOR VARSITY CREW SANFORD BONYNGE INCE REYNOLDS MURPHY RIEGER DANNEMAN NOBERT PHIILLIPS THE JUNIOR VARSITY CREW HE bright spot in the Jayvee record of last year was the totally unexpected victory over Yale and Penn in the annual Blackwell Regatta. In one of the most excitingly spectacular finishes the old Schuylkill has ever seen, this unher- alded crew reached heights of real rowing greatness, standing off a gallant Yale bid in the final hundred yards to win by a scant fifth of a second. Bill Sanford, who later broke into the Varsity shell as substitute for MacBain at Princeton and Lambart in the Olympic trials, stroked that shell through to triumph. At Princeton the following week Sanford was in Captain lVIacBain's place in the Varsity shell and Kilroe of the lightweights took over his assignment. This coupled with the undeniable strength of the Orange combination sent the Lion boat down to defeat by a margin of nearly three lengths. Penn trailed the leaders far astern. The Columbia boat rowed a good race but at no stage of the game were they good enough to catch Princeton's flying .Iayvees that after- noon on Lake Carnegie, On the same day that the Columbia and Syracuse Varsities played tag with each other in a dense fob at Eastchester, the Jayvees came through vic- torious in a race against the Lion l5O's and the third Varsity. The lightweights, who later won the Henley championship, pressed close a-stern the Varsity sec- onds and made an exciting tussle of it throughout. They lost by less than a length. Nine lengths behind trailed the third Varsity, totally outclassed. At Poughkeepsie, the .Iayvees slumped and finished Hfth in a field of six, managing to beat only Penn and finishing behind Navy, Cornell, Syracuse and Washington in that order. fzisj , 14 9 X . . fb -' A A -Jo - FOOTBALL Atv: N - 4 L ' M XN N 0 ,f ,1 ff d a . ' ' .ev : VARSITY FOOTBALL BANIGAN WAGNER SESIT MCKINNEY EDWARDS CAMPBELL BARLOW DAVENPORT ANDERSON GALLIVAN GANZLE STANCZYK COSTIGAN KALAMARAS MURRAY DEPLER ROUSSELOT HINMAN GLENN ASHMAN MAKSER BLEECKER BLESSE ADLER CROWLEY TYS HAMILTON SLATTERY CARLSTEN LIFLANDER KLIEGMAN COWGER V SCOTT KUMPF BUSER NICHOLS SHERIDAN TASSI BRUCE ARNOLD MURPHY BRADLEY -Q, Q. Jjbwifhx THE 1928 VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM ...L WK 'WFS-.l CAPTAIN ADLER Backs John Anderson, '30 Paul D. Arnold, '30 John Bradley, '31 William Buser, '30 Earle Carlsten, '29 Thomas Gallivan, '31 Robert Hamilton, '29 Louis Kalamaras, '31 Henry Kumpf, '29 Philip Liflander, '28 John Nichols, '29 Joseph Stanczyk, '31 Harry Scott, '31 James Sheridan, '31 ' Tackles Malcolm Bleecker, '30 William Clark, '31 Esmond Edwards, '31 Louis Slattery, '30 Remey Tys, '31 William F. Adler, '28 1 Captain Harold A. Rousselot, '29 Manager George J. Banigan, '30 Assistant Manager Charles F. Crowley Head Coach f219j MANAGER ROUSSELOT Ends George Costigan, '31 Horace Davenport, '29 Victor Glenn, '29 E. Arthur Hill, '29 Ford Hinman, '31 Jacob Kliegman, '29 Edward Tassi, '29 Centers William Barlow, '31 Peter Bruce, '31 James Campbell, '30 Guards William Adler, '28 Hyman Ashman, '30 William Blesse, '31 Carl Ganzle, '31 William Makser, '29 Charles McKinney, '30 William Rydell, '29 Alfred Triska, '31 THE VARSITY FGOTBALL COACHES SESIT WAGNER DEPLER CROWLEY MURRAY PRICE ,r AQBJMQQX .0 COLUMBIA 20-VERMONT O Saturday, September 29 SLOW 20-0 victory over Vermont opened the 1928 season and inaugu- rated the enlarged Baker field. As a whole, the team showed its lack of expe- rience, although the line play featured the afternoon's entertainment. Five sophomores were in the starting line-up, all showing up well for their first performance in Varsity uniforms. Hank Kumpf bore the burden of the ball-carrying and scored the first touchdown in the first minutes of play, Harry Scott, one of the sophomore additions to the team, scored twice-once on a short low pass from Kumpf and again from the one-yard line after all four backs had joined in a sustained march down the field. Kumpf began with this game his final season for Columbia. lt promised to be his most successful but was rudely cut off, unfortunately for Kumpf and for Columbia, when a broken ankle sustained in the Dartmouth game some several weeks later put him out of the running for the remainder of the season. The Lion showing against Vermont presaged very little about the forth- coming season. Coach Crowley faced the problem of building a team out of a crowd of green sophomores and around a small nucleus of non-too-brilliant veterans. Harry Scott turned in a performance reminiscent of Mike Sesit's line plunging ability and defensive play. Remey Tys and Mal Bleecker, tackles, were the real stars of the afternoon. Ripping wide holes in the offense, and standing like stone walls on the defense, these two sterling forwards gave promise of being Columbia's mainstays on the first line of scrimmage. C 5 S .a .... f, .. . a . ,A ..-.. , rf 'r-' Y-Ya--------.aa -fr-. . HAROLD SWAHN LIFLANDER BREAKS THROUGH 52211 COLUMBIA 27-UNION 0 Saturday, October 6 REQUENT fumbles failed to disguise the marked improvem-ent in the Colum- bia team when on the following Saturday, Crow1ey's men administered a 27-0 drubbing to Union. Hank Kumpf ran just about how he pleased and scored three times before the final whistle stopped him. Harry Scott contributed the other touchdown of the afternoon. Phil Liflander, second-string quarterback, replaced Sheridan early in the second period and proceeded to turn in, with Kumpf, the best individual ball-carrying performance of the game. l2,000 spectators watched the successive, sustained drives which produced a Columbia score in each quarter. It was not until the iinal moments of the game, after Coach Crowley had sent in his reserves, that the two teams on the field appeared anywhere near evenly matched. Columbia earned thirteen first downs to Union's one. Kumpf and Scott took turns hammering at the line through the first three periods, long sustained marches ending up within scoring distance, where Kumpf would plunge through across the line. Liflander added two extra points. Action in the fourth period came fast and certain. Kumpf's runback of an attempted Union pass brought the ball down the 37-yard line in enemy territory. The veteran fullback netted six more yards off tackle and then a long pass, Kumpf to Scott, advanced the Blue and White line to within seven yards of another score. Scott took it over two plays later and Liflander again booted the extra point making the final score 27-O. 'Li QQ, N - HAROLD SWAHN KUMPP KICKS I:22Zj 9, afL9JWs6?s-C 4 COLUMBIA 31-WESLEYAN 7 Saturday, October l3 PECTACULAR sprints for touchdowns featured the Wesleyan contest the next week. Columbia's backs did all the running, Wesleyan scoring its lone touchdown on a surprise air attack which came without warning in the second period. Hank Kumpf, Phil Liflander and Harry Scott registered runs of 65 yards, 80 yards and 89 yards, respectively. Columbia's inability to defend against a straight forward passing attack was demonstrated late in the second period when Wesleyan received the kick-off after Kumpf's 65 yard run for a score. A pass from Tetley to Captain Silloway netted twenty yards, and two more, judiciously interspersed with line plunging brought the ball down to Columbia's three yard mark where Lockwood took it over on the nrst down. Crowley's proteges stood helpless against this aerial attack, the suddenness of which seemed to take the sail out of the Lions. Anderson, substituting for Kumpf, squirmed through the final few yards to score in the third quarter and not many minutes later Lillander received an enemy punt on his own 20 yard line and raced 80 yards behind faultless inter- ference for the second score of the period. In the iinal quarter, Wesleyan started its passing attack again and advanced to the Columbia l9 yard line. But there was one pass too many. Scott scooped the ball out of the waiting arms of an opponent and before anyone knew what was happening was halfway to the goal surrounded by an impenetrable wall of interference. He literally sauntered the final twenty yards across the line. 4 HAROLD SWAHN KUMPF SCORES A TOUCHDOWN 52231 Q- p kebx A! COLUMBIA 7-DARTMOUTH 21 Hanover, Saturday, October 20 LAYING a slow, fumbling game in the first half and speeding up to score one touchdown and hold Dartmouth scoreless in the second, Columbia went down to defeat at the hands of the Indians at Hanover to the tune of a 21 to 7 score. Columbia's lone tally came on a 35-yard run by Liflander in the last quarter. It was no snap game these two teams played in their first major meeting of the season. Injuries were frequent. Most important was Hank Kumpf's broken leg which cut off the rest of his Columbia athletic career. Jim Campbell, Columbia center was taken out near the end of the last half with an injury to his ear. Jeremiah, Dartmouth halfback, cracked a collar bone, which put him out for the year. Otherwise nothing happened but a Columbia defeat. Dartmouth pounced on a green, inexperienced eleven during that first half, and capitalized every nervous error, transforming them into scores which mounted up to 21, Dartmouth's total for the game. It was a new team that appeared on the field to start the final half. The Columbia offense began to work with the proper clock-like precision and continuity of play. It carried the fight into Dartmouth territory and kept it there. In the third quarter, the Lion backs carried the ball down to the l-yard line, but here Hawley's big, Green Indians held and Columbia lost a score by a matter of inches. Not many minutes later Scott recovered a muffed punt and Liflander cut through on an off- Ah-.aa E DARTMOUTH COMPLETES A LONG PASS I: 224 :I LIFLANDER KICKS POINT AFTER TOUCHDOWN tackle play that netted him thirty yards and a touchdown. He also kicked the extra point. Sheridan stood on his own 4-yard line early in the first period to receive one of Black's long boots. The sophomore quarterback fumbled and Lyle of Dartmouth fell on the ball over the goal line for the first score of the game. A long gain on a change of punts placed Dartmouth in scoring position again. Breithut took the ball through the line for several short gains and then tossed a short, left-handed pass to Bankart who scored. In the second period, Dart- mouth took the ball for a long walk and marched it down to the seven yard line where the Columbia line held for three downs, only to weaken and give up another score to the Green on the fourth attempt. Halftime found Dartmouth in possession of all the points it was to get. A rejuvenated Columbia team answered the opening whistle for the second half and rushed headlong into an attack which somewhat dazed Hawley's men. They came to with the ball on their own l-yard line and there they held, taking the ball on downs. Black punted out to Liflander who ran the ball back to the Dartmouth 33-yard mark. Buser took it for several yards and then Liflander broke loose for the one long run and lone Lion touchdown of the day's work. The Dartmouth game told one story to Columbia coaches, players and followers: Inexperience. There was lots to be done if Colurnbia's 1928 team was to break into the winning column in major games. A defense against for- ward-passing and eradication of an inferiority complex were the two outstand- ing needs of the Lion squad immediately after the Hanover fray. f225J SP AQBJMQLN be COLUMBIA 20-WILLIAMS 6 Saturday, October 2 7 ILLIAMS, champion of the Little Three, paid its annual visit to Baker Field late in October and went back to the Berkshires on the other side of a 20-6 defeat from which they emerged with probably more credit than the Columbia team which won the victory. The Purplemen fought out into a fast start which had the Lions stopped for a while but their advantage was short-lived. Colum- bia scored early in the second quarter on a low pass, Stanczyk to Liflander. Although Williams came right back and scored a few minutes later, Crowley's men took full command immediately afterwards remained in the ascendency throughout the rest of the game and were ,able to score two more touchdowns in the second half. Strangely enough for Columbia, all their scoring was earned via the aerial route. Lion rooters wondered, and continue to wonder, Why Columbia players never seem to learn completely the meaning of the forward pass. On the opening kick-off Williams took the ball and rushed it down the field. But Columbia took it away near their goal posts and Stanczyk and Scott carried the ball steadily back up the field. Early in the second quarter Phil Liflander took a short, low pass and breezed across the line unmolested. He kicked the extra point. Brown of Williams crossed the Columbia line after a seesaw fight which ended successfully when the Purple back cut through right tackle to score from the lO-yard line. Buser scored after the half, taking another short pass from Liflander. Near the end of the game they reversed positions and the quarterback went to the receiving end and also tallied. 5 m Qt 'M A TOUCHDOWN FOR COLUMBIA K 226 I CCLUMBIA 0-CORNELL 0 Saturday, November 3 OLUMBIA and Cornell found themselves more than a match for each other for the second time in as many years. Two well-balanced, well matched teams emerged from the mud and muck of a rainy day at Baker Field, worn, wet and grimy but unscored upon. The game was featured by chances to score, evenly distributed to each team, and in both cases uncapitalized. Gil Dobie and Charlie Crowley give their men much the same brand of football to play and Cornell-Columbia games are usually a dull exhibition of fruitless line-plunging punctuated by frequent punts. The 1928 meeting, the sixteenth between the two schools, proved no exception to this almost invariable rule. Only on this occasion a driving rain moistened matters a bit and 25,000 spectators sat in the stands licking their lips in anticipation of the score that never came. The game had two exciting moments. Both teams seemed at times on the verge of scoring, bringing their colors near enough to victory to make it appear worthwhile. Lyon of Cornell early in the second period picked up a Columbia fumble on the Blue 27-yard line and cut loose with a free field ahead of him. Phil Liflander, safety man, spun around, leaped out into a per- fect tackle, bringing his man down to earth on the 1,9-yard mark. Norman Scott, one of the finest plunging backs Cornell has ever brought down to meet Columbia, here resumed his activities and with the aid of an off- ,,,, . ,, ., i E 2115- ,Eff-7 i - . ,, , ., V r . . . .. 'W ., A ij are-1.1:igr.,.f.,-1:k,gr:,s-M:3,35-:,::1,:.1,:,:,:Q::.::f,,:5,.,.-9,4-....as Wea ., ,fiur-4gag,, fe?ia:,a -sic. f:.,:,ay,, . 4f- filgm ,a-xw:f '.:::-k---+- 49: K C' - -' - - A -' V.- -:f:1:52::zN'wv ,6E' .-: 4 -5:25, 1+ :- ,kr 1-22:-rs '12-1si:2'2a2:r.' :-dizmwfifrtrzr-rg:--.:,.-1 azz, ,:.,.,,g:.Q ,gr : - . :-L ff,-is-.g:, 'ffl . x ra -f -2 ,-Slit-,:1:5:3q-,. rf 5:13 1-f,-1r:.-'-2-fsf.' ,'t:21' '.:aEq:,:?,5:52,::.,a'rf42g.:-Q-43:-: . .' mi- .Ef1 'j:E:'- ..::I 1:-1 if-,rm--,-515: f- 'fy,.f:..r:1:r:26r1i::,rS ,.-+1s2fr2Er:.3:1:::5 ' V . ' sv., img:-gez:-1-1-1 -:-,-r:-:1:af:w- :-r., -, 2,.-11:41-:f:r:rfw 'Ql'ye, sri:1215?S'?Qwge.sf-2-:1::.-.za-.:-:-e2wf:::v.fy-' -:r14w,:':':f+-.-::- xwki'-:f:3a4!14'. 5452.-ri1r-?fr.1::1:s::-'-fS'2:3Z:f1-11 ---- 1 .'F 4'-rf ,' 1' ew ' .:s:L:.5.,aiar.,f:Pfsg:Mf::,-4-21:1sff?'--1-' -12:-me-g':: 1-4.: -.. 2 '-'isfffwxvr-1:5---'Ffa We-11'-ig-'-g 1-,.:qame.-frm'-f::: 57 ' ,. r .,., , T ---- 512:25 ' ,- - ' x . ' , ' if -'ff ' ' wr- .erase-1:.:.f::f:f:,-:7-:.,:,1,:g,:-:ex-:r:f:e'if :-.?-1454-z::' .1 '5:f:154fb1-:'. 14' Q .-:-:--:':1:a.-.-H1i11::'.m::::5-f:-:-.-:-:2:--:-:1-ef' -z:-1f-:::::- -V.-:-:--':-:-1-:ef:1:::fM-2 ,ee -. ,1' 5 .,,., . . i ' ,,,,,,.,,1.,i:.,., 3,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,:vf.,,.,,,,,,,.,.:.,.ir.:..?:.,.:,,,.,,R.,.,:,,,,,,,.,,,i,,.,m.,,,,.,,,.W,m.,:,,.,,.,,.,,,,,-.,.,.,,.,..,..-..1,.,:-1-:Qa.:.,,.,.g.,1,.9,.,,,,.,,,4.1.1-ami:ax.:Q.,:1.,a.r:,Z......,s:.fa:e4.v1:-W'.'v:f-W-f -:fmt-:ir 1-. . . -: .-ff ,.: , . 5,.-gp-ga.Q:1.-:ref-sg.,gig,jig-1-11-1.53m55?,55.,.:.-:: .gi.1-1:11.-5:55g5,535,mp5,:::,5351:514:-:1:45.::g5f:Q:3Q2Q1gfj555gw:-a cs:-mrggqgfgg35:3:g3:5s:b:Lr:1:1'.-1:2-'ma-215:f:5i::ar:::f'-iw-f '-2-'14-'ir-1'r'1-2-r'1-rar.:7--215'E':1-f1f'TfErE'fF25f ' .,.,.,.1:2.'fE?'r:v.'If:2 :1---2:',':2E r1'Er,.',..Q-,:',,3.5-I-,.,,,., . .suing :-gzgrszyzi.. :::-:::::.1,:f::-: wif.:1:::r.s:::::z:-f1fa:a r:5vf.::f2a:1:5:mfsfv,i ::::.::a1.f:5:e:::5z:-:ev Ai:-i:5:2za151f rf-wr-3-2-if:-2..1 .,:,,,'-fri:-: :,f..zs,f '4 sv ., -- .-11' ' ' , HAROLD SWAHN SCOTT TACKLED AFTER COMPLETING A PASS f2271 HAMILTON GOES THROUGH THE LINE side penalty advanced the ball to within one yard of a score. First down had been called on the 6-yard line and Columbia's forwards stiffened into an impene- trable wall. Scott tried again and piled up on a mountain of tangled bodies. The entire Columbia team wrapped itself around him and hurled him back, winning the ball on downs. A few seconds later Bill Buser punted far out of danger sending the ball back to midfield. Thus into the past rode Cornell's only real threat against Columbia's 1928 eleven. But the Lions didn't do very much better when their chance came. lt came at the opening of the final quarter, An exchange of punts had put the ball into action in Columbia's possession on their own 41-yard line. On the first play Harry Scott dropped back and hurled a forty-yard pass which dropped into the waiting arms of Phil Liflander who started out on the last few yards to the goal with nobody between him and a touchdown. Cornell's safety men drove after him and in a frantic attempt to elude them, Liflander slipped and went down in the mud with two red-jerseyed enemies on top of him. The stands roared in the rain with siX yards to go for a Columbia victory. Bob Hamilton negotiated one yard through the line and then Scott juggled the soggy ball. It fell to the ground, and was immediately pounced on by John Ander- son, alert Cornell tackle. Opportunity slipped away and did not again return to either team. Cornell punted back to midfield and the ball stayed there for the rest of the game. 52281 gk -ILQJWSQQC A, COLUMBIA 14-JOHNS HOPKINS 13 Saturday, November 10 ISTORY failed by a single point to repeat itself in the Lion-Johns Hopkins game the week following the Cornell tie. The year previous Hopkins tied Co- lumbia at 7-7 after that season's scoreless scrap at Ithaca. Only the accident of a missed placement after touchdown cheated the medicos out of a deadlock for the second consecutive year. Howard Caplan of the visitors flashed the most brilliant play of the after- noon by taking the kick-off after Columbia's second touchdown in the second period on his own 4-yard mark and racing through the entire Columbia team for ninety-six yards and a touchdown. Faultless intereference surrounded Johns Hopkins' flying fullback and he knifed a straight course along the western side- lines to score. Phil Liflander did all of Columbia's scoring for the afternoon. He started by taking a twenty-yard pass from Scott to score in the first period. During the next quarter the team marched down the field and Little Phil bounced from tackler to tackler for ten yards, squirming through to tally the other Lion touch- down. He kicked the extra point both times. Columbia again showed its weakness against the forward pass attack and stood helpless in the third quarter when the medicos took to the air and with two long passes advanced from their own 39-yard line to the Lion 2-yard mark. Caplan went through the line and across it but failed to kick the extra point that would have tied the game, CLEARING THE WAY FOR SCOTT I: 229 fl Q. fagamilbc A! COLUMBIA 7-PENNSYLVANIA 34 Philadelphia, Saturday, November 17 UAKER speed and deception were once more too much for the Lions and the fiftieth anniversary of the Columbia-Penn series was celebrated with the 34-7 victory for the Philadelphians on November 17. The Blue and White flared into an attack during the opening minutes of play which caught Penn flatfooted and almost immediately produced a score, but after that it was all Red and Blue. Captain Paul Scull, Quaker ace, led an attack Whose driving deadly confidence was not to be stopped. Phil Liflander repeated his performance of the Dartmouth game by scoring the lone Lion touchdown of the afternoon. Pour minutes after play started the little quarterback darted across the line and caught a perfect 30-yard pass from Harry Scott to score. While the Columbia stands were recovering from their surprise and rippling out into a throaty roar, Liflanderkicked the placement and the Lions rode out into a seven-point lead. During the rest of the quarter, Crowley's men stopped two Penn charges to their goal line but after that Messrs. Scull, Shober and Murphy took matters in hand and the Columbia blaze died down. Columbia's total of fourteen players were pitted throughout the rest of the game against the entire Pennsylvania squad, something like forty-eight sub- stitutions being made from the Red and Blue bench. No team can stand this procedure for very long and although the team put everything it had into its BUSER GETs OPP A PUNT Lzsoj - a THE HIDDEN BALL IS FOUND play, the final quarter saw eleven dog-tired, exhausted players on the field. Penn's second and third string replacements kept coming and the score rolled up. The Lion team made its last stand in the third period and the two teams battled up and down the field scorelessly. The even terms began to fade as the game advanced into the final quarter and Penn literally ran wild. Murphy, shifty No. 3 back, knifed through for a touchdown and after another march repeated his performance. By this time Penn had all its substitutes on the field. One man sat still and alone on the Quaker bench, an injured back. Carroll Rosenbloom took the ball a few minutes later and on a hidden ball play which worked perfectly against a dazed and weary team, scored from the twenty-yard line. Nobody knew he had the ball until he was halfway to the goal. In the growing darkness the placement kick failed and the score stood in its inal form, 34-7. ' 52211 ,L fBJ kQ.- . 1 4 COLUMBIA 6-SYRACUSE 14 Thursday, November 29 I-IANKSGIVING DAY witnessed a disastrous close to a disastrous season for the 1928 Columbia eleven. Syracuse came down to Baker Field and Lion hopes rose high for the annual at least one major Victory for the Columbia team. As usual, things started off with a bang. No score was registered in the first half, but Columbia held the upper hand and produced a score early in the third period. Syracuse found itself and came back rallying twice to win a decisive victory. Captain Bill Adler was the outstanding Columbia man playing his last game for Morningside. Going on and out via the graduation route with him went Horace Davenport, veteran wingman, who had ahead of him another crew season as captain of the Varsity eight. Bob Hamilton finished his football career by scoring Columbia's touchdown after being substituted for Joe Stanczyk. Bill Makser came out ofthe line with a diploma and was also lost to the team for 1929. Typical Columbia football kept the ball in the air during most of the first half with the toes of Baysinger and Buser sending it aloft after a few usually futile attempts at the line. Soon after resumption of play after the half, the Lions took to the air via the other route and the Scott-Liiiander passing combination once more functioned, carrying the play down to the 3-yard line. Bob Hamil- ton scored through the line and the placement failed, giving Columbia a six- point advantage. Z a s V ta e 3 5 rr. ,B SYRACUSE BREAKS THROUGH I 232 J gm r .. ,... if-1 .. ,, i A F? . F5 ra TAKE HIM OUT! Syracuse however had its Baysinger, its Sebo, its Stevens who finally got started. The lanky Orange captain, Baysinger, began hurling passes in the style that has made him famous for three years. On the ground Sebo and Stev- ens hammered the line with immediate results and the Orangemen crossed the line twice, Brophy kicking the extra point in both cases to give the men from the upper wilds of New York state a 14-6 victory, almost a direct reversal of Co- lumbia's winning 1927 score. 'B C awww I2331 THE 1928 JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM Victor Nordstrom, '31 John C. Daniel, '30 Captain Manager NE of the features of the 1928 football season was the re-entry of the Jayvees into the victory column after a lapse of several seasons. Wagner College, coached by Ray Kirchmeyer, '25: former Lion football luminary, was the Victim of a rejuvenated attack at Baker Field and the Jayvees triumphed 12-0. Unfortunately the rest of the season did not tell the same tale. The season opened against the Columbia club eleven on South Field and Doc Cook's men, principally Ralph I-Iewitt, did pretty much as they pleased to win 33-0. The next game on the schedule resulted in a 6-O defeat for the Junior Varsity at the hands of the Manhattan Freshmen. Wagner College was met and conquered the following week. Instrumental in this victory was Vic Nordstrom, who had been converted from half to quar- terback and proved the center of the Lion attack. I-Ie did the great bulk of the ball carrying and accounted for both Lion touchdowns. In the last game of the season against the Penn scrubs on the eve of Thanks- giving, at Philadelphia, the Lion team put up a brave battle against three com- plete teams which alternated on the field against it. They stopped threat after threat but as the game drew to a close, still scoreless, it was impossible to hold out any longer. Savagely hammering through with fresh reserves at almost every play, Penn put across two touch-downs in the last few minutes. Colum- bia's offense was weak and Vic Nordstrom's punting was the chief factor in the defence although the line played a sterling game throughout. JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM I 234 I 0 , KQ JZ L t n a A -5-N BASKETBALL X R I 0 m x W 7 , . . .5 1928-29 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM AIKENHEAD MORRISON BLATTERMAN BALLON OBEY VOM SAAL GREGORY TYS MAGURK URBACH SMITH 9- Agfamesx THE 1928-Z9 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM i Donald Magurk, '30 l Captain Frederick Vom Saal, '29 Manager Richard Aikenhead. '30 Asst. Manager Daniel L. Meenan, Jr. Coach Paul Mooney Asst. Coach CAPTAIN MAGURK T Charles Ballon, '30 Prescott Blatterman, '30 John Bradley, '3l George Gregory, '31 Donald Magurk, '30 William Middleton, '30 George Milton, '31 MANAGER VOM SAAL HE SQUAD James Morrison, '30 J. Edward Obey, '3l Joseph Seaman, '30 David Smith, '31 Remy Tys, '30 George Urbach, '29 Howard Walker, '3l THE LEAGUE STANDING Won Lost Won Lost Pennsylyania 8 2 Cornell 5 5 Dartmouth 7 3 Yale 4 6 Columbia 5 5- Princeton l 9 f237:I Q, . ug THE 1928-29 VARSITY BASKETBALL SEASON OLUMBIA undoubtedly had its best basketball material in the 1928-29 season since the Intercollegiate Championship team of 1925-26. Yet, whether due to lack of practice or the lack of experience on the part of the Lion cagers in playing together, or any other reason or combination of reasons, the record for the season compiled by the Blue and White five was hardly what had been expected of it. Columbia Hnished in a tie with Cornell for third place in the Eastern Intercollegiate League, which, incidentally, included the weakest teams in years, and won only ten out of nineteen games. The Blue and White's triumphs were over Pennsylvania, League cham- pions, Yale, Cornell, Navy, Union, Williams, Seton Hall, the Alumni, and Princeton, whom the Lions defeated twice. The losses were sustained at the hands of Cornell, Yale, Pennsylvania, Fordham, St. John's, Army, N. Y. U., and Dartmouth, to whom the Blue and White cagers bowed twice. The sole close defeat was at N. Y. U.'s hands, the Violet winning by 33 to 31. Coaches Daniel Meenan and Paul Mooney, at the start of the season, had Captain Don Magurk, a forward, Red Urbach and Remey Tys, guardsg and the two previous Freshman stars, George Gregory, lanky center star and cub high- scorer, and Ed Obey, captain and second high-scorer of the 1931 yearling five. ln addition there were several varsity substitutes from the previous season. The Lions opened the season with this line-up against the Alumni and avenged the 1927 defeat sustained at the hands of the graduates, showing good work for an opening game, though rough in spots. The team likewise defeated Seton Hall the same week. However, in the team's first real test against Army at West Point next week, the Lions were not equal to the task and went down to a seven-point defeat. On Friday of the same week Columbia took on N. Y. U. and played excellent basketball only to lose in the final seconds by a field goal by Nemecek, the Violet's football star and court forward. Had the Lions been wise enough to have frozen the ball in the final seconds-a matter of court generalship-they might have won this game. The following night, however, the team came back into the winning column to defeat Williams in a well-played contest, the nnal one of the 1928 year before the Christmas recess. St. .1ohn's again took the scalp of the Columbia team by seven points on January 8, although the Lions rallied in the second half and the Captain and star of the Brooklynites, Rip Collins, was held by Tys in the second half. By a thrilling last-minute rally in the game with Union on Friday of the same week, the Blue and White won a 26 to 25 decision over the Schenectady team. The team then opened the Intercollegiate League season on Wednesday, January 16 with a victory over Princeton at Morningside Heights in which the courtmen went wild for the opening minutes of the second half, this spree win- ning for the Lion. Following this game, Gregory became ill and was unable to play against the crack Fordham five on Saturday night at the lVlaroon's spa- cious basketball stronghold. As a result, the Eastern champions got a 36 to 18 verdict over Columbia before a 6,500 crowd of spectators. The tussle was the final one for the Winter semester. Dave Smith, who had entered Columbia from Yonkers in February 1928 L 238 J 5- 4-Aoamea-+C A, and starred on the Freshman team in the last half of the season, became eligible with the start of the Spring semester. Smith, a guard, had formerly been Pill- State choice on the championship Yonkers five. With Smith still officially ineligible for the Dartmouth game at Hanover on February 6, the Lions travelled up to meet the Green, and though favored to win, returned on the short end of a 4l to 34 score to suffer its first League defeat. Gregory's work featured in putting Columbia back into the victory column on Saturday of this week when the Lions scored a triumph over Navy at home by a single point. Magurk likewise was instrumental in the triumph. Then, on Alumni Night, the Lions met Penn, the League champions and League lead- ers. Columbia had a nine-point lead over the Quakers seven minutes before the end of the game and would have won, when Smith, who had kept Captain Joey Schaaf in check through the second period, was put out of the game for exceeding the four limit, and, with Urbach also out for the same reason, Schaaf went wild and took the game away from Columbia. This was the hardest game of the season to lose. The Lions went to New Haven two days later and came back with an unexpected defeat by Yale for the first time in seven basketball seasons. The unevenness of the team was evidenced by its performance at Ithaca the following Wednesday when the Lions rallied in the closing moments to beat Cornell, 35 to 30. Then the team threw away the game with Dartmouth at home on Saturday night. The highlight of the season occurred the following Tuesday, February 26. when Columbia went to Philly to play the return game with Penn, which had, up to this time been unbeaten both in the East and in the League. Columbia bottled Schaaf up, with Smith outplaying the Red and Blue man, as he had in their first game, and Columbia won the season's distinction by trouncing Penn by the score of 35-23. The Penn game left the Lions in good spirits and they won over Yale at home on March l to even the series, by a 29 to 28 score in another last- minute rally. The return game with Princeton at Tigertown went an extra period with Smith caging the winning field goal in the five-minute period to win for the Lion, 25-24. Having thus won its third straight League triumph, the team played Cornell at home on March ll in the closing game. It showed no strength and coordination and let the Ithacans tie the Lions for third place in the final League standing. Gregory tallied 14 points in this game to run away with high- scoring Columbia honors for the season. The season's two outstanding Columbia players were George Gregory and Dave Smith, each of whom won places on the All-Star Intercollegiate League selections by the coaches. Inasmuch as Red Urbach was the only graduating varsity man, and the Freshman team had produced a marvelous five, the 1929-30 year held great promise for a championship team. f2391 -g4A9. LQsx I as THE SCHEDULE Score Columbia Opponent December Alumni at Columbia 35 21 December Seton Hall at Columbia 37 17 December Army at West Point 30 37 December New York Univ. at Columbia 31 33 December Williams at Columbia 49 33 January St. John's at Columbia 25 32 January Union at Columbia 26 25 January XPrinceton at Columbia 32 25 January Fordham at Fordham 18 36 February xDartmouth at Hanover 34 41 February Navy at Columbia 32 31 February QI-Uennsylvania at Columbia 23 39 February 24Yale at New Haven 23 37 February ?Cornel1 at Ithaca 35 30 February XDartmouth at Columbia 25 29 February Xpennsylvania at Philadelphia 35 23 March XYale at Columbia 29 28 March XPrinceton at Princeton 25 24 March 5l4Cornell at Columbia 24 36 XDenotes Intercollegiate League G 35 L . WIP . 52401 HITIQS. . MINQR A SPORTS Q . . , . l l -E 0 4 5 lux ,n THE 1927-28 VARSITY FENCING TEAM Norman Cohn, 29E Frederic Plumb, '28 C aprai n Manager James Nlurray Edmund Fritz, '29 Coach Asst. Manager Hugo Alessandroni, '29 Donald Dow, '29 Genaro Cautino, '29 John G. Ely, '28L Norman Cohn, '29E Julius Roth, '30 Alan Tompkins, '29 SCHEDULE Scores Opponent Date Columbia Opponent Pennsylvania P9bfU3fY 4 15 2 Cornell February 11 7 10 Harvard February 17 10 7 M, 1, T, February 18 14 3 Princeton February 25 9 8 Army March 3 7 10 Hamilton March 9 13 4 N. Y. U. March 13 11 6 Intercollegiate Semi-finals March 24 Won in Southern Division Intercollegiates April 5, 6 Won Sabre Team Title 3rd place for Three Weapon Team - 1927-28 VARSITY FENCING TEAM MURRAY ROTH DOW ALESSANDRONI PLUMB ELY COHN TOMPKINS 52421 e- A ffllimel-'K -3 THE 1927-Z8 FENCING SEASON OLUMBIA again took prominent part in the lntercollegiates mainly through the efforts of Captain Norman C. Cohn, '29E who ran through all his bouts to clinch for himself the individual sabres title and for his team the intercollegiate crown. ln his twelfth and last bout, Cohn was defeated, but by his own team-mate, Donald C. Dow, '28. The Lion team as a whole finished third in the three-weapon ratings, first place going to Yale. Not quite so strong with the other two weapons as with the sabre, the Lion team during the course of the season won five of its nine dual meets, losing to Cornell and Army and tying Princeton. Cornell and Army were also among those who defeated Columbia's fencing team the previous year. The first meet of the season against Pennsylvania resulted in a walkover, l5-2, for the Lions. Cornell followed up, however, and administered a lO-7 beating. The next two meets, Harvard and M. I. T. went to the Blue and White lO-7 and l4-3. Then followed a victory over Princeton 9-8, and the 'Army defeat, lO-7. Hamilton and N. Y. U. fell in succession in the last contests before the lntercollegiates. The scores here were l3-3 and ll-6. The Intercollegiate semi-finals were held at Annapolis and the Columbia team swept the field leading in all three weapons, carrying off all honors from Pennsylvania, Navy and Princeton. ln foils, Columbia marched right through, defeating Penn, 8-1, Navy, 5-4, and Princeton, 6-3. Alessandroni and Tomp- kins, both of Columbia, were the individual leaders each with seven victories and two defeats to his credit. In the sabres, Columbia again led with three victories and no defeats, Captain Cohn running his season's total to twenty-two succes- sive wins. The team only dropped one sabre match, Eller of Navy defeating Dow. In the epee, Captain Cohn was undefeated and the team won all three matches with the same score, 3-l. Going into the lntercollegiates a month later, the sabres team, composed of Captain Cohn and John Ely, '28L captured the sabres crown and Cohn the individual title. This victory brought to Columbia the Grasson Sabre Trophy. As a result of his performances in these events Captain Cohn was later chosen for the United States Olympic Team which competed in the Games at Amster- illam in August, 1928. Cohn was one of the youngest American fencers ever so onored. ' At the close of the season it was announced that Alan Tompkins, '29 would lead the team for the coming year. l 243 .I 1928 VARSITY TENNIS TEAM BRILL TSCHORN HAMMOND BOWDEN HYMES SHESHUNOFF SARGENT THE 1928 VARSITY TENNIS TEAM Frank Tschorn, '29 George Hammond, '28 Captain Manager THE TEAM Frank Bowden, '29 Robert Hatcher, '28 David Sargent, '30 Melville Brill, '28 Edward Hymes, '28 Victor Sheshunoff, 28 April April April April April April April April April April April May May May May May May Frank Tschorn, '29 THE SCHEDULE Norfolk C. C. at Norfolk C. C. of Virginia at Richmond Navy at Annapolis Edgemoor Club at Washington, D. Baltimore C. C. at Baltimore Pennsylvania at Home Cornell at Ithaca Lehigh at Home Colgate at Home Princeton at Home N. Y. U. at N. Y. U. Fordham at Fordham Army at West Point Union at Home Haverford at Home Dartmouth at Home I Williams at Home C. Score Columbia-Opponent l 5 3 3 l 5 4 2 O 6 O 9 cancelled-rain cancelled-rain cancelled-rain cancelled-rain 4 5 3 4 5 3 5 3 5 1 4 4 cancelled-ram Eastern Intercollegiate Doubles Championship-won by Tschorn and Bowden 52441 S, ,g THE 1929 SWIMMING AND WATER POLO SEASON HE Varsity Swimming Team experienced the worst season in the annals or the sport at Columbia, losing all the scheduled meets this year. Several of the contests were close, the team losing to Fordham, City College, Colgate and M. I. T. by the margin of the relay, but the Lion's weakness in the free-style events was all too apparent. Despite this, members of the team broke three of Columbia's tank records. Rene Faure established a new mark of 2:46 4X5 in the 200-yard breaststroke race, Bill Gaynor made a new l5O-yard backstroke record at 1:52 4f5, and Wood McClure set a new quarter-mile mark of 5.58 2f5. In the Colgate meet, with the score 30-I5 before the century, Columbia's su.periority in the other events went for nought when the Maroon took first and second and also won the relay to bring the final score to 3l-3l and victory to Colgate, due to the relay rule. In the M. I. T. meet the score stood 3l-23 in favor of the Engineers before the relay. but the Boston team beat out the Blue and White in the last lap, to win, 39-23, reversing last year's score. Before he left in February, Rene Faure scored two victories for Columbia and came in second to Nelson Millard of Yale. Thereafter Charles Oberist and either Roe, Giddings or Howell swam the breaststroke race. Johnny Kraft was the main entry in the dive and was a consistent scorer. The efforts of Luke Ryan in this event also deserve mention. Bill Gaynor and Frank Bowden did fine work in the backstroke. Gaynor turned in performances of about l:55 or under in many meets, while Bowden was always close to him, the pair often finishing in first and second place. Gaynor was also the mainstay of the sprints. Wood McClure, Savoia and Prince swam in the 440-yard race. In the M. I. T. encounter McClure and Jarosh of the visitors crossed the line inches apart, the judges awarding the victory to Jarosh in 5:51 215 and although McClure made his fastest time in this race, it was not allowed as a Columbia record. The other freestyle entries were chosen from Bowden, Ryan, Myers, Booth, Gobel, Savoia and Prince. Coach Kennedy experimented with many relay combinations, but toward the end of the season Gobel, Savoia, Gaynor and Prince were the regular entries. The Water Polo Team fared little better than the swimmers. Had the squad, however, shown the excellent team work and coordination throughout the season that it did in the Rutgers, Dartmouth and Penn encounters, Columbia would have finished well up in front in this sport. Peraino, Brown and Kalmykow played well in the forward positions, with Captain Rongetti, Schultz and Kelley filling in the defense. Steenland and Nauen alternated on the offense, while Moukad, Jorgensen and Levin were seen frequently in the backfield positions. f245:I 1929 VARSITY SWIMMING TEAM FARLOW ROWE' BOWDEN KENNEDY SAVOIA ARANOW KRAFT MCCLURE RYAN OBERIST FAURE PRINCE THE 1929 VARSITY SWIMMING TEAM Charles Booth, Gr. Frank Bowden, '29 Robert Farlow, '29 Captain Manager Edward T. Kennedy William Norton, '30 Coach Asst. Manager THE TEAM Adolf Ciobel, '31 Charles Oberist, '30 '29 John I-Iowell, '31 Frank Bowden, Rene Faure, '29 Silas Giddings, '30 William Gaynor. '30 January 9 January 12 January 18 February 8 February 9 February 13 February 15 February 20 February 23 March 2 March 9 March 1 6 John Kraft, '29 Wood McClure, '27 Martin Meyer, '30 THE SCHEDULE Fordham at Columbia b'fYa1e at New Haven XC. C. N. Y. at C. C. N. Y. Colgate at Columbia Army at West Point A Princeton at Columbia M. I. T. at Columbia ,kRutgers at New Brunswick D'fDartmouth at Columbia WfSyracuse at Syracuse : Navy at Annapolis Dkpennsylvania at Columbia Xfaeague Contests L 246 J Leon Prince, Jr., '31 Luke Ryan, '31 Domenico Savoia, '30 William Taggart, '31 Columbia Opponents 25 37 10 52 29 33 31 31 12 50 11 51 23 39 10 52 14 48 11 51 8 54 16 46 1929 VARSITY WATER POLO TEAM FARLOW NAUEN MATZKE FITZGERALD KENNEDY PRAGER MOUKAD KALMYKOW STRINGER BROWN STEENLAND SCHULTZ JORGENSEN PERAINO THE 1929 VARSITY WATER POLO TEAM Joseph Rongetti, '29 C aptain Edward T. Kennedy Coach THE TEAM Thomas Brown, '30 C. Theodore Jorgensen, '29 Vladimir Kalmykow, '30 Thomas J. Kelley, '29 Maurice Levin, '29 January January February February February March March March Jacob Prager, '29 Joseph Rongetti, '29 Robert Farlow, '29 Manager William Norton, '30 Asst. Manager 1 John 1VlaclVlahon, Jr., 30 Arthur Matzke, '28, '30E Joseph Moukad, '31 Richard Nauen, '28, '31, P958 John Peraino, '29 Mortimer Schultz, '29 Nlarinus Steenland, '31 William Stringer, '31 THE SCHEDULE 12 Yale at New Haven 18 C. C. N. Y. at C. C. N. Y. 13 Princeton at Columbia 20 Rutgers at New Brunswick 23 Dartmouth at Columbia 2 Syracuse at Syracuse 9 Navy at Annapolis 16 Pennsylvania at Columbia f247j Columbia Opponent 14 62 19 , 46 31 54 50 40 35 34 26 17 9 82 41 32 1928-29 VARSITY WRESTLING TEAM PETERSON L. AMSTER PARRY scoTT BAKER CLARK APPEL H. AMSTER KEZAR FARMLETT NICHOLS s1MMoNs RELYEA CARLSTEN THE 1928-Z9 VARSITY WRESTLING TEAM Thomas H. Simmons, '29 Charles H. Kezar, '29 Captain Manager August Peterson J. R. Stewart, '30 Coach Asst. Manager 115-lb. Class George Johnstone, '31 John P, Nichols, '29 125-lb. Class Myron Appel, '31 George Farmlett, '31 135-lb. Class Thomas Simmons, '29 Robert Lombardo, '30 Edward G. Baker, '30 Columbia 21 Columbia 1 1 Columbia 12 Columbia 15 Columbia 6 Columbia 0 Columbia 9 Columbia 42 Unlimited Class THE SCHEDULE If248:I 145-lb. Class Robert Parry, '30 Hubert Relyea, '31 158-lb. Classl Orrin H. Clark, '30 175-lb. Class Earle Carlsten, '30 Harrison Scott, '30 William D. McCabe, bu Brooklyn Poly 9 Harvard 1 8 Pennsylvania 15 Syracuse 1 2 Princeton 21 Lehigh 3 3 Army 3 6 Cornell 25 THE 1928-29 VARSITY WRESTLING SEASON OLUMBIA went through one of the poorest wrestling seasons in some years, winning two out of eight meets in the entire schedule. Gus Peterson, veteran coach, was faced with several bad breaks which effectively put the Columbia wrestling team out of the winning column for most of the season. Johnny Nichols, veteran ll5-pounder, suffered a foot injury after the third meet of the season and was out of the line-up permanently thereafter. Soon after the next meet, Captain Tom Simmons one of the leading men in col- legiate l35-pound wrestling circles, was forced to drop mat work because of the pressure of law school studies and the team advanced into the rest of its schedule with a badly battered line-up which boasted only one really first-class wrestler in Orrin Clark who took over the acting-captain assignment, The team started off well enough by trimming Brooklyn Polytechnic Instia tute, 21-9, in the Columbia gym. Harvard was to be met at Cambridge the following week and the Lion team took the trip to try and keep the thirteen- year slate clean. Harvard hadn't during all that time ever defeated a Columbia wrestling team. At the last minute, however, the grappers were forced to go without the services of Nichols who was laid up with a bad cold and the meet was held without a bout in the ll5-pound class. Parmlett and Captain Simmons took their bouts with time decisions and Columbia led at 6-O. Lifrak of Harvard, the I45-pound Intercollegiate champ, took the next match from Relyea by a close decision. Orrin Clark found little difficulty in throwing Sykes and the Lion lead lengthened. In the next three bouts, however, Graves, Warner and Boldt of Harvard threw their men in succession and Carlsten, Baker and Cuneo were pinned to the mat and Columbia surrendered the meet, 18-ll. Pennsylvania took the Lion into camp in the next scheduled meet with the Columbia victories again coming in the lightweight half of the program. It was Nichols' last bout in competition and he took it by throwing Gamma of Penn. Farmlett followed up with a decision over Hoepke and Simmons repeated over Reynolds. Columbia dropped the rest of the bouts to lose the meet, 15-l2, The Columbia team won its other victory of the season over Syracuse, 15-12. Simmons, Relyea, Clark and Scott were the point-winner for the Lion, Relyea winning his bout with a fall, the only one of the afternoon. The Co- lumbia victory came as a welcome addition to the annual Alumni Day pro- gram. Several of the matches went to extra periods, Scott taking additional time to beat Freeman, and Captain Simmons requiring the same to dispose of Schantze. Princeton, Lehigh, Army and Cornell were all met and bowed to during the succeeding weeks, the most disastrous defeat probably being the 33-O white- wash suffered at the hands of Lehigh. Princeton won, Zl-6, Army, 36-9, and finally Cornell, 25M to 4M . 52491 1928-29 VARSITY RIFLE TEAM DURAND MALRAISON GREIG DANIEL VAVRINA THE 1928-29 VARSITY RIFLE TEAM Everett N. Cmarnsey, '29 Milo A. Durand, '29 I Captain Manager Merril Eurbush, '30 Asst. Manager THE TEAM ,... Charles Bonilla, '29 Milo A. Durand, '29 Peter I-Iousekeeper, '30 Robert Coshland, '29 Merrill Eurbush, '30 Pierre J. Malraison, '29 .Iohn C. Daniel, '30 Everett N. Ciarnsey, '29 Raymond Vavrina, '31 Norman Cireig, ' 3 0 HE Varsity Rifle Team, which last year Won the Eastern Intercollegiate Shoulder-to-Shoulder Championship, has again returned some excellent scores. This year the team beat Princeton, N. Y. U., Brooklyn Poly, Cornell, Renssa- laer, Syracuse and C. C. N. Y., to Win the Eastern Intercollegiate Champion- ship. The team, which was undefeated in League matches, beat Et. Hamilton Army Team and Leland Stanford and lost to Pittsburgh and West Virginia in non-league competition. f250j I ' E . GM , JFRESHMEN ,Q R SPQRTS n ,v ff Q Q ' M un 4 'f d S' , , . . 4, 'T' fl u N e.-V Ao THE 1931 FRESHMAN BASEBALL TEAM LTHOUGH Coach Cook's charges failed to maintain the long string of baseball victories, they were defeated only once during the season and beat their most important opponent, the Cornell Freshmen, by the score of 2-l. The season oflicially opened on April lOth, when the yearlings met and defeated the DeWitt Clinton High School team. Poly Prep was slaughtered a few days later by the score of 24-4. The frosh were then held to a tie by the Newton High School team and beaten by Peekskill, 6-5 on May l. ln the Cornell game the cubs scored in the first and again in the sixth, while the Red team could not push over a run until the eighth. The entire game was well played. The season closed with a victory over St. Paul's, 10-0, and over James Madison, 21-8. The team, which was led by George Schuler, consisted of the following men: John Bradley, Ed Obey, Herman Swettman, George Costigan, Louis Kalamaras, George Bohrer, Tom Gallivan, Charles Heck, James Travis, James Sheridan, Fred Landau, Charles Frehner, J. Kilgore, William Soden and John Hastings. 1931 PRESHMAN BASEBALL TEAM LANDAU KILGORE TRAVIS MILLER DELANOY ARIDA SODEN Doo. COOK SCHULER COSTIGAN GALLIVAN SWETTMAN KALAMARAS HECK OBEY SHERIDAN BRADLEY lf252j 9 ,ADJ x94-K . Ag THE 1931 FRESHMAN TRACK TEAM I-IE 1931 Freshman Track team was handicapped by the leanest sort of a year. The Frosh participated in but one meet during the entire season. ln the lone meet the yearlings succeeded in causing the capitulation of Stuyvesant High School in the track and Held events even though they were handicapped by the absence of several men. The season opened and closed on Friday, May 4 when the yearlings defeated the high school team 61-55. Everard, Gilchrist, Jahelka, Lowe, Hack- ett and Kurtin were the point winners for the Blue and White. Although the team showed much promise in this meet further contests were either postponed or cancelled because of inclement weather. Coach Merner has most of the 1931 yearling aggregation with him this spring as Varsity candidates and it remains for them to meet any real test this year. The true value of the 1931 Frosh team can be computed from the num- ber who make the Varsity and from their prowess in Inter-Varsity meets. THE TEAM David K. Bouton, Manager Ed Everard, Captain William Gilchrist William Lowe Ralph Hackett George Jahelka, Jr. Abner Kurtin THE 1932 FRESHMAN CROSS-COUNTRY TEAM P THEIR three dual meets the Freshman harriers won two. The first meet was dropped to the strong N. Y. U. Cubs by the score of 20-35. Nevertheless Bill Somers, who was later chosen captain of the team, was the individual win- ner in the excellent time of 12:52, about two and one-half minutes faster than the winning time for the Freshman 1. C. A. A. A. A. race held over the same course. p De La Salle was beaten 21- 34 and the Manhattan Fresh- men were also defeated, 26- 34. In both these meets Somers, Wendorf and Proulx finished first, third and fourth respectively. The team fared badly in the lntercollegiates, finishing last in a Held of fifteen. Som- ers who was severely handi- capped by a cold, finished with the Columbia entrants near the end of the pack. Proulx, McAndris, Wendorf, , Somers and Rath crossed the line in that order. 1932 FRESHMAN CROSS COUNTRY TEAM I 253 I , , :r-..::- .1 .e:.,.-ve: :mas : :s-was K- 4: ., '-2129155 1 'ff-2 -1- 'Q . . A .45 ' +G' 9.1 K :.:' 1-:,: --w-.2 -X -I-iz'-:F '3 ,QQ .,.-44.3.m::4:.,.:,:.:.-.-Q....: -.::.::,: .:.:-1.--.:.1.-,.4..-Ev - -smfww .fe , . ' V - 2? - -1:4525::1a::s::s:aas-1:::: WN Q i . -:-.JI 12-:, .., :.:.I f-'5-g:- '-'- .1 -T. : -X. V 4 T 1iZ - ' 1 M. ra...-is .3 -Nw wk svssx -em. .4 N A E-5.1-1::I:1-I-rf:-:-112:::S:2':4 : 1 -Hy ' ss- ' - ws:-. f:awf'SiFr:- 'I ' -: ..m:.:.:.::,.,--.p....z:.:,:, :iv 35QQ.,::: g-: 15:44-s..s ,:: :--:.., f, wwf X A S: z-acl xl, sv QS A 'W .5512-'S 8 as Xggsfgg 'Q s Q :gasps 3:1553 :--fs s wa X await, gray . .. J. K ,.. . ,6.V3 ,. , ska H, bb, 'RRI P 5' 0 PM 6' 4-aaworwvrf Ma, s Wm ff-as-a'1 3 --siwxs z es: 'Pb' -48 sk '4 1 :W is W-215 r X ' iklfkzx 33 YQ -- -- --'-' -- ---- ---- - - ---' - - Q2 -1 -- x -'- -'- -X . --.-m-:3::Jz:,,4, .. . gg-fe::-:-::.::-::::1-:er-:swf-. - :f:-s::Q:L-- y '-..',wQ- w. .-xgsgg -k -,-...-s...::ef:z.::-:.,, .. .. :Q -.,.... ..... .. ,gr ...Q Q... ..... .... g, .s Vs W. .A,s . -- .- ss. H ,,.,.:,,,:-.,.E s- -: 9.5 .4 5: Q: - 35 JE . ..,. , .. N Q., rssrr.-.2'2:-:2:1:r:: .:g5:: ...,,.Qf:2..-II I -2-. af f- X- '- : fx-jfrai-V222--:X 1252. . :I E1 . Q,,.,Q,f.f...,f . .,.., . .. . . N. '1-I, Q :Ss 2: ..... . ' - . . , -. . Nw - .. , ...rf f ::2j '.-. --N-:51 wil' .. :E-1 4: -.13-'..eb.-:f :1E-E-. - :EE ... .. ,..,..f:' 32, -g',:-:eSE::?:-E-f'-M . 1-a .. .Q .Q Q . :, Q- ,, . Q. 1. -B+. - -,Q -- . - - 2:-1 :gg f 1 :Z-5: qs, Q , xv- w- --x': . ::sks 1 . -0 w .. ::::..- , 11:11 - 'mf' S+- -W 'sn 2:5 W- .2 . Q., Q-R35-:rg -Q3..f:g13::5fg5,.-.-gg -' 1 Y . -2--. q sf -2:-s?3'wf::.s--.,: on ----5--f:: : .V -Y.:-.:.-f.-.-.:..:. - --ef:-. :, 1z.a-s---.g.-w:-:- -:::--wa' fps- -wr . ..:a2,.:...-rf.-: -sez .424-as. .::.:-:---, :'e-::f:--:1- .E5E25:?': ssE:.-E-.2a:zf'.:- -::-fIs: fSf:fii::. 51:1 . -mfs: 2:5 ff.:-' - 1--ff-25si':-. 1 :ra -1-:Z-1 ' 1' :1Q 13?':1 ?i?:f5,'::j-Q-jig, ' ..-fs-. f ::ff' -1525 'f5 'EEE '-5 '-3:2 - 7: . fi f - '- M.:.:.:.:..:::::s:-1.1-.Ve--f-..:::::-e--:1.,.:::4. . X, .. :sg-rf-:-::a5:::w, . ,. -, .:: :Q .f-f1....f-1 -- 4 bzz5:zg-g::::P.-,-..-.-.-.-::.f:...if-52.::r:5,::::1.,-:im . E:-X N:-: :' nhl 'w - K . 134:-.:2v.'-':27H:' , J:-' - -- -rf - - ': :f LN - 'f '.: :-mp.:-:-:gs-.-:-1:.-1ws:-:-:P-:--f----W-: -- -- . ' -- . :. -:.1 . -4 .. .- :-wr:-:::-. ..-sz :: , .. ::::.:.,.,-Q.: :-. ::-: .,., -9 .- 4 - ' .4 -:e-y:-:wx-:::-s,,11:::::::-:22:-:-:-:-:-1--:wffrffziff::.:.,:'.mfzf Pee-:M -' .-::-vw 1:2-fn.. . 14 qs . ' -:-:V-.:. - :Q-T-f - ar... a- '-:-,A-gr, fr: ,-v- -::- -- - - ' - : . W :-mf :-:sm X was-f:1:f-err: -2?2 '1:15I-152253 rr- 1:1 :.:z:fs:- ef .rf -ess: .. .vp -:s:::1.w:-.-.-. - ., -1 .v::.:.,,,. M, f!Z'F:.E.1,,., ,. w- --:::r5:.:s:.-f .,. .,,,,-.Q, 1'2 -f5fi5 'Lf.:':' '1152 is-1-'. 'E-.:1Ef I if -2251: - -. .mf 1-I -3- .is 57:1 I' -15, .::. s 5521251 :elif ..:f 1: 5553? 1:5 -3-.:g.:3..:Q::--.. .Q Q g.-:ry :Q. ::::g-- gfg. 3-2 .:-I . ,5:gs:g :5:5:5 :E gay: 25 -:5:v- as- 'sw 11? fr s . 2:1 .:. . . - -5 .ser -sz: f :ss 1. .:- ::-.:sm-x:-:+.- .:.:--1:--M .ass:,.: . -- :- ::.. V. . . . Q- .: -:f 2- .::'x - ,.' 1.- :f-1: 2',---.'g:jQ--: - ::rQ?' 1 -' 'P -'-X . K : Q ' -Q 1. .1-5 QQ ': 'f ,111 QQ QQ . ,V .. ., .1 . W: -1 .. , Q . Q Q. I QQ . Q QQ .Q s . Q. :- .': ,- -ff :- ,r : -- ' vw - 1: . . ' Le:-: -:-:-f.-. - - 3 -4- --A -- . , p - ,' - .-- - ' ' S- , .21-.' 163535 .- Y , -- .- . .. . Q -. , AQ .. F .. .Q ,... Q- Q. 7?f:.:51!Q!:f' ' - I - - , I. f - 1 ' ' ' A 1931 PRESHMAN CREW TRIS KA GANZLE SPILLER KUUSILUATO NORDSTROM LOZIER FOX WALTERS MICHELS -THE 1931 FRESHMAN CREW April 28, Kent May 4, Blackwell May 12, Childs Cup Bow-Henry Walters 2.-Stephen Fox 3.-Edwin Lozier 4.-Victor Nordstrom 5.-Frank Keil 6.-Clifford Spiller 7.-Carl Ganzle Stroke-Alfred Triska Cox-Walter Michels BOATINGS June 19, Poughkeepsie Bow-Henry Walters 2.-Stephen Fox 3.-Edwin Lozier 4.-Victor Nordstrom 5.-David Kuusiluato 6.-Clifford Spiller 7.-Carl Ganzle Stroke-Alfred Triska Cox-Walter Michels 12541 M ay 4 Freshman Four versus Choate Bow-Floyd Sanford 2-Eli Hopkins 3,-Peter Blasi Stroke-Robert Werner Cox-Charles Metzner 5, ,gg Legg A! THE 1931 FRESHMAN CREW HE only bright spot in the 1931 rowing record is the two length victory gained last April over Kent School. It was the first triumph for a Columbia cub boat over Kent in six years and the '31 yearlings made a good job of it by clipping seven seconds off the course record to set a mark of 4:42. ln its other races the frosh bowed to a superior Yale boat in the Blackwell Regatta, but managed to defeat Pennsylvania. The following week, this same performance was repeated only with the Princeton yearlings out in front this time, in the Childs Cup Regatta. Columbia trailed a poor second, outdistancing Pennsylvania who finished third and last. At Poughkeepsie the 1931 eight found itself outclassed and finished sixth behind Navy, Cornell, Syracuse, Wash- ington and Penn. California's cubs trailed in last. On the Housatonic, rowing against Kent in the season's first race, the 1931 crew gave promise of becoming a much greater crew than ultimately devel- oped. Ably steered by Walter Michels, the yearlings negotiated the tricky course, natural conditions giving every advantage to their opponents, and won handily by two lengths. On the Schuylkill the following Saturday the crew bowed to a polished Yale eight, though it finished a bare length ahead of Pennsylvania. The same day at Eastchester a four lost to Choate in a five-eighths of a mile sprint. ln the Childs Cup race at Princeton, the frosh lost to the Tigers but again beat Penn. The Freshman were outclassed at Poughkeepsie and finished next to last. THE 1931 FRESHMAN TENNIS SEASON HE 1931 Freshman Tennis Team brought its season, which had previously oeen successful, to a disas- trous close when it was trounced by Princeton, 9-O. Of the live matches for the season the Prosh won three, tied one and lost one. After defeating Poly Prep, , 4 .,., , . a e fe 3 '3 54 ea, iff 'fi ffm- .-ee i:zsi.1:i2:2:1-a,-::-f'f'-'-zfiff:iii5ifgf 1ilirifaiiiehimggf:251:95-,-: f f gig. ,,,,, e 57 2 ia.z,-i,Ki., ,. , , Q .lv - 'S ' ' -. 'w : Q i Ng V. H F ,.' .cv-ww is I ff gi,-n -'ggi-2.-.. 'm,.,'v1 'zA , ici-i i 1, A ii '- iw V if A QW in , X +4 -,.-.-1 4-2, in the opening match of .i ,.Z, ...A az 421. r i ff, ,gg the season, the Frosh showed 1e g '-aI if wiggle ii 3:541 2 i f their iiiiiiiv by coming fiom behind t9 tie fhe Serene ROX- b11rY team- ROe and Bergen took the second doubles to C bring the Score YO 3 2111- The , .,,,., , ,.,,,, , ,,.,,,,.,,,, . ,..,. i::'ii'ii'iiiiii:' Concordia Prep netmen were ,ifi p,,pwf: i'.'i ff .i..ii' P '.,, 1 .-'i. il- iiii i ...i' beaten, 5-0, as were the Col- 1931 FRESHMAN TENNIS TEAM legiate lnstitute players who won but one of the six matches. Stone, Roe, Bergen, composed the team. Williamson, Holzinger and Playle were the men who H2551 Roxbury Prep 1932 ERESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM THE 1932 ERESHMAN FOOTBALL TEAM Ralph Hewitt, '32 William Cook Captain Coach H. Allan P. Pass H. Aungst M. Goldberg E. Anderson E. Haines J. Allen R. Hewitt A. Banko J. Hanson Nl. Barone E. Hall H. Book L. Higgins R. Caldwell R. Harris E. Camson R. Japar R. Curtis C. Joyce J. Deems N. Kirk R. Delafield E. Kish L. Eberstadt A. Kurtin E. Edling D. lVlacCash E. Fay D. Manfredi W. McDuffee THE SCHEDULE Junior Varsity October 12 N Y. M. A. October 20 Princeton Prosh October 27 Colgate Prosh November 3 November 10 lf256J Eaton Goldthwaite, 3 O Manager J. McNaughton L. Molinais R. Muller P. Nobiletti B. Pike R. Ridgeby W. Schneller G. Schwind D. Shaefer C. Tesar C. Von Salzen W. Valery L. Warner R. Wood R. Wooer Columbia Opponent 33 37 0 13 O 13 gf. 4z9aWsQ:-C ,g THE 1932 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL SEASON HE '32 Frosh football season was marred by the first defeat for a Lion cub eleven since l926. To Princeton went the distinction in the third game of the season. The remainder of the schedule brought forth a scoreless tie with Colgate and three victories over the Jayvees, New York Military Academy and Roxbury Prep. On paper, the season was just falr, but from the viewpoint of material it was more than successful. Doc Cook produced some of the most promising backs South Field has seen in several years. Chief among them was Ralph Hewitt, former Worcester Academy star, who was elected captain of the team after a sensational season as a triple-threat man. Three weeks after Doc Cook issued his first call, Mike Sesit brought his Jayvees down to the Campus and the Prosh sent them back whitewashed, 33-O. Hewitt called it a day after accounting for twenty-seven of his team's points, four touchdowns and three additional points. Charles Joyce, quarter, scored the other touchdown. Hewitt's punts for the game averaged forty yards, and he carried the chief burden of the line plunging and end running. The Jayvees failed to make any appreciable impression against the yearlings, who showed an aggressive ability that promised well for the rest of the season. N. Y. M. A. came down to Columbia with an unbroken string of three victories for the season. The yearlings thus appeared to be outclassed, but Hewitt again romped about pretty much as he pleased, scoring another four touchdowns and this time one extra point for a total of twenty-live points. The team score was 37-O. His first score came on a short line plunge after a thirty- yard pass from Joyce to Hewitt had put the team in scoring position. Another score on a short end run was followed by a spectacular run-back of the kick-off by Hewitt, who tallied for the third time after a dash of eighty yards. After taking care of a momentary cadet threat, the score rolled up again as Joyce inter- cepted a pass and ran 90 yards and the day ended sadly for the military eleven. Princeton won its victory the next week when a noticeable lapse of punch on the part of the Lion cubs slackened them down long enough to let Princeton pile up thirteen points. The cub backs, Hewitt, Joyce, Japar and Hall weren't able to accomplish very much without interference. The man running with the ball seldom got far since the other backs and wingmen weren't doing a good job of taking out the opposition. 1 This defect was visibly improved the following week but an extremely muddy field produced a scoreless tie with Colgate and gave neither team very much chance to display its wares. It was one of those days when football play- ers are satisfied to keep their hands on the ball and their feet on the ground. Hewitt again declared a Roman holiday in the last game of the season against Roxbury and scored all of his team's thirteen points. His punts again averaged forty yards and he did most of the carrying during the entire game. The final score was 13-6, Roxbury having drawn first blood with a touchdown during the opening period. ln the next period Hewitt got started, and, after throwing a pass to Japar for a gain of ten yards, knifed through off tackle himself to score. He repeated his performance in the last minute of the same period. The remainder of the game was scoreless, with both teams scrapping back and fortlf' on fairly even terms. I:257j ., 1. Af-JDJWLQQC A, THE 1931 FRESHMAN FENCING SEASON 1931 FRESHMAN FENCING TEAM HE 1931 Freshman Fencing team fought a fair campaign, winning six out of its ten matches although no startlingly good material was produced out of the yearling squad. Defeat was met at the hands of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church team, 7-2, Erasmus Hall High School, 5-4, and the Princeton and Yale iirst year dueling outfits. The latter two scores were 6-3 and 5-4. Two return matches with Trinity and N. Y. M. A. resulted in twin victories for the Columbia team each time. Trinity was met and conquered twice by scores of 5-4 and 6-3. New York Military Acad- emy was met first at Cornwall and then at the Columbia gym and defeated both times, 5-4. The other victories for Columbia were gained over McBurney Prep and Boys' High School of Brooklyn. The outstanding performer of the team was William T. Kees who was elected cap- tain. Marson, Black and Bergen along with Philipson, Joseph and Harsanyi completed the team. THE 1932 FRESHMAN WRESTLING SEASON HE Freshman grapplers this year scored three victories, were tied twice and defeated three times. The team opened a diliicult season by trouncing the Cooper Union Varsity by the score of 30-9. The two ties, one with Newton, 15-15, and one with Brooklyn City College, 18-18, then ensued. Following the mid-year exams the frosh bowed to Poly Prep, 17M -4M , and to the Tiger' matmen, 1 who came from behind to win 24-18. The '32 wrest- lers came right back when they overwhelmed the Penn Freshmen, 33-3. The cubs lost to Blair, 15-18, in the next engagement, and closed the season with a victory over the Lehigh yearlings 21-9. Captain Simmons and Pit- luga were undefeated for the season. 1932 FRESHMAN WRESTLING TEAM I: 258 fl Q. Q: ,'L9J kQ9-X Q .Q THE 1932 FRESHMAN BASKETBALL SEASON ITI-I a record of ten victories in twelve starts, the 1932 Freshman basket- ball team turned in one of the best yearling court records in Columbia's history. Coach Paul Mooney's charges, 'assisted also by former Captain Johnny Lorch of the 1925-6 Intercollegiate Championship Lion five, went through to triumphs over Concordia Prep, St. Johns College Freshmen, Yale Freshmen, Morris High, Trinity School, Colgate Freshmen, Horace Mann School, Peekskill Military Academy, Seth Low Junior College, and Princeton Freshmen. The only teams who beat the Blue and White cubs were James Monroe High School, New York champions, and the Dartmouth Freshman ive, by a score of 40 to 36. Dartmouth would never have beaten the Lions had not Lou Bender, star forward, been barred from the game because of the technicality of having failed to take a heart examination at the right time. The three outstanding Freshman basketeers on the '32 five were Dave Jones, the lanky star center, Charlie Joyce, the extraordinary guard and crack shot, and Bender, who entered College in February from DeWitt Clinton, where he was captain of the team which lost to James Monroe for the city title. Bender was all-city choice for forward and highest scorer of the Public Schools Athletic League high school city race. ln addition, Ed Lautkin was the Columbia frosh 1ive's other guard, while Jimmy McNaughton was the other forward. 19 3 2 FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM LORCH JOYCE LEAHY WHITE SCHAEFER FRESE AIKENHEAD LAUTKIN MQNAUGHTON JONES BENDER ANFANGER f2591 v THE 1932 FRESHMAN SWIMMING TEAM HE Class of 1932 pro- duced better swimmers this year than Columbia as a whole has known for a long time. The yearlings complet- ed a highly successful season which included a 38-24 Vic- tory over the Princeton cubs. The frosh water polo play- ers, however, lost to the Ti- ger team. Other victories included those over Poly Prep, Blair, Peekskill and Peddie. Row- land, Stone, Joyce, Donegan 1932 FRESHMAN SWIMMING TEAM and Dolgos in the sprints, I-Iaughey and Dolgos in the distance races, Jorgensen in the dive and Callahan in the breaststroke were the outstanding performers. Rowland also made excellent time in the backstroke. The Freshman relay, consisting of Joyce, Donegan, Rowland and Dolgos broke the Columbia record in the Princeton meet, thrashing the two hundred yards in 1:41 3f5. By defeating the strong Peddie team in the local pool the yearlings finished the first undefeated season in many years. At the Intercollegiate, a team com- posed of Joyce, Ruddy, Rowland and Dolgos annexed the Freshman relay title. THE 1932 FRESI-IMAN RIFLE TEAM HERE has been a lack of interest in the Freshman Rifle Team this year, caused, per- haps, by a late start, and as a I result the showing has been very poor. The frosh failed to beat a single first-year out- fit this season. Pegram and Captain White produced the best scores, and are looked upon as Varsity material. The team, which is coached by members of the Varsity squad, was managed by Merrill Furbush, '3O. Dobson, Booth, Barnet, and Tinney completed the 1932 FRESHMAN RIFLE TEAM squad. li26Oj dl xx A I Q- ' JINTRAMURAL G 4 SPORTS A ' . N xx I I ' I J 3- Axxgamfh-K A, TNTRAMURAL ATHLETICS FOR 1928-29 ORE than 300 members of the four college classes turned out this year to participate in the interclass sports. These men, who for the most part have not the time or the ability to make a varsity squad, are able to satisfy their liking for certain sports by joining their class teams. Interclass sports are under the supervision of Doc Cook, who is assisted by the coaches of varsity teams and members of the Physical Education Depart- ment. The squads for the different activities are selected by managers who are appointed by the class presidents. The successful teams, or winners in indi- vidual events, receive their class numerals, while additional medals are given the victors in crew, track, cane sprees and wrestling. These prizes are donated by Kings Crown, Spiked Shoe, Student Board and various alumni. During the past year the Class of 1931 has taken the laurels in five out of the seven tournaments. The intramural events and their winners for the past year are: Spiked Shoe Baker Field meet, April, 1928, Class of 1931, Baseball tournament, May, 1928, Class of 1931, Bangs Cup Regatta, November, 1928, Saratoga boat, Freshman crew race, November, 1928, Boat A , Cane sprees, December, 1928, Class of 1931 , Spiked Shoe South Field meet, February, 1929, Class of 1931, Wrestling, February, 1929, Class of 1931, Basketball, March, 1929, Class of 1929, Boxing, 1928 Class of 1929. Spiked Shoe, the honorary track society, held its second annual interclass track meet last April. The Class of 1931, who at the time were yearlings, led the other groups over the Baker Field track to Hnish the contest with the high score of 62M points. The Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors followed in order with 47, 27 and 14M units respectively. The individual winners were: 100- yard Dash, Lenoir, '29, 220-yard Dash, Lenoir, '29, 120-yard Hurdles, Ever- ard, 31, 220-yard Hurdles, Hackett, '31, 440-yard Run, Brown, '30, 880- yard run, Gregory, '31, One-mile Run, Cuilchrist, '31, Two-mile Run, Hernan- dez, '30, Broad Jump, Brooks, '29, High Jump, Everard, '31, Javelin Throw, Scott, '31, Shot Put, Hanley, '30, Discus Throw, Hanley, '30, Pole Vault, Everard, '3l. ln May, 1928 Student Board arranged a baseball tournament as the last of the interclass sports of the year. A series of three games was planned in which the Juniors would encounter the Seniors in the first match, the yearlings would meet the second year men in the second, and the third contest would be a play- off for the title between the two winners. Here again the Class of 1931 emerged victorious. The first meeting of the nines resulted in a Junior victory, the third year men taking over the 1928 delegation, 12 to 5. In the second game of the tournament the yearlings tramped on the Sophs by a 4 to 2 score, thus earning the right to meet the Juniors in the final contest. This third match proved to be an easy one for the Frosh, for they mowed down their opponents to the tune of 4 to 0. Frehner, '31 allowed only two hits, while Ward of the Juniors was touched for ten blows. Miller and Simoncelli led the yearlings in the offensive, each annexing two safeties, while Landau, Kilgore, Soden and Miller did some excellent fielding. Ward and Lichtman connected for the two lone Junior hits. The members of the winning team are: Arida, Bonynge, De Lanoy, Forrest, I:262j F., JWQJ A kebx -Vi i Vi A Frehner, Kilgore, Landau, Miller, Milton, Phillips, Relyea, Simoncelli, Soden, Walker and Yerg. Toward the end of last spring the Eimer Medal Swimming contest was completed. Bill Gaynor, '30, who is captain-elect of the next year's swimming team, easily took the gold medal for first place. Leon Prince, Jr., '31, broke tradition by winning the silver award for second place. 1-le was the first yearling ever to gain one of these prizes which are awarded for all-around swimming ability. Third place and a bronze medal went to Domenico Savoia, '30, By winning three of the seven bouts in the interclass boxing tournament the Class of 1929 repeated its iistic triumph of last year. Krosnick, Lichtman and Kliegman fought their way through to the finals and to ultimate victory to bring their class success. Two of the contests were won by knockouts, while one was won by default. The summaries are: 115-pound class: Cauldwell, '28 defeated Parajana, '30 on points. 125-pound class: Rubin, '29 defeated McKinley, '29 on points. 135-pound class: Lichtman, '29 knocked out Lombardo, '31 in the Hrst round. 145-pound class: Krosnick, '29 defeated Hunter, '30 on points. 158-pound class: Fiordalisi, '30 defeated Kliegman, '29 in an extra round on points. 175-pound class: Fiordalisi, '30 won by default. Unlimited class: Kliegman, '29 knock out Coles, '30 in the third round. There are three special intramural wrest- ling contests sponsored by the alumni which are run off every year. They are the Kilroe novice wrestling championships, the Phil Hart gold medal award in the 145-pound class and the Kilroe gold medal award in the 158- pound class. Silver medals are given the vic- torious entrants in the novice competition which comprises the regulation seven weight divisions. The other two tourneys donate a single prize each for their respective classes. The yearlings, as usually happens, were able to draw enough strength from the Freshman the majority of novice awards. Of the live bouts that were engaged in, the Class of 1931 won three: two groups, the 115- pound and the 125-pound, were not run off because of lack of entrants. The Hart gold medal in the 145-pound class went to Relyea, '31 who defeated Clark, '30 with a time advantage of 57 seconds. Earle F. Carlsten, '29 took the Kilroe gold medal in the 158-pound group by throwing Krosnick, '29 with a crotchand body hold after nine minutes of grappling. Both Relyea and Carlsten were members of Lion wrestling teams, one on the Freshman AMSTER AND HANSON IN THE CANE SPREES wrestling team to walk off with squad, the other the Varsity. The summaries are: Novice bouts- 135-pound 145-pound 158-pound 175-pound class: Lombardo, '31 threw Fried, '29, class: Relyea, '31 threw Dyal, '30, class: Zuckerman, '30 time advantage over L. Amster, '31, class: Dworakowski, '29 threw Lindberg, '3l. 52631 Q. 4 Unlimited class: Berger, '31 time advantage over Schultz, '29. Hart Medal 145-pound class: Relyea, '31 time advantage over Clark, '30. Kilroe Medal 158 pound class: Carlsten, '29 threw Krosnick, '29. The intramural fencing contest of 1927-1928, too, took place last spring. Louis H. F. Mouquin, an alumnus and former member of the fencing team, has established a fund to provide for an annual award of three medals to the most proicient members of the team. Norman Cohn, '28, captain of the team and representative of the United States in the Olympics in the Sabres division, won the tourney with a total of seventeen points out of a possible eighteen. Topkins, '29 came second with thirteen units while Alessandroni, '29 took third with twelve and one-half points. Gold, silver and bronze medals respectively were given to the winners. The annual Bangs Cup Regatta was held in November of the current school year over the Harlem River course. Two races, a mile pull for the varsity crew- men and a three-fourths of a mile for the yearling oarsmen, were participated in. Although it is usual for three boats to enter each of the races, only two eights could be mustered up for each of the sprints. The first of the events was won by the Saratoga boat largely by accident. The Henley eight, which was made up of last year's champion lightweights, had jumped into the lead and kept it until the last few hundred yards were reached, when the bow of the boat hit a submerged crate. With the unwelcome box clinging to the prow of their boat the lightweights were at a disadvantage which the Saratogo eight capitalized, and, as the boats swept by the nnish line, turned into victory. The members of the winning crew are: Bow, Agate, '31, 2, Moukad, '31, 3, Stein, '31, 4, Pnster, '3l3 5, Robertson, '30, 6, MacDonald, '29: 7, Hopkins, '31, 8, Lutz, '303 Cox, Stacey, '32. The Frosh contest went off more smoothly, unhampered by wooden vicis- situdes. The short distance of the course turned the race into a sharp sprint which was ended as the A boat crossed the line. The crewsters of the win- ning combination are: Bow, Thomas, 2, Powersg 3, Beling, 4, Spottswoodg 5, Englehartg 6, Jones: 7, Fowkes: 8, Fowler, Cox, Gaguine. ln the traditional cane spree contests the Sophomores all but made a clean sweep of the bouts, trimming the Frosh 6 ' to 1, and thus automatically placing a ban 1 on the smoking of class pipes by the yearlings . on the campus for the rest of the year. Had the first year men won, they would have 5 been permitted to sport their pipes on the campus after Washington's Birthday. The sole Freshman point was earned by Tesar who defeated Rosensweet in the 145-pound division after a struggle of three minutes and fifty seconds. Up to date seventeen victories have been scored by Sophomores, ten by Freshmen and three encounters have ended in EVERARD CLEARS THE BAR ties. The summaries are: 115-pound class: Johnstone, '31 defeated Martiner, '32: time nfty-live seconds. 125-pound class: Appel, '31 defeated Friedman, '32, time two minutes forty- live seconds. 135-pound class: Lombardo, '31 defeated Shafer, '32, time twelve seconds. 145-pocmcg class: Tesar, '32 defeated Rosensweet, '31, time three minutes fifty secon s. f264j fp Y ,g'!.9J kQsx 4 158-pound class: Amster, '31 defeated Hanson, '32, time six minutes thirty seconds. ' 175-pound class: Fox, '31 defeated Wood. '32: time eleven minutes ten seconds. Ur1Iz'mz'ted class: Scott, '31 defeated Banko, '32, time two minutes. The Class of 1931 again won the interclass track meet run by Spiked Shoe on the South Field board track last February by garnering a high figure of 50 points out of the 90 distributed. The yearlings came second with 28, the Juniors third with ll and the fourth year men were all but blanked with a total pf a solitary unit. Edward Everard, '31 proved himself the star of the meet by marking up 21 points for his class. He collected three first places and two sec- onds for his total. The summaries are: 70-yard Dash, Hewitt, '32g 70-yard High Hurdles, Spencer, '32: One-mile Run, Jahelka, '31, 75-yard Low Hurdles, Everard, '31: Two-mile Run, Cahill, '30: One-mile Relay, Class of 1931 CTierney, Swan, O'Connell, Prattb 1 880-yard Run, Somers, '32: High Jump, Everard, '31, Broad Jump, Everard, '3l: Shot Put, Clark, '3l. lnterclass wrestling, which was held last February in the Gymnasium, proved to be another easy success for the second year men who earned the high score of eighteen points. The Frosh and the Seniors tied for second place with nine points each, while the Class of 1930 did not score. The most interesting bout of the day occurred in the 175-pound class, when Schultz, '29 threw Japar, '32 after a little more than three minutes of hard grappling. The summaries are: 115-pound class: Johnstone, '31-time advantage over Cuaskill, '32. 125-pound class: H. Amster, '31 threw Southwick, '32. 135-pound class: Simmons, '32 threw Davies, '31, 145-pound class: Pitluga, '32 time advantage over Parry, '30, 158-pound class: lVlcCieath, '29 time advantage over Pope, '3l. 175-pound class: Schultz, '29 threw Japar, '32, Unlimited class: Burger, '31 threw Banko, '32, The Class of 1929 won the interclass basketball tournament last March for the second year in succession, but not before being forced into the shadow of defeat. A series of twelve games had been arranged for, each class quintet play- ing the others twice, and at the end of the tenth contest the Seniors, Juniors and Sophs were.all tied for first place with three victories and two losses, while the yearlings lagged behind out of the running with four defeats and a single suc- cess. Both failures of the fourth year quintet had been received from the Sopho- mores, and when, after the twelfth match, the Classes of 1929 and 1931 were discovered to be tied for first place, the former group was conceded little chance to win their numerals, An extra contest was arranged for to determine the champions. At the opening whistle of the play-off game the teams lined up as follows: Seniors-Deming, Ward, Pinel, Gazzola and Glenn: Sophomores-Travis, Rosen, Nordstrom, Hackett and Milton. The second year men were lacking several of their regulars, and their loss was soon to be felt keenly. ln the Hrst few minutes to play the Senior five ran up an eight point lead, hardly giving their opponents a chance to get near their own basket. This wide space between the two scores enheartened the one team and discouraged the other, for at the end of the first half the score stood 14 to 6 favor the Seniors. In the second half Auerbach, '29 went in for Ward, while the Sophs sub- stituted Congdon for Rosen. But the changes did not alter the advantage and even the line shooting of Hackett, '31, who dropped in five goals for a ten-point f2651 Q- - 'fDJ SQsC 4 total, could not bring the crippled Sophomore team victory. The game ended a Senior success, 32 to 20. Pinel, '29 was high scorer for his team with eight points recorded, while Ward, '29 and Auerbach, '29 followed close behind with six each. INTRAMURAL SPORTS AWARDS Baseball 1931 Herbert Miller George Milton Randolph Phillips Herbert Relyea Mario Simoncelli Hickmat Arida Robert Bonynge Nelson De Lanoy Charles Eorrest Charles Erehner J. Kilgore William Soden Herman Landau Richard Yerg Howard Walker Basketball, 1929 Morris Auerbach John Gazzola John Deming Victor Glenn lsidore Edinger Augustus Grilling Maurice Pinel Boxing , 1928 Robert Cauldwell 1929 Jacob Kliegman Sidney Lichtman David Krosnick Robert Rubin 19 3 0 George Eiordalisi Swimming 1929 Everett Mildner 1930 William Gaynor William Lancaster Lowell Hawk Irving Morris, Jr. Charles Oberist 19 31 Adolf Gobel Walter R. Hall Track 1929 Robert Brooks Einar Paust Rubin Lewis William Rydell Daniel O'Grady John Sacco David Lipsky Track 19 3 0 Bernard Axelrod Clayton Knowles 19 3 1 Edward Everard George Jahelka Cane Sprees 19 30 Paul Arnold George Odom Thomas Brown Louis Pettit Donald Peyser 1931 Bernard Rosensweet Henry Scott Crew QEa11 Regattaj 1929 Terence MacDonald 1930 Werner Lutz Allyn Robertson 19 31 Frederick Agate Joseph Moukad James Hopkins Walter Steen Leonard Pfister 1932 Henry Beling Lamoyne Jones Carl Englehardt Philip Powers Raymond Eowkes Maurice Spottswood Prank Eowler Robert Stacey Benito Gaguine John Thomas Wrestling 1929 Sidney Lichtman Robert Rubin Erank Zaklasnik 19 30 Edward Baker Orrin Clark 1931 Harold Amster Henry Scott 52661 JIQLNGQS CROWN gm KING'S CROWN N A university as large as Columbia the handling of students' activities is not a simple matter. While the Athletic Association, and the University Committee on Activities take general supervision over the athletics, the non-athletic activi- ties are under the control of King's Crown. This organization aims not only to help the various undergraduate groups, but also to protect the general pub- lic from any embarrassment that might result from inexperienced management, particularly in relation to Hnancial matters. So close has this organization been to the activities that the non-athletic extra-curricular organization have become known as the King's Crown activities. King's Crown itself is governed by a board of nine members and the Graduate Treasurer. Of the nine men, three graduates and two officers are appointed by the President of the University, and four are College seniors, elected by the student body. Benjamin A. Hubbard was appointed Graduate Treasurer by the Board in 1921 and has held that position since then. Besides the King's Crown Activities the finances of the classes are regu- lated by King's Crown, and practically every noon hour finds the oflice in John Jay crowded with class officers and the leaders of the other organizations anxious for a word with Ben . Student Membership is auto- matic for those college students who pay the S. A. F. fee. Sus- taining membership is open to others connected or formerly connected with the University. This membership carries with it subscriptions to the various campus periodicals and admis- sion to Dramatic and Musical productions, debates, etc., at the discretion of the governing board. Twice each year King's Crown awards silver and gold charms, miniature crowns, to those who have engaged in its activities. The regulations of award vary, but in general the gold crowns are limited to se- niors who are the leaders of A their respective organizations. , BENJAMIN A. HUBBARD Silver crowns are awarded to both Juniors and Seniors. This award was first established in 1917, though back awards have since been made. Possibly because of the importance of finance in the various activities Graduate Treasurer f269J UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS WOODWORTH GARDNER DELMHORST FARLOW much of the work centers around the Graduate Treasurer. As a matter of fact he acts in an advisory capacity not only on finance but on general policy as well, and many groups have been saved from failure by the timely intervention of this officer. King's Crown is based on the idea that extra-curricular activities are well worth the student's while. With this in View it has sponsored whatever seemed to show promise of giving the undergraduate a chance for improvement, until now it includes under its supervision a daily newspaper, a handbook, a literary and a comic magazine, and a College Annual in the field of publication alone. The Chess Team, the Debate Team, Glee Club, the Orchestra, the Band and Varsity Show are all affiliated with this far-reaching organization. KINGS CROWN BOARD oF GOVERNORS Graduate Members Kenneth W. Plumb, '22 Benjamin A. Hubbard Chairman Treasurer Frank D. Packenthal, '06 Nicholas MCD. McKnight, '21 Walter E. Kelley, '08 Prof. John J. Coss, '08 Undergraduate Members Berton J. Delmhorst, '29 Hugh H, Gardner, '29 Robert E. Farlow, '29 William Woodworth, '29 f2701 , C. a G . , 0 PUBLICATIONS V . M xxlxxx 0 441 1.9 63 3 ' 5 :WVR Ky , Q- fa9mQ THE 1929 COLUMBIAN HE wish expressed in the dedication of this volume-that it may prove worthy of the Colum- bians-has permeated the entire construction of this book. It has seemed to the editor that there is an especial appeal in books for the college student and inasmuch as this is a book of the College he has striven to make it worthy in itself and not merely as a college annual. Much time has been spent in the attempt to make it as beautiful as possible and no effort has been spared in striving for accuracy down to the smallest detail. The art scheme in this volume is the work of George Gates Raddin, Jr., '29 who was assisted by Lynn Eberstadt, '32 and Charles Alston, '29. The - r editor is glad to be able to offer to the campus a STANIEIIETY Bomss volume containing, in his humble estimation, decora- itor tions that might well be included in books of greater pretensions. Even though a great many students of all four classes have contributed to the making of this volume, it is essentially a publication of the Senior Class. This is the reason why the history of that class has been written in the first person. Many of the articles included are shorter than corresponding ones of previous annuals, but this has been done in the effort to make the material more readable, and without any sacrifice of completeness. The curious reader may have noticed that this volume is printed by an unusual process. For his beneit let it be said that , the technical name for it is the Angelo-Phototone. Along with the View Section which is also repro- duced by a special process-Aquatone-this is a fea- ture which, we hope, will make the 1929 COLUM- BIAN a more beautiful book. The cost of such work would have been prohibitive had it not been for the arduous work of Jule Eisenbud, '29, the Business Manager of COLUMBIAN. lt is obvious that the small staff and the candi- dates of COLUMBIAN could not have alone produced this book. The list of those who have helped in some way or another is too long to be included here. Without exception, the editor has found his class- mates willing to cooperate. There are some persons, however, who especially deserve mention, and the following is addressed ' JULE EISENBUD Business Manager IN APPRECIATION! For friendly advice we are indebted to 'lBen Hubbard who was never too busy to help us on many difficult points. f272j We owe many thanks to Ernest A. Cardozo, '99 for his contribution on the Columbia Lion. President Butler has been kind enough to again contribute to the COLUMBIAN. We wish to thank Berton J. Delmhorst, '29 for his history of the College Year. Thanks are also due to many members of Spectator Board for valuable help. C. Theodore Jorgensen, '29 perhaps better known as C.T.J., has written of the Adventures of Nina Manx for the benefit of certain members of the Senior Class. His brother, Hans, very kindly illustrated this feature. To Miss Bessie Ellinson and Mr. A. H. Young of White Studio we owe a large debt of gratitude. The Department of Buildings and Grounds and the Office of the Registrar have always been at our service, Mr. Irvin Silver and Mr. Harry P. Mellor of the Read-Taylor Press have played an important part in the production of this , , book and we wish to thank them for their coopera- tion and expert advice. We are grateful to Harold Swahn, '26 for the use of several photographs. . COLUMBIAN prints this year for the first time anywhere, extracts from the ancient Black Book of President Cooper's days. This has been made pos- sible through the kind co-operation of Mr. Milton H. Thomas of the Columbiana division of the Library. The members of the COLUMBIAN boards should not be deprived of just praise merely because the work was expected of them. THE EDITOR. GERHARD A. OSTERBERG 52731 fl ., faiwteaa Q 1929 COLUMBIAN SENIOR BOARD PERL RADDIN PHILLIPS MIKOLAINIS LUTZ CAMPBELL KATCHER ISAACS PARKER JLQJMQ,--G THE 1929 COLUMBIAN BOARDS Managz'ng Board Stanlel' B0fiSSf '29 Jule Eisenbud, '29 Senior Board Werner A- Luflf '30 -------------............. ........ A ssistant Editor IVIlI1CI21l1glS Mikolainis, '30 ..,,,, -,--,,-- A Ssgciate Editor George G. Raddin, '29 ............,. -,,----,,--,.--.--- A It Editor Monroe I. Karcher, '29 ....... .....,,,.....,-,, A thletics Editor HarO1d R. IS213CS, '30 ........ ......... A sst. Athletics Editor Alan Perl, '29 ......v........ .............. P hotographic Editor Darius Phillips, '29 .......... .............,.. Fraternity Editor Victor Campbell, '30 ........ ,---.. ..... Kings Crown Editor Saul Parker, '30 ....r...,,. ............. B iographies Editor Richard Elfers, '29 .............................. Asst. Biographies Editor Associate Board Raymond Applegate, '3l Robert E. Kopp, '30 George Banigan, '30 Leo H. Narodny, '31 Max Feldman, '30 Eugene Roussin, '29 Arthur H. Wakelee, '31 COLUMBIAN JUNIOR BOARD FELDMAN ROSENBLUM KRAMER ELFERS COHEN GOZAN WHITING DONAHUE LUTZ MIKOLAINIS COPP l:275fI Qlnlumhia ivprrtatnr 1928-29 RESENTING the news of the Campus with re- ' ' ' markable timeliness and in clearly written articles Spectator this year upheld its long tradition and main- tained its prestige both on and off the campus. This is the more remarkable since the year was particularly lacking in sensational happenings and the newspaper refrained from starting campaigns to relieve this han- dicap. Spectator editorially insisted on the right to criti- cize the other campus periodicals favorably or unfav- orably as the editors saw fit, but had little occasion to do the latter. On November 20, l928, Spectator reprinted in its column Others Say an article on Student Marriage by Huntington Sharp, Managing Editor of the Cor- nell Columns, a literary magazine. Accompanying - . the article was an editorial, entitled To Wed or . . BERTON J, DELMHORST which concurred with Mr. Sharp's sentiments as a Edit01 in'Chief whole. Whether the pornographic press had an off day just then or whether an evil wind was blowing in the metropolis that day, no one will ever knowg the fact remains that articles claiming that Spectator had advocated companionate marriage and that the students were in an uproar at this suggestion found their way not only into the tabloids but also into one supposedly conservative evening newspaper. Despite the indignant denials by the Managing Board the press continued, It was unearthed that November 20 was the anniversary of the first companionate mar- riage, and articles misquoting members of the Spec- tator Managing Board were syndicated through the country. It was fortunate for the conservative repu- tation of Spectator that within two days a less point- less sensation rocked the readers of Spectator and cau.sed the companionate marriage affair to die a wel- come death of neglect. When the football team failed to win a single T major game, considerable grumbling could be read be- tween the lines of Spectator editorials. Now oni ' Thursday, November 22, an unprecedented thing hap- pened. Charles Premd, Jr., '29, a crew man and veteran of Sidelines , the rah-rah column of athletics in Spectator, came out with fair outspokenness against Coach Crowley. Using headlines and subtitles, such as Who Wants a Losing Team , Need of Better Coaching , and Columbia Needs Another Haughtonf' he went on to say, . . .We have seen IAN F. FRASER Business Manager L 2 7 6 J ARANOW NEUBERGER NEEL the brilliant rise to fame of the Columbia crews under capable training by in- spired coaches. And we cannot help but think that nothing but a drastic shake-up can pull Columbia's football destinies out of the slough of mediocrity for downright failure, which?j in which it is now floundering . . . And appa- rently a new regime is needed to lead Columbia out of the present darkness. Hardly had the campus ceased to gasp from this unexpected attack when next morning the two center columns of the front page of Spectator were taken up with a rebuttal by Captain William E. Adler of the football team. Blaming the lack of reserve material for Columbia's gridiron difliculties, Adler wrote: I want everyone to know that Columbia has the best coach in the country in Charles Crowley and that everyone should help him instead of letting criticism be thrown at him by those who don't know a damn thing about football. Outside of these two sensations there was little of outstanding importance to' be reported in Spectator. But special stress was laid this year upon the various columns and a group of writers was assembled for this purpose which will be hard to rival in future years. Off-Hour was written by C. Theodore Jorgenson, '29 and Seymour L. Bloom, '3O: Whispering Galleries by Edward A. Muelleir, '30 and A. Edward Stasheff, '29: Overtones by Richard H. M. Goldman, '3O: Stroller by Theodore B. Wolf, '29: Screenings by John A. Thomas, '30 and Lawrence H. Levy, '30g Sidelines by Monroe I. Katcher, '29, Charles Fremd, Jr., '29 and Harold R. Isaacs, '3O: and The Book Worm's Turn by H. Lloyd Prankenberg, '29 and Frederick H. Block, '3O. MANAGING BOARD Berton J. Delmhorst, '29 Ian E. Eraser, '29 Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Harold S. Neuberger, '29 Edward R. Aranow, '29 u Managing Editor Advertising Manager - William R. P. Neel, '29 Ass't Managing Editor . f277:l Cp fiamim -4 G. J. Banigan, '30 P. H. Block, '30 J. Claman, '30 H. R. Isaacs, '30 I. H. Du Fine, '31 G. Dickler, '31 W. H. Fagan, '31 E. R. Freedman, '31 M. 1. Friedman, '31 A. W. Samuels, '29 B. Priedelson, '30 A. Kalrnykow, '30 W. A. Karsten, '31 E. Muller, '31 S. L. Bloom, '30 SPECTATOR BOARDS NEWS BOARD G. P. Meyer, '30 J. Moskowitz, '30 D. 1. Peyser, '30 P. Rosenberg, '30 ASSOCIATE NEWS BOARD S. A. Goldstine, '31 S. Graubard, '31 L. N. Greene, '31 C. Hunt, '31 P. R. Kelley, '31 BUSINESS BOARD L. M. Kaufman, '30 E. D. Kosting, '30 T. Lidz, '30 ASSOCIATE BUSINESS BOARD D P. C. B. Rose, '3l S. R. Rosen, '31 CONTRIBUTING BOARD L. H. Levy, '30 R. H. M. Goldman, '30 E. A. Mueller, '30 M. 1. Katcher, Il, '29 IT! PTH l IJP'7U 4 U5 CTU Sch1esinger,, '30 X. Egel, '30 A. Thomas, '30 G. Phillips, '31 J. Pingitore, '31 M. Prince, '31 L. Puglisi, '31 I. Lubell, '30 Thorne, '30 Zuckerman, '30 M. Shapiro, '31 L. D. Taggart, '31 A. E. Stashelf, '29 T. B. Wolf, '29 SPECTATOR EDITORIAL BOARD GOLDSTEIN PHILLIPS EGEL DICKLER GRAUBARD FREEDMAN GREENE GORDON HUNT FAGAN KELLEY PINGITO RE PUGLISI FRIEDMAN SCHLESINGER THOMAS BANIGAN ISAACS RO SENBERG MOSKOWITZ LEVY BLOCK BLO OM f2781 SPECTATOR BUSINESS BOARD MUELLER SHAPIRO RosE TAGGART SAGE ROSEN THORNE FRIEDELSON KAUFMAN Miss PATRICK KOSTING SAMUELS BUXBAUM 1928-29 BLUE BOGK George J. Banigan, '30 Sidney C. Werner, '29, '32, P. '65 S. Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Assistant Editors Prank C. Kelley, '31 Randolph G. Phillips, '31 Assistant Business Managers Stephen L. Joseph, '31 Alfred Samuels, '29 HE nineteenth volume of the Columbia College handbook and general guide to the campus was published in the Pall of 1928 and though intended primar- ily for Freshmen was distributed to other students as well. Through the spe- cial elforts of both staffs, all of the material was gathered before the end of the Spring Semester, enabling the little blue volume to be issued on the iirst day of classes. Blue Book was first published by the Christian Association in 1895, but the work of getting out the handbook was taken over by Spectator in 1922. The latest handbook contained several innovations besides the regular features., Regulations for awarding athletic insignias and King's Crowns, eligi- bility rules, description of Campus buildings and departments, the lnterfrater- nity Agreement, and a wealth of other knowledge important to the newcomer at Columbia were included in the book. f279:I 9- AJLQJWLQS-C J, Jtfttn. 1928-29 HE year 1928 will probably go down in history as the first rejuvenation of the Laughing Lion. The poor beast had been falling steadily lower for some years, and it was only by a drastic operation, performed by various prominent alumni and the managing board, Qinvolving, it was rumored, monkey-business glands,j that the failing feline was restored to his former vigor. The first issue of the present year deiinitely marked a new order of things. The Laughing Lions, as well as a large number of celebrities who rallied loyally at the call of the Editor, produced the first product of The New Jester, a maga- zine dilferent in appearance and spirit from its pre- decessors. The new periodical was hailed as the finest in years, and much favorable comment was elicited by the novel features introduced under the new system. Jester proved so versatile that it received the warm approbation of the Dean, as well as that of the stu- dent-body, a hitherto unprecedented occurrence. The magazine seemed to be actually capable of the diflicult task involved in being amusing without being . . . well, what it so very easily might be. This was made possible through the unearthing of considerable , quantities of hitherto unknown underclass talent, and ROBERT EARLOW by cutting the editorial boards down to' a minimum Editor of highly interested and efhcient contributors, In contrast to the views of former regimes, the managing board formu- lated a policy calling for humor of a more local genre, treated in a more urbane and sophisticated manner. The material for its columns was derived almost entirely from the campus: the Jester's cap and bells - were consecrated to the lampooning of Columbia and Columbians. The enthusiastic reception which marked the inception of the new manner clearly jus- tified its use, and plans were laid for a thorough re- organization involving a series of gradual changes throughout the space of several years, to be carried out by successive boards. The first issue of the Winter semester was the Cele- brities number, which included material by former Jester men who have now achieved fame. This was followed by the Fraternity number, the Christmas number, the Csicj Mid-Summer number and the Var- sity Show number, in that order. The present board put out their final issue in March. lt was entitled - the Travel Humber. BRYAN IJANNRENCE Business Manager Lzsoj JESTER BOARDS PAYNTER APPLEGATE I-IAINES EVANS LEVEY BAILEY SMITH LAWRENCE FARLOW WIGGINS STASHEFF THE COLUMBIA JESTER MANAGING BoARD Robert E. Farlow Editor Bryan Lawrence A. B. Stasheff Business Manager Managing Editor L. Gard Wiggins Alan Tompkins Circulation Manager Art Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS William P. Smith Hugh H. Gardner ASSOCIATE JEsTERs BUSINESS BOARD Winslow Ames Barney Dougall Lawrence Levy Lawson Paynter C. T. Jorgenson Harold Neuberger Dick Jones C. Alston J. Roth KZSIJ C. E. Donovan, Adu. I. J. Atkins R. Appelgate J. C. Bailey Edward Baruch Malcolm Bonynge Malcolm Hartsell Edward Runge Mgr Q- ,19J Q THE COLUMBIA VARSITY I ARSITX has proceeded on the policy of having no policy at all-or, accord- ing to an editorial in the Hrst number of the l928-29 volume, almost none. It will try to avoid bunk of all kinds-even this. Proceeding along these lines, therefore, it has published a series of articles on modern French authors, beginning with Andre Gide and Julian Green, con- tinuing with Marcel Proust and Remy de Gourmont, and completing the cycle with a critique of Henri Barbusseg at the same time, ' ' it has paid somewhat more than traditional attention to local affairs, having published, in addition to occa- sional and not always complimentary comment, a de- vastating article on fraternities and campus politics. entitled Airing the Bones , by H. Lloyd Franken- berg, editor of Morningside , with which publica- tion, by the way, relations of more than usual amicability have been established, since E. A. Stasheff, its associate editor, has also appeared as a contributor to Varsity. Articles dealing with current affairs in arts, letters, and politics have been prominent from time to time, especially noteworthy among these be- ing a critique of the new jazz opera Jonny Spielt Auf , by Richard Goldman, and a regular depart- ment of music reviews by Harold Brown. Book re- l views by various members of the staff have been fre- quent and interesting. A comparatively small amount of fiction and poe- try has been published. Millen Brand, the manag- ing editor, has been a contributor of short stories, as well as critical essays, and also has Louis Barillet. Ben A , Maddow's poetry has attracted a good deal of local attention, particularly some of his longer pieces, such as Comment on a Prelude and Fugue by J. S. Bach and Fever Sonata , both of which were featured in the February issue. The charming essays of Stanley Wronker have shown the possibilities of combining modern matter with the graceful technic of an old tradition. The cover, done in the modern manner, was done by William Rixford, and excellent wood-cuts by Max Feldman have appeared in almost every number. Editorially, Varsity has kept its thumb at its nose. Conscientiously, it has inveighed against Prohibition, the antics of Happy Cal and his cohorts in national politics, and whatever else in the contemporary scene has been amusing. Fear of academic fury has kept Varsity from being as outspoken as it might have SAMUEL BUXBAUM been, but such pusillanimus compromises have been as few as were discreetly possible. ALAN MARSHALL Editor Bisiness Manager If282:I VARSITY BOARDS BAUM ROSENBLUTH HOUSE WRONKER BARILLET FRIEDLANDER GOLDBERGER SIMMONS BROWN SAGE BUXBAUM MARSHALL BRAND KONHEIM FELDMAN THE COLUMBIA VARSITY BOARD OF EDITORS Alan Marshall, Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Business Manager Millen Brand Samuel W. Buxbaum Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Assistant Business Manager Albert Konheim Donald Peyser Norman Arnheim Associates L. Barillet H. L. Prankenberg L. Reis A. Baum E. J. Priedlander R. H. Rosenbluth F. H. Block R, H. M. Goldman W. U. Rixford, Jr. H. Brown B. Levy W. B. Smith R. B. Farlow B. Maddow A. E. Stasheff M. Feldman H. S. Neuberger I: 283 I S. Wronker ta 4'2f225i LF3f- aa IL CIRCOLINO L CIRCOLINO, the youngest of the campus periodicals, is the product of students who appreciate the signilicant part that Italy played in the creation of the European mind. These students, giving serious study to this phase of our intellectual background as members of the Circolo, created the paper as an organ of expression and as an outlet for their creative abilities. Topics from the realms of literature, art, science, travel and government, among others are presented by the students and authorities in these various fields. All student articles undergo a vigorous critical analysis at the hands of a qualified expert before Hnding their Way to the columns of the journal. The paper is not aililiated with Kings Crown but is published under the auspices of the Romance Language Department. ull Circolinon has just completed its iirst year of existence. During this year it has appeared once each month in four-page form, and has been distributed not only on the Campus, but throughout the United States and in several foreign countries. 1 Manlio S. Severino, '27 Joseph P. Lombardi, '29 Editor Business Manager STAFF OP IL CIRCOLINO PUGLISI PREITE PINGITORE GRAZIANO LOMBARDI CAFARELLI TADDEO FRAUNFELDER TUTT SEVERINO L2s4J 4 f m fx x - I . Za xxk . MUSM: AND G Q, . , R DRAMATJIQS ' Y - . ff ' M l 5 ' K THE GLEE CLUB fs 4fef31EiEAS?f-C A, THE 1928-29 GLEE CLUB SEASON HE past season has been one of the most successful that the Glee Club has ever experienced. The club started with a nucleus of about thirty-live men from last year. This group was augmented by the addition of about twenty- live newcomers as the result of the voice trials held early in the fall. Due to the fact that Professor Walter Henry Hall, the director of the club, did not return from Europe until the middle of October, Mr. William F. McDonald, who last year was made assistant director, took charge of rehearsals. He laid a splendid foundation upon which Professor Hall was able to build up a fine club. The latter, however, was forced by the pressure of his other duties in connection with the University and his church work to give up his active work with the Glee Club. Mr. McDonald, student leader in l926-27, a man thoroughly familiar with Columbia and Columbia men, as well as eminently qualined for the post, was made director of the club. As usual, the first concert of the season was that sponsored by the club itself on Thanksgiving night. Both classic and modern pieces were well represented. Warren Taub sang several numbers with great suc- cess, among which there were pieces by Purcell, Huhn and O'Hara. John Phelps, '31, a member of the club, rendered a W'altz by Chopin and Novelette - by MacDowell. Not only was the concert a success WILLIAM F, MQDONALD musically, surpassing last year's concert at the Wal- ' Director dorf, but it was eminently successful socially and li- nancially, a large campus audience attending the concert and dance. Several other very enjoyable concerts were held, notably those at the Sleepy Hollow Country Club of Scarborough-on-Hudson, Ridgneld Park, Crestwood New York, and the Brooklyn Central Y. W. C. A. At a meeting of the New Jersey Alumni Association of Columbia, a picked group of men from the club rendered a program of college songs. Shortly after Mid-Year, the club left on a short trip to Washington, D. C. for a joint concert with the Glee Club of George Washington University. This concert was one of the best that the club had rendered, even surpassing the brilliant affair held last year with the same club. After the return from Washington, the club continued with a number of local and suburban concerts-one under the auspices of the Brooklyn Masonic Lodge and another in McMillan Theatre under the auspices of the Institute of Arts and Sciences. The annual Intercollegiate Glee Club contest claimed the attention' of the men in the middle of March, but withindifferent success. f287j ZEITLIN BANCROFT CALYER THE GLEE CLUB Roster 1928-29 William F. McDonald Frank Zeitlin, '29 Director Manager I William N. Calyer, '30 Shaler B. Bancroft, '30 Publicity Manager President Elbert A. Twaddell, '30 Donald Carton, '30 Richard Gore, '31 Student Leader Librarian Accompanist William N. Calyer Manuel Cantor Howard J. Cantus Donald Carton William H. Congdon Albert H. Fay Madison B. Graves Albert J. Howe Thomas R. Keating Claude J. Kirkland Roy M. Z. Moskowitz John C. Bailey Shaler B. Bancroft Charles Cook Max V. Exner Merrill Gille Donald C. Dow Fred W. Farwell Heaton B. Heffelfinger First Tenors Richard Delaneld Roderick Donaher Otis R. Fitz Vincent Furno Hans E. Jorgensen Second Tenors Rene Muller Simon D. Owens Albert Schechter- William R. Schroll Joseph P. Smyth Marinus R. Steenland Robert D. Stover First Basses Richard Ciore Walter A. Karsten Neville T. Kirk Charles W. Kulikofsky Samuel Loewenthal Julius R. von Sternberg Second Basses Harry Klein Lewis T. Marsh John C. Merrill Leo H. Narodny f288fI Herbert Olson John T. Reidy Freeman T. Snyder Arthur H. Wakelee Adolph Tomars Roderick B. Travis Elbert A. Twaddell Felix H. Vann Raymond J. Vavrin Paul J. Witte John R. Phelps Lloyd Staples Miles J. Stevan George V. Moser Frank Zeitlin Stanley Pulver Alton V. Rheaume Clel T. Silvey 3 THE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA VER since its organization five years ago, the Columbia University Orches- tra has been coming more and more to the fore as a campus activity. Signs of its increasing prestige were in evidence early in the season when no less than thirty new musicians answered the call for candidates. For the eagle eye of Manager Brown was already casting about for material while others were still worrying about registration, and no Freshman could so much as whistle on the campus without being immediately apprehended and closely questioned con- cerning his musical aptitude. As a result, the roster of the Orchestra was considerably augmented and it now boasts of sixty members. Immediately the difficulties of preparing an almost green orchestra for the concert stage presented itself. However due to the earnest efforts of Prof. Moore, the conductor, Mr. Dittler, the string coach, Concert- master Milton Katims, and the leaders of the other string sections, such difficult compositions as the Schu- mann Symphony in D-Minor and a Bach Branden- burg Concerto were ably presented in the McMillin Academic Theatre on December 13. But the piece de resistance of this concert was the Suite Pioneer Amer- ica by Prof. Seth Bingham, of the Music Depart- ment, who is well known to all the budding compo- sers on the campus, This spectacular composition conductor whose difficulties struck terror to the hearts of the young musicians at the first few rehearsals was exe- cuted well enough to win praise from both audience and composer. Having scored a complete triumph in this first ef- fort, the Orchestra, now considerably more assured and not so green, looked about for more worlds to conquer. Opportunity soon came when the group was asked to provide music for the Alumni meeting in the McMillin Theatre on February IZ. The old grads, who had never dreamed of the existence of a symphony orchestra on the campus were treated to a pleasant surprise when numbers by Haydn and Bee- thoven infused an artistic vein into the proceedings of the afternoon. . These extra functions of the Orchestra are becom- ing more frequent every year. As a result of the ex- cellent informal concert given at Barnard last year, - the Orchestra was invited to repeat the visit this HAROLD BROWN season. A Two other concerts rounded out the season for the organization. At the first, given in the McMillin Theatre in March the Second Symphony of Bee- thoven and the Tragic Overture of Brahms were presented to an appreciative audience. PROF. DOUGLAS MOORE Manager 52891 THE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA Fruits of the scholarships granted last year are now in evidence, for a really Hne solo flutist and oboist have been developed, the latter from one who had no previous knowledge of the instrument. This year instruction in bassoon play- ing is being offered. The Orchestra course, Music 23-24, which provides for violin instruction to the members, proved highly successful in its first year of existence, fifteen students having enrolled and profited thereby. The Orchestra has been described by Chalmers Clifton, conductor of the American Orchestral Society, as one of the Hnest organizations of its kind in the East. With such encouraging criticism the Orchestra can look forward to the future with a great deal of optimism, and, with suitable support from the musicians in the student-body, there is no telling to what heights this organiza- tion will ultimately attain. ORGANIZATION Harold Brown, '29 Milton Katims, '30 Manager Asst. Manager Librarians Edmund Lifshutz, '31 Philip Gordon, '31 First Violins Violas Piccolo Milton Katims Harold Brown Warren Brackett Concertmaster William S. Chosnyk d d V D h if Belmont Fisher E War on Om O 011028 Frederick Zomzely Alfred S. Schnechter lsidor Termin Edward Neikrug Philip Gordon Kenesaw M. Landis Charles F. Frank Milton Conford Oliver Applegate Russel Wagner Joseph Stetkowicz Second Violins Eugene Brandstadter Benjamin Tarushkin Harry Klein Robert Blumofe Irving Madoff Seymour Rosin Alfred Moisio Simon Gluckman Egbert Jackson Hyman- Goldstein Robert Fialk Samuel Kleban Irwin Hyman Emil Hladky Donald Carton Edmund Lifshutz David Robison Trumpets Harvey Sartorius Henry Maccaro Tuba George Bagrash Cellos Robert Von Doenhoff Walter Soffregen T. Richard Witmer Paul Shaefer John Seeley G. Robison Basses J. Harrison Mathis Bernard Carp Flutes Gerald McGarrahan Warren Brackett f29lj Leon L. Altman Joseph Buonocore Clarinets Harwood Simmons Howard Piatt Bassoons Sol Schoenbach H. L. Coleman A. Robison Horns David Rattner Morris Gustab William Gaugh Trombones Robert Burggraf Leslie Taggart Nathaniel Arbiter Timpani Benjamin Greene THE COLUMBIA BAND Q, AAAQJWQQ-K ,Q THE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY BAND I-IEN the Band resumed practice in the Fall of l928, there were many men missing from last year's contingent. Some had graduated, others left school or were prevented from reporting by heavy schedules. The students were quick to rally to its support and before many weeks there were about thirty-eight attending each game. It was the endeavor of the management this year to secure as many of the songs of Columbia's football opponents as possible. Between the halves the Band alternated between the two stands, playing whenever possible the rival's football song. At Pennsylvania, the Band was one of four present. When playing with the United States Marine Band and the two University of Penn- sylvania Bands 280 pieces filled the stadium for one of the largest musical assemblages ever held in the East under the baton of one man. Later in the year the Band played at the l. C. A. A. A. A. meet. ROSTER OP THE BAND George C. Flint Albert C. F. Westphal Thomas McElwrath Bandmaster Leader-Manager Drum Major Comets Trombones Chas. Fassnacht Carl Johnson Adolph Koerber Arthur Krim Donald Mosser Harvey Sartorius George Sutton Harry Wiseman Clarinets William Bayles Albert Konheim Henry Levin Harry Moore Harry Portnoy Elwood Prestwood George Righthand Joseph Robison Bernard Rosensweet Richard Williams Percussion Charles Gilkeson Herbert Hinman James Keane Freeman T. Snyder Raphael Solomon Robert Burgrafl' Andrew Holt Leslie Taggart Etzel Willhoit Saxophones Anthony DeMay Otis Gardner William Mueller Donald Schaffer John Schaffer Clark Scott Roderick Travis Bernard Zincke Alto Richard Rowden Marvin Thorn Edmund Waldman Bass George Bagrash Carl Johnson E. Frederick Lowe George Williams Piccolo Leon Altman Clarence Moore Baritone Carl B. Boyer L COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PLAYERS OFFICERS George Middleton, 'O2 Thomas Farrell, '19 President Senior Vice-President Joseph Cieagan, '29 William Prey, '23 Junior Vice-President Treasurer William McL. Twiddy, '27 Secretary HE purpose of the Players is to keep alive the interest of the Alumni and undergraduates in dramatic and musical comedy productions, and to perpetuate the traditions of the Varsity Show. The Players was organized in 1906, and its membership is composed of those who have taken active part in the annual shows. Each year committees are chosen from its membership to work in co-operation with the Varsity Show undergraduate management. The Play Committee starts its work for the next show almost as soon as the last curtain drops on the current production. Their work involves the reading of manuscripts and making the Iinal selection, obtaining coaches, de- signing scenery and costumes, and everything of an artistic nature pertaining to the show. This year four complete books were submitted to the Commit- tee and the final selection was made only after careful thought and deliberation. The Executive Committee handles the business and finances. Graduates and undergraduates are represented in these committees, all working with the same interest and objective in view-a better show each year. is ai Wir' ' 52941 gi ,fdQ2EEQg?sx. .4 THE 1929 VARSITY SHOW N March 4th, 1929, the curtain of the old Waldorf-Astoria Ball Room was raised for the presentation of the twenty-third annual Varsity Show, Oh Hector . It marked the culmination of many months of hard work by the author, cast, ballet, coaches, managers and others. The occasion was unique in that it saw the start of the last Varsity Show to be given at the Waldorf, which was shortly to be torn down. The book was the work of William P. Smith, '29, and had been selected by the play committee after a close competition with other manuscripts sub- mitted by campus authors. The music for the piece, which was a musical comedy in two acts, was the re- sult of the joint eHforts of G. Edward Travis, '29, William Mitchell, '29, and Homer Pearson, '30. The lyrics, which received much favorable comment, were written by Milton H. Pascal, '29. The managerial end of the production was in the hands of three seniors, Hugh H. Gardner, Wil- liam Woodworth, and Joseph J. Geagan. Sheridan Garratt, '30, was the stage manager and Joseph L. Blau, '30, was in charge of the lighting effects. Scen- ery for the play was designed by Robert Parlow, '29. As is usual with this type of production the WILLIAM P- SMITH plot was rather simple and the humor and musical numbers were relied upon to carry the show along. The story is chiefly concerned with Paris, a Freshman at Troy College in the year 450 B. C., Hector, another frosh and roommate of Paris, and Helen, a beautiful co-ed. Paris, who has come to college with a reputation as a track man, falls in love with Helen, who refuses to marry him unless he does some- thing big for Troy . The villains, Epidemic and Omnibus, plot with Circe, another co-ed, and the latter causes the innocent Paris to spike Achilles, star runner of the college, on the eve of the big track meet with Sparta. Paris is disgraced but finally entered in the meet only to have a pebble placed in his shoe by the conspirators who have bet on Sparta. Hector, who knows of the plot, runs after Paris to tell him of it, while the race is in progress. He is pur- sued by the villains, but such is his speed that he reaches the tape first and un- knowingly wins for Troy, whereupon the usual happy ending ensues. Much of the comedy was supplied by Nux Vomica, wife of a professor, Doc Anathema, the trainer of the track team, and Shotsie, his assistant, in ad- dition, of course, to Hector himself. Thomas Keating, who played the part of Paris, carried off the role with great success. In addition to a large speaking part Keating had several musical numbers. George Travis, in the role of Hector, proved one of the comedy hits. Ted Jorgensen and Adrian Broderick, Nux Vomica and Doc Anathema, respec- tively, received much applause, especially in their number I Gould Care for You . Ward Haller had the female lead as Helen. ' Author Lzosj The music for the comedy was proclaimed of the best ever written for Varsity Show. Among those numbers that found most favor With the au- dience were High Hat the Blues , by Travis, and Oh Hector , by Mitchell. The pony ballet was again one of the features of the show, as were Wil- liam Blaisdell, '30 and Willis Anderson, '31, Who did a specialty dance. An acrobatic dance by Angelo Rizzuti, '31 was also Well received. The audience played to capacity houses during the run of six perfor- mances. As is customary different nights were designated College Night , Alumni Night , etc. Fraternity Night resulted in a complete sell-out and with the dance after the performance might Well be included as one of the social functions of the year. The entire production was staged under the direction of Kenneth Webb, 'O6. Raymond Perez was the dance coach and he was assisted by James Paris, '29, ' HELEN AND PARIS I 296 1 VARSITY SHOW MANAGERIAL STAFF EGEL PEARSON ODOM GEAGAN WOODWORTH GARDNER THE MANAGERIAL STAFF Senior Managers Hugh H. Gardner, '29 William Woodworth, '29 Joseph J. Geagan, '29 Assistant Managers Francis X. Egel, '30 Sheridan Garratt, '30 George P. Odom, '30 Homer Pearson, '30 Second Assistant Managers Eugene Ashley, '31 John F. Holzinger, '31 Nathaniel William Brown, '31 J. Lindsay Warwick. '31 Harry Krebs, '31 Robert G. Werner, '31 Howard L. Walker, '31 Ralph A. Bieberstein, '31 Sheridan Garratt, '30-Stage Manager Joseph L. Blau, '30-Lighting Effects Scenery by Robert E. Farlow, '29 I:297fI MITCHELL TRAVIS ' PEARS ON PASCAL THE CAST Alma Mater .,.........,........,........... Raymond D. Applegate, '31 Homer CCheer Leaderj ............ ...........,. Harold P, Book, '32 gaucus .....................,........,...................., Paul H. Van Ness, '30 ladiolus ' William Dennick, '31 Trouiear ifuppef C'aSSmen5 '--'o -' 'Fred Miller, '29 Hector CA Freshmanj .......................... G. Edward Travis, '29 Achilles CCaptain of the Track Teamj ..,.... . ..... Lynn Dana, '32 Epidemic Julian Cohen. '29 Omnibus i 'Gambkrsi c ' 'iRando1ph Phillips, ' Demosthenes CA Professorj .................. Norman Arnheim, 30 '29 Paris CA Freshman, Hector's Roommateb --Thomas Keating, '30 Circe CA co-edb .......,.......................... Lloyd Seidman, '32 Juno CAnother co-edj ......c,.,...............,..., Myron Gordon, '31 Helen QStill anotherj ..,..... ....,r-,--,--- W ard Haller, '31 First Freshman i....................................... William Dennick, '31 Second Freshman ,.1,................,,..,-------,,- -Paul H. Van Ness, '30 Nux Vomica fWife of Demosthenesj .... C. Ted Jorgenson, '29 Doc Anathema CTrainer of Teamj ......... .Adrian Broderick, '31 Shotsie CHis Assistantj ............,............ ,, ..,,, , 1,,, L, I-I, Levy, '30 First Drunk .........................,................., William Dennick, '31 Second Drunk--. ............. ..................... P aul H. Van Ness, '30 AJHX ................ ................................. W alter A. Karsten, '31 Ponies Alfred W. Harris, '32 Roy W. Miner, Jr., '32 Franklin B. Dailey, '31 John R. Phelps, '31 Show Girls Harold O. W. Johnson, '30 Thomas F. Sweeny, '31 William F. Muller, Jr., '29 DeVa11on D. Scott, '31 Harry R. Doremus, Jr., '29 Stanley H. Brams, '31 Chorus E. L. Prestwood, '29 E, O. Rogers, '31 W. A. Karsten, '31 R. G. Risley, '29 V. E. Romano, '31 52981 Edward B. Falck, '30 Albert H. Fay, Jr., '32 Henry 1. Wheeler, '30 Julius S. Wyler, '31 Michael W. Di Nunzio, '31 George S. Leonard, '32 Andrew Kalmykow, '30 James D. Paris, '29 William E. Barhite, Jr., '30 Douglas C. Baker, '32 Max Goldfrank, '31 C. W. Breiner, '31 D. N. McCormick, '31 H. Klein, '30 5, fbamxlm A, THE 1928-Z9 DEBATE SEASON Lawrence A. Tassi, '32L William T. Matthews, '30 Crlpffllin Manager Life without discourse is unworthy of man. -- Socrates EBATING at Columbia College has, during the past year, undergone two noteworthy changes. Previously the policy had been to develop a winning team -a team which succeeded in captivating its audience by cool logic and persuasive argument. The topics discussed by the team were invariably political and, as such, proved to hold but little interest for the spectators. Under the leadership of Coach Arthur W. Riley these tactics were abandoned. First, the team has aimed, not to convince by logic nor persuade by ar- gument, but to set before the audience in a clear, brief, lucid manner, the question, giving due con- sideration to the team upholding the opposite side. In other words, it endeavored not to paint in glow- ing colors its own side of the question, but rather to face the issue squarely, and attempt, with the aid of the audience and the opposition, to seek a rational solution to the problem. The team has considered debate not as an obstacle to action, but as the only wise preliminary to it. Second, the team has succeeded in selecting ques- tions of more general interest-not limiting them to politics. During the season such topics as Advertis- - - ing and Salesmanship held an important place in the LAWRENCE A, TASSI schedule. Realizing that the future of debating lay Captain in the interest of the public, all those ideas which tend to make debating more enjoyable-light hu- mor, good natured repartee, and non-technicality-have been incorporated. These aims were brought into a sharp focus in the Cxford Debate held at the McMillan Theatre. Before the debate the teams dined as the guests of the Faculty at the Faculty Club. Several hundred spectators filled the audito- rium and the debate was hailed as the most enjoyable in years. The 1928-29 Season witnessed three new style debates. The first, with Dartmouth, was a successful attempt to debate by rapid fire questions and immediate answers. The second, with Union, was a short radio debate broad- cast by W.G.Y., Schenectady. The third was with Smith College at North- ampton and was very well received. The Varsity Team made two trips. One through the Mohawk Valley and the other into New England. The Freshmen journeyed to Princeton. Coach Riley maintained an exceptionally large squad--thirty-four men in all. It was his effort to give them all a chance and not to depend on the seasoned speakers alone. fZ99J Aegamim THE 1928-29 DEBATE TEAM Schedule Oxford Debate- Resolved that the United States should join the League of Nations Oxford Qfllij Columbia QNeg.j Alan T. Lennox-Boyd -Kenesaw M, Landis, '29 C. S. Malcolm Brereton Lawrence Tassi, '32L Dingle Foot William T. Matthews, '30 October 29, 1928 Dartmouth Debate- Resolved that Salesmanship is the curse of the age Columbia CAff.j Dartmouth CNeg.j Randall Riley, '30 R. E. Ela, '30 Arthur Krim, '30 C. E. Rhetts, '31 December 28, 1928 Pittsburgh Debate- Resolved that this house deplores the effects of Advertising Columbia Qflfij Pittsburgh QNeg.j Randall Riley, '30 Mr. Hamilton Arthur Krim, '30 Mr. Buerger February 14, 1929 Marquette Debate- Resolved that this house deplores conventionalism Marquette CAf'f.j Columbia CNeg.j Kenneth Erion T. Richard Witmer Ray Denefe Lawrence T. Schwartz Avin Sable William T. Matthews February 15, 1929 Smith Debate- Resolved that this house deplores conventionalismn Columbia CNeg.j--T. Richard Witmer and W. T. Matthews, '30 March 16, 1929 Union at Schenectady-April 18, 1929 Hamilton at Clinton-April 19, 1929 Colgate at Hamilton-April 20, 1929 Cornell Debate- Resolved that the Jury System be abolished March 23, 1929 Amherst Debate-May 6, 1929 I: 300 :I CHESS TEAM HOROWITZ .DOBBIE BAKER LUXEMBERG HASSIALIS BEYER EIGERMAN JOFFE GREENFIELD THE 1928-29 CHESS TEAM E. G. Baker, '30 H. Eigerman, '30 Captain Manager HE record of the Chess team, for this year has been fairly good. A four- board team composed of H. Eigerman, '30, M, D. Hassialis, '31, J. Joffe, '29, and Mintz, '29, traveled up to West Point early in the year to beat the Cadets by a 3 to l score. In the Christmas tournament, a four-board team composed of T. Beyer, '31, E, G. Baker, '30, and M. D. Hassialis, '31, with O. H. Clark, '30, and H, Eigerman, '30, alternating at the fourth board, lost to the power- ful C. C. N. Y. and University of Pennsylvania teams and drew with N, Y. U. An eight-board team was entered in the Metropolitan Chess League Tour- nament, in which most of the leading players in America, as well as some Euro- pean stars, competed. That the Columbia team can hold its own in such com- petition was demonstrated by Beyer's excellent win over Lajos Steiner, the Hungarian master, as well as Baker's win over Berman of the Hungarian club, and many other well-played games against some of the best players in the League. Columbia won its first League match when the Philider Chess Club was beaten by a score of 4M to 32 , but succumbed to the Rice Progressive team, the next Week, by the same score. The team then gave the intercollegiate cham- pionship C. C. N. Y, team a great battle, although it lost by a 5 to 3 score. The Hungarian Club beat Columbia by 5M to ZM. At home Baker and Beyer tied for the College Championship, with Cuazih third, and Clark and Eigerman tied for fourth, f3Oll if-39-3-M551-K 9- 4 KING'S CROWN AWARDS GOLD Blue Book Orchestra Band George J. Banigan, '30 Milton Conford, '29 Albert Westphal, '29 Sidney C. Werner, '29 Milton Katims, '30 . William Kupper, '29 Columblan Columbian Isidor Termin, '29 Jule Eisenbud, '29 Stanley Boriss, '29 Glee Club Frank Zeitlin, '29 Instrumental Club Maurice Levin, '29 Jester C. E. Donovan, '29 R. E. Farlow, '29 I G. G. Raddin, '29 A. E. Stasheif, '29 Alan Tompkins, '29 Orchestra Harold Brown, '29 Varsity Millen Brand, '29 S. W. Buxbaum, '29 Alan Marshall, '29 Ivan Veit, '28 Varsity Show Jacques M. Barzun, '27 Stuart Chambers, '28 James Loughlin, '28 Donald K. Phillips, '27 Leon Scharf, '27 William P. Smith, '29 Frank Utting, '27 Spectator Edward R. Aranow, '29 Berton J. Delmhorst, '29 Ian Fraser, '29 William R. P. Neel, '29 Harold S. Neuberger, '29 SILVER Band Elwood Bgrestwood, '29 Anthony De May, '29 Herbert I-Iinman, '29 William Mueller, '29 Ogareff Coumont, bu. Victor Campbell, '30 Richard Elfers, '29 Harold R. Isaacs, '30 Werner A. Lutz, '30 M. V. Mikolainis, '30 Saul Parker, '30 Alan Perl, '29 Darius Phillips, '29 George G. Raddin, '29 Debate Team Kenesaw M. Landis, '29 Beryl Levy, '29 William T. Matthews, '30 Oswald Vischi, '28 Glee Club Shaler Bancroft, '370 Newcombe Cayler, '30 Donald Carton, '30 Niel C. Van Deusen, '28 Carl W. Dykema, '29 Heaton Hetfelfinger, '30 Thomas Keating, '30 Carl Risley, '29 William Schroll, '30 James R. Travis, '29 Elbert Twadell, '30 Felix Vann, '30 G. Von Groschwitz, Frank Zeitlin, '29 ' '27 Instrumental Club Ross Strait, '29 J ester Winslow Ames, '29 McGrew Kimball, '28 Bryan Lawrence. '30 L. H. Levy. '30 W. P. Smith, '29 Arthur Swenson, '29 L. Gard Wiggins, '30 L-3021 Frederick Zomzely, '29 Spectator George J. Banigan, '30 Frederick H. Block, '30 Samuel W. Buxbaum, '29 John Claman, '30 Francis X. Egel, '30 Harold R. Isaacs, '30 Lionel M. Kaufman, '30 Monroe I. Katcher, '29 Ernest D. Kosting, '30 Gerard P. Meyer, '30 Jesse Moskowitz, '30 C. Theo. Jorgenson, '29 Lawrence H. Levy, '30 Donald I, Peyser, '30 Paul Rosenberg, '30 Edward Schlesinger, '30 John A. Thomas, '30 Frederick C. Thorne, '30 Theodore B. Wolf, '29 Daniel Zuckerman, '30 Varsity Samuel W. Buxbaum, '29 Norman Arnheim, '29 Max Feldman, '29 Albert Konheim, '29 Donald I. Peyser, '30 William Rixford, '29 Varsity Show Thomas J. Donigan, '29 Robert E. Farlow, '29 Hugh H. Gardner, '29 Joseph Geagan, '29 Edward Mammen, '27 Jack Morrissey, '28 Malcolm McComb, '29 Oliver Nicoll, '27 James D. Paris, '29 Miles J. Stepan, '27 William Woodworth, '29 I' gm ORGANIZATIONS mf. I 4 a zi x I , Q ' fi . 3 G N STUDENT X4 N GOVERNMENT ' . I ,- Kx , 9+ 41551 -Lea-K THE BOARD OF STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES TUDENT BOARD this year undertook no sweeping changes in the govern- ment of the college. During it's tenure, however, a great deal was accomplished towards welding the college auto a more coherent and spirited unit of the uni- versity. Most of Student Board's achievements were in the field of interclass sports, underclass scraps and preservation of college tradition. During the spring of 1928, Student Board sponsored the introduction of distinctive college blazers on the campus. An attempt was made this fall to have the Athletic Association outfit the football team in light blue and white jerseys in the hope of giving the Columbia team a more colorful and individual aspect. However, this plan was turned down as impractical. Cireat effort was expended to help the Freshmen orientate themselves easily and entirely into college life. On September 28, l928, a meeting was held in John Jay Hall at which Freshman attendance was required. At this meeting the Freshmen were addressed by leaders of the various undergraduate activities each of whom explained the workings and value of his particular activity, Among those who addressed the audience were Harold Rousselot, Chairman of Student Board, who presided over the meeting, Dean Hawkes, Chaplain Knox, Hugh Gardner, who spoke of Kings Crown activities, Professor Douglas Moore, who explained the colleges opportunities for musicians, Coach Crowley of the foot- ball team, William Adler, captain of the football team, Horace Davenport, crew captain, Joseph Caeagan, manager of crew, Coach Kennedy of the swimming team, and others interested in Columbia athletics. Such a meeting was a dis- tinct innovation and was generally judged a great success. A canvass of the fraternities to determine the popular feeling in regard to Freshman Rules and college spirit in general was also taken. Then came the elections of oflicers of the Freshman Class supervised by Stu.dent Board. The elections were held in lVlcMillin theatre during one of the hours set aside for a Freshman orientation lecture. The Board reorganized the rules for the tug-of-war. Purposing to make a real scrap out of what was growing to be a cut-and-dried victory for the Freshmen, it was ruled that each class should have the same number of men on the rope. According to tradition, a member of the Board played a hose across the dead line to the sorrow of the Frosh. Football rallies were discouraged as a general thing but this was suspended in the case of the Cornell game because of the extraordinary campus interest in the contest and a successful rally was held in the Commons, with Hugh Gard- ner presiding. Two weeks later a special train was run to Philadelphia for the Penn game under the auspices of the board. About 500 Columbia rooters made the trip in this way. During the fall term, Student Board took over the management of the band. lnterclass athletics were reorganized with the result that now a more spirited rivalry sprung up in the various sports which were undertaken. Dinner week was postponed from February to April. The Board also requested the various classes to discontinue the custom which has sprung up in recent years of having actresses from Broadway act as class sponsors. If306j STUDENT BOARD KUMPF DAVENPORT MMBAIN WOODWORTH DELMHORST ROUSSELOT GARDNER Near the beginning of the Spring Semester the formation of a new organi- zation was announced, the Blue Key Society. The society that previously held that name will be known as the Society of Managerial Candidates. The new Blue Key Society is based on similar ones at Dartmouth and Cornell and has as its purpose the reception of athletic teams visiting Columbia. The society functioned successfully though unoflicially during the fall Semester. The early Spring elections for new members of Student Board were held in February. At the Junior Prom, on February 22, it was announced that George Bannigan, '30, and Remey Tys, '30 had been elected to the board for the rest of the Spring Semester and the next year. THE BOARD Harold A. Rousselot, '29 Chairman Alastair MacBain, '29 William Woodworth, '29 Hugh H. Gardner, '29 Berton J. Delmhorst, '29 Henry W. Kumpf, '29 Horace E. Davenport, '29 N071 9 4!iDJ Q,-Hx .4 THE COMMITTEE ON STUDENTS' ACTIVITIES HE determination of Columbia authorities and students to maintain high academic stan- dards and to preserve true amateurism in intercollegiate sport has made necessary a closer under- standing between the student body and the faculty. The Committee on Students' Activities represents one of the most gratifying attempts yet made in a first rank college to solve this troublesome problem. The Committee is composed partly of members of the faculty whose official positions and interest in student activities make them peculiarly fit to conduct such work. The other mem- bers of the committee are six undergradfuates, usually representative athletes, well able to present the students' attitude towards the question. ' The committee endeavors to help all athletes maintain a high standing in their courses. In cases where it seems necessary, tutoring is procured. By this means the athletes of Columbia are enabled to maintain an intelligent interest in 'their academic work, and all danger of pro- fessionalism is eliminated. Faculty Members Prof. H. J. Carman, Chairman Reynolds Benson Edward B. Fox Prof. G. A. Betz Edwlard J. Grant Cex-officioj Willet L. Eccles Dean Herbert E. Hawkes lex-ohticioj Undergraduate Members Wayne Battelle, '29 Alfred Forsyth, '29 Horace Davenport, '29 Jacob Kliegman, '29 Hugh Gardner, '29 Samuel Walker, '29 UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE ON STUDENT ACTIVITIES CARMAN GARDNER DAVENPORT BETZ KLEIGMAN Laosj I . 0 ' G M HUNURARY . rx ' 'W . . ,, 4 L' -A . , - 3 3 4 5 of Rhode Island, Brown ...,.. .,... 1 830 1847 Ca- I APAQJWKQFGC Alpha Alpha ROSTER OF PHI BETA KAPPA CHAPTERS Delta Chapter of New York established at Columbia University, 1869. Secretary, J. H. Randall, Jr. North Atlantic District of Connecticut, Yale .............,.,. 1780 of Massachusetts, Harvard . ....,., .1781 Alpha of New Hampshire, Dartmouth 1787 Alpha of New York, Union .....,v..,..,...., 1817 Alpha of Maine, Bowdoin .... . .....,..,t.,... 1825 Alpha Beta of Connecticut, Trinity .....i..,,,...., 1845 Gamma of Connecticut, Wesleyan .......... 1845 Alpha of Vermont, Vermont ,.....,..,....i 1849 Beta of Massachusetts, Amherst ....,......, 1853 Beta of New York, N. Y. U. .s....,.....,... 1858 Gamma of Massachusetts, Williams ....... 1864 Gamma of New York, C. C. N. Y. ,...., 1867 Beta of Vermont, Middlebury ....,......... 1868 Alpha of New Jersey, Rutgers. ............. 1869 Delta of New York, Columbia. ,..........1. 1869 Epsilon of New York, Hamilton .....,,... 1870 Zeta of New York, Hobart .,.,......1....... 1871 Eta of New York, Colgate. ..,................ 1878 Theta of New York, Cornell. .,..,,,........ 1882 Alpha of Pennsylvania, Dickinson. .....,, 1887 Beta of Pennsylvania, Lehigh ............,... 1887 Iota of New York, Rochester ,...,......,... 1887 Gamma of Pennsylvania, Lafayette ..,.... . 1890 Delta of Massachusetts, Tufts --- - ....... -. 1892 Delta of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania ...... 1892 Beta of Maine, Colby .... ......... - ........ ..... 1 8 96 Kappa of New York, Syracuse ...,... 1896 Epsilon of Pennsylvania, Swarthmore ..., 1896 Zeta of Penns lvania Haverford 1899 y , . .......... . Epsilon of Massachusetts, Boston ..,.,...,. 1899 Mu of New York, Vassar .,.. .............. 1899 Beta of New Jersey. Princeton ......,..... 1899 Lambda of New York, St, Lawrence. ...,, 1899 Eta of Pennsylvania. Allegheny .,..,..,.., . 1902 Zeta of Massachusetts, Smith. ..,..,....,.,.. 1904 Eta of Massachusetts, Wellesley ,,.. --- ----1904 Theta of Massachusetts, Mt. Holyoke..-.1905 Theta of Pennsylvania, Franklin and Marshall ,,.,.....,,...... ---.1908 Iota of Massachusetts, Radcliffe. ,.,1,,,..,i 1914 Gamma of Maine, Bates ................ ..... 1 917 Nu of New York. Hunter .... . ............... 1920 Iota of Pennsylvania, Gettsyburg. ........ .1923 Delta of Maine, Maine ...................,...... 1923 South Atlantic District A1 ha of Vir inia, William and Mary 1776 P 1 8 Alpha of Maryland, Johns Hopkins Alpha of N. C., 895 Univ. of North Carolina .,,,,,,,,,,,,,.i, 1904 Beta of Maryland, Goucher ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,Y,,, 1905 Beta of Virginia, Virginia ,,,,.,,v, . ,,,,,,,,, 1908 Alpha of West Va.. West Vir inia ........ 1910 8 Gamma 'of Virginia, Washington and Lee ,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 1911 Alpha of Georgia, Georgia ,,,,,,,,,,Y,,Y,..--- 1914 Delta of Virginia, Randolph-Macon. .,... 1917 1 310 Beta of North Carolina, Duke. ............. Gamma of North Carolina, Davidson.-L Beta of Georgia, Agnes Scott ................ Alpha of S. C., Univ. of South Carolina ..,............. North Central District Alpha of Ohio, Western Reserve ............ Beta of Ohio, Kenyon--.L ..,..,,,.,.,.,.,.. Camma of Ohio, Marietta ..........,......... Alpha of Indiana, DePauw ...........,...... Alpha of Illinois, Northwestern. ....,... . Alpha of Kansas, Kansas. .................... . Alpha of Minnesota, Minnesota I... . ,...... Alpha of Iowa, Iowa State ......,,..,,,,..,,. Alpha of Nebraska, Nebraska. .....,.,, . ,.,. Beta of Indiana, Wabash. ......... Alpha of Wisconsin, Wisconsin. ......,,.,. Delta of Ohio, Cincinnati .................... Beta of Illinois, Chicago .... . ...... Alpha of Missouri, Missouri. .... Epsilon of Ohio, Ohio State ....... Zeta of Ohio, Oberlin .... . .......... Eta of Ohio, Ohio Wesleyan ............., . Gamma of Illinois, Illinois ---.---- Alpha of Michigan, Michigan-- Beta of Iowa, Grinnell ....i..... .... Theta of Ohio, Denison ......... Gamma of Indiana, Indiana. .... -- Iota of Ohio, Miami -- .......... -- Beta of Wisconsin, Beloit- ....,.... Gamma of Wisconsin, Lawrence ....,,..... Beta of Minnesota, Carleton ....,.,r,...,., Beta of Missouri. Washington . Alpha of North Dakota, North 153125121 Delta of Illinois, Knox ...........1......,..... Gamma of Iowa, Drake ..- ..... .......,. . --- Delta of Iowa, Cornell College. .......,..... Kappa of Ohio, Wooster ......... . .... . ..... Alpha of South Dakota, South Dakota South Central .District Alpha of Alabama, Alabama ........ --- Alpha of Tennessee, Vanderbilt.-.-.------. Alpha of Texas, Texas ........... .,... - . ..... Alpha of Louisiana. Tulane--- -- Alpha of Oklahoma, Oklahoma ---.------- Alpha of Kentucky, Kentucky.--- Beta of Tennessee, Univ. of the South Western .District Alpha of California, California -.--.-- .--- Alpha of Colorado, Univ. of Colorado.- Beta of California. Stanford -..- --------- Beta of Colorado, Colorado College ------ Gamma of California, Pomona -.--....---.- Alpha of Washington, Washington ------. Beta of Washington, Whitman .---------.- Alpha of Oregon, Oregon. .--..-----.------- - Delta of California, Occidental. ....------.-- Alpha of Idaho, Idaho. -..--------.--. ----.. , . 1 1920 1923 1926 1926 1858 1860 1889 1890 1890 1892 1895 1896 1898 1899 1899 1899 1901 1904 1907 1907 1907 1907 1908 1911 1911 1911 1911 1914 1914 1914 1914 1917 1923 1923 1926 1926 1850 1901 1905 1909 1920 1926 1926 1898 1904 1904 1904 1914 1914 1920 1923 1926 1926 4 C+ fbamseax A9 ELECTED TO PHI BETA KAPPA, 1928 G. Stanley Baker Jacob Barb Charles F. Bonilla Carl B. Boyer M. D. Brill Carl Buchman Henry F. Butler John I. Cahalan Edwin M. Cohart David Cowen Richard H. Crum Ambrose Doskow Philip B. Heller Elliot Hochstein Leon H. Keyserling Emanuel Klempner Irwin L. Langbein Max Levin Edgar R. Lorch Malcolm S. McComb Francis A. Mahoney Edward W. Mammen Benjamin Mandelker Arthur J. Orange Frank J. Podesta William T. Parry Leonard Price Elie Siegmeister Samuel Silverman Raphael Solomon Frank Stefansin Morris Strum Terence L. Tyson Leon Ulman Egbert H. van Delden Neil C. Van Deusen Ivan B. Veit Harry Wilenchick Howard C. Wood MEMBERS OF PHI BETA KAPPA IN THE FACULTY OP COLUMBIA COLLEGE Adler, Mortimer Beckhart. Benjamin H. Berkey. Charles P. Bigongiari, Dino Bonbright, James C. Bowen. Robert H. Butler. Pres. Nicholas Murray Carman, Harry J. Chadwick, Harold K. Coryell, Horace N. Coss, John J. Croxton, Frederick E. Dewey, John Earle, Edward M. Edman. Irwin Egbert, James C. Erskine. John Evans, Austin P. Farwell, Hermon W. Fennelly, John F. Fife, Robert H. Fiske, Thomas S. Fox, Dixon R. Fox, Edward B. Friess. Horace L. Galloway, Jesse J. Gray, Louis H. Haig, Robert M. Hammett. Louis P. Hawkes, Dean Herbert E. Heuser, F, W. J. Hollingworth, Harry L. Jacoby, Harold Keyes. Clinton W. Knapps, Charles Lee. Frank H. Llewellyn. Karl N. Lodge. Gonzales Lyon. Hastings McCrca. Nelson G. McGoldrick, Joseph D. MacMahon, Arthur XV. 1 ai. I I ang?-5' , -Q . - 251- I W -5,..Vfg,,' :V . -,. gf-. 4, E Mesnard. Andre Miner, Dwight Molt, Philip M. Moon, Parker T. Moore, F. G. Murphy, Gardner Murray. S. Butler. Jr. Neff. Emery E. Nelson, John M. Odell. Geo. C. D. Orchard, John E. Pegram. Geo. B. Perry, Edward D. Randall. John H. Remy. A. F. J. Schneider. Herbert W. Schuyler. Robert L. Seager. Henry R. Seligman, Edwin R. A. Spiers, A. E. H. Steeves, Harrison R. Stockder, A. H. Storck. John Van Doren, Mark A. Van Metre. Thurman W. XVatson. Goodwin B. XVeeks. Raymond XVeld. William E. XVestbrook, H. Theodric XVilliamson, Charles C. XVolfanger, Charles C. XVolfanger, Louis A. Wood, Ben D. Woodbridge, Dean Frederick Vifoodworth, Robert S. Yeandle, Frederick G. Young, Clarence H. Young. J. Donald There are 372 members in the uarious Faculties of the University f3l1j 4a19JmQ1-C 49 W. Wayne Battelle James E. Connor Horace E. Davenport Berton J. Delmhorst Robert E. Farlow Owen P. Brown Stuart G. Chambers George J. Conway Frank E. Dixon Ralph J. Furey Charles K. Bullard Robert S. Curtiss George S. French Herbert J. Jacobi Edward V. Jaycox A. C. Farlow G. Jaeger H. J. Kelly J. C. Kracht V. E. Lohr F. T. Anderson J. Bradley F. VP. Ryan R. J. Cooney C. E. Eliason E. C. Bennett F. Booth G. B. Brophy J. J. Casey T. W. Chrystie J. S. Bludnell F. V. Brodil R. M. Burtt NACOMS Senior Society Class of 1929 Alfred S. Forsyth Hugh Gardner Joseph J. Geagan Henry W. Kumpf Eric C. Lambart Class of 1928 George T. Hammond Emerick L. Hollowell Arthur B. Howell Edwin G. Jacobi Thomas M. Kerrigan Class of 19 27 John T. Lorch Harold F. McGuire H. Wood McClure Clifford E. Nobes Class of 1926 R. S. Lyman A. W. Mannheim W. C. Mueller G. C. Pease C. O. Rawalt Class of 1925 R. Fowler J. H. Gleson L. H. Tiihonen J. F. Van Brocklin H. L. Voight Class of 1924 D. Cort W. O. Dillingham W. H. Ferris E. H. Field Q D. B. Griswold Class of 1923 P. O. Elliot C. H. Ford V. C. Graeb W. B. Johnson f3l2J Alastair MacBain Gordon C. Piercy Harold A. Rousselot Samuel R. Walker William Woodworth William J. Madden David B. S. Millar, J James J. Reynolds Arthur Smith Robert W. Watson Henry E. Packer George A. Roegner Myron F. Sesit E. Fred Uhrbrock Palmer J. Wright R. W. Rowen S. G. Schimetitisch R. J. Wagner K. E. Wiberg F. E. Zegri T. B. Walker E. B. Wallace R. B. Williams H. C. Wilson A. J. Young W. F. Koppisch R. F. Moore W. C. Walker A. D. Walling M. W. Watkins R. W. Keenan E. L. Kelly G. Medigovich 1' Jimmmlx E. C. Anderson W. L. Eccles . Hadden . L. Hanson . L. Harbaugh U7-732 L. R. Condon T. Fitzgibbon R. P. Forsyth W. F. Hahn G. L. Kappes Class of 1920 F. P. Benedict H. W. Forster J. W. Giles Z WFOPOWFFWF m m 235-Wikis iaaiarsal.-Q 2525 33552 DS CA Q-4 Q.. Class of 1919 . N. Alexander S. Dunn, Jr. W T. J. Farrell, Jr. H. L. Friess J. E. Geisler R. B. Haines P. S. Herbert M. Jacoby J. D. Kennedy H. G. Larson A. S. McCabe W. J. Miller W. Neale W. S. Robinson F. W. Rogers R. Shilliday W. B. Brown M. J. Buonaguro R. A. Curry Class of 1922 J. H. Hassinger W. Higgins W. M. Higley J. H. Hinch C. Moszczenski Class of 1921 J. F. Kienninger G. D. Larner N. D. McKnight F.. J. Nevin ff' J K. W. Plumb F. K. Scovil W. M. Squires J. S. Tedford L. R. Watson W. T. Taylor L. Schiff L. S. Van Houten S. C. Waldecker A. L. Walker, Jr. IQ3131 Af David K. Bouton J. Joseph Burke George Donaldson Arthur Douglas Victor Glenn William P. Adler John H. Bogle John Born, Jr. Frederick D. Dassori Joseph B. Green E. W. Beers J. Billings C. V. Breiner J. W. S. Davis C. K. Empringham UPIWPUQ fee?-'PHE 5292? 33 ' C1 gm E Ullman 3-5 2 K Os: 23 SFU M. Campbell U. Dockerill J. J. Donaldson J. C. Gephart J. G. Goodwin M. W. Baldwin H. P. Bloomer E. McK. Bodenbender J. Campbell O. v. St. Whitelock SACHEMS Senior Society Class of 1929 Edwin A. Hill Edward L. Kilroe Wm. MCK. Lightbowne John P. Nichols Daniel P. O'Grady Class of 1928 Royal M. Montgomery Rutherford Olliphant William H. Pitt Fred E. Rieger Gordon Smith Class of 1927 F. L. Parrell A. Pitch E. P. Greene C. K. Hamilton Class of l926 R J. Kirchmeyer S. W. Lambeth C. G. Lockwood H. K. McAnarney John MacWillie Class of l925 J. H. Hardy A. D. Hyde J. Lang J. C. Myers E. J. Starkey Class of l924 C. W. Crawford, Jr. C. J. Echavarria D. S. Gibbs W. J. Johnston f3l4l Robert B. Pond George G. Raddin, Jr Louis R. Slattery IWilliam P. Smith William D. Wright Thomas R. Sullivan M. J. Von Der Hyde Cyrus E. Warden John L. Wasson Kenneth R. Williams A. V. Lockwood 7R. W. Richardson E. Roche W. B. Sherman P. R. Slack O. S. Manning A. P. Maybee C. D. Millison T. P. O'Grady H. A. Van Wyck W. C. Steinkamp J. J. Theobald E. A. Thompson P. J. Wacker C. B. Warden W. S. Knebel W. H. Marshall G. T. Moeschen P. B. Price G. E. Waschek 1L9JmQaLM E. S. Chase L. H. Conklin I. E. Cooper C. L. Douglas W. S. Parrel P. D. Bernard W. L. Blanchet J. H. Bradshaw, Jr. A. F. Chrystal R. P. Archibald, Jr. J. E. Carrol P. B. Kindelberger A. K. Thomson Class of 1920 M. J. Bloomer R. C. Conant R. M. Craigmyle W. Neumann L. L. Hanel E. M. Healy H. F. Helwig, Jr. J. M. Houlahan G. L. B. Jones J. Litt E. L. Taylor Class of 1919 R. B. Preas G. Griswold J. C. Hegeman R. C. Hawkins R. J. Turk, Jr. E. J. Kemp J. E. McCracken J. L. McFadden P. J. McGowan, Jr. W. H.'Oberrender R. L. Peck, Jr. L. C. Raegener, Jr. E. S. H. Svensson R. W. Westwood Class of 1923 W. Jennings R. M. Lovewell E. A. Meyer W. J. Miller J. R. O'Conne11 Class of 1922 O. De Kay W. M. Eberhart W. P. Frost J. C. Park Class of 1921 W. H. Matthews, Jr. B. A. Roderick W. G. Rollins H. M. Robinson O. D. Thees, Jr. 1. H. Trowbridge W. L. Johnson M. C. Spence J. W. Thornton P. E. Wright, Jr. L. J. A. Salmon H C. E. Phelps . N. Sibley H. A. C. Rauchfuss E. T. Stelle. Jr. M. Tynan i if Ii A Q I Y f E lg E z.: 'ij-', 1,3 1-.::' 'L L' -v . .... -, a . , N, A 17- , .j if L :mum ai- ' WM- . ..... mfs.. Q.,-3,,A,,L:-..V 5 .. p T ' a W fs T ijfia i i i :,,u.v..-.-v.-r.-..A,, -MMT Q n ,tj I ai- -u 3 A: E A . J jp: ---. . a r A 1 iv Q -E F34- 1-lf'-f' '-3 f' '. x e :iff ,,, X E. : q . sz: - 3 5,-5, . . 5' wk ilu 'VN-' . :li ,..., .. ,... - 1 a n .- C 6' C 5, Y XX. 5' r' f l, 19 f ls , , , ' .. -'ij-,..3'5lfFl,S!v5 f 0 f . .... C . V ...Q - ' ' ' ' -f-f 5,22 fsisj ff-AQJQQQ-x A Wallace E. Carr John C. Eickwort James F. Farrell Arthur E. Harrington Clyde Hendrix. Jr. Thomas Biggs C. Rudolph Carlin Leonard A. Drake William R. Easton Rene B. Faure Richard C. Campbell Francis L. Farrell F. Norman Gabrielle Frank M. Gale J. R. Broderick D. T. McDonald John Shigo C. Yegen, Jr. C. A. Fairchild, Jr. R. H. Marshall Thomas F. McCarthy Albert H. Young George S. Case John F. Van Brocklin SAHIB Senior Business Society Class of 1929 H. D. Wood McClure Richard F. Meyer Maxwell N. Naas Charles M. Newhouse Robert E. Noth John A. Williams Class of l928 Gordon S. Ferris William F. Githens Lewis J. Hornberger Louis J. Kiernan Class of 1927 James G. Goodwin Frank J. Gunther J. Ross Haas Russell M. Molyneux Class of l926 Raymond Wagner Russell W. Lynch Ferdinand Zegri Class of l925 fq 53161 Thomas L. Power Charles F. Rodican Bertram B. Riley Eugene L. Roussin Curtis G. Watkins John M. McCoy Duncan Merriwether William E. Peterson Clay R. Smith Jonathan G. Wells, Jr Robert F. Morrow Edward V. K. Jaycox Kenneth W. Hinds Nicholas W. Vancil J. H. Ricker E. E. Battelle, Jr. Henry K. McAnarney Charles Lockwood E. Halsted Platt Lewis Trowbridge John P. Loughlin Graham A. Gardner Clark G. Scott John J. Donaldson C:- I AQAQJMQQ-C -Q J MU PI Sophomore Society of Black John Atkinson Wayne Battelle - Joseph Burke Horace Davenport George Donaldson Arthur Douglas E. Sheldon Anderson William Beardsley Ralph Furey Edwin Jacobi Robert S. Curtiss John T. Lorch Palmer J. Wright William Darnell C. Kingsbury Hamilton Gus A. Jaeger Charles J. Kennedy Kaleb E. Vvliberg Rudolph E. Sohst, Jr. Raymond Wagner Raymond J. Kirchmeyer Walter Rautenstrauch Vincent de C. Lynn 1929 Class of Robert Farlow Hugh Gardner P. L. Griffith Henry Kumpf Daniel O'Grady Class of 1928 John B. Griffin Michael A. Hoey Maynard S. Kearney E. Mount Norris Arthur L. Smith Class of 1927 Raymond Schmidt William Ray Leonard Schlude Daniel J. Hanley Nelson Doerr Class of 1926 1 rp f ,..-ref . Finlay. 7 ' 1 l i 5 A' , . L 317 1 Avengers Gordon Piercy Robert Pond Harold Rousselot A. C. Smith Samuel Walker William Woodworth Gordon Smith William Wheeler Kenneth R. Williams M. Jennings V. der Heyde Cyril Empringham Edward Foley Pelham Thayer Frederick Uhrbrock Joseph W, Davis George G. Pease James D. Prince John MacWillie, Jr. Stephen G. Schimetitisch Henry K. McAnarney Arthur Schopp William Wright VAN AM SOCIETY PHILLIPS SCOTT WALKER LOZIER NORDSTROM SALMON SHERIDAN THOMAS VVARWICK GOBEL FORREST REDFIELD BRADLEY THE VAN AM SOCIETY Sophomore Society Adolf Gobel, Jr. John L. Warwick President Vice-President Charles D. Forrest Walter R. Hall Treasurer Secretary John W. Bradley George B. Costigan Frank R. Donahue Charles D. Forrest Carl M. Ganzle William Gilchrist Adolph Gohel, Jr. Walter R. Hall Ford B. Hinman Edwin R. Lozier George W. Lusk Class of 1931 53181 John J. lVlcSorley Victor Nordstrom Randolph G. Phillips Richard Redield Pierre J. Salmon Henry H. Scott James P. Sheridan John E. Smith Edward H. Thomas Howard L. Walker John L. Warwick . . . 'i bm 7 ATHLETIC N. I 5 c . 9 . . ' E V 4 5 Q. 4fdQ2iiah2e5.... ag THE COLUMBIA VARSITY C CLUB CREW FOOTBALL BASEBALL TRACK BASKETBALL 'MINOR SPORTS' HE Varsity C Club was formed early in 1920 to be of service and help to the undergraduates, to the university athletic authorities and to athletics at Columbia. All men who have won a varsity HC or since September 25, l926, a major C in varsity athletics are eligible for membership. Each of the major sports has a standing committee composed of former and present members of that sport, an alumnus as chairman, another alumnus and three undergraduate members. These committees act as a liaison between the athletes of the past and the athletes of today, and present to the alumni from a sympathetic and intelligent point of view the problems of the undergraduates in each particular sport. Meetings of the alumni of each sport are held from time to time throughout the year. At the annual meeting in December, which is attended by President Butler and Dean Hawkes, all men who have won a letter in the preceding twelve months are formally presented with certificates of their award and Varsity CH buttons. Not only is it an opportunity for fitting recognition of the under- graduates, but it gives the older men a chance to become acquainted with the new letter men. Henry W. Kumpf, '29 Samuel R. Walker, '29 Undergraduate President Undergraduate Secretary T. Ludlow Chrystie, '92 Walter Neale, 'l8 President Secretary John J. Ryan, '09 Roy U. Wood, '14 Vice-President Treasurer 53201 Cl-- 1 Ai fobamasx THE DOLPHINS SOCIETY , -,. . Q . I 1 :Ai -F2 i is . 1 i , f- ., 'ini . .fIfmm'Z..i.w 3 , 1 V . Q E. . . . Z 7 22 Kg - s ...0?I??gE:4f HONORARY SWIMMING AND WATER POLO SOCIETY Founded 1920 Alfred S. Forsyth, '29 Joseph Rongetti, '29 President Vice-President Robert E. Farlow, '29 S ecretary- Treasurer Ronald Allwork, '28 Sherman Barnes, '29 Charles Booth, Gr. Thomas Brown, '30 Francis Egel, '30 Frederic Frank Bowden, '29 H. E. Davenport, '29 F. D. Dassori, '29 A. S. Forsyth, '29 Edward T. Kennedy Elected in 1928 Rene Faure. '29 Robert Farlow, '29 William Gaynor, '30 Vladimir Kalmykow, '30 William Lancaster, '30 Maurice Levin, '29 Irving Morris, '30 William Norton, '30 Henry Osterholz, '28 William Sanford, '30 Smedley, '26 Robert Williamson, '28 Active Members C. T. Jorgensen, '29 Thomas J. Kelley, '29 H. W. Kumpf, '29 H. D. Wood McClure, '27 Honorary Members George F. Holm f321j Richard Nauen, '28 A. J. Peraino, '29 M. Schultz, '29 J. R. Rongetti, '29 August Peterson Cp 4,1531 dP:x. J, THE NAT1oNAL COLLEGIATE SOCIETY OF SPIKED SHOE QQEDQSH Q 'D i.5ge -'Q' X' 0 o f ff ' -N In , ,f 4, as 1, v ny , in 8 f Sf w wf e '.gg 13' Q ' iw E C8 klkdl iii , ' lr' E lil fi nvT:f 'vwyws M - of ftu bk 'CEFTEHQ-:Pf11arw:fff , 6 2 0009? XXVFI' ,k k O X PIKED SHOE is the honorary track society of the collegiate circles. Since h b active in the it was founded six years ago at Columbia its members ave een cause of track, both on the Campus and at other colleges. In this short space ' ' l be shi has increased until there are now fourteen chapters its nationa mem r p included. Other colleges are now applying for charters and the local chapter 1S formulating plans for formal organization of the National Society. Th l al cha ter has continued its policy 'of sponsoring interclass track e oc p competition for this has proved of real value in bringing out track material. NATIONAL MEMBERSHIP Alabama Poly. Lehigh Alfred New York University Birmingham Southern Pittsburgh Columbia Rutgers Cornell Syracuse Georgia Union Georgia Tech. Western Reserve Lszzl SPIKED SHOE SOCIETY HAGEN BROWN BRAUSE KERRIGAN SCHWEITZI-:R KOWLES BROOKS MERNER SLATTERY AXELRODLEA M KINLE1 LEWIS JAHELKA CAHILL POND MEYER BATTELLE BOUTON JOYCE GORBATENKO SPIKED SHOE QPPICERS 1929 Collin D. Meyers President David K. Bouton Secretary MENIBERSHIP Carl J. Merner, Coach Carl Neiman, Trainer John M. Atkinson, '29 Bernard Axelrod, '30 Fred J. Banfleld, '29 W. Wayne Battelle, '29 David K. Bouton, '29 Edward Brause, '29 R. Boland Brooks, '29 Robert T. Brown, '30 Thomas V. Cahill, '30 Anthony Ghillany, '3lB William Gilchrist, '31 George L. Gorbatenko, '29 P. Leroy Griflith, '29 Joseph Hagen, '30 Raymond W. Hanley, '30 E. A. Hill, '29 E323 VJ. Wayne Battelle Vice-Presiderzt R. Bartlett Pond Treasurer 1929 Peter Housekeeper, '30 George Jahelka, '31 Edward P. Joyce, '30 Prank T. Kerrigan, '30 Clayton P. Knowles, '30 Charles A. Lea, '30 Rubin Lewis, '29 George McKinley, '29 Collin D. Meyers, '29 Daniel P. O'Grady, '29 William A. Pilz, '30 R. Bartlett Pond, '29 Alan W. Rowe, '29 William Rydell, '29 M. Peter Schweitzer, '30 Louis R. Slattery, '29 John C, Thirlwall, '29 Joseph L. Tierney, '29 ,f3f3lEiEKf3s-. THE RAPIER CLUB :,' li. i Honorary Fencing Society Founded 1923 GFFICERS Norman C. Cohn, '29E Hugo V. Alessandroni, '29 President Vice-President Victor Brociner, '29 Alan Tompkins, '29 Secretary Treasurer MEMBERSHIP Class of 1929 Hugo V. Alessanclroni Samuel Buxbaum Victor Brociner Genaro Cautino Alan Tompkins Class of 1930 Alan Mansfield Julius Roth Richard deC. Sanville Class of 1931 Walter T. Kees Rudolph Marson University Norman C. Cohn, '29E Robert Silva, '29E f324J 4 d4 , . x . ' Q6 ALUMNI G 'Q btw 5. XX J I 'L' ' I D 142 0 xx THE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY CLUB Four West 43rd Street Knowlton Durham, 'Ol Frank W. Chambers, '06 President 5 E0 Vice-President Ward Melville, '09 Q, 5 Arthur L. Marvin, '97 Secretary 'CLVQ' Treasurer To promote social intercourse among its members, to further the interests of, and zn general to uphold the mfluence of Columbia Unzuersztyn-This is' the purpose of the Columbia University Club. HROUGH the Club, Columbia men continue to strengthen and add to friendships of their university days. It is the meeting place of practically all annual class reunion 'QR Y 1, ,vvi dinners. Many classes have established a regular monthly gg!-H I dinner or luncheon habit. tiffflf The Club boasts a very enthusiastic Squash Tennis membership. In 1928 the class A team crown came to lg 5 4 West Forty-third Street, and with it the National Class A individual championship, won by Rowland ,B. A g I-Iaines, '19 and the national Class B championship, won by Gardner I-Iirons, 'l8S. S. The Club also excels in bridge. Last year the team topped the Inter-Club Bridge League. Competitions in Squash, Bridge, Billards, Pool among Q the members are continually keeping the men active. The Columbia University Club Scholarships are prizes coveted by fifteen men each year. Social activities include a regular Club Night each month, at which every conceivable form of entertainment is supplied from boxing bouts to glee clubs. Ladies' Day is celebrated on February 22nd by a dansant and squash exhibitions in honor of the ladies. Here is an ideal place to live, just one block from Fifth Avenue and Forty-second Street. An excellent table, comfortable rooms a barber shop, valet service a radio room and a large library, offer the permanent resident or the transient alumnus the best living at moderate prices. Theatre ticket and florist service is available. Men entering the Club during their first year as an alumnus escape the initiation fee of twenty-live dollars. For the nrst two years after graduation the annual dues are ten dollars, increasing thereafter on a sliding scale until the sixth year, when the dues are sixty dollars. The Secretary's oflice will gladly answer all questions concerning admission. f326j ,I ,n,9JwsQ4-C A, THE ASSOCIATION OF THE ALUMNI OF COLUMBIA COLLEGE 'fe 'Y Q . z 5 -9 Oo oN 0051 OP 7, o , Q 3 obo fx 9 vmvlf' sfsv Organized in 18 2 5 HEN the State of New York granted the charter to this Association of Columbia College men, Seth Low, '70, later President of the University and Mayor of New York City, John Howard Van Amringe, '60, later Dean of Columbia College, and the other petitioners stated that the object of the organization was to perpetuate the friendships and relations arising during the course of study in Columbia College, and to promote the true interests, influence and efliciency of Columbia College as an institution of sound learning and practical education. ng the long history of the Association that statement has taken shape, and it continues to find expression in many activities, too numerous to record here, but all directed toward advancing the welware of Columbia College. All Alumni of Columbia College, no matter how many years they attended the University, are eligible for membership, which carries with it, automatically, membership in the Alumni Federation. The Association also supplies the Alumni News to all its members. Dues are 83.00 annually for the first five .. Duri years after a man's class has graduated and 85.00 annually thereafter. William Grant Palmer, '07 Charles G. Proflitt, '17 President Secretary Frederick K. Seward, '99 W. H. Dannat Pell, '09 Vice-President Treasurer STANDING COMMITTEE Louis Dwight Ray, '82 Richmond Weed, '95 Geoffrey Parsons, '99 David Armstrong, '01 James L. Robinson, '04 C. Von E. Mitchell, '07 Frank Whelan, '14 Douglas M. Black, '16 Walter S. Robinson, '19 Herbert A. Koenig, '20 Lawrence R. Condon, '21 Nicholas M. McKnight, '21 Communications should be addressed to the Secretary at 2960 Broadway, New York, N. Y. f327j 9. ,g29J Qsx 4, THE ALUMNI FEDERATION OP COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, INC. OFFICERS John K. Pitch, '02 President W. B. Symmes, Jr., '98 William H. McCastline, '03, P. Y5 S. First Vice-President Second Vice-President James L. Robinson, '04, '06L Stephen P. Burke, '20S Third Vice-President Recording Secretary Charles G. Proffitt, '17 C. E. Lovejoy, '17 Treasurer Executive Secretary HE Alumni Federation comprises eight constituent school associations, composed of alumni of the eight leading departments of Columbia University. It maintains a central office in Suite 109-110 Library, Columbia University, and has a staff of an alumni secretary and fifteen assistants. Card catalogue records of more than 32,000 alumni are maintained up-to-date and also a geo- graphical card index by states, counties, cities, and, in the case of New York City, by streets. An addressograph iile by classes is also maintained. The Alumni Federation records as an alumnus any former student of a principal department of the University who has attended at least one year in good stand- ing. The Alumni Federation publishes weekly, thirty-three times a year, the official graduates,' magazine, known as the Columbia Alumni News, handles printing and addressing for class secretaries, and such other Columbia alumni organizations as Society of Older Graduates, Early Eighties, Upper Eighties, Forty-niners, etc. Local clubs of Columbia alumni exist in many large cities of the world and new ones are constantly being organized by the Alumni Federation. Young graduates of Columbia are urged to obtain from the Alumni Oiiice the names of presidents and secretaries of these local clubs in cities where they contemplate locating after graduation. Clubs are already in existence in the following places: Albany, the State of Arizona, Atlanta, Berlin, Buffalo, Chicago, Cin- cinnati, Cleveland, Cuba, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, District of Columbia, Lon- don, Port Worth, Geneva, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Little Rock, Los Angeles, Louisville Manila, Maryland, Memphis, New Jersey, New Orleans, Omaha, Paris, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Portland, Richmond, Rochester, St. Louis, Salt Lake City, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Spain, Spokane, Syracuse, To- ronto, and Westchester County. Ii328j 4 ll 0 . ZZ . Ky 04 'S 0 3 GENERAL X A hh 4 ' KV , , I 'L - -x x . ' i n i ' 0 S+ a f42f?i. 49fs- -S PHILOLEXIAN SOCIETY Surgam 1802 HILOLEXIAN is one of the traditions of the campus. Like all Columbia traditions it passes by unnoticed until a foreign Visitor appears, or until a person from the provinces visit the Heights, when Philolexian is pointed out as a reposi- tory of culture. This group contains, of course, all the more worth-while writers and poetasters of the campus who meet and discuss the more subtle points of aesthetic appreciation. One hears the echo of the ex- perience of beauty issuing in hot waves from the Philo sanctuary on the fourth floor of John Jay Hall. No longer on Thursday nights does the argu- ment partake of the majesty of formal debate. Philo members are noted for and in some instances sonnel at large, but men are chosen for their interest in some particular branch of the arts. This year there is a remarkable disinterest in the traditional Philo play. This decline in histrionic culture is un- doubtedly due to the peculiar condition of the Philo finances. Phil's members are noted for and in some instances infamous for their creative work on and off the campus. The writing of essays, short stories and V epics vie with painting and drawing and music. One Ti Philo man is an especially talented musician, while that same person in private life assumes the unbe- lievable aspect of a physicist. There is a noteworthy burgeoning of creation this year due perhaps to the fact that Philo men spend their summers abroad seeking solace and inspiration. The specific results are a broadening of waist bands due to Heidleberg beer, and a keen interest in European literature. A banquet was recently held in the Columbia Club which proved that Philo men had profited by their European training. No one had to be taken home. Much Hoboken beer was guzzled and nothing was heard of Words- worth and Hardy. Philo's faculty sponsor, George C. D. Odell, was the guest of honor, again proving himself a favourite with the undergraduates. GEORGE G. RADDIN, JR. President Lzaoj PHILOLEXIAN SOCIETY OFFICERS WINTER 1928-1929 SPRING George G. Raddin, Jr. George G. Raddin, Jr. President President William U. Rixford Alan Marshall Vice-President Vice-President William E. Orr William E. Orr Secretary Secretary W. Bradford Smith W. Bradford Smith Treasurer Treasurer Erwin Watermeyer Charles Stainback Librarian Librarian ACTIVE MEMBERS Class of 1929 Millen Brand Harold S. Neuberger Kendall Kimberland George G. Raddin, Jr. Kenesaw Landis Charles Stainback Alan Marshall Erwin Watermeyer Class of 1930 Richard H. Goldman William E. Orr William T. Matthews Boris Shishkin W. Bradford Smith Class of l93l ' Joseph A. Danysh ' INACTIVE MEMBERS Berton J. Delmhorst, '29 William Rixford, '28 Malcomb McComb, '28 William P. Smith, '29 Lincoln Reis, '30 Dudley Taft, '29 Frederick vom Saal, '29 E331 J ff AAQJWQ5 THE BATON SOCIETY Founded 1927 A . ,,v' 1 5 ,1 .---: :lx I-IE preamble to the constitution of the Baton states that this organization was to promote harmonic relationship Within the Columbia University Band, and to further develop the musical spirit and loyalty Within this organization. Among its first claims to Campus recognition was the purchase of new uniforms for the Band. Each member of the Band agreed to lend his scholarship money for several years, after which time the Baton has agreed to pay him the sum advanced. The policy of the organization this year has been to arouse attention on the Campus to the peculiar needs of an organization such as the Band. A new idea was introduced in the form of meetings. Instead of a formal meeting, the members met in the John Jay Dining Room and there talked over the various projects concerning the Band and the Baton. Members of the Band from other years Were invited to attend and their friendly criticism aided greatly in the management of the Band. I:332J BATON SOCIETY HINMAN Lown KONHEIM MUELLER Pnnsrwoon WESTPHAL BOYER BATON OFFICERS George C. Flint Albert C. Westphal Honorary President President Kenneth Burkey Elwood Prestwood Vice-President Secretary Carl B. Boyer Treasurer MEMBERS Kenneth Burkey Carl B. Boyer Anthony DeMay Herbert Hinman Albert Konheim HoNoRARY MEMBERS Frederick Lowe William Mueller Elwood Prestwood Albert C. F. Westphal Bernard Zincke George C. Flint Benjamin A. Hubbard William Warden 53331 W ,M ,QQJWMPQX as LAUGHING LION ASSOCIATION Founded l92l HE Laughing Lion Association was organized with a View towards mak- ing Jester a more permanent institution. Although it is honorary in nature it has a practical purpose in that the older members are afforded a means of main- taining close Contact with the current managing board and thus offering expert assistance. The association, which was inactive last year, marked its reorganiza- tion by the Laughing Lion number of Jester. OFFICERS Corey H. Ford, '23 Robert E. Farlow, '29 Honorary President Chairman Bryan Lawrence, '30 Secretary L1oN CoMMiTTEE Thomas H. Wenning, '25 Donald Freeman, '24 George W. T. Gillette, '18 George M. Reaves, '21 R. J. Holmgren, '23 Alan Haglund, '24 W. H. Hanemann, '2l S. R. Watts, Jr., '21 ACTIVE LIONS Robert E. Farlow, '29 A. E. Stasheff, '29 Bryan Lawrence, '30 Alan Tompkins, '29 L. Gard Wiggins, '30 53341 .,. 1-J2JmsC'4-. Ag DEUTSCHER VEREIN HE growing interest in the study of German has greatly reflected itself in the spirit and activities of the Deutscher Verein during the past year. The meetings have drawn large attendance and membership has been eagerly sought. Among those to address the Verein were: Dr. Paul Dengler, Director of the Amerika-Institut in Vienna, Dr. Eduard Leonhardt, lecturer, and Pro- fessor at the University of Vienna, Dr. Otto Koischwitz of Hunter College, and Professor Remy of Columbia, Who entertained with his famous cartoons. Mr. Werner Neuse, exchange-teacher from Berlin, spoke on modern German student problems and the German author Josef Ponten was also a guest of the society. OFFICERS . Professor Frederick W. J. Heuser Professor Henry H. L. Schulze President K Vice-President G WV, us sf W ,ws Ulxl :gb Q? Paul J. Witte 54 P' fy oifzgi Theodore Markovits, Jr. , 4 .-si.. C hazrman 2 it 3 Treasurer I 1 wq xgf William Frauenfelder QW1'n'I09'l Secretary Executive Committee Professor Otto Schinnerer Harold S. Neuberger Professor Gottlieb A. Betz Christian Schuster DEUTSCHER VEREIN I 335 I fn . -4L9J L. .g THE PRE-ENGINEERING SOCIETY HE Pre-Engineering Society, under the direction of Professor Harrington, incorporated a new feature in its administration this year. A new office of Fresh- man adviser, chosen from the incoming class, was created. The purpose of this is to better represent the Freshman's interest in the society. Besides the customary smokers the society ran several excursions to plants interesting from the engineer's Viewpoint. Those visited included the United Electric Plant at Hell Gate and the Bush Terminal in Brooklyn. OFFICERS George Macwood, '30 President J. D. Howell, '31 E. L. Portner, '31 Vice-Presia'ent Vice-President E' Baker, '30 Professor Harrington Secretary-Treasurer Faculty flduiser PRE-ENGINEERING SOCIETY I 3 3 6 :I fn AQDAWLQA .g THE PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY T THE Hrst meeting of the year, the members of the Pre-Medical Society unanimously accepted a new plan of organization as set forth by Professor Car- penter, the adviser in charge of pre-medical students. The plan involved the election of three vice-presidents, two of whom were to represent those members whose status and problems were differnt from those of the other membersg namely the pre-dental students and the Freshmen. The senior group was addressed by Dean Hawkes and by Professor Van Buren, assistant Dean at the College of Physicians and Surgeons. The latter spoke at a smoker limited to those men who intended to enter medical school in the coming fall. A smoker for the Freshman group was held in Earl Hall and this meeting was addressed by Professor Southall of the Physics Department. OFFICERS Herbert R. Gore, '29 President Mindaugis Mikolainis, '30 William B. Curtis, '30 Vice-President Secretary Oscar L. Winkelstein, '30 Harry Ageloff, '32 Vice-President, Pre-Dental Vice-President, Freshmen PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY I 337 fl Q- IAQJWLQDX no l Y . Y 1- -L - E 7 THE PRE-LAW ASSOCIATION Donald I. Peyser Theodore Beyer President Treasurer Raphael Rosenbluth Edward B. Fox Secretary Adviser EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Edward Aranow Hugh Davies Theodore Lidz Theodore Beyer Victor Glenn Benedict I. Lubell Joseph Celiano Walter J. Horvath Daniel A. Zuckerman August I-Iovorka HE Pre-Law Association was formed two years ago to better acquaint students intending to enter Law School with both the requirements of the school and current phases of active law work. Since its inception it has spon- sored frequent dinners and noon-hour speeches by prominent instructors and practicing attorneys. Among those who addressed the three hundred members this year are Professors Powell, Moon, MacMahon, Moley, Berle and Olliphant and Attor- neys George Gordon Battle and Harold Medina. The association has also cooperated with the Campbell Moot Court of the Law School in the holding of smokers and with the Dean of the Law School and Mr. Fox in the matter of aptitude and special examinations. THE PRE-LAW ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE GLENN DIAMOND ZUCKERMAN HORVATH GELIANO DRAGUNAS DAVIS HOVORKA SPIVACK LIDZ LUBELL JONES BEYER PEYSER FOX ROSENBLUTH BELOUS f338J 9- Afl'3JmQ.s-C A! THE CHANDLER CHEMICAL SOCIETY HIS year's program of the Chandler Chemical Society was most successful both intellectually and socially. An innovation which met with favor was the showing of motion pictures on chemical subjects. Speakers before the society during the year included Professor J. Enrique Zanetti on Explosives , Profes- sor H. Thacher Clarke, of the College of Physicians and Surgeons on Organic Laboratory Technic , Dr. R. Graham Cook on Pioneers of American Chem- istry , Mr. Elliott P. Barrett on Calorimetry , and Dr. R. H. Bogue, head of the research department of the Portland Cement Association, on 'AThe Chemical Constitution of Cement. The latter lecture was given under the joint auspices of Phi Lambda Upsilon and the Chandler Chemical Society. The Society held its third annual dinner in John Jay Hall on February fifth. Dr. Ellwood Hendrick was master of ceremonies and Professors Ham- mett, Fink and McKee were after-dinner speakers. CFFICERS Everett L. Saul, '29 President Howard L. Vincent, '30 Joseph Joffe, '30 ViC8-Pfesfdenf Treasurer George A. Wilkens, '29, '3lE Professor Louis P. Hammett Secretary Faculty Adviser i l i I CHANDLER CHEMICAL SOCIETY DISOMMA CLIFFORD WITTE HOROWITZ LICHTERMAN ADRIANI CooK LOWENHEIM JOFFE SAUL VINCENT WILKENS PFLUGER JENKINS E391 Q:- I -!L9J kQ.-'K -4 THE BLUE KEY SOCIETY HIS society is the oflicial organization of the Sophomore managerial can- didates. Beginning next year this group will be called the Society for Man- agerial Candidates. George Beisheim Christopher Chapman Bernard Dougall David Dunning Charles Fisher James Hadley William Woodworth, '29 Manager Class of 1931 Louis Holmes Edgar Martinson Thomas IVIcNamee Albert Perley Anthony Pingitore Paul Queneau Richard Redfield Pierre Salmon Arthur Smith George Sutton J. Richard Taylor Edward Thomas Edmund Whiting BLUE KEY SOCIETY SUTTON DUNNING SALMON HOLMES SMITH REDFIELD THOMAS TAYLOR PINGITORE BEISHEIM GIDDINGS CHAPMAN WHITING QUENEAU f340j ,gpg IFRATERNJITIES my THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL UE to the resignation of Secretary Eackenthal as Chairman of the Coun- cil, the Constitution was amended so that the Dean of the College would be Chairman and the Secretary, Vice-Chairman. The main business of the Council during the year was to amend the Inter- fraternity Agreement in the following fashion. Article V, Section 2, Part C is to read: l'Rushing shall close at 6 A. M. on the 3rd Friday following Thanks- giving and shall remain closed until noon of the same day. An additional amendment was the following: There shall be a Standing Investigation Com- mittee appointed by the Chairman of the Council on the first Monday of November each year for the purpose of immediately investigating charges against any fraternity. After the closing of the Fall Rushing season, a number of alleged viola- tions of the Interfraternity Agreement was reported to the Chairman, A Special Investigation Committee was formed by Chairman Hawkes, who was ex-ollicio a member, with Mr. Benjamin A. Hubbard as Chairman and Berton J. Delm- horst, '29, Hugh H. Gardner, '29 and Harold A. Rousselot, '29 as under- graduate members. The Committee delved into the details of a number of cases which had been submitted and found that although the agreement had not been violated in the letter, the spirit of the agreement had not been closely adhered to. Although no fraternity was penalized, there was a general airing of com- plaints and grievances. The fraternities who were voting members of the council are as follows: Q, . fagamffax Ag Acacia Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Epsilon Pi Alpha Sigma Phi Beta Sigma Rho Beta Theta Pi Delta Beta Phi Delta Chi Delta Kappa Epsilon Phi Psi Upsilon Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Delta Delta Delta f343j Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Sigma Delta Phi Sigma Kappa Pi Lambda Phi Psi Upsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Mu Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Tau Delta Phi Tau Epsilon Phi Theta Xi Zeta Beta Tau Zeta Psi 4.-QQJMQ2, ag sk ALPHA DELTA PHI 526 West ll-4 Street Number of Chapters, 27 Number of Living Members, ll,5O0 Joseph Jeremiah Geagan John Gordon Given Raymond Jelfords Malcolm Bonynge Founded at Hamilton College, 1832 Columbia Chapter Established, 1836 Class of 1929 Edward Joseph May Robert Bartlett Pond Louis Rodolph Slattery Samuel Randolph Walker Class of 1930 Eaton Kenneth Goldthwaite Raymond William Hanley Charles Alfred Lea John Wyatt Bradley Peter Parrott Bruce Walter Robert Hall William Hustace Lane, Jr. David Roswell Angus Herbert Moyer Aungst Raymond Frank Fowkes John Dennett Hanson David Nathaniel Jones Robert Sheridan Morton Frederick W. Read, Jr. Felix Huffman Vann Lewis Gard Wiggins Francis Carter Wood, Jr. Class of 1931 Gene Litzenberg Pratt Richard Buckingham Redfield Edward Holloway Thomas John Lindsay Warwick Class of 1932 Marshall Grant Nims Maurice Donovan Spottswood John Winslow Thomas Jack A. Wilbur Ralph Shelly Wood, Jr. Fratres in U niversitate Ronald Allwork Bruce Angus John Bourke Stephen Rowe Bradley Clarence Knight Conard Charles K. Hamilton Mark Stanley Matthews Fratres in Facultare Albert W. Attwood Edward Bagster-Collins Roscoe C. E. Brown John W. Burgess Bashford Dean Edward M. Earle Hoxie N. Fairchild Alfred D. F. Hamlin James F. Kemp E34-41 Henry Ladd Lea M. Luquer John MacWillie, Jr. Robert W. Owen John H. Randall E. R. Smith Frederick T. Van Buren Talcott Williams F. J. E. Woodbridge ALPHA DELTA PI-II J. THOMAS FOWKES SPOTTSWOOD NIMS R. WOOD JONES HANSON D. ANGUS AUNGST J. BRADLEY E. THOMAS HANLEY WARWICK F. WOOD REDFIELD BRUCE VANN MAY READ WIGGINS HALL WERNER LANE B. ANGUS BONYNGE CONARD S. BRADLEY LEA MATTHEWS GIVEN GEAGAN MORTON WALKER ALLWORK JEFFORDS SLATTERY POND .ffm f-V xp: :Riff ff- fgx J 4+ ve' A J, x. . lynx uf? ,-5 .cf- -, :ff-' ,,'g-fggi' ' iC',I,.'L-,. 4 ,Q .1552 I A 'Q ' Q ik sflfk na ' 5 Hg - IWW.. . f' 'W1W5 '4w M iifw., iw. lr Vg 6, : Av f.. X- apf g 'W ' .im W '- as ' -f . g , .., N s.,,nfzy4-uwaa -1' 1 f: -wfwe fir A -' eg, Q4 , ' w a M-4, - f , . . -- ...M -J , f, - '- 1 - f W 'J , '- 73 df- JJ vi f--A- - , f 51.91 'V A' 4ezfawq.,'1,,'f D H K- LW '- J.: Q A 3' -' - mgx fl A322163-I , . Ji . '7iT?2i 4' , X . A fa f4LTfE'9 sf . , ,-,.-,Z .:,-55 . , ,' X- . WAZQLB.-. . ...f.,.,,..,,.,..j, f7?m:a', . .-.L V 1 xi if ' ,ww f345j Q, J-Li ,fL9JmLQsx K V A2 PSI UPSILON 627 West 115th Street Number of Chapters, 28 Number of Living Members, 10,010 Founded at Union College, 1833 Lambda Chapter Established, 1842 Class of 1929 F. David Anderson J. H. Huizinga Richard C. Aikenhead Edward Baruch William Galbally, Jr. Silas M. R. Giddings C. Phillip Jenney Albert W. J. Howe Bernard P. Ireland George L. Baxter Charles Feld Henry W. Frapwell Dwight H. Holbert Class of 193 Gordon C. Piercy Louis Root 0 Bradley S. Kehoe Charles T. Keppel Louis L. Pettit Douglas M. Robertson Clarence M. Schwerin Class of 1931 Hilary H. Lyons, Jr. John J. McSorley John B. Watkins Class of 193 2 Howard S. Houston Alfred H. Larsen John J. O'Dea Leonard Scully Frarres in Uniuersitate Robert Dunham Alexander C. Flick, Jr. Frank J. Maguire Harold F. Maguire Victor Morales A. Abbot Nicholas Murray Butler William H. Carpenter A. V. W, Jackson Frarres in Facu f346j Nathan K. Parker Paul F. Saurel Thomas A. Sully Lawrence A. Tassi Gordon Van Beuren Ztate Albert C. Jacobs Samuel McKee David E. Smith Arthur L. Walker PSI UPSILON BAXTER FELD TRAPWELL HOLBART O'DEA TARSON SCULLY W. SMITH IRELAND HOWE DUNHAM HUIZINGA KEPPEL FLICK BARUCH GALBALLY SULLY McSORLEY PETTIT MORALES KEHOE ROBERTSON JENNEY GIDDINGS TASSI SCHWERIN AIKENHEAD PIERCY ROOT CISAQQ Nm . ANY' ' F . -2 1 ,.5 QQQQEI ----...,4f3X ,L , 42,5 .1 f347j 2 --,-,de DELTA PSI 434 Riverside Drive Number of Chapters, 7 Number of Living Members, 2,924 Founded at Columbia, 1847 Alpha Chapter Class of 1929 Winslow Ames Edward Lawrence Kilroe William Hubert Miller Class of 1930 William Hill Clyde Frank Eugene Kilroe Class of 1931 Frederick J. Agate, Jr, Louis Woodruff, Wallner, Jr, John Scott Mahon, 2nd Wildurr Willing, Jr. Class of 1932 Eli W. B. Hopkins Charles Moran, Jr. Fratres in Uniuersirare Gordon Knox Bell, Jr. H. D. Wood McClure Rockwell King DulVloulin Robert Allan Pinkerton Robert B. Hale George A. Whiteside f350j 35 'i5riri?lF2' W lx., .'j, Qj'sf,E .gi 5 5 fy 7 ' I 4 V f xl. j i X ki .. isa fi Agfa, Ls51J su f9:m?A Aa PHI KAPPA SIGMA 536 West ll4th Street Number of Chapters, 39 Number of Living Members, 7,600 Founded at University Columbia Chapter Founded, 1855 of Pennsylvania, 1850 ' Classof 1929 Frederick H. vom Saal C. Gilbert Storms Class of 1930 Allen S. Andriette Everett Maguire Stewart Burkland, Jr. J. Frederick Moloney James Hutcheon Robert Parry Andrew Kalmykow Wilson M. Smith Herbert Swanson Class of 193 1 Harry Chasserot Arnold Peck Thomas Evans John Phelps Robert Guernsey George M. Powell Walter Karsten Hubert Relyea Fratres in Urziuersitate Rene Faure Henry Packer John Montignani Vladimir Smith Fratres in Facultate Lawrence K. Frank William Krefeld Eric Jette James Peck George A. Pfeiffer L 3 5 2 J PHI KAPPA SIGMA SMITH PI-IELPS PECK KALMYKOW MERKLE EVANS POWELL BURKLAND GUERNSEY ANDRIETTE STORMS MOLONEY VOM SAAL PARRY SWANSON CHASSEROT A . QI' Z 1 f T 'I ' Tiff .2 I -l -1, , ' ,f l Q ' ' X :rj j 'ff 'A ,TEF 1' 147' ,L 'ljf 1 fp f iff! ' 1:1541-' '-41 I . I:353J ef ,19mkQg3 , PHI GAMMA DELTA 538 West ll4th Street Number of Chapters, 69 Number of Living Members, 22,855 Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1848 Omega Chapter Established, 1866 Class of 1929 W. Wayne Battelle Robert B. Brooks Junius B. Bird William W. Blaisdell A. Sheridan Garratt Lloyd Basler John W. Bergen George G. Bohrer George C. Burghardt Fred W. Farwell Christian B. Hewitt John F. Holzinger Stuart Dickinson Joseph M. Rector, Jr. Class of 1930 Class of 1931 Alfred A. L. Triska Class of 1932 William J. Doscher, Jr. Earl W. Englehardt Joshua L. Evans Reed Harris John H. Bogle Edwin P. Daly William Harnish Robert W. Koop Theodore R. Lee William S. Ayers Theodore Baumeister. Charles P. Berkey William Campbell Cornelius Coakley David L. Dodd H. W. Farwell Adam Leroy Jones Edward F. Kern George P. Krapp Shreve G. Warden Fratres in Uniuersitate Robert D. Williamson Fratres in Facultate Jr. Charles C. Williamson I 354 J Hugh H. Gardner William MCK. Lightbowne Harrison H. Johnson John W. Olstad Stanley K. Wilson, Jr. Ralph T. Laycock Hart S. Loomis W. Merritt McBrian Walter P. Michels David Smith Herman E. Swettman Arthur V. Smith Ernest T. Lyons Ira James Mack William H. Richardson Donald D. Ross Gilbert G. Southwick Stuart Meyers Karl Reimer William B. Sherman Cyrus E. Warden John L. Wasson Prescott Lecky Robert Lewis Roswell C. McCrea Paul Monroe Lindsey Rogers William F. Russell Harold Seely Schultz Russell'G. Smith Clarence G. Stone Thurman W. Van Metre PHI GAMMA DELTA EVANS ROSS RICHARDSON DICKINSON HARRIS AVIGNONE McBRIAN LYONS MICHELS BERGEN BURGHARDT SMITH TRISKA OLSTAD HEWITT LOOMIS SWETTMAN BASLER LAYCOCK GARRATT JOHNSON BATTELLE GARDNER RECTOR WILSON BROOKS BOHRER . ln- . I .. ' i I , I gi, I l 3 J onrwvainswf Bn-:vm . --.g:g: -.z'.g3- Ifpwly .X W E A:,,'.,,1 2- X , QQ l'Aurw1'c1Tf' f355J Cr ,a1f315EilL?s-. ,Q PHI KAPPA PS1 529 West 113th Street Number of Chapters, 50 Number of Living Members, 14,529 Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852 Columbia Chapter Founded, 1872 Class of 1929 David K. Bouton George Donaldson Alfred Forsyth Augustus Griffing W.illiam lmhof Salem Mansour Peter Andrews David Cowger William Gaynor John Johnson James Banks Harvey Fitzgerald William Gilchrist Adolf Gobel Robert Hoffman George Jahelka Frank Kelly George Lusk Parnell Callahan Jerry Courtney Frances Hawkins Carl Holman Class of 1930 Class of 1931 Class of 1932 Darius Phillips George Raddin Howard Riley Joseph Seeley Randolph Thornton Joseph Tierney William Lancaster William Sanford Aubrey Stewart John E. Thomas Edgar Martinson Victor Nordstrom Lawson Paynter Randolph Phillips Philip Reilly Howard Walker Donald E. Williamson Gordon Wright Lamoyne E. Jones Clayton Knowles Philip Powers Jonathan Springer William Wright Fratres in Uniuersitare Edward W. Beers William F. Chambers Frederick Dassori John Domenech James W. Forsyth John Paul Guy T. Embury Jones Gerald T. Jones Frank Sullivan Randolph 1. Thornton Fratres in Faculrate Ralph H. Blanchard Carl Kayan Donald L. Clark Albert T. Poffenberger E. Gaylor Davis William P. Trent 53561 PHI KAPPA PSI COURTNEY TIERNEY GOBEL JONES THOMAS COWGER HOFFMAN SPRINGER CALL AH AN MARTENSON GAYNOR BANKS JAHELKA KNOWLES NORDSTROM WALKER WILLIAMSON FITZGERALD JOHNSON ANDREWS POWERS STEWART KELLEY PAYNTER GUY PHILLIPS CHAMBERS RILEY DONALDSON SANFORD FORSYTH BOUTON CHAMBERS MANSOUR GRIFFING S-. Q f 44? N M U . Qgx QEEP' H3571 ,QQJWQSC 4 DELTA KAPPA EPSILON 608 West 113th Street Number of Chapters, 45 Number of Living Members, 17,510 Founded at Yale, 1844 Gamma Beta Chapter Established, 1874 1-Xrthur Douglas John C. Eickwort George J. Banigan Frederick Ernst Robert Bonynge William W. Clark Leif A. Dahl Bernard Dougall Edward Everard Charles H. Fisher Ill Robert N. Cauldwell Class of 1929 George C. Squier Class of 1930 Class of 1931 Class of 1932 William Barnes O'Connor Thomas Comstock Manning W. Stires Reynolds Benson Rene Muller Fratres in Uniuersitate Fratres in Facultare Frederick C. Coykendall Herbert B. Howe I 358 J Charles F. Gunther Richard lnce Joseph Hagen Elim O'Shaugnessy Carl Martin Ganzle Francis C. Keil Frederick Landau Edwin R. Lozier William Soden Clifford R. Spiller Edward Haines David T. Hunt Halsey Van Wyck Henry Van Wyck Gary Calkins Willet Eccles DELTA KAPPA EPSILON BONYNGE DAHL HAINES FISHER SODEN HUNT CLARK O'CONNOR KEIL ERNST GANZLE LANDAU GUNTHER INGE EICKWORT DOUGLAS SQUIER BANIGAN SPILLER LOZIER O'SHAUGI-INESSY lv s-f QM S ffkiftis.. Q W Q-E? .Y X , I . 17-Agia' Mi-'I-tg? ml,-v' ,f -H I U -yi n QSEYQ I,-O x-,ailfiliir - 'Q ' . Q, Sv If f359:l Jwbamea-K Number of Chapters, 29 ZETA PSI 546 West ll4th Street Number of Living Members, l5,000 Founded at New York University, 1846 John M. Atkinson John W. Fiske, Jr. Robert G. Hamilton Edwin A. Hill Thomas R. Brown Malcolm S. Bleeker William Barlow Harvey W. Burger George B. Costigan Charles D. Forrest William M. Kehoe Henry K. Beling Julius A. Dolgos Arthur J. Gloster Edward B. Hall John D. Hill Ralph A. Hewitt Richard E. Joyce Epsilon Chapter Established, 1878 Class of19Z9 Arthur E. Lynch Joseph A. Nesbitt Harold A. Rousselot Joseph C. Turner Class of 1930 Robert J. Lynch John J. MacMahon, Jr. George W. Wright Class of 1931 James J. Midgley Henry H. Scott Adolph B. Shea Joseph J. Stanczyk James R. Sweeney Class of1932 Gordon Van B. King William M. McDuffee James D. McNaughton Charles R. Meehan John A. Meehan Raymond M. Ruddy Ralph E. Schaefer harles E. Schmonsees C Fratres in Urziuersitafe Joseph H. Bishop Seth Bingham Brian Hooker Henry M. Howe Thomas H. Kerrigan Frarres in Facultate Henry R. Seager Albert P. Stout Arthur H. Terry, Jr. I:36Oj ZETA PSI RUDDY HALL McNAUGHTON BELING MEIGHAN McDUFFY JOYCE SCHAEFER DOLGOS HILL GLOSTER MIDGLEY KING SWEENEY FORREST STANCZYK BARLOW SHEA BURGER KEHOE WRIGHT COSTIGAN R. LYNCH MCMAHON SCOTT BLEECKER BISHOP BROWN HILL FISKE ROUSSELOT ATKINSON A. LYNCH NESBITT HAMILTON TURNER - 1' f'l?X4:'.,.- :L ,Ella -- X Q , .4 ' , 1 ,755 -'J5f ' 53 ICS. .: 71 , Fhw. X ' H-ff. gx T ?w2:a:11. QF 4 ' Q5 gf'f?5fI:. ily , . .' - at 1. 13, fx , - mir' .-fi, Q f .. -. ,- Qsiixfiii .- Y,-,Q M L V we-f1' r ..,. N22 f ' I -. M.--,, , - , I. 'lb21'I-'zf dag- ' X-'3 . 5.521553-Qlglwxf.,.4.1-V - - 4s-' , ll i .K , , 53611 Ca- JLQJWQ5 BETA THETA PI Number of Chapters, 86 Founded at Miami, Ohio, Horace E. Anderson James Connor James Cowie John Creech Horace Davenport Fred A. Barr Victor E. Campbell Charles Chattaway Hickmat Arida Eugene Ashley Richard O'Keefe William Foley Robert Shaffer Frank Fowler Bertrand Pike John Bainbridge Henry Crampton Clifford Curran Ralph T. Bickell John J. Coss 429 W. ll7th Street Number of Living Members, 36,543 l 8 3 9 Alpha Alpha Chapter Established, 18 S1 Class of 1929 Class of 1930 William V. Norton Class of 1931 Arthur Wakelee Class of 1932 Arthur Webersinn Fratres in Uniuersitate Addison Wilson Fratres in Facultate T. Bruce Kirkpatrick l:362:I John Deming Einar B. Paust John Sacco Frank Ward Leon A. Wehbring Frederick Cooper Lawrence Graham Clarence Jochum Raymond Shea James Sheridan George Sutton Theodore Schneider Edwin Treat Edward Walsh Lawrence Warren Joseph Hogan George Pease George Ruemhling Edward S, Elliott George W. Hibbett BETA THETA PI TREAT ASHLEY WEBERSINN O'KEEFE JOCHUM COOPER WALSH PIKE SHAFFER SHERIDAN NORTON SHEA ARIDA LITTLE REID GRAHAM BARR CREECH WEHBRING CONNOR PAUST ANDERSON HOVEY COVVIE RNQN ' ' I 'IIIIV7 W 4' H: l!w,i,3NIFg,s A IH III.W4s':4'al2 1I25! L ffIMMI:MmeI5nIa!iI'fI!i1if' I IsUIQSp2g2L2 wa5:wsI 4 I ' f f'3'1N'i?! F 3 1 E.. M ,. f363-I FOWLER CAMPBELL WIKE CURRAN WAKELEE DAVENPORT SACCO Cf- 1 .g PHI DELTA THETA Number of Chapters, 97 Founded at Miami Univ., Carlton S. Cutbill Grant Daly Donavine Forber Gibson La Foy Joseph L. Cummings Merrill Gille P. LeRoy Grifdth, Jr Richard Hanwell James A. Atkins George W. Bowles Walter Fitzgerald James Allen Edward Fay Otis Gardner Howard C. Beers Samuel McGeath T. C. Blaisdell, Jr. Nathaniel Bowditch A. A. Evans George Godell Frederick A. Goetz John Hodgson O. H. Holmes 565 West ll3th Street Class of I Class of I Class of I Number of Living Members, 35,000 l848 Columbia Chapter Established, 1884 929 Louis Marchisio John W. Morley Thomas Uniker, Jr. Louis Zwahl 930 John Hughes E. R. lngrisch Thomas McGough Howard Britton Morris 931 J. Nixon Hadley Louis Kalamaras David Kuusiluato John S. Nichols Class of I Fratres in Un John E. W 932 lrving Spaulding Marshall Walker Chauncey Whitner iuersitate Clariborn C. Ross Louis A. Reeves illiams Fratres in Facultate f364j Marshall A. Howe Cassius Keyser Fitzgerald Nichols N. B. Potter Young B. Smith Walter Tinne Levering Tyson PHI DELTA TI-IETA BOWLES GILLE HUGHES ALLEN FITZGERALD ATKINS MCGEATH GARDINER INGRISCI-I NICHOLS HADLEY FARBER LA FOY ZWAHL MORRIS MARCHISIO DALY CUTBILL MORLEY UNIKER BRAISTED -5 iw' df' xy- f7'X ' 'V 7 ESQ 0 x r , ,r 1,g.' , -5.2-Ex' 1 . ml-I . -,.-br H 1- L. V -. 'mm' e i' ' 1. '12 X Af, V ew :e. A sf -. A 7' .. - f irx I ' I I L ' V2 ,EF Q 6 ' F I -li. J Q ij . :- fi X EEE.: EL X, I J .J J X w ax! 'fear mf? 5f5R1,Qn5'5?f' A I 365 J DQBJMQA .9 DELTA UPSILON 558 W. ll3th Street Number of Chapters, 55 Number of Living Members, 22,500 Founded at Williams, 1834 Columbia Chapter Established, l885 Robert Farlow Shaler Bancroft Newton Calyer - David Estlow Frederick Happel Heaton Heffeliinger Adrian Broderick Robert Finch Pierce Abbott Sheridan Atkinson William Campbell Peter Coyne Lynn Dana Roderick Donaher John Born Allan Abbott Benjamin R. Andrews Robert H. Bowen William T. Brewster Donald H. Davenport Bergen Davis Richard E. Dodge John Erskine y Class of19Z9 William Smith H. Dudley Taft Class of 1930 Edgar Hendrickson William Hewitt Thomas Keating Sterling Lanier William Matthews Class of 1931 Leo Narodny Herbert Olsen Class of 1932 Richard Delafield Albert Esch Peter Gartner Richard Gustafson Richard Kelly F ratres in Uni uersitate George Conway Lloyd Zimmerman Fratres in Facultate Horace L. Friess William K. Gregory Colba F. H. Gucker William Haller Philip M. Hayden Royal S. Haynes Milo B. Hillegas Herbert G. Lord Raymond L. Weeks .I3661 John Thompson John Murphy George Odom Frederick Platt Robert Potter Elbert Twaddell Leonard Pfister Edgar O. Rogers Harry Kerr Roy Miner Eric Nightingale John Reidy Freeman Snyder Harry Wiseman Richard Kessler Nelson G. McCrea Frank G. Moore David S. Nluzzey Bernard Oppenheimer John E. Orchard James E. Russell Charles H. Smith Rexford G. Tugwell DELTA UPSILON REIDY KELLY CAMPBELL TWADDELL SCHROLL NARODNY ESCH MATTHEWS KIRKLAND MINER DELAFIELD HAPPELL OLSEN BRODERICK COYNE RODGERS HEFFELFINGER FINCH PFISTER POTTER KERR GU STAFSON CALYER HEWITT PLATT TAFT FARLOW SMITH MURPHY KEATING B ANCROFT ,A.MMf T,T. ,gi g amwnMT 'A Va 2 4 , , ,, iff -A A , . . '- x 4-'Vp ',,' J S .5v.,J.,..:,:n -un' .... 2'-5-5 51 Fix IE-r 1n11'4f1: .- :r l-1 5-Svf-WJW ' gf: If-2 an I 1 .NW -,4 .1-A9251 -.,,,,vn4.., ,-,-fm-.v.--1 -Aw-EJQQL ,1,4.1u,-1, '-' A Z-If -' -J ' '-if -1- ' . i - ' . . . 2 ,.fg4-we , 'Cf C+ 1 -, li-i-1 Z-2-If' ' ' ' ., A- -' - Z' Q- 4 . ,- 7 1:-vig. A L25 ,:!'iI-k? ?i- 'Q' .1:3' Z-1- E f5'Z'fF51b. -1'3- ' A-'fy - f -Tr ffg. '-na' iwff' 2 X E f?-- Ay 1,-:fi , fm , -.ifsmcw 'h X .1913 ,' , .af 5'?EJf1':?:T ' ' Q 5,mfAmm4mFwwmam29ww ' ' ' j4jfE11 N151 L3e7J DGAQJWLQQC SlGMA NU 532 West 114th Street Number of Chapters, 94 Number of Living Members 20 OOO O. E. Aeschbach P. W. Baniield J. Kraft T. V. Cahill G. Beisheim H. T. Birgel W. Dennick W. H. Allan I. Bunbury R. Herman C. Joyce J. W. Lampe G. K. MacBain G. T. McElwrath Class of 1929 C. J. Smyth Class of 1930 W. E. Orr Class of 1931 P. J. Salmon Class of 1932 'Tl O x: U Q. G7 Q. N F? 4 Q. 03. :S ,.. N 5 :F ii 4 V'-1 oi Nz' Fx: Na Q.. 5? Exo 93 0 cv N 'U C1 N V1 FU U3 FT D3 'Z 5 rr CD cn. P14 OO O0 OO DHI 5 U PIU CIIIQEO W. Kumpf MacBain Moragne S. Henry W. Dunning Krebs L. Raley K. Patterson C. Schluter Spencer B. Swift Wells W. Wilkens S. Van Voorhees Fratres in Universitare W. W. Beisheim H. D. Meyer, Jr. D. Clifford A. H. Beamish G. Halbert Fratres in Facultate A. R. Crawford E. J. Grant C. J. Merner li368j SIGMA NU SCHLUTER WELLS JOYCE BEISHEIM McELWRATH KREBS SALMON DARLING BIRGEL SPENCER G. MacBAIN DUNNING LAMPE KUMPF KRAFT MORAGNE ORR A. MacBAIN HENRY SMYTH BANFIELD AESCHBACH 4.4-X 'a'3. P1 K 1 'R '1t1 A:f' f f., 51 ' , N- 1 , 2 .X ' ' 1 Q ' Q, 4 Q ss XM ' 5 f N ' 5 ' 1 X Hr ,Q A . ' x v 1 Q3 J X K Aww- ri 'aff 'N If 1 3 S K I 2 ,i N 'J 7 1 f X , '- ' fm.vQf.4 ' -a i' , .v w ek E S? '+ 1 fx 5 , :Qs A ff, , 55: 'N QQ - Q 1 qi -if A, Qpzqfzg 15 v' V Wt..-.A,,i,. lf369j ,zglmesx SIGMA CHI 415 Riverside Drive Number of Chapters, 81 Number of Living Members, 20,000 Founded at Miami University, l855 J. Joseph Burke James Farrell Richard F. Hansen Prescott H. Blatterman William B. Buser Robert Byron James L. Campbell Haakon Gulbransen August J. Hovorka Evert A. Anderson Franklin B. Dailey H. Warner Dailey Walter E. Edwards Thomas F. Gallivan Ralph A. Hackett Harold P. Book John Deems Lindley E. Eberstadt Frank Nobiletti Herbert Jacobi John Lorch Robert Noth John L. Grant Nicholas McKnight Columbia Chapter Established, Class of1929 Albert Houghton George McKinley Allen Rowe Class of 1930 Norman Hixson William Meyer James Morrison Lionel F. Nobert W. Bradford Smith George Weigl Millard Yarbrough Class of 1931 James I. Keenan' Charles A. Monroe Albert Morrison Warren E. Piaget Howard Roe John Smith Richard W. Yerg Class of 1932 J. Frank Powell Alfred E. Stacey Ernest C. Thompson Robert Volkhausen Fratres in Uniuersitate Daniel Reidy George Roegner Thomas R. Sullivan Edward Stephany Fratres in Facultate John M. Nelson Russell B. Opitz 53701 1894 , SIGMA CHI FARRELL GULBRANSEN POWELL ROE STACEY BOOK THOMPSON McFALLEN VOLCKHAUSEN EBERSTADT F. DAILEY SMITH W. DAILEY MULLER ANDERSON PIAGET HOVORKA MORRISON MCKINLEY NOBILETTI KEENEN BLATTERMAN HIXSON MORRISON CAMPBELL HANSEN YERG MONROE HOUGHTON 44 ...faq W v . my A 5.3. . e -x 199312 If U 1 - JPL '5- F4 J., .,.f ah, 4353- 9, -- I' i ' ' 1 . . ..ii 312+ QQ: -P Ol .1 , A C : li371:l 9' fgawsii ., SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 531 West 113th Street Number of Chapters, 103 Number of Living Members, 34,531 Founded at Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 1856 Mu Chapter Established, 1895 A James P. Bartoccini Prank G. Bowles Harry Bruns Class of 1929 Lloyd M. Erankenberg John 1. Gilbert Edward J. Hughes Alan H. Mansfield R. J. Congdon Arthur D. Prew Ward. M. Haller Louis A. Holmes William Holmes William Bell Arthur Kane Paul F. Brissenden Percival D. Browning Noel T. Dowling Neil C. Van Deusen Class of 1930 John G. Richards Class of 1931 Class of 1932 Fratres in Uniuersirate Fratres in Facalrare 53721 Charles L. Mayer Melford Mayo Ered Miller William Muller John P. Nichols Joseph R. Rongetti Alton D. O'Brien Thomas Lovell Stanley H. Pulver Paul H. Ripley Alton V. Rheaume Thomas R. Sweeny Joseph B. Bruns Robert Hatcher Irving Raymond Edward D. Thurston James O. Wetterau SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON RHEAUME PULVER BRUNS HOLMES MAYER FREW MILLER SWEENEY MOSER VAN DEUSEN INGELS NICHOLS HUGHES RONGETTI MANSFIELD RICHARDS HALLER : -:A w.. V X, ,., H W W, Q -W J? 1219: f w . Qgff,3:,: Q' w Lf if I 'J f-'V RZ? - ,,-1,134 H , ,EY fi,15fZ..,'f 1 f is 'r W '5- W si Wifi,-Q if 1.1 Miki-, -2E3X' fp ,gningg-.517 ---- m y :--::.ff.f1g1-Qgyf' f, lg -2 '. 4.1, , 'fZ.':'- 5 ', , . Ayr: :Q e nt: ...f- R v ,- EE' 21. , ff Y Y' ' 7 'I Lf. , -5, , , Q: 7 ' Xe '1 if ' J QQHLITAWV ff x, v 4-sQg KS zlfi-ggi? mf' Lwdwg M L A42 .W 1 9, 53731 C:- I PI LAMBDA PHI Number of Chapters, 18 Founded at Yale, 1895 Mortimer H. Purtsch Elkan Marks Arthur R. Mosler, Jr. Hugo Baer, Jr. Frederick T. Block Justin L. Green Jack Sundelson Sydney Goldstine Theodore Greenbaum Richard F. Kahn Jerome Eisner, Jr. 534 West 114th Street Number of Living Members, 3,350 Alpha Chapter Established, 1896 Class of 1929 A Alexander G. Silberstein Ira D. Wallach David Weinman, Znd Class of 1930 Lawrence H. Levy Benedict I. Lubell Donald I. Peyser Robert P. Weiss Class of 1931 Steven Joseph Nathan Wise Class of 193.2 Richard Lang Richard Levine Stanley Wronker Frarres in Uniuersitate George B. Levy I 374 J Ai PI LAMBDA PHI LEVINE WRONKER GOLDSTINE WALLACII LANG BAER GREENBAUM KAHN EISNER MOSLER WEISS L. H. LEVY PEYSER BLOCK LUBELL G B LEVY 0 x-j, xx I . , JOSEPH ,up ,gg-,FS I iff' E ' :ff , ' . ' 'Lf ,,.4yL,' Y! 'F-5 J., A 'TY W1 Os ,.,, 597 M ' nu.-1 W W-lizrzzm 552. '3Pg4f5'g l 0 Tees AMQYA 'F , a lxilg 4 H A fi- xv, J 'uf Os ff., I 42? 1 wg ,X 1 C 1 4' rv x Q, ' 'N '7 4 L 1 rf ' , QQ ,, .I M ng H '62 f Q z : ' IQ3751 f+ 4'-QEQLQPX A' PHI SIGMA KAPPA 550 West 114th Street Number of Chapters, 49 Number of Living Members, 9,800 Founded at Mass. Agricultural College, 1873 Theta Chapter Established, 1897 Class of 1929 Arthur B. Crap Elmore Gamble Oscar Erickson William Makser Ian Fraser Daniel O'Grady Richard Rogers Class of 1930 Richard Cunningham Ernest Kosting William Curtis Herman Ridder Edward Joyce Kenneth Schenk Frederick Thorne Class of 193 1 Ralph Bieberstein William N. Low Robert Burggraf Dan Manfredi Edward Camson Thomas McNamee Leslie Taggart Class of 1932 John Anderson William Knapp Merril R. Bailey Godfrey Kritzler David Pollard Frarres in Uniuersitate Gerard Boyle Richard Meyers, Sr. George D. Brown, Jr. Richard Meyers Owen P. Brown James Mulligan Ronald Brown Arthur O'Keefe Glenn HutCheHS Edgar Thcfsland Fratres in Facultate Benjamin A. Franklin 53761 PI-II SIGMA KAPPA KOSTING ANDERSON KRITZLER POLLARD BURGGRAF BAILEY MULLIGAN McNAMEE R. BROWN TAGGART LOW BIEBERSTEIN MANFREDI CURTIS CRAP MAKSER FRASER ERICKSON GAMBLE SCHENK HUTCHENS L3771 ,fd91Ei U?s-. THETA Xl 542 West ll4th Street Number of Chapters, 30 Number of Living Members 6 750 Edmond B. Fritz Herbert A. Gersbach William E. Gilbert Michael E. Lopato George E. MacWood William Y. Pryor John C. Bailey Nathaniel W. Brown Frank R. Donahue Daniel M. Eggleston Edward J. Fortner William A. Greenlield Curt F. .Heiland Edward M. Lacina Edward F. Lawton Earl H. Newcomer Founded at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, l864 Epsilon Chapter Established 1898 Class of 1929 Howard B. Morrow Maxwell N. Naas Gerhard A. Osterberg Eugene L. Roussin Class 0151930 J. Robert Stewart Harold J. Walker Class of1931 Einar G. Gustafson John L. Howell Paul E. Queneau William G. Russell David U. Snyder Edmund J. Whiting Class of193Z Cyril J. Maun Walter Neumuller Emil Punzak Bernard Queneau Ernest B. White Fratres in Um'zJersitate Charles Baker Norman Flint Joseph J. Boyle Theodore Housel Joseph J. Donnoly Henry S. Huber Frank X. Farr Edward F. Kline Richard G. Pitkin Fratres in Facultate James K. Finch Thomas H. Harrington E. H. Armstrong 53781 THETA XI B. QUENEAU GREENFIELD LAWTON NEUMULLER MacWOOD PRYOR LACINA P. QUENEAU BROWN GUSTAFSON WHITING FORTNER WALKER SNYDER HEILAND MAUN EGGLESTON MORROW LOPATO BAILEY GILBERT HOWELL DONAHUE GERSBACH ROUSSIN OSTERBERG STEWART PITKIN FRITZ VmWf?3 f? 4? wai9':' 1 1 .N O I, . ,. W, J' - M 15' Q f x I , M3 Wm K X 55,1 X gf Eg? u 5 :T W, gm' E w w 6,201 5 +R ' QQ, gg W 'E R Qi? f fl ' Q fs Q21 QQ f379J Ag-JFJWQM ., ZETA BETA TAU Number of Chapters, 37 Founded at City College, Edward Aranow Edward Brause Jule Eisenbud John Claman Richard H. Goldman Albert Maltz Jesse Moskowitz Martin F. Ehrenberg Melvin I. Friedman William J. Bratter Harold Dreyfuss James Florsheim Arthur Gladstone Maurice Goldberg Howard Halper Leonard E. Ackerman David Cowen, Jr. Raphael Kalvin Warner H. Mendel Maurice Mound Raymond Schosberg Morton Arant Richard H. Gottheil 625 West 113th Street Number of Living Members, 7,000 1898 Delta Chapter Established, 1903 -Class of 1929 Class of 1930 Class of 1931 Samuel Rosen Class of 1932 Fratres in Uniuersitate Fratres in Facultate Jerome Klein Lzsojf Monroe I. Katcher I1 Nathan J. Lapkin Jacob Prager Ellis Rand Paul Rosenberg Richard D. Sanville Daniel Zuckerman Steven Fox Lester M. Levin Norman Laidhold Paul Lansman Saul Rotter Bernard Simon Robert Simons Stanley Zipser Leonard M. Sindeband Beryl Silberblatt Joseph H. Siris Gilbert D. Steiner, Jr. Myron Sulzberger, Jr. Victor N. Wolfe Frederick Lascoif H. Lincoln Rothschild ZETA BETA TAU SIMON ROSEN ZIPSER FOX APISDORF LANSMAN FLORSHEIM SIMONS GLADSTONE RAND SCHOSBERG BRATTER HALPER LAIDHOLD BLUM ZUCKERMAN DREYFUSS R0 TTER SANVILLE CLAMAN ARANOW PRAGER EISENBUD BRAUSE RICH ROSENBERG MOSKOWITZ l?2IIliiE 'Yin b TH 5 :MJ A . J .p , ,., 2 Hz.. P, 1QNlllIllllllXX!XXXXX? ' L Wlnmmmluiuwz.I f .' . wa. fc' -.13 xii: iff 0,'!g?gxrx 5... -'kj - lf' .2 m45LUl.l.l.l.l5jf 51. .- IJ g.. K-. Q34 jf 0ATrr r'rv,-I 31 g.. Q. r 3.1 0 f fn f' , ' 7 .4 M, QT, ,Q .U ,.. K.. 5' Lfi if me mc' 1. l'. Q.. J- 4.1 vf la-'fam Cf' 1. 1, '.. , I I, - f Q ..,, , K6 X3 5' -0- '..-N . I 11 4.- A.. -i- - ,. I' 17 --- ,Q ,,.- ' WZ B N, 'Eg ' N -Aw .JA ,V ' . l 1239 f f3811 AQDJMQA ACACIA 548 W. ll3th Street Number of Chapters 33 Number of Living Members l0 000 Founded at University of Michigan, 1904 Columbia Chapter Established 1909 Fratres in Uniuersitate Lawrence E. Adams Oscar J. Anderson Frederick F. Beach Hollis L. Caswell Frank E. Cooley, Jr. E.. Rowe Cunningham Henry P. Douglas Walter S. Evans Fra William Campbell Allen H. Connolly R. Graham Cook Frederick W. Era Charles Friedgen Dr. tres in Facultate E 382j Robert L. Fox George R. Gohn Richard B. Kennan M. Gregory Matthews Richard N. Mickey John P. Radcliff, 3rd Clel T. Silvey David Weaver Jewell M. Garrelts Arthur W. Hixson A. V. W. Jackson Edward F. Kern Roy B. Kester W. H. McCastline ACACIA EVANS DOUGLAS BEACH CUNNINGHAM SILVEY FOX COOK MICKEY GOHN COOLEY KENNAN ADAMS RADCLIFF WEAVER MATTHEWS if ff 43 .43 ' fa. p uff---W l'i9,3,m3NQa,w '- ,2 YP' ii 4542 , ix 1,31 ' f 3 83 :I apbawsim as PHI SIGMA DELTA 548 West 114th Street Number of Chapters, 20 Number of Living Members, 1,715 Founded at Columbia University, 1909 Nathan Ancelewitz Norman Arnheim Bernard Axelrod Seymour Bloom Saul Durney Allan Dalsimer Irving DuFine Richard Jones Frederick Bruell Rowland Cohen Adam Frank Arthur Adelman Carl Axelrod Arnold Dumey Arthur Farmer Frederick Hailpern Herbert Hutner Harry Kaplan Class of 1929 Alfred Samuels Class of 1930 Henry Zwerling Class of 193 1 Class of 1932 Victor Rosen Frarres in Uniuersitate 53841 Alpha Chapter Maurice Levin Mervin Pollack Albert Katz Theodore Lidz M. Peter Schweitzer Charles Metzner Lester Sage Edward Weinstock Edward Fuld Irving Goldberger Seymour Rosen Edwin Kirschberg Frederick Liebowitz Philip Liflander Albert Lyons Nathan Sameth Richard Silberstein Arthur Sohval PHI SIGMA DELTA GOLDBERGER FRANK DRUELL FULD S. ROSEN ZWERLING V. ROSEN LEVIN LOWENTHAL COHEN SAGE BLOOM LIDZ SCHWEITZER S. DUMEY DuFINE B. AXELROD METZNER JONES HALPERN SAMUELS HUTNER LIFLANDER KAPLAN ANCELEWITZ A. DUMEY C. AXELROD KATZ ARNHEIM KIRSCHBERG 9' fm T - um- fa . fx K Q 155: fi - V5 ,gijifunx ' ' ji .X 4 I , up .- x , ,-, -4- 4.'1-Pwsfr, - 1, . -' m y wb ,ij an gf... gxziirbiff v p, ' ' gif rf , . 1,1fl5f'i2Ma- 4 f . ' 'Z 4 5 5, 51, 1 1 A , - F S- if 1: ,ww f Mgq-ga .+ ,Y - M' ,. t ':2:fe ?'- 21 ff: ,- .f 3 .f , , XM'- ,fafa avi- ' . w Ts L' Iggy ,., A,..,s, f f ii 'sf V- - 'V , mg -.X-. , Q - f . IN' .A I:385J ,A ,f-JYJMQS-C E J ALPHA SIGMA PHI 524 West 114 Street Number of Chapters, 30 Number of Living Members, 6,044 Founded at Yale College, 1845 Lambda Chapter Established, 1910 Class of 1929 Alfred E. Dietz William A. Peck George H, Hardy Thomas H. Simmons C. Theodore Jorgensen, Jr. Frederick T. Van Urk, Jr, Howard L. Lalor Albert C. F. Westphal Harold A. Wylie I Class of 1930 Harry G. Bowman, Jr. Donald K. Magurk Robert T. Brown J. Harris Mathis John M. Keyes, Jr. Arthur J. Thompson Francis A. Lyons Remey R. Tys W. Gordon Westmoreland Class of 1931 Harold F. Amster Charles B. Heck Lewis E. Amster Arthur M. Wells Class of 1932 Hans H. E. Jorgensen Charles Tesar Fratres in Unz'Uer.w'tate Taylor E. Affelder Ludwig B. Mayleas William M. Affelder, Jr. Charles H. Mueller Wallace E. Carr Francis W. Pribly . Frank E. Darling, Jr. William U. Rixford, Jr. Donald W. Eckley Channing Rudd J. Newlin Embree John MacP. Somerville Allen E. Fitch Everett B. Tarvin Edward W. Mammen Jules B. Van Urk Fratres in Facultate Nathan Abbott Cretiredj H. Malcolm Dresser Howard B, Brown Arthur l. Gates William T, Cook Ward A. Holden Emery E. Neff I: 386 I ALPHA SIGMA PI-II TESAR LALOR KEYES LYONS H. JORGENSEN TYS MATHIS WESTPHAL HECK WANDAN L. AMSTER H. AMSTER WELLS BOWMAN MAGURK MAYLEAS RIXFORD AFFELDER BROWN CARR HARDY T. JORGENSEN WILEY ECKLEY TAROM SIMMONS DIETZ PECK lx W P ,K 51455. J 5' J 52151124 2 .':3A:',f Mk' Vi E , i, .'6:-'li-zsfwflw, V f ' ' fff ' O ff, , A 4' I I ,SE EK 1-fy. -'L, ' 0 - riv A q I .' , -. Y 'V55504' - ' L , QA- ,aef31EiEZiPs-. TAU EPSILON PHI 618 West 113 Street Number of Chapters, 33 Number of Living Members 3 O00 Founded at Columbia, 1910 Alpha Chapter Samuel A. Diamond Reuben D. Lewis Leonard Buchsbaum Myron P. Gordon Henry A. Gozan Abner Kurtin Eugene Horowitz George S. Elpern Harold Felix William 1-lelfer Herbert Holiner Milton J. Levy Class of1929 Lawrence G. Weinstein Julian R. Wilheim Class of 1931 S. Benedict Levin Hubert Margolies Erwin T. Michaelson Samuel Rosenberg Louis Rosenblum Class of 1932 Paul Wendorf Fratres in Uniuersitate Jules Neidle Herbert Rothstein Joseph G. Rothenbr rg Tobias Stein Milton Turlxel Bernard Verney Frazer in Faculrare Sidney Solomon Lsssj TAU EPSILON PHI ROSENBERG GORDON GOZAN MICHAELSON HOROWITZ MARGOLIES BUCHSBAUM WENDORF ROSENBLUM LEVIN KURTIN HELFER TURKEL DIAMOND WILHEIM SOLOMON HOLINER LEVY M a-uhx I -'J i W iffy? C ' x , AA 1 f ffxdi NCI, .,AA E ,, T' 4 ,.- 5 Q 1 1 1 I 9 1 I 9 g 40, ff M 03 '4!'Q ii' H ,y A if f ,ay -4 l L 4, If , ff f :1 , f f w fx I f Q 1 'AW f f ,f IJ' W' IX , 1 3 9 W. yw f , 2 ZS, J 0 P Af f Cf ff ,If K o ' 4 f yy 4 C2 . , f 3 fffpl 0 3 WI . Q Q - M' fc 2 ff f ' n o a ff? W, P Q 7 ' ff d ff f f f 4 ,r Q7 3 VH., , 01,93 i . 3 f X f f Q gyyf , g Q, f , W In f af 41 f V, f f 'f 'W S WM l if X f, .fi UWM, gfw W fifv f 4 f 11-f Ei ,ui-2? I f - Mb L1a?,-fE,,.v-uEwa:- I 3891 40DJmsQA ALPHA PHI DELTA 560 West 113th Street Number of Chapters, Z4 Number of Living Members 1447 Founded at Syracuse University, 1914 Beta Chapter Established 1915 Hugo Alessandroni Victor D. Cione Anthony De May Mario Eberle Louis Gaeta Robert Lombardo John Celeste Class of 1929 Class of 1930 Daniel Martoccio Class of 1931 Class of 1932 Frank Cuulotta Joseph lntrabartolo Ambrose Peraino Henry Maccaro Charles Marro D. Frank Zuzzolo William Giordano Fratres in Universitate Peter Brienza Liddy Carlino Peter Galante Anthony Graziano Howard Marraro Fratres in Facultate I:39O I Henry Lamberti Michael Ruffulo Manlio Severino Vincent Tesoriero Peter Riccio ALPHA PHI DELTA GAETA INTRABARTOL0 EBERLE GRAZIANO ZUZZOL0 MARTOCCIO CELESTE CARLINO SEVERINO PERAINO GULOTTA CIONE DeMAY MACCARO A AAAA S 1 AlA AAAA .WJ 1 Y-: , i: B'E TE'ei 'mar-:': 5 ' IIIIIIIIIIIFME''ullllllllll A AA A A A A , mnrmlzllh mllllluww A ,.1.. f -AA' A-'11 ,.1:Af A A f A,A' IPS A X , I:3911 ,ff,9-imesx TAU DELTA PHI 604 West ll4th Street Number of Chapters, Z0 Number of Living Members 1500 Established at C. C. N. Y., 1910 Delta Chapter Established, 1917 Louis Fribourg Beryl Levy George Linn Jesse Fine Jack Feldman Nathan Hirschfeld Bernard Bermant Irving Levitt Class of 1929 Class of 1930 Abraham Marcus Class of 1931 Stanley Tanz Class of 1932 Samuel Traunstein Fratres in Um'uersz'tate Bernard Bernstein David Dorfman Philip Peldblum Milton Fleiss Wilbur Friedman Murray Heiligman David Katz Jules Sorin I 392 I Joseph Bodie Alton Wolfert Ira Wolfert Robert Friedenberg Edward Massell Hyman Roshovsky Robert Robinson Nathaniel Silverberg Samuel Lent David Otis Samuel Rosenstein Robert Sager Hilliard Shair Herbert Silvers Herbert Wechsler TAU DELTA PHI LEVITT BERMANT TANZ WEISENBERG TRAUNSTEIN ROBINSON SILVERBERG SORIN HIRSHFELD ROSHOVSKY FELDMAN FLEISS MASSELL WECHSLER FELDBLUM LINN BERNSTEIN FINE WOLFERT RHO DIE FRIEDM AN KATZ - u .- ...-., ---,- --.,.u -U... --..... .-...Q --ul -- .W lun Lu- 3,l!lJllvv se121e's111la W I393:I ca 114gJ SQSx BETA SIGMA RHO Number of Chapters, 7 Number of Living Members, l O27 Founded at Cornell, 1917 Gamma Chapter Established, 1919 Class of19Z9 John W. Benjamin Kenneth S. Cohen Julian J. Fried Bernard S. Lewin - George Urbach Class of 1930 Robert F. Blumofe Louis H. Goodman Class of 1931 Myron Appel Gerald Dickler Emanuel R. Friedman Seymour Graubard Morton A. Shapiro Class of 1932 Louis Bender Stanley S. Lowell William I. Radner Alfred S. Schechter Sidney C. Solomon Harold R. Isaacs Lionel M. Kaufman Daniel L. Lipsky Herbert I. Miller Albert Philipson Leon M. Prince, Jr. Irving Friedman Eleazer Lipsky David Robison William Ludwig Irving Moskovitz Jules Plaut Fratres Isadore Aronsohn Arthur Becker Archie Brause Daniel M. Cohen Harold Davis Stanley Ehrlich 1 Mortimer A. Friedlander Joseph Gaines Samuel K. Goldstein Fratres in Faculrate Lloyd G. Seidman Julius Wolfram Mendel Zucker in Uniuersitare Herbert Kaufman Seymour H. Livingston Arthur Markewich Lewis J. Miller James Rosenthal Edgar A. Samuel Leon H. Scharf Milton B. Seasonwein S. Malcolm Strausberg Sanuel Borofsky Aaron J. Kessler f394j BETA SIGMA RI-IO LUDWIG SEIDMAN PLAUT WOLFRAM SHAPIRO E. LIPSKY BECKER MOSKOVITZ ZUCKER D. LIPSKY PRINCE APPEL KESSLER PHILIPSON ISAACS BLUMOFE KAUFMAN GRAUBARD DICKLER MILLER FREEDMAN BENJAMIN FRIED COHEN RADNER LEWIN SOLOMON SCHECHTER URBACH LOVVELL f fa X A nu X pl umm l 5' Huh WW W unmnull ff iimluwrnumllllmlnhqlu fx u 3 :SQ fu-M Imax 'Y 5 f I . ,x ,. Digi, L1!'M' 1 JUllI'. F 6 inn ,If ., 'Im I Eiw : , g'EI11i'1Q7e1nHl'H Mx VL: lf Iwi 'i?5f? 1wV l'm11 5'- mv? Filllllawalm'iw I .Jig ' I I '.I,l Shin' qiifhllmui . f' EL' u 1 ll' l f'- ' H3951 5. Avbameax DELTA BETA PHI 610 West 115th Street Number of Chapters, 17 Founded at Cornell University, 1878 Number of Living Members 600 Columbia Chapter Established 1921 Class 01:19.29 Edward Brewster Joseph W. Burns Irwin B. Freundlich John Kearney Edward Kukowski Charles C. Link Anthony W. Russo Arthur Stein Class of 1930 Kenneth L. Burkey Edward Ealck William Shaw Howard Shookoff Edward Von Doenhoff Class of 1931 Stanley Dawson Herbert Hanson Fratres in Uniuersitate Gottlieb Helpern Milton Koss L396I Solomon S. Schifrin George Strenger DELTA BETA PHI TEPPER ROSENTHAL BREWSTER KUKOWSKI BUCHSEN SPISELMAN FALCK MCGLINCHY LINK HANSON VON DOENHOFF DAWSON GLICKSTEIN KOSS STEIN BURKEY FREUNDLICH SHOOKHOFF RUSSO BASSON .gflzzilfzilllzyfllq xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx s H! QX ,El'EI H971 981 53 Y? Am ig-4 0. - ?-. - A we-, y .. Qxmxxxxximii l E5 gi Si. f- 'Fi ' gi 55: ,E 4 r- x :- NKYXGKKXXXXXXXXXXXXXXKXXX Q. .gL99mQ:M ,Q DELTA CHI 435 West 117th Street Number of Chapters, 36 Number of Living Members 8 523 Founded at Cornell, 1890 Columbia Chapter Established, 1922 Class of 1929 LeRoy Carlson Everett Garnsey Victor Glenn Thomas Kelly George Lucey Philip Maguire Class of 1930 Merrill Furbush J, Joseph Seaman Class of 1931 Albert Burr Christopher Chapman Norman Greig Class of 1932 William Pegram Almuth Strait Pierre Malraison Stuart Mills Frank Nugent W. Scott O'Connor Charles Roos Ross Strait Frederick Wheeler Henry Wheeler Warren Lacey Edward Muller ' Webster Wells John White Richard Wood Fratres in Uniuersitate Paul Brunn Reuben Carlson Edward Dealy Benjamin Swalin Fratres in Faculrate Edward Friebele Philip Gauss Adolph Otterstein Harold Bold Frederick Croxton Herbert Norris f 3 98 J DELTA CHI A. STRAIT R. STRAIT GREIG F. WHEELER PEGRAM CARLSON BURR H. WHEELER W?RQ9f, FU RBUSH MULLER CHAPMAN KELLY MALRAISON O'CONNOR LUCEY SWALIN NU GENT SEAMAN GLENN 1. . my C H .1 Q-'rf ' were .f, . . x ' 5'+f..Q4 ' n.lV'rx, nwftfs , -. H 5 MM ty, 1 ff I 5 r 1 r,,. .5 , , lug fNQEfg wal 1: rn l3991 9, ,fdQlEiau?fx. ALPHA EPSILON PI 600 West 111 Street Number of Chapters, 21 Number of Living Members 1 000 Founded at N. Y. U., 1913 lota Chapter Established, 1923 Arthur Arsham Murrey Auerbach Milton Axenfeld Class of19Z9 Louis Rosenthal Marshall C. Berman Harry Klein Class of 1930 Class of 1931 Leon I. Sass Fratres in U niuersitare Sidney Bernstein Albert W. Fuss 54003 Milton B. Conford Alan F. Perl Maurice Price Robert E. Kopp Jack J. Lichterman Julius A. Sass Murray Wolfe ALPHA EPSILON PI AUERBACH BERMAN KOPP AXENFELD ROSENTHAL PRICE CONFORD LICHTERMAN PERL KLEIN sAss ARSHAM C:- f3amQ ALPHA KAPPA PSI Professional Business Fraternity Number of Chapters, 45 Number of Living Members 15 890 Founded at N. Y. U., 1904 Chi Chapter Established, 1920 Robert Bertholf James J. Dolan John C. Eickwort Clyde Hendrix Frederick Laidlaw Richard F. Meyer Robert E. Noth Robert G. Fisher William P. Giesselmann Holland B. ldleman Robert S. Morton Ralph S. Alexander B. H. Beckhart John M. Chapman Leo J. Chassee Donald H. Davenport James L. Dohr R. Parker Eastwood Class of 1929 Fletcher K. Perrow Charles F. Rodican Eugene L. Roussin Brant R. Snavely James J. Somers William A. Steidinger Roger De F. Underwood John A. Williams Class of 1930 Gerhard A. Osterberg J, Philip Walker Leon A. Wehbring Lewis G. Wiggins Frarres in Facultate -I 4021 James E. Egbert Roy B. Kester Lloyd H. Langston Robert H. Montgomery Roswell C. McCrea George T. Renner H. Parker Willis ALPHA KAPPA PSI WILLIAMS LAIDLAW, WIGGINS FISHER ROUSSIN MEYERS SOMERS STEIDINGER WALKER IDLE EICKWORT MORTON WEIIBRING PERROW NOTH HENDRIX WILLIS UNDERWOOD BECKHART RODICAN SNAVELY GIESSELMANN 3, C nr-as I:403.j fjfdverrzlser , Index S Bank of Manhattan Co .............. . . Bank of United States ........... Broadway Presbyterian Church .... Brooks Bros. .............. . Browning Paint Co.. . . . Harry Bryer ......... John Buckle, Inc ....... Charles B. Mayer Corp. ....... . Columbia Storage Warehouse ..... Compliments of A Friend ..... Corn Exchange Bank ..... Corpus Christi Church . . . C. U. Press Bookstore ...... Cleasonffiebout 'Class Co.. . . . Charles Henry ........... Iester ................ John Jay E3 Commons .... Johnson Co. .......... . Lally Column Co., Inc.. . . Larus E3 Bros. Co ....... Lee Bros., Inc. ......... . . Le Poidevina E3 Co., lnc .... Iohn F. McGowan ........ . . . Harry McKee ................... N. Y. Linen Supply E5 Laundry Co .... Papadem ..................... Pollak, William . . . . . ReadfTaylor Co. . . . Spectator ........ C. Shindhelm ......... Trommers .............. Mark C. Tredennick Co .... F. R. Tripler E3 Co ....... Varsity ......... Watson Es? Collin . . . White Studios ....... Vx7itt Drug Co., Inc.. . . . ...iii xxviii ....XXV .. . .i ..xxi .xxiv ...vii . xviii .....xii .xxvi . . .ix . .xxv . . . .xvii ...iv ..viii ...iv .....xii . . viii .....V11 ....Xxii . . .xi .xviii . .xvi .xxiv . . . .xxvii . . viii Insert . . .vi .xxvii .xxiv . . xiii xxviii .xxiii . . . .xxii . .xix . . . .xxii iii 5131355 Gmltlrfueziii miahiixg Quadra, IADISON AVENUE COR. FURTY-FOURTH STREE17 NEW YORK fivfffl O O W :Mis J W - fx Nm-'V'f7Q'f . . 'bf-E,.x2LL41 .55 . N - X... Q K'--'-S -,MSHA -1-w P,:'-2.T5!yx1 'Q X9 - ' , , ! . IQ 'Gil ,3 ,QSM I 5. .5 XQXXW 255' 'S ai' HI Q fi' ee s f. 1. . -- -SN fi? ' w Af 7 ' '17 ,'x 1 'L ag :Yi Q N-gg f M J f ' O 'Qs V1 'ff' ffzfn. h- 'li-ln 2-gf 913 T . E,,EE:S,,:gK, fd -. ., -M ymf 1 1115351 .1ES11 '-'ffl ff 4 ' Kuff J4 - -f 3' ff lk Q' W 1 X, at I E J '-H592 eere e A O 'Ex V . ., fs I , Hg yijmii-. ...-- v 'Ju' 1 -1' -' ' .2 umm W 1 ,I uv . 1, '35 F'--4-v-- ,.'.4:x: -Z Qjgcgoqs IIUDQX Y 1818 AND TO-DAY Clothes for Sport and General Wear Send for BRO0Ks's Miscellany BOSTON Nswsunv comuan or BERKELEY STREET nswron-r PALM amen I LOOKING FROM THE CHAPEL I1 Q-:RX f 6 W If X 5 t cl Thls famous symbol commemorates the fact that th1s bank onglnated 1n an act of Pubhc servlce that of furn1sh1ng pure water to the res1dents of New York as a safeguard agamst a threatened ep1demxc Thls was In 1799 At the same tune the bankmg end of the busmess was organlzed upon a bas1s of close 1nd1v1duaI personal serv1ce to 1tS customers Smce that txme, the c1ty's populanon has grown to more than one hundred t1mes as great and the bank has expanded from one ofhce to s1xty two but the spzrzt of serfvzce has remalned unchanged. BANK of the MANHATTAN COMPANY Main Ojice 40 Wall Street Sixty-tfwo confueniently located offices in Greater New York f fa K r aft' Manhattan Servlce X X III CELESTIALITE. Next to Daylight Was Selected TO PROVIDE IDEAL LIGHTING In the new Physics Building, Fayerweather Hall, and the new Havemeyer Chemistry Annex. Celestialite was selected by the University scientists in charge after careful tests of a great variety of lighting units. . Send for a free fragment of this unique Sflayer glass. It will show you how closely Celestialite imitates Nature's way of making daylight. You, too, can know the satisfaction and perfect eye comfort sure to follow the installation of Celestialite. Trial demonstration arranged upon request Celestialite Division Gleason-Tiehout Glass Company ZOO FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY COLUMBIA JESTER THE LEADING ootuaos como Largest Campus Cz'rcuIatz'on Every issue sold out. Last issue sold out in two days. Favorable comment from all Metropolitan dailies. Snappier and snippier than ever. Soul Portraitsff Satire on modern art and literature. Get the inside of college life as seen from the humorist's point of view. SUBSCRIPTION, 32.00 PCT CYCLIT IV WILLIAM POLLAK, A.A.G.O., A.B., '28 Organist and Choirmaster Saint Luke's Chapel, Trinity Parish, New York X -4 Instruction in Piano, Organ, Theory K 'K 483 Hudson Street - New York City V THERE is only one daily newspaper at Columbia University. This journal, The Columbia Spectator, is known not only in its own institution but nationally as one of the hnest, clearest and most reliable amaf teur dailies in the country. G23 IT is needless to say that The Columbia Spectator is read by all the students inf terested in the news of the University. Columbia happens to have some 30,000 of them. And advertising rates are surprisf ingly low. Q3 IF you are interested in attracting the attenf tion of Columbia University students, The Columbia Spectator is obviously your ideal medium. A postal card from you to 411 Iohn Jay Hall will bring sample copies and a letter of complete information. 'Yotill get 'results if you advertise in THE COLUMBIA CDAILY SPEcTAToR Columbia Students Spend 520,000,000 a Year! VI OHN CBUCKLE, Ne. Wltolesale Fruits and Vegetahles Q3 Hotels and Sreamships Supplied 872874 Washington Street, New York City Telephone Watkins 3600 ' BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO Lally Column Company, Trio. 21lf249 LOMBARDY STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. Laffy Patent Columns Concrete Filled Columns for A11 Classes of Building designed to suit every structural condition Endorsed by the Building Departments of all large cities and by the leading Architects and Engineers VII Arthur Johnson, Prop. Chelsea 6592 We are members of Florists' Telegraph Delivery ALL SORTS Flowers by Wire to all the World Tel. Monument 2261 2262 ALL SPORTS Makers of Columbia Charms J, S6 CQ JOHNSON CO. Florists Manufacturing jewelers 2973 B O d r a wa 352 West 13th St. New York, N. Y. Bet. 115th and 116111 sts. Wing Building NEW YORK CHARLES HENRY Electrical Contractor L I G H T I N G 40 W. 33rd STREET, NEW YORK PENNSYLVANIA 4108 KINDfHEARTED OLD LADY: My good man, have you injured your arm? FELLOW fwith ann in slingj: Naw, lady, I took the Old Gold blindfold test, and the blindfold has slipped, -Bean Pot. HER: And will you love me as much as this when we are married? HIM: How can you doubt me? You know I've always liked married women best! -Green Goat. LADY: I want to see some kid gloves for my eightyearfold daughter, please. POLITE CLERK: Yes, madam, white kid? LADY: Sir! -Princeton Tiger. VIII ln Keeping With the Sound Cprinciples of CBanking FUR threefquarters of a century the policy of The Corn Exchange Bank has been one of individual service to its customers, and of complete protection to their money. This individual service begins first with our Board of Directors and is made available to each customer through our Qflicers and Employees. The Corn Exchange Bank has always been a leader in adding those features of service which will be appref ciated by its customers, and in opening additional branches as fast as the growing needs of individual sec' tions of our Greater City require superior banking service. The Corn Exchange Bank stands for safe and conserva' tive management of its depositors, fundsg by this is meant that those funds will be invested only in the securities of, or loaned to, conservative and wellfestabf lished concerns, and for promoting legitimate business, and will not be loaned in speculative enterprises, even though this could be done at greater profit to the bank. T HE CoRN EXCHANGE CBANK ESTABLISHED 1853 66 Conveniently Located Branches to Serve 'You IX A CAMPUS SCENE X Q3 Past, Present and Future the autobiographical forecast, and the autobiography of a modern. I've toured the famous colleges And read the latest hooks. I've damned the t h o u s an d ologies - For long I've known that knowlf edge is Less potent than good looks! I'm far famed for my piety My name is known to Popesg And yet, despite sobriety, I always get variety- Of course, I know the ropes! At Thirteen I was sporty, too, My mind was broad as sing I knew the stories naughty, too Of what all men of forty do When Missus isn't in! I figured out virginity's Face value to a cent- And when I learned how thin it is I promptly turned to sin. It is Too soon still to repent! J But when my arteries harden, I'll Return to virtues prized- By flirting with a Cardinal And getting him to pardon all, Illl then be canonizecl. Hear me now, while I deliver My jinal virgin's plaint Till I become a true believer- Who will be the next reliever Of 'one doomed to be a saint? I faybee. 563 WHILE you are away this Summer, don't leave your Piano, Musical Instruments, Furniture, Silverware and Valuables in your Room or Apartment. Stored with us they will be safe from heat, moths, fire and burglary. Rates reasonable. Expert care and service in this ULTRA modern 14 story building, Riverside Drive at 134th Street. Telephone call will bring a representative to give the desired information as to your requirements, cost, etc. Telephone, BRADHURST 2600. i EE BRoTHERs, INC. XI John Jay Dining R00m Breakfast 7.30f9.00 Cafeteria 304.30 Cafeteria Dinner 6.00f7.15 Served 350.65 Cash Luncheon 1 I. Grill Cpen Daily 8.30 A. M. to 1.30 A. M. Sundays 9 A. M. to 12 P. M. 6 Columbia Commons Cafeteria Service Breakfast 7.30f9.00 A. M. Luncheon 11.3OfI.3O P. M. Dinner 5.30f7.00 P. M. Safety Service Satisfaction COLUMBIA STORAGE WAREHOUSES Vaults for Valuahles Storage OWovz'ng Qpacking Special Facilities for STORAGE OF TRUNKS Send for Illustrated Booklet OLUMBUS AVE. NEW YORK Telephone, Trafalgar 2977 67TH STREET E3 C ABla'nl o'ig,rh'e' Cnty of IN RXVIYORK from an Aarftual S It .V .iif -L:: 'f?4-Vf A T . 'U Y-763127 1 'E A A i.7f5:'2 f'vw?X,gff.. 1 . f X.-. . A , '. .L -'V A X 1 1 , fe-aaa... , r ,f , ' pa., .P uf. I .. I , 1 .4 9.4 1mu,h'? ff .f -if aff-5-. ' . -' xl If Ilwpgmwrqml1:f:fu:.B.i l' I Q' V J F. .Uv ,,-5f...,,.f,-.45-. 1 f I-1 ggi, ,1 Ma, a . A S R. fy? . 2f:..f'rf5:::ar::r? Mg . f dl' fiaaza-.-ff' If - fyfsfiiif' I. I - ' U vxsxa-N-cfzxffy fs 'f L' ll.. -'63-3':f. I 9 . - ' ff ' A' Q V ' I Wg.-Puma-a,t'.fx.f - ' .' Q, . - fl , , lvxf Q J 4 ,V ' 2fXfirfQQE.fLfZ7?Zf' 'N I L1,1'7 -'iIi:,. ',f ' N-aeikxmmmsifgglt-V 1-Q? -Wx' H-2202225555 -. asf 5' - U - i wg- ' Q -2xCu19g9'-I'-f'r'Q3 ' .225 . gi Q YM vt. . U ff? .5 1. A. .,.. g.. A I '- 2 RAL fff? Hs ml! I P' -' ' - ' A V I er l 3- A A2 K5 'lvl -i -r 2 + . 4 I, Sa I iw 1 in QlIg...'-r'fg f ' -fir? f ' . , A Q7 - ---,- ,V 'f3'j'X.5 -Q9 1--'5cOMfQ'fyJ f 141.55 -- W .,?mf.wmmmm-wmmwmffl ji, . Va: L x Iggy '.:T:,5. 0-114-F' - 4 ,gl X , ,gl 1, I. I ma -. A , -f vsp- - 4-.. A . 2 ...J - -f K , L we K' , .xt , J 4. :L I -:ii . fl? H HQ75 f ' I, vylxlxy ! I 'Z 5 .- 'N :1Fig5iIfjzl:? l f.-A . 1-' -1 E.,-v' '.-ff. ri ! :' - X 'r Qrvfsc . I -. - 4 E21 ' fr ,. TNQ - - ,a-Q: I . . , d:,?zf,,vx5 I J,-1,51 IL: fix-mr-d f Q. 11.559 .,- f .-' - .. ..:f - .U 1 . - ' N 'I V 'P shim 1 -1' 1 1 5 'E Wig ii' - ' -'r Jo .,- 1,-2' '35 'y - '1 ' ' w -L . rg Q - -417 l , e?'f,i?: ' El 'EL V., X : g2P' E.E 1 Q V J i g -I '-Rf c' .. S' S-or 1 31 ,f f I -'A l v- ff' A W if' '- f sz 1 1 ' f ig 3 X G, I7 .. - V I, vm i x H I Y r N X. ,. mn J ' f In Q . - ,Q '- 30553 - f ' . 4 ' ' ' - . -- r jk 'f ' ... 5 ' -- f-1 . rev.. :faq ,QW 1, ,W I . 1 - a - ...mn nv R: - K . r - . t l ixfga..--g..tE5. . . 1 -- .. W. 1 I I .1 I 4' a if w H 3' . - - A 'N ' ' F T -, 1 ' 1? .. V g?Zfviwfa.'- ' 55' . ' A A - li Q iff 5431 ' j 3 ' Facsmuk ya11m!1iwx.ffl.1pv::!v,wnf.f,wp nf6lrDf1fM .ffW,w:.- f 1 W baaffwfffm Lfmfvwavf I ' ., XII md E? White, Architects PHYSICS LABORATORIES BUILDERS MARK C. TREDENNICK C0 New 'York XIII Two Toems By BEN MADDOW Comment on a Prelude and Fugue by J. S. Bach I. ORE purposes interweave than are straining each otherg Rasp the knotted chords, Strike out rebel dissounds plangent. Whence these evident rhythms? This is some metal thinly turned Of a grey bright globule frunning unhesitant along a lev Drawn from the long ignition of that C1 D, manyfwilled o II. By wrenching whatsoever No ash may hinge its jawg The crumbled that was Bach May not recall its fuel. But if it speak Break us our tympana For its articulate fever Burns us too close and cruel. III. The instrument of a spinning music has Doubly apex of a spiralling widely com Time is unfleshedg the never needed bon A thing to turn in, A patient space to hold this shape. IV. Warm in the embrace of a colored air, QTurquoise, somewhat greenly tintedj The line of a white shadow on a whiter A beetle crosses. How shall I chisel the exactitude of this wall light? Those who have seen the center of the They have not lived for do not conde Inchoate. sun- scendj to say V. Endfchord: acceptance. Iudicious and intolerable precept! I take unwillingly this beaten copper b It holds the rotten caking of remember A residue that dilution may not scour. owl. ed rosefleaves, Une being dull to all but present perfum Reaching pacihc wisdom, Ignorant of irrelevancies, they may nam The cold intenuous beauty of an empty VI Forgivable desire for bending out the k of the world Snap, ., Involving all in single pompous honorab No longer need: These notes will dignify our trivial sep es, e holder. nees of corne le catalysm. rate deaths. the number of the nets, IB. a spaceless heart, e, and a long spiralling recessional. es to stretch his immortalityjg rpieces till the tendons 3. XIV Two Toems-Con tin ued VH. Sleep covers the dry bloody labor The clinging skin ripped from the uterus: Of agony the stone was born, This fluted pillarg And the rocks which underlie the sea Strengthen its thighs, Stubbornly petrified of vacillation, Persistent in diffuse omniform, O singular clarity. FEVER SONATA Waking in a surface broken! He burst the membrane of some dull green water, met the bitter air. And there crept into his throat the rasping spirals of a dusty pain. Fibered flesh was new intensity of Hre Whipped by the soughing of a drought that bends flamefrobes against the knees of burning houses. Revulsion! as a gull burning in two lights the sun and the sea arrows down to the lifting water hissing out white flares of wing and back, So in him the fever spilled out, the cold ash among the sheets snowy with sweat, A vibration shook him, he was an iron cord, plucked by the fierce chill, singing an anguish, cold, cold. He was in a harp, a tautless forever isolated. No, now he was in a bubble's wall, unboundaried piece of its spericity, flesh fused and chilled into alveolar shaping. No more himselfg And he cried out with the fear turning in his entrails, A parasitic coiling in the intercoiling of the gut, Lest he should lose body, instrument to eat the loaf of his need Fully, before blackness. Lust came, flowing in the tri-hued stream of ice and flaming, that branched and capillaried in his hardening limbs. Desire tipped lips and fingers, spread the thighfsurfaces, longing Soft hollows and a white turgid belly to crush. He saw a gleaming wantoness dancing fMade by treefshadow fingers H Out of the square moonlight from the panel For the smooth lecherous shape, grasping he fell from the bed, empty-limbed. For a swift second of the temporal wheel, impersonality leached his passion. He lay in the morning light, breathing the dark in his lungs, The lacing shadow twigs became spiders, and jointed legs pronged at his eyeballsg But willingly suffered the grey masking And extinction took him. XV Compliments of John P. McGowan Marble Co., lnc. 1180 RANDALL AVENUE Bronx, New York HOUDINI Was Joe drunk last night? 'LI dunno, but he was trying to pants over his head. -Dodo. get his She: Do you love traveling? He: No, I like to sit in quiet corners when I do my loving. -jackfofLzmte1'n. Drunk, staggering along the street, bumps into a telephone pole. Feels way around it several times, then mutters, S'no use. Walled in. -jacRfofLante'rn. Young Father: What's that white cloth on the line? Young Mother: That's baby's 'undie'-the flag of our union. -Lion. He: Do you care . . . to dance? She: I don't care . . . but l'll dance'- jugglev. Delighted Daddy: What'll we call it? Modern Mama: Quits. -Desert Wolf. HEY! HEY! Her poise couldn't be shaken, but when she danced everything else was.-Spanker. XVI ,-1'-'V 5-NX Xkqgk 1 Q l 5' U . 'I is OOYNS CAT YQUR SERVICE In Co Ueg e - - and afterf You may have admired our selective taste in iction. Uur ability to get reference books swiftly. Qur uncanny facility for unearthing Rare and Uutfoffprint books' at modest cost. Cur completeness in scope of service. In college and after . . . come or write to The Bookstore . . . and your requirements will go forward speedily. A fine mail order service has been developed expressly for graduates. Anybook . . . anywhere. fllie CBOQKSTORE JOURNALISM BUILDING 2960 BROADWAY XVII giWhat's this? HA Portrait of a Lady. L'My God! And you call yourself an artist? 'LOh, no! I'm a woman hater. -Michigan Gargoyle. HIS HONOR: L'Get the prisoner's name so that We can tell his mother. ROOKIE: He says that his mother already knows his name. -HName. CROWD: 'kHey! Sit down in front! ASS'T MANAGER: Quit yer kidding. I donlt bend that way. -Larnpoon. FIRST STUDENT: So the President just expelled you-huh. What did you say to him?', . SECOND STUDE: I congratulated him for turning out such ine young men. -Ramrner Iamerar. Chas. B. Mayer Architectural Woodfwork Corp. 40TH AVENUE AND 'ZIST STREET L. I. C., Borough of Queens, N. Y. C. In teriorfs Furniture Telephone: Stillwell 6266 Samuel Jones Daniel Cripps Qfl. LF, CPCIDFVIN 56 CC., Inc. Granite Contractors Telephone: Lackawanna 3019 286 FIFTH AVENUE, N. Y. Yard: Boulevard and Sanford St. Agents for JCHN L. GOSS CORP. ASTORIA' L' It Goss Pink Deer Isle Granite PhO1'lC ASfOri21 5009 Quarries at Stonington, Maine XVIII , I ' ' ,Ag 1-gg v v -r 1' -r v 1- vA.vA.?AvA74'rA.-r -r -r v v v v v vgvgviiv 'Iii-'IIHIllllllIlllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 2? if '.---'.-'., ...-,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,..,................. ..... ............................... . - .21 1 A' :irlulmg '.l. . UE f E Ei ' I if in I W W E if S: ' E EA I- 'mmm 2 3? I- EE E -5 T E' EL H PHOTOGRAPHERS 5 E- A 5 if gi EQUIPPED WITH MANYYEARS EXPERIENCE E 24 'Z FOR MAKING PHOTOGRAPHS OF ALL SORTS E gf I- DESIRABLE FOR ILLUSTRATING COLLEGE E f-EAL .. ANNUALS. BEST OBTAINABLE ARTISTS, E WORKMANSHIR, AND THE CAPACITY FOR E PROMPT AND UNEQUALLED SERVICE E if I 220 WEST 41-QE STREET, 5 E ' NEW YORK. E E -. EE A E 3 gi Ei .: ,E E I1 EIIIIEE inum-: E :' ailllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllll lllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIE 'E ET .. ni? 1 I I . -wr-Iv' -Av'-Iv'-If-v-fu'-v -v-V-v-v-'uf-W V - --7 XIX VAN AM QUADRANGLE XX The Browning Painting Co., Inc 243 E. 35 STREET New York City 'K PAINTING CONTRACTORS FOR MEDICAL CENTER COLUMBIA PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL XXI Phone Cathedral 4444 I 5 Witt CDrug Co., Inc. 2959 Broadway, Cor. 116th Street Opp. Brooks Hall and School of Journalism New York We have opened a new Drug Store for your convenience, with a full line of Drugs, Sundries, Proprietary Medicines, Cigars, Candy, Toilet Articles, Soda and Luncheonette Pl1ysicians' Prescriptions Our Specialty E D O E W O R T H Part of a College Education Its .Quality Never Changes LARUS Eb? BROTHER CO. Richmond, Va. Established 1877 WATSON 56 COLLI AND DECORATION 238 EAST 34th ST., NEW YORK CITY Telephones: Caledonia 2838 and 2878 Do you all want me to shoo these heah flies fo' you? queried Merle, the freshman from Chicago. Oh, no, whispered Malory in a low sweet voice, Let them run around in their hare feet a while longer. Put down your guns, boys. I've got you covered. -Cornell Widow. l'What's corne between Gerald and his artist friend? 'LShe asked him to pose for her pic' ture, 'Apollo and the Gorilla '. Well, what's wrong with that? She'd already drawn Apollo. -Nevada Desert Wolf. XXII Evergf QTCZIVQPTZISQIN.. . . . . Mzist get attention, and a particular lqind of attention. He must arouse the serious and favorable interest of a group of readers who can and will buy what he sells. His success in securing this lqind of attenf tion depends on his good judgment in selecting his adf vertising medium. In the right medium, his message will get across, realizing not only favorable interest but the ultimate purchase. Moderii advertisers are turning to the serious monthly magazines, convinced of their effectiveness. Magaziries such as the Atlantic Monthly and many others of the quality group are rapidly expanding their average space devoted to national and local advertising. The reason is, of course, quite obvious. These publications secure the right lqind of attention. Their readers are in the upper purchasing levels. They are interested in what the advertiser has to offer. They read the magazine off and on for a month or longer, which gives the advertisement a great degree of permaf nency. Their attitude is favorable because of the presf tige of the medium. For these reasons, the skillful advertiser is realizing the significance of a new trend toward the magazines. Eze Columbia Varsity? Columbia University New 'York City XXIII Telephone, Medallion 3989 TO be at ease in Your dress as you step out among scrutinizing friends is, after all, a governing influence in the selection of your clothes. There is a style and tone for each type .... and it is my business to help you. fu The Brymore 3537.50 group K a suit for every occasion a n al Cream Harry Cldryer 556 WEST 41sT STREET 22 WEST Wd STREET New York Opposite WaldorffAstoria T R 0 M M E R ' S WHITE LABEL MALT BREW Brewed from Selected Imported M orav ian Malt and Certified Sa azer Hops Che Epremier of Cfrommeris Celebrated QQPQWS on Qraught and in fBotrIes Bushwick Avenue and Conway Street Telephone, Dickens 4400 Brooklyn, New York XXIV Corpus Christi CRoman Catholie Church 535 West 121st Street, near Broadway Masses on weekdays 7 and 8-on Holydays 6, 7, S, 9, 10, 11, 11.451 Masses on Sundays-Upper Church-6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 Masses on Sunday-Lower Church-9, 10.30 to 11.45. Confessions heard Saturdays 4 to 6-and 7 to 9.30. Cn eves of holydays- after 4 P. M. and after 7 P. M. Instructions, counsel and other religious functions hy arrangement with the clergy. Students welcome Iohn H. Dooley, Pastor CBroadWa5f3 CPreshyteriar1 Church Corner of 114th Street WALTER DUNCAN BUCHANAN, D.D. Pastor SABBATH SERVICES 11 A. M. and S P. M. SABBATH SCHOOL 9.45 A. M. WEDNESDAY PRAYER MEETING 8.15 P. M CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR PRAYER MEETING SUNDAY 7.15 P. M. A Cordial Invitation Is Extended Columbia Students XXV QR Compliments Of A FRIEND Nvhat if tomorrow bring Catering to the Columbia Varsity Show Wigs to Hire-Professional MakefUp Men G. SHINDHELM The old Reliable WIG MAKER 144 WEST 46th STREET Bryant 5726 Established 1866 Tel. Ashland 5780 New York Linen Supply Ee Laundry Co., Inc. Established 1898 The Worldls Leading Linen Supply House 326-332 EAST 32ND STREET NEW YORK COLUMBIA CHEERS COLUMBIA SONGS SPELL IT OUT C-O-L-U-M-B-I-A, SANS SOUCI RAY, RAY, RAY, C-IO-L-U-M-B-I-A ! TEAM, TEAM, TEAM. Air: See Columbia Song Book SHORT CHEER RAY, RAY, RAY, C-O-L-U-M-B-I-A, TEAM, TEADI, TEAM. Sorrow or anything Other than joy? NVhat if 't be wintry chill: Rain, storm, or summer's thrill? Tomorrow's the future still, This is today! C---O--L--UI:gg3ggCFgSE-A, Tomorrow's the future still, C-0- L-U-lVI-B-I-A, C-O-L-U-M-B-I-A, This is today! TEAM, TEAM, TEAM. II FOGHORN Yea! Yea! Yea! Out on life's stormy sea Rah! Rah! Rah! All of us soon may be, Rah! Ralhi Rah! Far, far away. Rah! Ralhl Rah! - Still hold your glasses high, Columbia ! Columbia! Columbia ! Team! Team! Team Yea-! Team-! SIREN Colum-BIA, Colum-BIA, Colum-BIA H00-RAY, Iloo-RAY, Hoo-RAY. I-Iere's to youth while it's nigh! Though we tomorrow die, This is today! Though we tomorrow die, This is today! III C-O-I1-L -TVI-B-T-ILL TUAM, TEAM' TEAM- One last toast ere we part! NVritten on ev'1'y heart FIGHT This motto stay- Fight! Blue and WVhite! Long may Columbia stand, Fight! Blue and Vfhitel Honored throughout the land, Fight! Blue and YVhite! Our Alma Mater grand, Fight! Fight! Fight! Fight! Fight! Now and for aye ! XXVII E3 :X o -, , I A ' friiwiwlepf' 2 .2 I A 5 gg lay ,l f-EERE sa., gms . GENTLEMEN's 4fd y'i fflnf 4 F Rexx 0 5' F gl, 2- fi ' 'f-:mmm : 2 ' mf 2 ' -' C1251 -- f-li 'W-QL 'A K , M if N x I MADISON AVENUE AT FORTY-SIXTH STREET'NEWYORK . Jvg ig, ,-jf' 4,1 ec ,,... .4 - -- ,leg . . . V. :fa ..4.. f . 'l., '!'1'ms ff. tf g I Dzsfzncgzzzsfzea' Cloflzef , L: Egfr . IM llmi li '1'fl1 ' 1 . Ni fi i :g ' l l gl i 1 A CESSORIES FA ' FW. . l an - :1'f l Q l'I T HATS ig C I VI fl Qil l I1 ' ll ' .-s 3 f 5 . Fl-Iii H gf.: W pl I 4 Pnpreseniaromplefe mremblage :A 2 UW E ll - --. yy.. 1'- X i k ,jIl: 1 o - UQ . 1 Z LZ X V1 .ugllyl , ofgentlemen 5 c offzes, fwfr an 3 ? ozrresxarzeffar all occzzszonslf 15 our QA TZ' HW ,,,pf ir N il ., ,Q-Zihgilf ' - . vg E , purpose la mee! ine reguzremenzs qt 0 g Y ix il. 1lkl,!J'll gentlemen qfcriticnl1fn5feina're55 RA I Xxx ,, X l H 2 F xx N 'IQ at + ' at it FT E A VE X X . RI PI-EIQR St U. 5 X X -mi xhli -9 Ouyftters in Gfnffemcn - Eszablislzed 1836 in . X 3 L: -s fwg 10. f'lo 'l ' f s f u g ggi ct?2as5?1c??BlsL:1cZ?i2533fcZi?As5:hzCi2aS,:1efZf3 ctfihs,-ci?Bs,,'cZT22.s,,'ct?f-,1a,,'c .?22s,,fcT?BA,,-as Ee Colonial Bank and q-he Bank of the Qpockaways merged into mhz Egzrnk uf Qlilniieh ,States This merger, affected April lst, makes available to our 250,000 depositors as well as to the general public an enlarged banking service. The Bank of United States now has 37 offices in Manhattan, Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens, with an additional one under construction-and augmented facilities to handle expeditiously the banking transactions of our rapidly growing clientele. Our resources exceed a quarter of a billion dollars, fincluding our securities affiliate Bankus Corporationj. We thank the public, our depositors, and our 10,000 stockholders for the cooperaf tion and confidence which have made these achievements possible. 4? PAID ON THRIFT ACCOUNTS MAIN OFFICEAFIFTH AVENUE AT 44th STREET XXVIII 1 I V, A 1 u 7f.1'I 1 .sfgnvw-Sqgn 'mnmwa-mvnnmn-, x ' F 1 ,Fl ii M Ni ,ptwajfflm - - ,,,. Y m'-wlE,Z QmN, .,fi:1M gl' ., V 3 1- j, Q , ' Y 'N r Y- X - U ' - ' V ' 'ski m ,?nix5Ef'lf-f crx .gay ,nf . , , b , , , -vw, N, 1-uf , 9 . 7: FL 'V 1 v. S k - ' fi w QQ ., 1 J H ' V 'N X 'K xi , fi . I ' 7 A 1 e f 5 + P i 5 W ' f f 4 qi . I 5 f 11 I I ' E V55 5 E ,RQ 5 L Q. , 1, ,J I2 : 4 Q E if Q F 1' - A 5 il I . - 12 5 E5 ' si 2 f I5 I ' N 4 1 1' 5 1 i ' L k 41.-1' 1 si W- J 'WE ML if ge , ,, . H E 1 Q Q . Q . li E ai f l 5 lg Q VIZVG 'if' PRHVTIZVG 'ig BINDING 5 L als V, ' Q 'P 1' Q ' 1?-' 4' 4 , Vg? H Q Q Q Q ' Qadoi, j9rc2:jb'Pf7't.f Q ' 1 ', ' ' Q? ', 1 Elf QQ Q 'j' Q' ' 1G?fzZ1kf!esQ'.2f Ziiyfok Woe-Prks. 7'z'arryf1ARe'daf ,Sm-j1f7Fea5 Q Q IQ ' , Q 5 Q fag' Q ' '1j-' jjjflf Q - Q 4 Qf-' FQ:4,.,, Y L Q ' . , ff Q, - N ' ' N: il g. UQ' f' 1. QW Q ,, CHQ-3 Q , Q , Q Q N ' 1: 4 I.. F EV' T 1 f f?f'22fif '52?ff'4 CF' J 95 Q ' Q Q f ' W ' Tp fr' x1 ' ' Ll42i '51 ' , 4 , 11' f' i Q31 , ' 1' QQ QQ, QQ Q Q Q ' Q QQ QQQ QQ ,QQ QQ . QWQQ Q ,I QQ Q5 , . H , , . f 1 filo-mbcwcl Amd .iveets . is ,- Q' 'Nw' ' . , ' I , , ' 2. I a ' 2 3 1? v QI- QW Q ilunffz f ., , QQ Q Q QQQQ . G 5 g: ' :' fi' E4 121355: ' - ': 'Q jig 'j , ' if-Y, ' li- I . f , L., '-4' E Ig if . l-1 ' - A . Q f mi! , QQ-Q Q Q Q,Q QQ Qhnudf! gQ2'jl2917'if?1'2O2 i'n,, N ' Q Q wx M ' i if 1 ,,,, J 'P 1 H G E 3 ga U 3 E O 25 8 2 gm 9 we sa N Q D 2 -2 HS O Q is Q3 53 Q rs -.E 2 Q2 25 A 3 O 'CMB -E 3 Q i va 'Q .1 -3 S mm Sl S N9 , - .. x, A Acacia .,..g..,.. ..., , ., Advertisements ,...,. Alpha Delta Phi ,.., Alpha Epsilon Pi ..,,. Alpha Kappa Psi, ,... - Alpha Phi Delta .,.,,A.,.,,..A,,,.,.,...... .v.,, Alpha Sigma Phi ,,,,,,,,,.,,,,, .,... , ......,,,... , Alumni Association of Columbia College ...,,....v,..a,,,....,..,....,.. Alumni Federation ....,.........,..... Athletic Insignia Awards Intercollegiate ..., ,. ,... Intramural ,,,, ,..,,,. Athletic Retrospect ,,... B Band ....., ......,,,..,..... . ,. Baseball-Varsity .... . Freshman ..- Basketball--Varsity ...... .,.......,,, ...., Freshman ., 2 ............ - Baton Society ........... Beta Sigma Rho. ....... . Beta Theta Pi ....,... Biographies ,....., Black Avengers ,,,,r..... , ......,..,,,.., Black Book ,,,.,,............ ....,.. ,,,,,., Blue Book .,,, . ..,,. .,.. .......... , . . ,t Board of Student Representatives, Book of Misclemeanors C Carman, Prof. H. J, ,,,,,, ,,,,, Chandler Chemical Society ...,,,. Chaplain Knox ..,...,,........-,,, Chess Team ,.,....,,.,,...,,,.,, Circolino, Il ,,,,,.,,,e., College Year, The . ...,....., ,- Columbia Lion, The ,..... ,,.,.Io.. Columbia University Club r,,.,..... Columbia University Players ,,,,.,.., .,,v, COLUMBIAN ..,...,,,. . ..... ....,..r,,,v,,...., , I Committee on Students' Activities. ...,... Crew-Varsity ..,........,......,,,.,.,,,,,.,...,, Freshman ..,.........,.,,...,,,,., .,,,. Cross-Country-Varsity ...,,..., , Freshman ,,,., miex 382 405 344 400 402 390 386 327 328 180 266 175 293 185 252 235 259 332 294 362 69 317 38 279 306 38 66 339 48 301 284 23 34 326 294 272 308 203 254 201 253 D Debate Team ,,.. Delta Beta Phi ,,,,. ,. Delta Chl .,...,,, Delta Kappa Epsilon ,,,, , Delta Ph lielta P ' Delta 1 ,.,. , ,,,,,,.,.... ,. si ,. . ,,,,. Upsilon ..,t.,,.... Deutscher Verein , Dolphins Socie ty ........ F Faculty ..,,,,,,,, r,,,,,, Fencing-Varsity .....,.. Freshman Football-Varsity ,,,. Juni or Varsity W., Freshman Freshman Class Freshman Sports .,,, , ,,,. Clce Club ,,,,, Hawkes. Herbe History of the History of the History of the G H rtE ...., Class of Class of Class of 1929 1930 1931 1932, .t.t. History of the Class of I ln Memoriam ,..,. ....- Interfraternity Council Intramural Spo l'fS . W, Intramural Sports Awards .,.... ,,.,, J Jester vw ,,..r,,. . .- Junior Class ,....,, ,,. K Kings Crown .....,,.,,,,,.,,.,. Kings Crown Awards King's Crown Board of Governors ,.,,. , 299 396 398 358 348 350 366 335 321 43 242 258 217 234 256 165 251 286 47 60 152 160 168 42 343 261 266 280 149 269 302 270 Lion. The Columbia ..,...,, N- Nacoms ...... ...... .... . . - Orchestra .... .,,,,, , W., Phi Beta Kappas.- ...,., Phi Kappa Sigma. ...,...... .,,,., Philolexian Society ....... ,,.,,, P1 Lambda Phi ............. Players' Club .... , ............. ,,-,,, Pre-Law Association , .v.,.., .... , . Pre-Medical Society ..,.. ,.,,,, Psi Upsilon ..,,......,...,.. ..,... Rapier Club .............,...., .. Rifle-Varsity ....v................. .,,,,, Roster of the Class of 1930 ,..,, ...... Roster of the Class of 1931 ....,. s,,,,, Roster of the Class of 1932 ,,,.,, ,.,,,, Sachems ....,, ...... ,.... L Laughing Lions --.. .,... -. M Memoriam, In ,,,, , Mu Pi .,,,,,....,., . N O P Phi Delta Theta ,,,,.. Phi Gamma Delta ,,,,,. Phi Kappa Psi .,.....,. Phi Sigma Delta ..,..... Phi Sigma Kappa ........ Pre-Engineering Society President Butler ....,... R Freshman ,.,,,,,, S Sahib ,...,,. fedex 334 34 42 317 312 289 310 364 354 356 352 330 384 376 374 294 336 338 337 44 346 324 250 260 154 162 170 314 316 Senior Vote ....,..... .s.,.. ,,,,,, Sigma Alpha Epsilon ....... ,,..,, Sigma Chi ,,,,,,,,-... mm Senior Class ....,i, , ..,,,, Seniors lnformally .,.. Sigma Nu .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Sophomore Class ,,,,,,,,,.,..,,.,,,, ,, ,,,,,,,, ., Spectator ............,r,,,,,,,,,,,,,s,,,,,,,,,,,,..,, Spiked Shoe .,........., r,,, , L-, ,,,,,,,,,..,. ,W Starling Adventures of Nina Manx, The Student Board ..v......,,,,..,.,,.,,,,,,.......... Swimming and Water Polo ,,..c,............ Swimming, Varsity Personnel. ............. Swimming-Freshman T Tau Delta Phi , ,,,,, W M--- Tau Epsilon Phi, ,,,,, Tennis-Varsity ,,,,.i Freshman ,... Theta X1 ,,,, ...,,.... Track--Varsity ,,,, . Freshman , ,l.,., .,.. . . U University Committe on Athletics ,,.,.,,, , University Committee on Students' Ac- UVIUCS D., ,.......... . .,,,,......,. ---..-,,,- V Van Am Society, ,,,r...., ,r.... Varsity C Club ,W .,.-.- Varsity. The Columbiam, Varsity Show .,,.,,.,......, ...... W Vw7ater Polo Personnel, ,,a., ..,., . Wrestling-Varsity ,,,,,... ,.,,,, Freshman ,,,,s. .,,.,, Z Zeta Beta Tau .. .,.... .-... Zeta Psi .....,... 457 135 67 372 370 368 157 276 322 144 306 245 246 260 392 388 244 255 378 193 253 184 308 318 320 282 295 247 248 258 380 360 5


Suggestions in the Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Columbia University - Columbian Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930


Searching for more yearbooks in New York?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online New York yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.