Cornell University - Cornellian Yearbook (Ithaca, NY)

 - Class of 1933

Page 15 of 544

 

Cornell University - Cornellian Yearbook (Ithaca, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 15 of 544
Page 15 of 544



Cornell University - Cornellian Yearbook (Ithaca, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 14
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Page 15 text:

JUNE 2.0, II , 'II LLB-George V. Holton was re- elected a director of the Socony-Vacuum Oil Company at the annual meeting, May 31. '11-Jerome D. Barnum, president of the American Newspaper Publishers As- sociation and publisher of the Syracuse Post-Standard, speaking at the second annual banquet of the college of business administration of Syracuse University, is quoted as saying that business has pulled itself out of the depression and will ad- vance without the NRA. He forecast a revival of agitation of the child labor amendment, and expressed his opposition tothe broad grant of power giving the Federal Government control of children under eighteen. '13 AB-Mrs. Bert W. Hendrickson CBlanche W. MoyerD, chairman of the American home department of the New York State Federation of Women's Clubs, attended the triennial convention of the General Federation of Women's Clubs at Detroit, Mich., June 4 to 11. '14 LLB-Supreme Court Justice Harry E. Schirick, Democrat, has been recom- mended for re-election by the Columbia County Bar Association. '15 Sp7Floyd E. Becker of Roseland, N. J. is a member of the newly-created State Milk Control Board which will take over the functions of the three-man board that has operated for the past two years. '16-Harold L. Bache has been elected to the board of managers of the New York Produce Exchange. '17 ME, '77 ME-Frank G. Tallman, Jr. '17, son of Frank G. Tallman '77 of Du Pont de Nemours 8: Co., married Ruth Lester of West Orange, N. J. on May 3o. Tallman, Jr. is an engineer with the Edge Moor Iron Company in Wil- mington, Del. '19, '1o AB-Willard F. Place, execu- tive assistant to the president of the New York Central Railroad, was appointed vice-president at a meeting of the execu- tive committee recently. '1o EE-Aubrey R. Curry is with the Niagara Hudson Company, Buffalo. '11 AB-Elwood G. Feldstein was in- stalled, June 5, as Exalted Ruler of the New York Lodge, Number 1, B. P. O. Elks. I-le is an attorney at 47 West Thirty-fourth Street, New York City. '14-Louis P. Flory, staE photographer of the Boyce Thompson Institute of Plant Research, is one of the judges of the annual exhibit of the Yonkers Camera Club being held June I5 to 3o. '15 AB-Walter T. Southworth re- ceived his LLB degree from Brooklyn Law School last June and was admitted to the New York Bar last December. He recently left the local Buick Company to take a position with Chadbourne, Stanchheld St Levy, New York City. Last June he married Edith K. Jascheck of New York City. Their address is 18 East Twenty-first Street, Brooklyn. '16 AM-Lawrence H. Houtchens is teaching English at the University of New Hampshire, Durham, N. H. '18 BChem, '19 MChem, '31 PhD- John W. Ackerman and Mrs. Ackerman of 71 Lakeside Drive, Nutley, N. J. an- nounce the birth of a daughter, Joan Sue, on May 3o. Ackerman is with the Fine Colors Company, 11 to 19 McBride Avenue, Paterson, N. J. WHAT '35 MEN AND WOME AB, AB-Catherine R. Abbott of South Main Street, Geneva. Cleveland Heights. 0- and Jehu L- P-X BS-Charlotte M. Dredger is living at Campbell of Wyomissing, Pa. areengaged. 1 G1-acc Avenue, Lynbrook. BS-Bel-B-Afllefwillbe emrleyed by EE-Sherman G. Forbes, Jr. may be the Shelicld Farms at Hobart- addressed at his home, 89 Hillandale AB-Carl H. Ahrens may be addressed Avenue, Stamford, Conn. at 96 Louis Street, Staten Island. AB-Maxwell Ash expects to re- The Clase Secretaries ceive his LLB from the University in 1937. His home address is 1515 Board- walk, Atlantic City, N. J. ME-The address of GeorgeR. Ash- ton is 13 Dorchester Road, Rochester. ME-Thomas C. Borland will be employed in the oil production depart- ment of the Standolind Oil and Gas Company of Texas. His home address is 163 East Bissell Avenue, Oil City, Pa. ME-John S. Brown, Jr. after grad- uation will live at 1111 DeVictor Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. AB-Robert M. Cook lives at 616 Lors L. Coram 1205 Glenwood Road Brooklyn, N.Y. JOHN W. TODD, Jr. 6941 Perrysville Ave. Glen Avon, Pittsburgh, Pu. '19 AM-Shelton L. Beatty is dean of men and assistant professor of English at Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa. '3o BS, '31 MA, '30 BS-Helen Greig is working for the Federal Surplus Relief Corporation. Her address is 171o H Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. She writes that Eleanor A. Reed '3o is work- ing at Great Neck. '31 ME-Ralph L. Hill, Jr. is an air conditioning engineer with the York Ice Machinery Corporation and living at 1138 Belmont Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. '31 AB, 'o6 BSA, '33 AB-Dorothy Lee '31, daughter of Ora Lee 'o6 and Mrs. Lee of Albion, is engaged to Fred A. Bennett '33 of Berlin. They are to be married in August. '31 AB-Frederica G. Ritter is em- ployed in the bank examining division of the Federal Reserve Board in Washing- ton, D. C. Her address is 1757 Brandy- wine Street. '3 3 AB-Marian F. Saunders of Maple- wood, N. J. is engaged to Gordon V. Bond of Plainfield, N. J. Her address is 66 Kendall Avenue. '34 AB-Edmund H. Trowbridge mar- ried Viola Vail of Belmont, Mass. on May 15. Their address is 51 Garden Street, Cambridge, Mass. '34-The engagement of James H. Madden and Elsie R. Little of New York City has been announced. Madden is connected with the Borden Sales Com- pany, Inc. '36-Edwin T. Bradley, third year Medicine, is engaged to Leonie J. Dan- forth of New York City. Bradley took his undergraduate work at Princeton University. N ARE DOING DVM-Richard T. Gilyard will enter practice with his father, Dr. Arthur T. Gilyard '07, at Waterbury, Conn. His address is 73 Field Street. BS-Phyllis Gray will teach home- making in the Junior High School at Gouverneur. AB-Stephen E. Hamilton, Jr. of Wilmington, Del., who was unde- feated singles tennis player for the 1935 season, will seek the intercollegiate title at Chicago, Ill. on June 14. AB-Doris Kaplan of 1478 East Nineteenth Street, Brooklyn, expects to enter a graduate school for Jewish social work. BS-Wilfred R. Kelly lives at R.D. 5, Cooperstown. AB-Joseph F. LaBarbera expects to enter Physicians and Surgeons Medical College next year. His ad- dress is 531 Ninth Street, Brooklyn.

Page 14 text:

IO CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS Concerning TH E F AC ULTY PROFESSOR GILBERT Ross is leaving the University's Faculty after four years as assistant professor of Music, to accept a position as associate professor of music at Smith College. Professor Ross, one of lthaca's most popular concert artists, has achieved wide distinction as a violinist, his Faculty concerts here have been among the best-attended offerings of the Music Department. With Mrs. Ross and his two children, he will leave for North- ampton after the close of the Summer Session, at which he is to teach. Last week, with Richard Parmenter '17 and Professor George S. Butts '15, Agricul- tural Extension, he sailed in Parmenter's twenty-one-foot yawl from Annapolis to Cape Cod. MRS. CORNELIUS BETTEN, '10 Sp., has resigned as instructor in Home Econom- ics, a position she has held since 1915 and during the year 1911-11. Thirty-eight members of the staff entertained her at dinner at the old Jones house at Taug- hannock June 1. Mrs. Betten has been one of the directors of the International Association and this year was elected to honorary membership in Mortar Board, Senior women's honorary society. She is national secretary of Delta Delta Delta and alumna advisor to the Cornell chapter. Her husband, PhD '06, is Dean of the University Faculty, their son, Cornelius, Jr. '31, is assistant in Chem- ISIFY. Miss EDITH W. Ouzrs, AM '30, hostess at Willard Straight Hall for the past three years, is recipient of a fellowship to the graduate school of Columbia University next year, where she is to make the first study of the social and educational as- pects of student unions in the colleges of the United States. She will continue at Willard Straight until September. DR. FRANK AD,-.1R, Clinical Surgery at the Medical College in New York, was married, May 19, to Mrs. Marion Hop- kinson Brooks at the home of Mrs. Brooks mother, Mrs. Ernest Hopkinson, 1110 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Pmsintxr FARRAND was commence- ment speaker at the one-hundredth grad- uation exercises of Lafayette College, june 7, and was honored with the degree of Doctor of Lztws. Addressing the 165 members of the class, he urged freedom of inquiry, opinion, and thought in uni- -.ersity and school. Dux lhvrnit S KINSDAII En ineer . ... , , U lg, - ing, Spoke :xt 11 luncheon of the Cornell Club of C.l1lc.:1go,Alunc 13. He was 3 commencement speaker at Armour ln- stitute that d:1y..june 14, he spoke tothe College of lgngincering, Newark, N. J., and June 14 he is scheduled as commence- ment speaker at the Shrub Oak High School in Westchester County. DR. EUGENE F. BRADFORD, Registrar and Director of Admissions, was com- mencement speaker,June IO, at Houghton College. Miss GRACE SEELY '04, head residcnt of Sage College, sails on the SS Cham- plain, July 5, to spend the summer in France. DR. DEAN F. SMILEY '16, Hygiene Cnow on leavel, is to speak at the annual con- ference of health oHicers and public nurses to be held in Saratoga Springs, June 16 to 18. PROFESSOR FORREST B. WRIGHT '11 and Mrs. Wright QMildred E. Deislerl '14 and family left Ithaca June II for a two- weeks' motor trip to Kentucky and Georgia. PROFESSOR CHARLES CHUFP, Plant Path- ology, was rather seriously injured in the leg by a batted ball at the Extension picnic held recently at Taughannock, the bruise resulted in a ruptured blood vessel and the formation of blood clot. PINHASS L. PARISH, his wife, and his five-year-old daughter were killed in an automobile accident at Scranton, Pa., June 9, as they were returning to their home in Brooklyn with their daughter, Yemema Papish '3 6, after visiting Papish's brother, Dr. jacob Papish, PhD '11, acting head of the Chemistry Depart- ment. lVIiss Papish and a younger brother were seriously injured. PRoFEssoR D. B. JOHNSTON-WALLACE, Agronomy, spoke June IO to a conference of workers on pasture investigation from the Dominion Department of Agriculture and the Provinces of Ontario and Quebec. OBITUARY BESSIB ELLEN OUTFERSON, for fourteen years secretary of the Graduate School, died at the Ithaca Memorial Hospital, june 9, after a four months' illness, at the age of 47. A graduate of Columbia Uni- versity in 1909, Miss Outterson taught until coming to Ithaca in 1910, a year later she became secretary of the Graduate School. She was well-known to a large number of students in the Graduate School, those returning to reunions last week-end learned of her death with the regret expressed by Dean Floyd K. Richt- myer 'o4: Miss Outterson brought to her work a devotion seldom if ever sur- passed, she was helpful fat beyond the ofhcial duties of her position. Her death will bring sorrow to thousands of gradu- ate students all over the world whom she had befriended in so many ways. Miss Outterson took graduate work at Cornell in 1918 and 1919. t Concerning THE ALUMNI '75, '18-Dr. Edward Bausch '75, formerly president of Bausch St Lomb Optical Company of Rochester, has been appointed chairman of the board of that company, Theodore B. Drescher '18 has been made a vice-president. '91 ME-Stanley W. Hayes, president of the Hayes Track Applicance Company, Richmond, Ind., has been granted forty- one United States patents as a result of his research in railroad track material. His avocation is raising forest trees and shrubs on his glacial moraine farm near Rich- mond. His address is P. O. Box 304. '96-William Best, Jr. is vice-president of the General Cigar Company, Inc., 119 West Fortieth Street, New York City. '98 BSA-Henry W. Jeffers of Plains- boro, N. J. was elected chairman of the Republican State Committee, May 18. Jeffers is with the Walker-Gordon Milk Company and chairman of the state board of regents. 5 'oo LLB-Christopher Wilson of Coombs 8: Wilson, New York City, was elected a director of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce at their annual meeting, May 1o. , '01-Earl B. Alvord, head of the new products department of the Grasselli Chemical Company, Cleveland, O., an- nounced, May 14, that for years the chemical industry has sought a low cost commercial substance which would kill pests and fungi and yet be harmless to the host plant and humans, and that research progress promises radical or fundamental changes in the commercial products of the industry with an annual volume of ap- proximately S2.0,000,000, according to Howard Carswell, staff writer for the World-Telegram. 'O1 BArch-R. H. Shreve was one of the New York delegates to the Mil- Waukee, Wis. convention of the American Institute of Architects which convened May 11 for a four-day session. '05 AB-George C. Boldt, Jr. sailed, June 7, for England where he intends to spend part of the summer. We have been informed that Boldt is a grandfather. 'O7 AB-Robert Schurtnan is vice- president of the Byron jackson Company, Huntington Park, Cal. '08 ME-Albert J. Boardman is vice- president of the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway Company. '10 MD-Dr. Charles I. Hyde was married in 1915. He has one son, Leroy, in the University, Class of 1936 Arts, and later Medicine, his other son, Bernard, expects to enter in the Fall, and his daughter is to enter high school in the Fall. Dr. Hyde wrote that he in- tended to be here for reunion.



Page 16 text:

Il CORNELL ALUMNI NEWS BS-Celestine Latus is to be assistant dietician at Cleves Cafeteria, Washing- ton, D.C., owned by Ruth Cleves Justus '16. Her address will be 169.1 T Street, N.W. ME-john S. Leslie will attend Babson Institute, Babson Park, Mass., during 1935-36. His home address is Box 181, Wyckoff, N. AB-john L. Lewis's home address is 569.1 Buffalo Avenue, Niagara Falls. AB-George E. Lockwood lives at zoo Lyncroft Road, New Rochelle. AB-Edith M. McAdoo of Kew Gardens, president of WSGA for 1934-35, and treasurer of her Class in her Freshman year, and president of Sage College in her junior year, is engaged to Jack Rankin of New York City. AB-Lawrence B. McArthur lives in Buffalo, at 161 Fourteenth Street. BS, '19 BS-Mabel E. MacGregor of johnson City is engaged to Charles E. Cladel '19 of Ithaca. Miss MacGregor is a student dietician in a Johnson City hospital, Cladel is an instructor in the department of Hotel Administration. ME-Thomas E. McMahon of 1.57 Ascon Avenue, Forest Hills, is planning to take graduate work at the University next year. - AB+julius Meisel is to be connected with the Capital Paper Company, Inc. of New York City after july 1. His home address is 1156 East Twenty-sixth Street, Brooklyn. BS-Elizabeth Myers has a fellowship in the foods and nutrition subdivision, Iowa State College, Ames. Her home address is 4ooo Cathedral Avenue, N.W., Washington, D. C. ME-George C. Norman may be reached at 101 Courtland Avenue, Buffalo. AB-F. Faxon Ogden is employed by the General Chemical Company at Quincy, Mass. On April 1 his engagement to Mary S. Gammons of Cohasset, Mass. was announced. His address is 167. Mon- roe Road, Quincy, Mass. BS, BSYBIargaret R. Robinson of lialdwin and William K. Dayton of Stanford are engaged. Miss Robinson was Il member of the Sage Choir and president of the Westminster Society. Dayton has been active in the Future 'Farmers Association, Sztgc Choir, and the West- minster Association. He plans to teach in South Day ton High School next year. Ali - Tllc engagement of Anne L. Iloelirig and li. I.. Rideout, instructor in Rottiance Languages, has been an- nouncctl, Bliss Roehrig plgmg to mach l..ttin next j.'e.t1'g1t the Lpiversity. Ali Leo llokeach will enter thc Law Ftlitml. His lIlIlTlC IlLldl'C5S is 9X5 Pgirk Plate l5rtiol.lx'n. , - li' .Nl llelen Ruse will lic in Ham- inontlsport until ,july i, At that time she will begin lier tluticsttttlicl'tmt.ll'e:eegtrgI1 department oi fienerqtl Ifootls Corpora- tion in New York City, where her address will be 17.3 West Thirteenth Street. BS-Frederick W. Rys is to attend the Harvard Business School. His home ad- dress is 5463 Aylesboro Avenue, Pitts- burgh, Pa. ME-Robert F. Seidert, III of Buffalo and ,lean S. Briggs '3 6, also of Buffalo, are engaged. AB-Charles F. Sharpe, 3d. is starting work this Summer Session toward an MA degree from the University. His Ithaca address is 301 Dryden Road. - AB-Murray R. Socolof's address will be 384 Crown Street, Brooklyn. BS-Clinton R. Stimson received his degree in three years with an average of 85.9 percent. He has been active in 4-H work, particularly with dairy cattle. He won the Roberts Scholarship, was on the Countryman board, a member of the Round-up Club and Ho-Nun-De-Kah. He has been awarded a graduate research assistantship in animal nutrition by the Iowa State College of Agriculture, Ames, Iowa, where he will begin his work September 1. DVM-Emanuel Tarlow, coach and member of the swimming team, will be registered next fall in the Graduate School. His home address is 19.12. Ward Avenue, New York City. AB-Ruth I. Thompson of Hastings- on-Hudson is engaged to C. W. Colman, instructor in Romance Languages. Miss Thompson has been a member of the University Orchestra and the Ross Quartet. DVM-William F. Tierney of Caze- novia has a job as meat and dairy in- spector for CCC camps. AB-Margaret Tolein lives at 5 Sherman Place, Utica. BS, ME-Edith L. Trappe of Staten Island is engaged to Robert H. Glanville of Seneca Falls. Miss Trappe was presi- dent of Omicron Nu, women's national honorary society in the College of Home Economics, and president of the women's cabinet of CURW this year, and a mem- ber of Mortar Board, senior women's national honorary society. BS-Charles H. Voorneveld is a specialist in ornamental horticulture, and lives at Syosset, Long Island. BS-Wallace E. Washbon is with the Extension Department as itinerant agent in Tompkins County. He is living at 2.14 Thurston Avenue, Ithaca. BS-Evan B. Whitacre is engaged to Egrynwen Richards of Rome, a graduate of Syracuse University in 1933. AB-Frederick A. Wilson of Sag Harbor will be here next year in the Medical College. DVM-Engueda Yohannes may be reached cfo W. M. Yohannes, American Legation, Addis Abeba, Ethiopia. CORNELL HOSTS Good Ploces to Know I NEW YORK AND VICINITY rnell Hosts AT THE WALDORF Ilca Tohn Shea ......... '27 Henry B, Williams. .'3O Frederick D.. Rcty. . .'33 Herbert E. Frazer. . .'34 THE WRLDORF RSTORIR Park Ave 49th to 50th NeWYorlc WASHINGTON, D. C. Qllruriiqltifrteria 1715 G Street, N. W. Z6 block west State War and Now Bldu- BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON 8: DINNER RUTH CLEVES JUSTUS '16 A Summer Uuting of Real Development CAMP for Boys 9 to 17 In the Highlands of Ontario EXPERIENCED SUPERVISION Resident Physician Fee S160 Wrile for Booklet to H. B. ORTNER '19, Director ITHACA, N.Y. THE MERCERSBURG ACADEMY Thorough instruction, college reparatory work being especially successfuiI Personal interest is taken in each boy, the aim being to inspire in every pupil the lofty ideals of thorough scholarshi , broad attainments, sound judgment and Christian manliness. For catalogue and information, address BOYD EDWARDS, D.D., LL.D., Headmaster, Mercersburg, Pa.

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